-
Should someone have severe or hostile differences of opinion with another person it’s my hope that the involved parties would settle their disputes in private.
***SPAM FOLDER ALERT***
THERE SEEMS TO BE A TREND WITH WORDPRESS OF COMMENTS BEING SENT TO THE SPAM OR TRASH FOLDERS. I MAKE IT A POINT TO CHECK THOSE DAILY. YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT KIND WORDS YOU COULD BE MISSING!!!
- Like us on Facebook
- 😉 My story follows the PHOTO PROMPT BELOW and link tool. I enjoy honest comments and welcome constructive criticism. 😀

PHOTO PROMPT
Copyright –Jennifer Pendergast
Genre: Literary Fiction
Word Count: 100
POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE
“We’re graduated,” said Diane cradling her diploma. “Let’s go celebrate.”
“Not tonight, Miss Valedictorian,” I said. “I’m bushed.”
“Aw, Mike, don’t be such a stick-in-the-mud.”
“Tomorrow.”
“Now.”
A sucker for her sweet pout, I gave in. Four other kids piled into my jalopy. I hung my tassel on the rearview mirror and stepped on the gas. With youthful abandon we laughed at nothing and everything. We owned the future.
“It wasn’t your fault, son,” said the police after the inquest. “The guy who t-boned you was three sheets to the wind.”
“I’ll tell Diane next time I visit her grave.”
Ouch!
Beautifully built and expertly exploded.
The standard is set.
LikeLike
Dear Elephant,
You turn my head. Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Dear Rochelle,
An apt story for the time of year and one that strikes close to home for any who have lost a loved one in this fashion. Very well done, from title to conclusion.
Aloha,
Doug
LikeLike
Dear Doug,
Home hit here. 😦 Thank you for coming by with your encouraging words. It’s happening now.
Diatomaceous Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Loved your sad-but-true tale, but “diatomaceous” made it doubly worth visiting today. Consider The Word Exchange, by Alena Graedon. I’m off to compost….uh, COMPOSE. 😆
LikeLike
Dear Grumpy,
I think we’ll get along just fine. Glad you you liked my story. I am a bit of a word nerd. I’ll be by to read your story. And please, don’t decompose. 😉
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Dear Rochelle
Last night the news here was full of stats on the deaths of teenage drivers; youngsters who had died within months of passing their driving tests, there were far too many.
Your story highlights these tragic deaths and the aftermath so poignantly, well done.
Take care
Dee
LikeLike
Dear Dee,
The same stats every year since I can remember. This one is based on a true story that happened over forty years ago. I only hope the young man who drove that night has been able to move on.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
The blood rush and the hastiness of teenagers…
A tragedy well narrated Rochelle….
LikeLike
Dear Satya,
Sad but true and, in this case, their only fault was being at the wrong intersection at the wrong time. 😦
Thank you,
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Tragically the tale feels all.too real. Up to the detail that the driver survives. There is no answer. Shocking last line. The timing of delivery was just right. We all know someone much too young taken away…
LikeLike
Dear Hamish,
This tale feels all too real because it’s based on a true story. The driver did survive. He was thrown from the car while two of his friends were killed and another would never be the same.
Thank you for your kind words.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
What a sad story. I hope the man in the story could move on with his life.
Zainab.
LikeLike
I hope so, too, Zainab. He was a sensitive boy I worked with.
Thank you for commenting.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
very tragic and too real… it might be difficult to carry on and not to blame oneself… but i hope he gets to move on.
expertly handled and well-told and as always.
LikeLike
Dear K.Z.
I often think about the young man and wonder how he is and what he’s doing. It’s based on a story that’s all too real and lives in my memory. My thoughts turn to those kids every year about this time.
Thank you for your encouraging comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
So much in so few words. A tough story.
I now see it’s based on a real life incident. Kids and cars! (And guns!)
LikeLike
Dear Patrick,
The saddest part of this is that the young man in question was a sensitive boy who was t-boned by a drunk driver who was not a kid.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Every soul is at risk of turning the wrong corner, not knowing what price they’ll pay. Such a sad, sad story. Great writing, as usual. And wonderful, wonderful photo this week. I feel the cold of those stone walls crashing my bones.
