Wednesday's Words on a Friday
The original Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and eventually taken over by a moveable feast of participants when Delores had computer troubles. Sadly, Delores has now closed her blog forever due to other problems.
The aim of the words is to encourage us to write. A story, a poem, whatever comes to mind.
If you are posting an entry on your own blog, please let us know so we can come along to read it and add a few encouraging words.
This month the words/prompts are supplied by David M. Gascoigne and can be found here
This week's words/prompts are:
1.elbows 2.imagine 3.canal 4.heavily 5.population
and/or:
1.mocked 2.months 3.annex 4.support 5.casino
here is my story: (a bit rushed, but I think it's okay)
For months they mocked
me and the months became years as I built a solid annex to my home, then
attached it to a flood-proof, cyclone-proof, fire-proof survival cellar
burrowed into the hill behind my house.
“Yer’ crazy Dave,” they
said, “completely bonkers,” they said. “We don’t get that kind of weather here,”
they said. But I’d been a meteorologist in my younger years and I could see the
climate changes coming.
Over time, places that
once were heavily inundated with annual rains became drier and a few of the
town’s small population began to think differently. They even gave some support
against the hecklers.
As the local canal waters
dropped lower and lower, even Colin Chuckberry, the Casino owner, expressed
some concern. He asked if he could view the interior of my cellar, saying he
might want to build one himself in the concrete carpark under the Casino. "Bit late for that mate," I thought to myself, but didn't say so out loud.
I showed him what I had
done so far, even showing off shelves groaning with survival supplies. “I imagine
you’d be set for quite some time,” he said, noting the canned goods, water
barrels and stacks of toilet paper. ‘Where’s yer toilet?” he asked, and I
showed him a composting toilet in a little hollow off to one side.
What I didn’t show him,
nor anyone else, was the much larger room behind the cellar, with even more
supplies and a ventilation system. The whole shebang had taken me twenty years
or thereabouts and still wasn’t quite ready.
But I was out of time.
Within a week a spectacular storm hit the town, no one knew where it came from
or how long it would last, but suddenly two hundred and fifty families were
touching elbows crowded into my cellar, crying in fear and wondering how they
would survive as the winds blew away roofs and sheds, as the canal rose and
flooded much of what was left.
My own home was almost as
safe as the cellar and I moved a few families with smaller children into it. There
was no power of course, so I instructed them to eat the frozen pre-cooked foods
before using anything else.
When push comes to shove, people help each other out. Good for Dave.
ReplyDeletejabblog; he wasn't planning on needing to fdo this so soon, but things happen and here they are. This was the reason for the "hidden" room with extra supplies.
Deleteexcellent use of words. With the storms and hurricanes this year, this story has special meaning.
ReplyDeleteSusan Kane; thank you, I've set this in a place that normally doesn't have such fierce weather, but somehow Dave knew it would happen.
DeleteApocalyptic visions, that sadly could become true. Well written.
ReplyDeleteCharlotte; the way the weather is behaving everywhere I wouldn't be at all surprised. Maybe I should start my own "survival cellar"
DeleteWe need men like Dave. And lots of them. Well told.
ReplyDeleteElephant's Child; we do need lots of men like Dave, sadly there just aren't enough of them. Thank you.
DeleteI'm so glad he was willing to do this not just for himself, but for all of them.
ReplyDeletemessymimi; me too and I'm thnking that despite being crowded they will all manage just fine.
DeleteWonderful and well written!
ReplyDeleteWe definitely need people like Dave!!
Katerinas Blog; thank you.
DeleteWell done R. Dave had the last laugh on that one.
ReplyDeleteMargaret D; he did, but he is also helping the people of his little town.
DeleteI hope people wakes up. I also did a story.
ReplyDeleteDora; I hope people wake up too, the earth needs us to be more responsible.
DeleteI am so glad I live in boring Germany. Well at least as long as Ukraine keeps standing... But with weather we are safe here. Sad, good story. There sure is a The Simpsons-episode where Flanders offers shelter, too, did you see that?
ReplyDeleteOh, the people here at Covid-times with all the loo-tickets, it was hilarious! Packets and packets of toilet-papers!
Iris; most of the world has safe weather, even countries that have continual dry or continual wet, are "safe" until one day something unexpected and different happens. I don't remember that Simpsons episode, maybe I didn't see it yet. I remember the people buying too much toilet paper, there was one silly man who bought so much, when covid was over he tried to sell it back to the store but of course they wouldn't buy it. I would never try that, I would just keep it and use it.
DeleteBeing prepared is good. But I definitely didn't going through storms or any of those nasty things mother nature throw at us. Good takes on the Words for Wed prompts.
ReplyDeleteHave a lovely.
lissa; thank you. Prepared is good and even better if you have enough space to really stock a good amount. I could never have supplies for a whole town . I wouldn't like those storms and hurricanes either, nor floods.
DeleteI am glad Dave let others use his shelter, and even gladder that he had a special space for himself!
ReplyDelete