For Our Fathers:
Social revolution is never easy. Most times change is printed in the blood of the revolutionary as it is in blue or black ink and as we well know, history is written by the victor in both mediums.
When the wars had first started I had been but a child barely past my third birthday. Too young to comprehend why the world had gone mad but old enough to remember the three men who had taken my father away: Two hard eyed young men in the muted greens and grays of the guard, the third in a mud stained great coat and peeked officer's cap of a commissar. Now that I think back on it I think it was the look on the Commissar’s face, the expression I can only describe as cold, inhuman, determination that frightened me most. Frightened me more than the impossibly large hellguns that his companions carried.
My father had turned to us then, my older brother Darwin and I, knelt then gathered us up in his arms. I can still hear his voice, gruff with emotion, as he whispered words of comfort I can't quite remember. My mother joined us in the embrace, I can still remember the sensation of warm tears dampening my hair and the back of my neck; and then with a bark from the man of stone, the Commissar, my father was gone, disappeared into the glow of the outside world through the hab door.
*******This is a short story I've been working on for a while, obviously science fiction and admittedly (unrepentantly I might add) a fan fiction. It's actually something I started writing for a creative writing class here at school through a random prompt given by the teacher and it just took off and I grew really, really fond of the idea and the concept. Thus I decided once I was done with the class I'd just keep writing, just keep going and see where the character's story would lead her. However on the last portion of the short story tragedy struck: My pen drive became corrupted and I had to scrap everything I was doing and start again, this time around with a heavy time constraint.
I finished the assignment and made it to the jumping off point for the rest of the story but it wasn't nearly as flushed out or in depth as it's previous incarnation. I had vowed that I would start again, revamp that last section and grant it the detailed look it deserved but that was almost a year ago now.
I'm not entirely sure I can pick the story up again, not because I want too, but because I fear I really don't have time or can't give the piece the depth I want to give it. When I write, I'm my own worst critic when I reread something I've completed. Maybe it's a flaw? I'm not sure, but every now and then I look at this little bit of work and think "maybe in a few days...I'll be able to hammer out the kinks."
Ultimately I hope that I'll be able to finish it to a point where I'm satisfied with how things turned out.