LikeLike
Dear Loré,
Nobody’s promised tomorrow, are they? Or even the rest of today. Sobering thoughts. At any rate, I’m pleased you liked my story.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I’m sincerely freezing in the summer heat… what a chilling story. How to go on after such a situation I’ll never know…
LikeLike
Dear Björn,
All I can say is thank you for such a warm comment.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle, Excellent story as always. My daughter and a friend were hit by a drunken driver. Thank goodness they had their seat belts on and were not injured. It could happen to anyone. Frightening indeed. I also hope the young man in your story has moved on with his life. —Susan
LikeLike
Dear Susan,
I’m so glad your daughter and her friend were okay. So many stories don’t have such a happy ending. Yet no one seems to learn from these incidents until it’s too late.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Very sad story Rochelle. It hit hard. Very well written.
LikeLike
Thank you, Indira.
LikeLike
I hate to see graduation seasons come when things like this happen. I can think of maybe three things over the years that happened in town like this at this time.
I like the conciseness of this narrative. Taught and to the point. Crisp, clean, no caffeine, mahhhh-velous! 😉
LikeLike
Dear Cola Nut,
Too much truth in this one. It’s all too common. Thank you for swinging by.
Shalom,
Miz Wiz
LikeLike
It goes well with unbleached rice.
“Uhhhnnnn ….!”
LikeLike
I saw that one coming, but that didn’t make it any less powerful. Good one, Rochelle.
LikeLike
Dear Adam,
Some stories just beg to be told and retold. Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Checked my humor curbside with this one. I’m going to visit my niece who just graduated high school with a full scholarship to her college of choice. She truly owns her future, and it would be devastating if…I won’t speak it. Your reminder that too many young lives have been cut short is timed perfectly.
LikeLike
Dear Stephanie,
I fear this one struck a few raw nerves this week. Timing is everything. Thank you for stopping by.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle,
this is some wonderful storytelling. I think he will be haunted by What if? for the rest of his life. What if he hadn’t gone afterwards. It’s hard to have perspective when you’re young, until it’s too late like this. Of course, in your story, it wasn’t like they were even drinking: just terrible, terrible luck.
LikeLike
Dear David,
Your words mean a lot. It’s sad that these kids were innocent victims. I hope that the actual survivors in the story, “Mike” in particular, were able to move on with their lives.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Such a sad piece, and somewhat chilling as I’m in my second year of uni and have just seen quite a few friends celebrating their graduation.
LikeLike
I also meant to ask if it was okay that I used one of my own pics alongside my response for this prompt. The photo reminded me of one I took the other week of one of the buildings on campus at Bath Spa.
LikeLike
Dear Carol,
It seems that my story, which is based on a true one, has touched a few nerves this week. Every year about this time I think of those kids who weren’t wild or drinking and wonder where life might have taken them.
In answer to your question, it’s perfectly okay to include your own photos. All I ask is that to maintain the connection to Friday Fictioneers is that you also include the original prompt. Thank you for asking.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Somehow I knew death was coming for these youngsters, but your last line got me just the same. Sad. but so often true.
LikeLike
Dear Alicia,
Sometimes there’s no way to get away from predictable.This time of year sends my mind back to those kids.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
That was such a sad one Rochelle; it seems to happen so often but the snuffing out of young life, particularly at such an auspicious time when the whole universe is unfolding for them… it beggars description. But you managed it. Nicely done.
LikeLike
Dear Sandra,
I hated telling such a sad one when it’s mostly a true story. Some stories need to be told repeatedly. Maybe someone will get it. Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
So bittersweet, Rochelle. Your story fits the prompt nicely and captures the joy of graduation and the devestation of the aftermath.
LikeLike
Dear Gina,
Thank you for your kind comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
🙂
LikeLike
Having experienced something similar this captures the anger that can be left behind. Thank you for this.
LikeLike
Dear Woman,
Thank you for coming by and saying so.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Dear Rochelle,
I do not like your story. It’s too well-written and brings back too many painful memories. I’m still wiping away tears.
All my best,
Marie Gail
LikeLike
(Well-done this week, btw.)
LikeLike
Dear Marie Gail,
I consider this a high compliment. It’s okay not to like it. It’s based on a painful memory of my own.
Thank you
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I keep thinking to myself that after nearly 25 years I would get passed it, but some things don’t fade over time.
