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Another Contest for Questors! (Win Bottles!)

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Shiori Tonbo

PostPosted: Fri Dec 08, 2006 6:59 am


This one won't be much either, but I'm going to try to give away a few more to help out you guys. <3


This is a -Writing- Contest. So it should be easy for you guys, considering that's half of what IODM is about anyhow.


What you may write about:
1) IODM Christmas. This would be for the ISLANDERS not for your Quest Character or other Quest Characters.
2) A short Christmas story about your Quest Character. This can be a memory, a possible future, or anything else you can think of.

Those are your choices. <3 Now, what can you win?

1st place-- two bottles of your choice (they will not arrive on the same day and will require two separate orders.)
2nd place-- one bottle of your choice
3rd place-- one bottle of -my- choice

If there aren't enough entries, I will give the people with the top entries a bottle each of my choice, as I can't justify going to all that trouble for very little effort. However, I don't think that'll be an issue!

Have fun, guys!

This contest Ends on December 12th, 2006 at Midnight, EST. I may not be around, but it'll still be closed. That will give me plenty of time to find a slot opening time I can work with. <3


FAQ:

Is there a Limit to the Length of the entry?

No. I have plenty of time on my hands after tomorrow, so feel free to write quite a bit. Just, no novellas if you don't mind.

How many entries can I submit?

As many as you want. <3 The more stories the better, IMHO, but it doesn't really increase your chances of winning unless one of them happens to be better.
PostPosted: Fri Dec 08, 2006 7:00 am


For Entries

Submission Form:

Name:
Bottle Desired:
Entry:

Shiori Tonbo


ginchael

PostPosted: Fri Dec 08, 2006 4:40 pm


Sorry, this story is kinda depressing sweatdrop ...read at your own risk. Very emo...

Name: ginchael
Bottle Desired: A
Entry:
Quote:

Alan Murrow, December 24th, 2000


How could someplace that was once so warm seem so cold?


Alan Murrow settled into his armchair and stared out the window of his penthouse. The wall of buildings around Central Park was fading fast in the ever-heavier snowfall, only the twinkle of lights visible through the whitening mist.

Damnit, Helen, I tried.

He saw her in the falling snow, standing out on the small balcony and looking out to the park, wearing her “casual” summer clothes and watching the thousands of tiny people living their tiny lives and enjoy God’s gift of a warm, sunny day. Helen was the one who insisted on being close to the park, so that if they had kids (it wasn’t even a question of when at that point and to the two of them the thought of children was fading like the sun into night) they could bring them out on sunny days and they would be able to have grass until they eventually bought a house out in the suburbs, maybe in Westchester or even far out west in the rural parts of New Jersey, some big old farmhouse or even one of those old Victorian manors in a rural town that specializes in antiques and gift shops.

That, of course, was before A Closer Look was cancelled for what NBC called “a new, dynamic news lineup,” which is company code for dismal ratings. That, Alan has often thought in the last month or two, was probably the last straw for her. One day in early November, while Alan stayed home, she returned from window shopping with her girlfriends with papers from her lawyer. She was living with her sister, now, in Philadelphia.

A quick wind picked up, and twirled Helen off the balcony and into the whiteness of the snow beyond.

Alan tore his stare away from the window to the television. Sighing, he picked up the remote and pressed the ON button. The high-quality television started to emit its cold glow.

“…I want to be…a dentist!”

He smiled at the clay elf. This show…it’d been around for a while, and was one of his favorites as a little kid. Alan smiled, bathing in the cool glow of the television and the warmth of watching it as a kid, with his younger sister Rebecca Lee sitting next to them, both warm under a blanket, their mother making cookies and hot cocoa as they waited for their father to come home to have the midnight Christmas meal. As they laughed as strange toys sang about how silly they are, she turned and smiled warmly at him.

“That was Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer. Coming up next on this Christmas Eve, A Charlie Brown Christmas, only on ABC.”

