Friday, February 17, 2012

The Widow

Not gone, just writing.

Sometimes I miss Khensa. No, not sometimes, all the time. She was predictable. She was impulsive, snarky, and sometimes aloof. She and I shared almost nothing in common (excepting of course my occasional descent into snarkiness) but then I could still write her so well, or if not well then easily. There was a distance between us. She was a different person and I felt rather that I was transcribing her actions and thoughts as an impartial bystander. With Aisha, my newest heroine, I find myself coming a little unhinged.

Not that we are completely alike, but we are more alike, and there are moments where Aisha's actions mirror what my own would have been. I write her doing one thing, all the while thinking how I would do it another way. Writing her is like fighting my own subconscious, and it's surprisingly exhausting. She's not particularly trusting, nor is she particularly confident. She holds her tongue when she should speak, and she stays when she should really run. She doesn't invite the same grand adventures as had Khensa. And Aisha is plain and quiet and anyone who didn't know her better would think she was boring, but then that's her appeal.

For though her life has taught her to live without love or hope, she still nurses that tiny bud that dreams that if she would only speak the right words to the right person at the right time someone might hear her. They would understand that she is not plain or boring, or any of those things. They would understand that she is only lonely in the shadow of her sisters' beauty.

But the beast, who would rather be a monster than a man, at first does not listen, and then he doesn't want to listen. When he at last does listen, its too late, for he has pushed her too hard, and she has given up trying to bridge the unbridgeable.

And then he must always be wondering: would the whispered words between them still be as sweet if they were all a lie?

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Aisha and the Beast

I've dropped below the radar for a while with the onset of the winter school quarter, but I've appreciated all the wonderful emails and messages I've received for the New Year. Thank you for reading Farro and Sulfur and enjoying them enough to take time out to let me know your thoughts.Your encouraging words have been the fuel for my next project, which in atmosphere, narration, and setting is bleaker, slower, and more character-based than either of my previous novels.

Aisha is not what Khensa was -- obstinate, impulsive, and quick. Aisha is quiet. She's self-sacrificing, lonely, and considers herself to be neither brave nor strong (though, I shall allow my readers to be the final judge on that score). Aisha is sad and yet bound to her sadness by an obligation dictated to her by the familial culture in which she was raised.
"Marry the Lord Pathi," her father told her, and she had obey even though he was too old, and even though he was already married.
"Come home with me," her father pled, knowing she would have to sacrifice wealth and comfort to do so.
"Sacrifice yourself in my place," her father wailed.
Eventually, she would agree to all of his demands. Not because she was a fool, and not even because she cared for him, but because she loved her dear little sisters, who every day feared they would end up like her.
Perhaps Aisha's story isn't to your taste. Perhaps you prefer a heroine who wears her feelings on her sleeve, who speaks her mind, and lends herself to the great adventures. But then Aisha's story deserve to be told, for it is my opinion that she is braver than any other, even if her courage is harder to detect.

This is Aisha, but of the Beast I will say nothing, for that would be spoiling the story, and I'm already afraid I've spoiled too much.

Until next time!
Arreana