Peace,
Marie Gail
LikeLike
It’s a good story of how special occasions don’t count for squat when it’s someone’s turn to die. I once knew a guy who died on Christmas Eve & my mother’s funeral was on my father’s eightieth birthday.
LikeLike
Dear Larry,
My dad passed away two days after my 31st birthday. I’ve jokingly said it was considerate of him to wait and not spoil my day. Nonetheless there are those dates that remain indelibly etched into our hearts and minds.
Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle,
How dare you use one of my photos when I’ve got so much planned for this week! Now I’m stuck reading all the stories! 😉
I could really feel this story – frighteningly common – and I liked the fact you made it clear to the reader that none of this is Mike’s fault, although I fear he may not see it that way. Great stuff, Chief!
Jen
LikeLike
Dear Jen,
Would you like me to let you know next time your photo goes up? 😉 It’s a great picture, just had to use it.
It is a frighteningly common story and one that’s based totally on my own memory of one such event. I hope the young man in question was able to move on.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
No no, that part of the comment was entirely in jest, Rochelle. You’ve got enough to do and this was a lovely surprise! I’m slowly but surely getting through them – how do you manage it every week?
LikeLike
Honestly, I’m considering scaling back in some areas for my own sanity. Many suggestions have been thrown into the arena as we are experiencing another growth spurt.
LikeLike
Everything changes in the blink of an eye. So well crafted 🙂
LikeLike
Dear Helen,
Truer words were never spoken.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Ouch! That was heartbreaking… but very good! And so well written 🙂
LikeLike
Many thanks Rachel. Your comments warm my heart.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I hated to like this one, Rochelle. It was very good and very to the point. Still, people never learn. I’ve seen too too many fatalities this weekend on the road.
LikeLike
Dear Faith,
I don’t think there’s a learning curve here…it’s more like Dead Man’s Curve, forever and ever and no amen.
Thank you for commenting.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Our lives are full of ifs and buts. And it seems so are our deaths.
LikeLike
Dear Dawn,
We’re not promised tomorrow…or even the rest of today. Sobering thoughts.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
That is very powerful Rochelle. Because I’m British, some of the words and phrases I don’t fully understand, but still got the gist of the story and you most certainly made every word count. Very good 🙂
LikeLike
Dear Victoria,
I’ve also encountered a few disconnects where British expressions have been used. 😉 But I love the cultural exchange. I’ll be happy to clarify anything you don’t fully understand.
Thank you for your kind comments.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle, the whole story was perfectly drafted, but the last line is the real star of the work. You couldn’t have written anything that would have packed a more powerful punch than that one line.
LikeLike
Dear Sandra,
Many thanks for your generous comments. You’ve made me smile. .
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
A jarring story, one that evokes memories of lost friends. Very well done.
LikeLike
Dear Jan,
Can any of us reach that certain age without similar memories? This one is heavily based on one of my own.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I am new here……that story held me speechless for few seconds.. hats off to you…..I submitted my link too. My first hand at fiction…….
LikeLike
Dear Anupam,
Glad to have you aboard.
Thank you for commenting on my story.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Hi Rochelle
Such a sad tale and so scary that this kind of thing happens so often. Bad drivers rarely hurt themselves and rarely think of the consequences until it’s too late.
On a separate note, I wonder if it would be possible to mention next time about checking spam folders? It’s not something I did as a routine until Susan (patriciaruthsusan) started having problems, and now it turns out that my comments have been hiding in Doug’s spam folders for the past few weeks, so I’m wondering how many more are hiding in other spam folders and how many more Fictioneers are affected? A short reminder to check spam folders every now and then would be very useful (and everyone listens to you because, apparently, you are the Queen!)
LikeLike
Dear EL,
So let it be said, so let it be done. I went ahead and included the spam folder message above. And I’ll continue to include it. I know I’ve said it before. I’ve found quite a few comments being arbitrarily sent to Spam or Trash. Weird. I do check routinely for that reason.
As for my Queenliness…hmm…Sometimes I wonder if there are so many notes, that they get tuned out like static on the radio.
Why is it that the guilty party, ie the drunk driver, comes away from these tragedies unscathed? I know it’s not always the case, but it is too often.