Alan sat up suddenly. Had I dosed off…? He looked at the clock. Nearly 2 hours! Outside the window, the lights of New York were twinkling in the dark of the snowstorm.

He got up from his chair and walked across the across the open living room, heading for the refrigerator. He rarely drank and had been that way since at least his mid-20s, but right now he could really use that spiked eggnog he bought.

As he was taking the carton out of the lighted refrigerator, the phone’s electronic ring pierced the near silence of the large penthouse. Sighing, Alan put down the eggnog and picked up the phone.

“Hello.”

“Alan?” an older woman asked on the other end of the line.

“Yes, this is he.”

“Alan, it’s your mother.”

“Mom?” he asked. “…how did you get this number?”

“Your agent. So, how are things?”

“No different,” he lied between his teeth. He imagined Helen laughing at a joke her sister made in Philly. “Why did you call me?”

He heard her hesitance on the other end of the line. “It’s Christmas, dear.” There was another hesitant pause, as if his mother was trying to make up her mind. “…and your sister would like to see you.”

Alan stood there, open-mouthed. “Rebecca?” Soon, though, his senses caught up to him and the anger that he had been holding close to him for over a decade came rushing to his head. “Rebecca? What does that pervert want?”

“Alan!” his mother scolded, as if he were a young child. “She’s your sister!”

Alan gripped the phone tightly. “That lesbian is no sister of mine. Now, if that’s all you want, I hope you three sinners have a very Merry Christmas—“

“Alan, don’t hang up on me! Please, just listen.” His mother sounded desperate.

Alan remained silent.

“She has AIDS, Alan.”

“Gay cancer?” Alan tried to dig the insult as deep as he could.

“You know that isn’t true.” Once again, the scolding. “Apparently, she had gotten it from a bad blood transfusion, before she even realized that she… is…”

“Can’t say it, can you?” He taunted.

“Alan, stop it! We’ve been trying to tell you for years, but you just won’t talk to us. Your father and I, every time we’d call your assistant would tell us you were out, or in a meeting…It’s been very obvious that you don’t want to talk to us. But please, for your sister’s sake, just listen to me.”

Alan paused.

“She isn’t doing very well,” the voice crackled through static. “Alan, she’s dying.”

Rebecca is sitting there in the blanket next to him, watching the clay reindeer save Christmas, as their mother brought them their hot cocoa and cookies.

“She doesn’t have much time left….and she said she’d like to see you.”

The two of them laugh at the strange toys stuck on the island, singing as they did things that didn’t make sense. Their father would be home soon, and then they would have dinner and go to sleep and await Santa Claus and his bag of gifts in the morning.

“…Alan? Are you still there?”

Alan stood there, silent, anger rising.

“…Alan?”

“I have no sister,” he said, voice full of hate.

“Alan, please, stop this! She’s dying! Your sister is dying!”

My sister died a long time ago!” he screamed into the phone. There was silence on the other end.

Rebecca was smiling, innocent, happy, full of life, standing right beside him.

There was a series of short, shallow gasp hidden behind the static.

Alan hung up the phone.

Angrily, he threw the eggnog at the wall. The carton exploded, the thick liquid dripping down the white wall and over pictures of him and Helen, Helen’s family, their wedding. Hastily, he opened up the cabinet above the refrigerator and grabbed an old, dusted flask of Jack Daniels he originally bought to celebrate the birth of his first child…a birth that never came.

Sitting down once again in his chair, he opened the bottle angrily and turned his attention once again to the cold television. A little boy was on a stage, a sole spotlight upon in.

Alan took a deep swig, trying to swallow it down. He wasn’t used to the taste of alcohol—the whiskey burnt his throat as it went down.

“…and that’s what Christmas is all about, Charlie Brown.”

Alan Murrow put down the bottle, held his head in his hands, and sobbed
.
PostPosted: Tue Dec 12, 2006 8:29 pm


Alright, got my entry finished, and just in time. The end is a little depressing, but overall I think it came out well.

