And He answered and said unto them, "I tell you that, if these should hold their peace, the stones would immediately cry out."

Friday, August 7, 2009

Carry On Tuesday # 12

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Welcome to Carry On Tuesday
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Your prompt for Tuesday August 4th
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Our prompt this week is the opening sentence from The Open Door by Elizabeth Maguire
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The story is in the journey,
not the destination
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Use all or part of it at the start or somewhere within your poem or prose.
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Kersen's Journey

He finally was used to the smell. A yellow smoke poured out of the living mountain and clouded his view of the stone. Only for a moment. He bent over and heaved the long rock into his basket.


The wind blew the smoke long enough for him to see Doni just down the hill. Kersen took a long drag off his cigarette and lifted his pick. It felt small and light, but in his hands, it did the job of chipping away just the right size of rock. Maybe it was the tool. Maybe it was the man.

After an hour of more of the same, Kersen lifted the pole on his back. Both baskets were full. Doni looked like he was finishing up so he put the pole down. No reason to carry it a second longer than he had to. Three hours journey up the slippery stones to the nearest kitchen. Then a couple of rests on the way. A quick meal and back down to the yellow vents.

Then one more trip to the kitchen and to cash. Double what the factory workers make.

One day he would be free of the mountain and pursue his dream, if his wife was true to him. And frugal. A typewriter, a table and chair, paper and stories of the men on the mountain.

It is said that the story is in the journey, not in the destination. Kersen's journey begins up and down the living mountain, one painful step at a time.


Copyright 2009 All Rights Reserved

For more creative stories, please click here.

I am new to Carry On Tuesday. Welcome to my little blog. Please leave a message and a link to your story, because I would love to come visit.

And for the record, this is a fictional man and worker but the job and the moutain are real in Indonesia.

5 comments:

George S Batty said...

This is a nice story about a part of life I never knew existed. You description was very good. I was smelling the Sulfur before I read the article about the volcano. they really have a tough life. thanks for enlightening me.

Anonymous said...

What an interesting story. Thanks for joining in this week, I hope you'll back.

venuss66 said...

A wonderful story.

Unknown said...

I happened to see it on television last night. I thought it was heartbreaking. They showed these men carrying baskets of sulfur up a winding path, which was a little edgy. Now the link shows them using a cart but what I saw, they carried baskets.

And they were happy because they were making so much money. $6/day. Double of a factory worker. In this day and age.

Unknown said...

Where were my manners? Thanks for stopping by!

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