Thank you for your comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Lovely! I love how you portray emotions
LikeLike
Dear Mitraarchita,
Thank you for commenting and welcome aboard the Friday Fictioneers Express. 😉
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Thank you. Looking forward to an exciting journey 😀
LikeLike
aloha Rochelle. this time of year an all too real reminder. i think almost every community knows this story in one form or another. and it’s always appropriate to write it again. aloha.
LikeLike
Dear Rick,
Does your “aloha” mean that you live in Hawaii? I ask because one of my very best friends lives there.
Re: my story, yes, all too common and based on a personal memory.
Thank you for coming by.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
yes. i currently live in the islands of Hawaii—Oahu. altho i did not grow up here, i’ve lived here for quite a few years now.
yes. i have memories along those lines as well. aloha. rick
LikeLike
Oh dear, the shock of the fall. Very sad end to four years of suffering!
LikeLike
Dear Lindaura,
But then perhaps their school years weren’t that painful. Definitely, it was a shock.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Sad and too often true. Well done.
LikeLike
Thank you, Mr. Rants. And welcome to Friday Fictioneers. 😀
LikeLike
Such a heartbreaking story, and unfortunately one we’ve heard too often. I don’t think there’s anything that hurts me more that hearing about those who lose their lives too soon. Clever title, tying in the graduation procession. This was touching and tragic. Well done.
LikeLike
Dear Adelie,
Too many heartbreakers like that. Too many young lives snuffed out. This story is based on personal memory.
Thank you for your comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle, I’m truly sorry that this was based on your personal memory. I send my deepest sympathy.
LikeLike
As I attend one graduation after another, this is something that chills me. Last week a young classmate was killed in car accident… we all think that if we’ve gotten to graduation, we’ve evaded the worst. A day after the young woman was killed, a colleague of my husband lost his 37 year old son in a car crash. We can’t evade the worst, only hope it doesn’t visit us. Chilling story this week, Rochelle.
LikeLike
Dear Dawn,
Although it wasn’t my intent, this story seems to have stricken quite a few raw nerves. This is based on a personal memory. They were kids who worked for my father, had actually just gotten off work. A drunk driver t-boned their car at the intersection by the DQ. I’d gone home thirty minutes before the accident. My dad was devastated. The girl I call Diane was like another daughter to him. I remember the boy I call Mike as a sensitive, gentle young man.
Life leaves no one unscathed.
Thanks for coming by.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Wow! I had no idea it was so personal. Such a devastating loss to so many! Thanks for filling in the blanks, Rochelle. xo
LikeLike
Hm…that should’ve read the DQ where I worked. My dad managed a Sirloin Stockade ten miles away. So if I’d not been off work I’d have witnessed the accident.
LikeLike
What unfailingly enhances my feeling of desolation in such cases, is the victim’s cluelessness. I always think of when they wake up and choose which socks and shoes to wear, not knowing that they will be the last pair they’ll ever wear. It’s this thought, always.
Very poignant and evocative.
Greetings from Greece!
Maria (MM Jaye)
LikeLike
Dear Maria,
I find your take equally evocative. The idea of putting on your socks for the last time…
Thank you for your kind words.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Chilling!
LikeLike
Thank you, Alice. 😀
LikeLike
Great story Rochelle
LikeLike
Thank you, Tena. Nice to see you here. 🙂
LikeLike
A very somber and heartbreaking post, especially due to it’s being based on a true story. I agree with the other commenters, the last line is a real clincher.
Shalom in your home!! 🙂 Beth
LikeLike
Dear Beth,
I’m always happy to hear when a story I wrote works even if it’s not a happy story.
Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I feel there was some little thing missing between “We owned the future” and “It wasn’t your fault, son.” Some device, some words, some space…..something to move time though joy to sorrow. The other side of “we laughed at nothing and everything.” Anyway, thank you for putting your story out there.
LikeLike
Dear Buddy,
These are good thoughts to ponder. The hundred word limit is a challenge, ie what do say, what not to say.
Thank you for coming by. Will you be joining us?
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Well done, yet so sad.
LikeLike
Dear MWAI,
Thank you for coming by and commenting. Some stories have no happy ending, do they?
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Poor Mike – not just his day ruined but his life, and several others.
LikeLike
Dear Liz,
Sad how life can turn on a dime, isn’t it?
