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A take on the fairy tale The Elves and The Shoemaker. |
The Elvori and The Storymaker Mike Wareing There was a title - Winterâs Echo - and nothing else. Sitting at his kitchen table Jeff stared at the laptop screen, willing inspiration to strike, but it steadfastly refused to come. A dozen times heâd started to write the story, and just as often heâd ended up deleting it all in despair. It was now two oâclock in the morning, hours since Claire had stormed off to bed and heâd angrily opened his laptop, determined to prove her wrong, to write the story that would finally sell. But he realised now that it was never going to happen. Claire had been right. He would never make it as a writer. Sheâd supported him all these years for nothing. With one last despairing glance at the two accusatory words on the screen, he made his way upstairs and climbed as silently as possible into bed, trying hard not to disturb Claire. She was asleep. Or pretending to be. It was noon the next day when he finally surfaced. Claire had gone to work early while heâd still been asleep. They hadnât spoken since the previous eveningâs argument. Lying there disconsolate Jeff had come to a decision. This was the end of his dream of being a writer. The time had come to grow up and face facts. Last night Claire had threatened to leave him. He was sure she hadnât meant it but it had scared him. The one thing that he was certain of, above all else, was that Claire was the single most important thing in his life. He couldnât risk losing her. He would get a proper job - a career. Intending to delete the Winterâs Echo document heâd left on his laptop last night - a practical demonstration of his new determination - Jeff hit a key on the keyboard to bring the screen back to life. He was going to look for jobs. As the screen lit up Jeff saw, not the two words heâd been expecting, but hundreds of them. He stared uncomprehendingly. Paging down a few times confirmed that it was exactly what it looked like: a short story. Winterâs Echo, it appeared, had been written. But that, of course, was impossible. He fell into the chair at the kitchen table and tried to consider the possibilities. Had he written it last night after all and somehow forgotten? Maybe heâd got up in middle of the night and written it â a kind of sleepwalking perhaps? He even considered the possibility that Claire had written it. But nothing he could think of seemed even remotely plausible. Eventually he gave up trying to think of explanations and read the story. Afterwards he sat back astonished. It was good, astoundingly so. It was set in a world named Elvor, an alternate reality so well-realised that, on finishing reading, Jeff felt a sudden strange kind of disconnection at suddenly finding himself back in the mundane surroundings of his ordinary kitchen. Elvor was a curious and beautiful land and the Elvori an odd ethereal people. Much of the background detail was merely hinted at, but the strength of its reality was such that Jeff felt completely immersed in it. The actual story was a strange and subtle thing, lyrical and profound, about the power of story itself. In Elvor story-telling was a complex and integral part of life and culture. The Elvori lived their lives by the stories they told and those that were told about them. It was almost a religious thing. There were individuals called Story Masters who governed the making of stories and seemed almost priest-like. There was so much peripheral detail that was never explained, as if the reader were expected to know it already, and this leant a great realism to the story. That evening Jeff showed it to Claire. âJeff, thatâs brilliant. Easily the best thing youâve written.â âThatâs the problem. I didnât write it.â âWhat do you mean?â Claire sounded disappointed. âIs this someone elseâs story?â âI donât know. Claire, this sounds crazy, but last night, after you went to bed, I tried to write something, a story, to prove to you that I could do it. But I couldnât. I couldnât write a thing except a title. I gave up and came to bed. Today when I looked at my laptop this story was there. I donât know how. I didnât write it. I canât explain it.â Claire looked at Jeff for a moment. âBut you must have,â she said. âI didnât.â âMaybe you wrote it and went to sleep and forgot that youâd written it.â Jeff shook his head. âOr you wrote it in your sleep.â âI donât know. I donât think so.â âJeff, come on. You must have written it. I certainly didnât and thereâs only the two of us in the house.