Florida retreat brings inspirations with excerpts
By
Emma Palova
EW
Emma’s Writings
Lowell,
MI – I am getting ready for my annual writer’s retreat in Florida. Each year in
February, I head down south to the Gulf coast to get some sunny inspirations
for my writings.
It
has become a tradition since the late 2000s to visit with my parents, who
winterize in Venice. Each year brings different insights; from dolphin
sightings, chats with fishermen to encounters with beach painters and sand
castle builders.
Two
of my favorite memories are of course from the beach. I was walking on the
beach, when French-speaking tourists asked me where is the west. The sun was
just setting on the horizon to our right. So, I pointed in that direction.
“Oui,
merci,” they shook their heads laughing.
The
other one is from Sharky’s Pier. I walked on the pier boardwalk to watch the
sunset.
It
was getting increasingly dark in the orange glow on the Gulf side, but the shore
was glistening in silver with the rising moon in the east. The contrast between
night and day was striking much like the characters in my stories. Some are
dark and shady from the very beginning like chief Will in the story “Chief” from
my new book “Shifting Sands: Secrets.” Copyright (2019) Emma Palova. Other
characters like manager Ricky go awry with time. Some characters shine bright
throughout the story like the Belrockton matron Doris in the story “Silk Nora.”
Nature
with its changing faces has always inspired me, as long as I can remember.
A
heart and a cross made from sea shells overgrown by beach grasses is a close third
runner up in the circle of inspirations.
“Start
asking yourself questions,” one of my former editors said.
Many
years later, I ask myself: “Who made that statement in the sand and for whom?
How come it lasted?”
Then,
there are golden nuggets from the Floridians who have never left sunny Florida.
“You
mean to tell us there is snow on the ground in Michigan?” guys asked me in disbelief.
“Plenty
of it. We have to stake the driveway for the snow plowing,” I said.
I
am looking forward to chatting with my parents about out immigration saga, now
spanning three generations.
I
love yoga on the beach with Elin Larsen and hundreds of her followers. Her DVDs
help me get through Michigan winters.
“Just
move,” Elin encourages.
Excerpts from the “Chief”
And now this mess just before the
holidays. In earlier years, he would light up to fight off the anxiety. He
couldn’t even do that anymore. Nervously, he tapped his fingers against his
thigh. He noticed he needed new pants.
Ricky in the meantime was staring blankly
into the Monday rain on Main Street. The rain mixed with a few snowflakes, and
his short drive to work was awful. And he wasn’t a good driver either. His
strategy was as always to wait out until the other side spills out all the
information putting him at the advantage. But this time it was taking longer
than usual. Ricky was afraid of eating the whole pencil. Plus, he had a long
day ahead of him with a meeting in the evening.
“I got a letter,” said the mayor pulling
out a folded sheet of paper.
Ricky looked directly at the mayor
fidgeting.
“Did you want to read it to me, Carl?”
asked Ricky, “or you just want to tell me?”
The mayor too knew how slick Ricky was
from previous dealings with him. He decided to be careful this time.
“It’s about the chief,” he said softly.
Of course, Ricky should have known right
from the get go that it was about the police chief. The other day when he was
getting a haircut at Salon 111, he overheard a conversation from the
neighboring chair.
That was another bad habit in his
portfolio: eavesdropping coupled with gossip.[EP1]
“The chief was trying to change something
in a file and he got caught,” said the cute redhead hairdresser leaning over
the head of the lady in the chair fluffing her blonde hair.
“What was he trying to change?” the blonde
raised her eyebrows looking at herself and at the redhead in the mirror.
Both of them stared into the mirror, as if
the answer was inside that piece of glass.
Ricky rubbed his forehead, as he tried to
chase away that scene from the salon from his mind. He knew it was going to be
a long day and a long week in Riddleyville when the salons and the bars start
buzzing with tidbits from the city hall.
“What about him?” Ricky looked up at the
mayor. “He called in sick or what? I know it’s Monday and he worked the Ladies
Night Out and the weekend. I don’t have a problem with him calling in.”
As always Ricky was trying to steer the
conversation in his preferred direction.
“Somebody else can fill in for him tonight
at the meeting,” he said. “I’ll take care of it.”
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