Name: Leonard Flynn
Bottle Desired: H
Entry:
Quote:
Leonard was walking home from work, holding his arms wrapped around himself to keep warm. The sky was dark and overcast, the sun nearly gone below the horizon. His feet were wet and cold from trudging through the snow, and his fingers were long since numb because of his threadbare gloves. As he passed the old, battered mailbox, with the name 'Flynn' nearly faded away, he could smell the smoke from the fireplace in his home.

He hated that smell. It always reminded him of how poor they were, how they couldn't afford to run their broken down excuse for a heater all the time. It reminded him of how he was going to be stuck working the same dead-end job as his father for the rest of his life, unless he could somehow go to a college. But most of all he hated how he carried that smell with him whenever he left for school or work. As the day went on, the smell would dissipate, and he could almost forget about his situation. And then every day he had to go back. At least once it warmed up they would need a fire, and the smell would start to go away.

He'd stepped onto the cracked cement slab porch, opening the door. "Hi honey, how was work?" His mother called out to him.

"The usual; idiot manager, stupid customers, soul-numbing work, etcetera.” Leonard worked as a shelf-stocker for a local grocery store, and if his boss wasn’t yelling at him, then it was a customer with some inane question. It was long hours and the pay was terrible, but it was the only job he could get. “Where’s dad? Isn’t he home from work?” He asked. Leonard was busy taking his shoes off and trying to warm his hands.

“No, he called a little while ago to say he’d be staying late.” She answered a little disappointment evident in her voice.

“On Christmas Eve? He promised he wouldn’t take overtime.” There was almost a whine in his voice, despite him being almost seventeen. It wasn’t fair! All his friends got to spend whole weeks with their families, off vacationing in Florida, or even another country. And what did he get? He got to work, just like his mother and father.

“Leo, you know we need the money. You do like to eat food, don’t you?” It was the same joke, every time. The sad part, it wasn’t exactly a joke. “Listen, Johnny’s in the family room watching TV, why don’t you go spend some time with him?” Johnny was his six year old brother. He couldn’t exactly work, and school was out, so for now he got stay home.

“Yeah, yeah, foods good.” It was the same answer he gave every time. “Alright, I’ll go check on him.” Leonard walked through the kitchen into the living room, where his brother sat watching ‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas’ on their little black and white TV. Johnny never noticed anything else while he was watching TV, so Leonard was able to sneak up behind him before grabbing and tickling him. “Ha! I got you now!”

Johnny let out a high-pitched scream that quickly turned to laughter. “Stop! Stop it! I can’t…haha…breathe!” Leonard let up, his mood already lightening up.

“That’ll teach you to sit so close.” Leonard said, rustling Johnny’s hair.

“Quit it, quit it! Johnny tried to force his hand away. “Mooooooom! He’s being mean to me!

“Be nice to your brother dear.” His mother’s voice called out from the kitchen. There was suddenly a click as the handle on the front door turned. Leonard’s eyes widened as his dad pushed the door open and stepped in, holding a large plastic bag filled with boxes.

“Merry Christmas!” Johnny ran forward with a squeal of “Presents!”, while Leonard simply stood there, slightly stunned.

“I thought you were working overtime?” He asked perplexed.

“Not yet, you get these tomorrow.” His father was trying to keep the bag out of Johnny’s reach. “If I had worked over, I wouldn’t have had time to get these.” As he said that, he gave a wink in the direction behind Leonard. He turned, seeing his mother with tears in her eyes. “None of that now. This is supposed to be a happy time.”

Leonard was getting tears in his own eyes. It had been a while since his father had gotten them presents and even longer since he had been able to spend any decent amount of time with them. “Dad, I-“

Leonard woke up, the dream quickly fading. He wasn’t home, back at his run down house, back at his crappy job; back with his family. He was on an island, being turned into god knew what. He’d never see any of them again.

He rolled in his bed, trying to get back to sleep, but he couldn’t. All he could think of was how he missed the smell from their fireplace.

Acinonyx jubatus

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