â Jeff just stared blankly back at her. In the end they could find no explanation that worked. They settled eventually on a vague idea that Jeff had somehow written it sub-consciously, automatic writing or something like that. These things happened didnât they? They decided Jeff should submit the story anyway. It was too good not to. It was so good in fact that they agreed they should try the most eminent magazine in the field. And so next day, not without some considerable misgiving on Jeffâs part, Winterâs Echo by Jeff Stephens was sent off for consideration by the largest and best known publication in the field of fantasy and speculative fiction. Incredibly, just a few weeks later, the story sold. And not just that, but Jeff was also asked for more Elvor stories. The magazine felt certain that their readers would love Winterâs Echo and demand further tales of the Elvori. For a while Jeff and Claire forgot all about the true origin of the story and celebrated as if Jeff had actually written it himself. Claire believed in him once more and that gave Jeff the confidence to think he would be able to write more tales about the strange world of Elvor where story was life itself. However by the time the story was published a couple of months later, to great critical acclaim, Jeff was despondent again. Heâd tried in vain to come up with another Elvor story but nothing he could write himself came even remotely near to the brilliance and subtlety, the sheer heart-breaking beauty, of that first story. One night, in desperation, he plucked a title from the air - Dreams of the Silver Forest - typed it into his laptop and retired to bed. In the morning, after a restless night, he kissed Claire goodbye as she went to work and with some trepidation, not sure exactly what he was hoping for, he opened his laptop. There was another story there. Unbelievably it had happened again â whatever âitâ was. âThereâs something really weird going on here, Claire.â âYouâre absolutely positive you didnât write this?â âThereâs no way I could write anything that good.â âWell, I donât know, Jeff. I think youâve just got to go along with this until we can work it out.â âSend it in you mean?â âWell they wanted more Elvor stories.â âBut itâs not my story to sell, Claireâ âI donât think you have a choice. Itâs too good to keep to ourselves.â And she was right. The new story built on the first one and developed further the world of Elvor. More details were revealed, more insights into its complex culture of story. And so once again Jeff submitted it and once more it sold. And so it continued. The stories kept coming and they kept selling. All Jeff had to do was provide a title. The years passed and Jeffâs reputation in the world of fantasy fiction was assured. He and Claire married. They moved to a nicer home. Theyâd discovered that the phenomenon was not linked to any one particular place. Wherever Jeff was the stories would appear. Gradually, over time, he and Claire came to realise exactly where the stories were coming from, and who was responsible for them. In the end, of course, it was all very obvious. The truth was right there in the tales, had been from the very first one. They grew to accept the situation and to enjoy Jeffâs success and the rewards that it brought, though they were fully aware at all times that it could all be taken away from them as easily as it had been given. âAfter all,â Claire would reason with him. âItâs not as if youâve deliberately stolen someone elseâs work. The stories have been given to you like some kind of gift.â For what purpose neither of them could ever begin to imagine. But it couldnât last. Eventually Jeff became dissatisfied with his undeserved success and he knew he was reaching some kind of turning point. The recent stories had been making lots of things perfectly clear to him. There was a lot of detail in there about the hidden paths between worlds and how to find them, how to travel them. There was a decision to be made. After weeks of deliberation however, he had finally come to realise that, in actuality, there was no real decision to make at all. There never had been. It had all been leading to this. There was only one thing to do and he knew he had to do it. It was time to take control, to craft his own future, to make his own story. That evening he talked it over with Claire. Not entirely to his surprise he discovered that she had been feeling the same way herself for some considerable time and she readily agreed. He spent the whole of the next day writing. For the first time ever it came easily, almost as if the story had been given to him in the same way as all the others. But this time he knew it was his, it was his own creation, his own work. His own story. Once heâd finished he showed it to Claire. She read it through. âItâs perfect,â she said, and kissed him. Leaving the laptop open on the kitchen table they went to bed and held each other and waited for the morning. Beginnings by Jeff Stephens One cold and clear morning in mid-spring â a crisp echo of the bitter season just passed â the would-be Storymaker and his beautiful wife, led by unseen Elvori guides, walked out of their home, perhaps forever, and stepped hand-in-hand into the Silver Forest⌠|