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Dear Marie,
Once again you gave us enough information in 100 words to make the characters personal to the reader in this sad, tragic, and oft repeated true story. I remember being 12 ft. tall and bullet proof. As a youth, you believe you’re invincible.
– Walt
LikeLike
Dear Walt,
Well put. Although I remember going through a time after this particular accident where I was terrified to ride in a car. I was 15 when this happened. I didn’t get my driver’s license until I was 22.
Thanks for coming by.
Shalom,
Marie
LikeLike
What a sad ending…unfortuantely too true for so many, if not a graduation, a vacation or maybe just having gone out to shop or have an ice-cream. The impermanence of life is always a shock and a surprise…leaving those who stay behind the emptiness of their loss.
LikeLike
Well said, Georgia. Thank you for coming by.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Very timely for this time of year, and a good lesson anytime. Well done.
Here’s mine: http://unexpectedpaths.com/2014/05/30/friday-fictioneers-and-an-elegy/
LikeLike
Thank you, Maggie.
LikeLike
A thoughtful, painful story…
LikeLike
Thank you, Anne.
LikeLike
Sad. Lots in this one.
LikeLike
Thanks Neens. Nice to see you here. I’ve missed you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Thanks Rochelle, great to be back…. Hope to make it regularly again. Have been busy performing poetry and raising my profile offline, with barely time to blog the fountain, but now I seek inspiration and company and know I can obtain both from you and FF 😊
LikeLike
I was surprised by the ending! I was expecting a happy grad.
LikeLike
Dear Lily,
I wish it could’ve been a happy ending. Thank you for commenting.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
That’s a tragedy that crops up entirely too often.
LikeLike
True, Alice. Too true.
LikeLike
tough situation when the driver survives. you pulled together a very realistic story with the fine detailing. her pout that makes him change his mind and then it goes all wrong. i can see where him agonizing over this. . .
LikeLike
Dear Sun,
I can’t imagine what he felt. It is based on a personal memory. I don’t know whatever happened to “Mike.” He seemed to be one of those gentle, sensitive souls that could be tortured by the fact that he was driving.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
A sad tale indeed. I pictured American mid west whilst reading this. Well written
LikeLike
Dear Weltchy,
It happened in the American Midwest. Just a few feet from where I worked at a local Dairy Queen. Thankfully I missed witnessing it by about thirty minutes.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Touching tale, Rochelle. Grave news to be conveyed at Diane’s grave…
LikeLike
Dear Anita,
Thank you for your kind comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
The moment they piled into the car to celebrate I thought “oh no”. I was expecting the collision to be their fault, though.
Great last line, I heard real bitterness there. I hope he can get over it in time so that it doesn’t eat him up his whole life.
LikeLike
Dear Ali,
Stories like this are painfully a fact of life. it’s my hope that “Mike” was able to forgive himself.
Thank you for your affirming comments.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Succinctly written (just as well,seeing as its flash fiction!), goose-bumping, shiveringly (made up word?!…) excellent. Thank you.
LikeLike
Dear Virtually,
Your comments made me smile.
Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Excellent. Too bad such things do happen. Lucy
LikeLike
Hi Rochelle, Such a sad, sad story but written very well. I’ve been hit by a drunk driver, my son has been hit by one, Mike’s cousin Wally, nephews Jeremy, and David were killed by drunk drivers. It doesn’t make the loss any more sad – more like Mad! Great story though. Nan 🙂
LikeLike
Dear Nan,
Exactly. Mad. Angry. Appalled. I’ve another friend who was taken out by a drunk driver in more recent years. Why is it that nine times out of ten, the drunk walks away with a few scratches?
I’m sorry that this story is such a personal one for you.
Thank you..
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Well you didn’t pull any punches with this one. The young voices are really strong and playful, the ending such a flat contrast. So good.
LikeLike
Dear Sarah Ann,
It’s one of those events that seems to have touched us all in one way or another. No way to soften that kind of a blow.
Thank you for reading and commenting.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
A terribly sad story, Rochelle! It breaks my heart, especially that part about owning the future.
Well-done!
LikeLike
Dear Vijaya,
We’re invincible when we’re young, aren’t we?
