Well, it's official, I don't like Mondays.
I've been procrastinating since last Thursday, telling myself I have to get the next part of one of my stories written, but I keep putting it off. I have to go to Africa, the Niger Delta to be exact. It can wait, I'm not ready for the steaming jungle and hostile villagers yet.
I didn't do anything on Sunday, and, as a writer, I guess that's not very good. I'm supposed to be writing a page, or a hundred or thousand words a day, just to keep the juices flowing.
And, suddenly, it's now Thursday again, or is it Friday - the days are all one big blur.
I'm not in the mood. I sit and stare at the computer screen, and nothing is coming. Is this the first sign of writer's block?
I dig out several articles on how to overcome it, and start putting their suggestions into action. No. No. Maybe.
No. I don't think it's writer's block.
Perhaps I need some inspiration so I go to my tablet playlist, spend 10 minutes trying to find the headphones carelessly discarded by one of my grandchildren the last time they were here.
And, yes, the tablet was left in the middle of playing a Minecraft video which has drained the battery. Now I can't find the charger!
Back at the computer, holding a dead tablet, and a pair of headphones, inspiration is as far away as the mythical light at the end of the tunnel. Today it is an oncoming express train.
Perhaps a pen and paper will work.
An idea pops into my head ….
Is it possible the passing of a weekend could change the course of your life? An interesting question, one to ponder as I sat on the floor of a concrete cell, with only the sound of my breathing, and the incessant screams coming from a room at the end of the corridor.
It was my turn next. That was what the grinning ape of a guard said in broken English. He looked like a man who relished his job.
What goes through your mind at a time like this, waiting, waiting for the inevitable?
Will I survive, what will they do to me, will it hurt?
The screaming stops abruptly, and a terrible silence falls over the facility.
Then, looking in the direction of where the screams had come from, I hear the clunk of the door latch being opened, and then the slow nerve-tingling screech of rusty metal as the door opens slowly.
Oh God, Oh God, Oh God, no.
No writer's block. But I have to stop watching late-night television
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