Net Work Book Club discussion
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A Drabble fever - share yours.
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Suze
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May 24, 2014 12:43AM

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ps. What is the IBB newsletter?


Uzi, a family of Israeli open bolt blowback operated sub machine gun, first introduced to the IDF in 1954. From the 1960s through the 1980s, more Uzi submachine guns were sold to more military, law enforcement and security markets than any other submachine gun ever made.



The latest in the Murder Drabbles series has been posted in the Indie Book Bargains newsletter (you can sign up for the newsletter here: http://www.indie-book-bargains.co.uk). If you've missed the previous drabbles (a drabble is a story that is exactly 100 words long) then you can read them all here:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/p/m...
Keeping the Story Straight
The two detectives questioned me all afternoon, my earlier evasiveness had caught their attention so now I had to placate them with truth.
I told them I’d been in the park, but I hadn’t seen anything and that I hadn’t said anything because I hadn’t known about the murder. I think the fat one intuited that I wasn’t saying everything, but I stuck to my story and without evidence they couldn’t hold me.
Eventually they let me go, that wouldn’t be the end, so I would have to be much more careful the next time I indulged in my delights.


Vickers Medium machine gun, is a name primarily used to refer to the British water cooled .303 machine gun produced by Vickers limited for the British Army. The weapon had a reputation for great solidity and reliability. Ian V. Hogg, in Weapons & War Machines, describes an action that took place in August 1916, during which the British Army's 100th Company of the Machine Gun Corps fired their ten Vickers guns continuously for twelve hours. Using 100 new barrels, they fired a million rounds without a single failure. "It was this absolute foolproof reliability which endeared the Vickers to every British soldier who ever fired one.


Time Stoppage
by Andrew Lawston
Red or blue? Wayne Rooney snipped the blue wire, and released a breath he didn't know he was holding. Two minutes left.
Van Persie punched the air. "One more and it's disarmed! Manchester saved!"
Wayne's dextrous fingers blurred over the bomb's spaghetti innards, but he was shaking his head. "No good, I need three more minutes!"
With a soft click, the countdown flashed back to five minutes.
"Impossible! Unless..." Both men turned to the dressing room door, where a figure stood bathed in light.
"I come back to you now," said Sir Alex Ferguson, "at the turn of the tide."
(my drabbles can all be found at http://drablr.com/alawston)


White phosphorus, also known as WP, Willie pete, and Fenian Fire. First purposely manufactured by the British Army in grenade form in 1916. White phosphorus grenades were especially valued in Vietnam for destroying Viet Cong tunnel complexes as they would burn up all oxygen and suffocate the enemy soldiers sheltering inside.



We continue the macabre journey through the alphabet with the latest in the ABC Drabbles of Death series. This week we reach the letter 'E' and while it's an obvious choice it was a lot of fun to write! If you haven't read the previous drabbles in the series then you can read them all here:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/p/w...
If you hunger for more short stories or flash fiction then I know just the place - come and join the dediacted Facebook group only a click away:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/short...
And now it's time to see what people are made of...
E is for Eviscerate
These days I prefer to use a hook. I started with a knife and that works fine. Too easy for my taste, I like there to be some skill. A hook takes more effort, a good swing to get it in, and then a yank to pull everything out.
There’s a knack to not nicking the bowels on the way in, not a pleasant smell if you do I can tell you!
The highlight for me is watching them weep and try to stuff everything back in. How it all ever fit inside is a wonder if you ask me.

Xiphos is a double edged single handed sword used by the ancient Greeks, it was a secondary battlefield weapon after the spear or javelin. According to Stones glossary, the name xiphos apparently means something in the way of "penetrating light. The leaf shaped design lent its self to cutting and thrusting.

I like it, and didn't realise just how many weapons were out there, which is pretty naive of me really, especially after years of reading murder books.


Xiphos is a double edged single handed sword used by the ancient Greeks, it was a secondary battlefield weapon after the spear or javelin. According to Stones glossary, the ..."
Ouch, it sounds like one of those knives the gangs use with notches cut into the blade for maximum damage.

Yo Yo, It is a Tagalog word, the native language of the Philippines, and means "come back". The design was larger and heavier than todays Yo Yo and the rope was considerably longer. It was used for hunting and as a weapon from the 1400's. For hunting it was thrown at the animals legs to tangle them. As a weapon it was either dropped or thrown on an enemies head.


Zyjlon B, a cyanide based pesticide developed in the 1920's by a german scientist. It was used infamously in the German gas chambers for both the Auschwitz-Birkenau and Majdanek extermination camps during the holocaust of WWII. It was a powder that reacts when it comes in contact with water. It is said that death could take up to 20 min from initial exposure, but at least 1/3 died almost immediately, depending on there proximity to the vent.



The latest drabble (a 100 word story) in the Tales of the Imp series was posted in Friday's Indie Book Bargains newsletter. Visit www.indie-book-bargains.co.uk to sign up for the newsletter and receive a daily drabble and UK Kindle bargains.
If you haven't read the previous drabbles in the series then you can read them all here:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/p/t...
If you want to read the origin story for the Imp, you'll find it in the Off the KUF collection of short stories:
http://amzn.to/1nT0qo2
While the Cat’s Away
Happy days are here to stay! The Imp departed on secret business, I had the whole night without his interference.
I wore my cleanest shirt; a bit rumpled, but never mind. A splash of aftershave and I was ready. I arrived at the restaurant an hour early, so did she.
Drinks and food passed by in a blur and here we are in the bedroom and oh my word I’m trembling with excitement. She is too; it’s going to be amazing. Naked we embrace and an unwelcome shrill voice pipes into my ear.
“What’s going on here then?”
Damn him!


It bothers me knowing that some scientists are actually trying to create something which will affect and destroy peoples lives.







Our deadly march through the alphabet continues and this week I thought I'd avoid the obvious choices. In fact it's almost a whimsical choice! If you've not read the previous drabbles (100 word stories) in this series then you can read them all here:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/p/w...
And if that isn't enough to satisfy your flash fiction or short story needs then come and join the Facebook group dedicated to those forms and discover some more fantastic reads:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/short...
And now let's find out how dangerous a finger can be...
F is for Finger
I know what you’re thinking. A finger can’t kill you. How wrong you are! With a finger I can pull a trigger and BANG, you’re dead. Okay, that would be cheating. How about this?
A sly diversion and a finger jabbed straight in your eye! I’m nervous on the first attempt, so it’ll only hurt a bit. There’ll be a struggle so I can get a clear shot and try again. I’ll keep jabbing until your eye is a wet mess and I stab through your retina and into your brain.
It’s not easy, but a finger can kill you.

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