Thank you for your kind words.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Dear Rochelle,
Brought back memories this one, of friends left behind early in life. I wrote something a few years back. I normally don’t post links to my blog when I comment but this one triggered some emotions http://tinyurl.com/n64p837
Regards,
Subroto
LikeLike
Dear Subroto,
Thank you for the link. A sobering reminder if not a wonderful piece of writing. You should think about submitting it somewhere. Seriously. And it brought another memory to my mind as well as the true story my story’s based on.
I had a friend I met when we were both in a support group. We kept in touch via the internet. Then she stopped writing. I chalked it up to her going back into treatment for she and her therapist had been discussing the prospect. After six months passed I began to wonder so I googled her name. In an eye-blink I was confronted with two newspaper articles and an obituary. She had been killed in a car accident. The drunk driver who hit her walked away with a few scratches.
Thank you.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Rochelle thank you taking the time to read and comment. I wrote it in a rare moment of introspection triggered by an online tiff between friends.
LikeLike
I work at a university… you see all those young people going around… learning to live… and sometimes to die. C’est la vie.
LikeLike
Dear Maru,
Sad when they to learn to die so young. Although I’m not sure that’s something that’s learned.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
They face a huge bunch of experiences, sometimes pretty tough ones. When I said ‘that’s life’ I meant the whole of life… Do they learn all they could? Depends on the person.
LikeLike
Very nice. The story’s brevity added to the ending’s punch.
I might give your Friday Fiction challenges a go!
LikeLike
Dear Kate,
Thank you for coming by and commenting. Do join us. 😀
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Hi. I didn’t notice that you had to ask permission to use your photos, but I put ‘Copyright Jennifer Pendergast’ as a caption to the prompt photo I put into my story. Is that OK with you?
Also, I wanted to heartily thank you for coming up with Friday Fictioneers. I am getting tons of readers, and 4 or 5 more followers! It’s a great idea, and it’s helping me and other writers read and write together. Thank you, thank you, thanks you!
LikeLike
Hi Grace,
All the copyright means is that you can’t use the photo for anything other than Friday Fictioneers. I WANT everyone to paste in the photo for their stories.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Oh, thanks.
LikeLike
What does shalom mean?
LikeLike
Literally “peace” and is used as greeting or farewell.
LikeLike
Cool.
LikeLike
It would be interesting if you posted that on your About page.
LikeLike
I’ll give it some thought. 😉 Where are you from, Grace?
LikeLike
What a great, albeit sad, short story. Well done. This is my first time participating. I was unsure of where to post my piece. I hope it is fine here: http://februaryst.wordpress.com/2014/06/01/photo-prompt-summer-winter/
LikeLike
Dear C.E.
Thank you for commenting on my story.
Welcome to Friday Fictioneers. Posting here is fine but the preferred is the link list which I see you’ve also done. No need to do both although there are some who do.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Thank you Rochelle. I saw the link after I commented, lol. Neat little service that linkup. Thank you for the warm welcome.
Aleikhem shalom.
LikeLike
A great story Rochelle. The second of its type this week from this prompt I believe. Or it could have been from mine last week. The days all seem to roll together at the moment LOL.
I like the way you ended it, with the “justice doesn’t work in this case”
LikeLike
Dear Al,
I’ve read them all and there were quite a few graduation and commencement themes but I’m not sure there was another just like it. I understand about the days rolling together.
Alas, this one’s based on a personal memory. And that’s another story. 😉
Glad you liked it. Thank you for your comments.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
I’m sorry to hear that 😦 Memories like that are the hardest.
I did mean with the accident and the death as a result of it.
On a good note, you are about to equal last week’s record, and hopefully tomorrow someone will post and break it 🙂
LikeLike
Could possibly happen. 😉
LikeLike
😀
LikeLike
Another superbly affecting story. There was something very bittersweet about the picture which you managed to channel perfectly.
LikeLike
Dear Etienne,
Your comments are kind and affirming. Thank you.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike
Now I am crying 😦 This was such a gut-wrenching read. So much hope and so much life and snatched away so prematurely. Lovely writing, Rochelle.
I was too late to add my link to the linkup, so if you have time, do stop by and read my take on the prompt:
http://shailajav.wordpress.com/2014/06/04/yearning-fridayfictioneers/
LikeLike
Dear Shailaja,
Thank you so much for your comments. It is sad and happens too often.
Going to read yours now.
shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLike