Okay, inadvertently I ended up with another tale from Tricky, but every day I am getting more clarity about what her story will be telling me.
The General Guidelines can be found here.
How to create a clickable link in Blogger comments can be found on lasts week's post here.
There is also a Facebook group for Mid-Week Flash, if you fancy getting the prompt there.
Jumping Through Time
Bollox! That would teach her to muck about
with things she shouldn’t. She could see him coming in the distance and needed
to work fast.
The mirrors worked, she knew that, but she
couldn’t be sure she’d set them to the right frequency; if it was wrong whoever
was coming would be in for a nasty shock.
She could see his red shorts and those
luminescent funny-shaped shoes they wear with the laces off centre; she’d seen
them last time she’d travelled through that particular mirror. It had been a
strange place, full of buildings all crowded together and machines that spewed
nasty toxins into the air – and all these people running.
She’d tried to work out what they were
running from or to, but couldn’t. And they wore different clothes from people
who weren’t running. She even saw huge posters up on walls displaying those
shoes and people running in the background. Maybe it was some kind of fashion,
thankfully lost in the annals of time, never to return – at least not to her
time.
She shuffled the other mirror round on the
wet sand, trying to put them where they’d meet in the right place. It should
only feel like he tripped on something and almost fell when he came through.
The water surrounding them reflected the sky so he should only experience a bit
of disorientation for a few seconds before (hopefully) rejoining the road on
the other side.
She could hear him breathing now as he ran.
Was she right? He was just one of those running people, wasn’t he? She really
hoped nothing was chasing him; she wasn’t prepared for two of them to jump
through, that would create a problem. She hadn’t calculated for two; the rift
wouldn’t hold.
She could hear the footfalls now, thumping
on the wet sand. She held the mirror steady as it shook with his arrival. She
put a hand on the other mirror making sure they remained lined up. His
breathing was in her ear and she heard a grunt as he broke through, with a sort
of yell that turned into a yip as he almost somersaulted through into the other
mirror. She heard his feet land heavily in the other mirror, and a few
stumbles, then he was running again.
But he glanced over his shoulder for a
second and caught her eye. She was sure he had looked straight at her and seen
her.
She shuddered. No, it was just a trick of
the light. He couldn’t have known she was there. Surely not, unless … unless he
wasn’t just one of those running people, someone for her to experiment on; what
if he was an agent sent by Carter? What if he was clued up on what she was
doing?
Arse! Damn her tricky mind and its
whisperings.
She put the mirrors together and shoved
them back into her carpetbag. She stumbled in her rush to stand, her knees stiff
from being in the residue water the tide had left behind. She needed to get
back and think about this, and needed to do it in a safe place – her home being
the only one. He couldn’t reach her there.