Love Theories – Short
Stories Collection
By
C Clark Jefferson
Author Bio: C Clark Jefferson is author of Love Theories Short Stories Collection, correspondent, blogger, playwright, speaker and writing coach. She was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois and has been writing since the age of nine. She obtained her MBA from Keller Graduate School of Management and studied abroad in London, United Kingdom while attending undergraduate school.
http://www.dawritediva.com/
Blurb:
In
our lifetime, we all experience it. It’s that intimate tugging at
our heart that controls our thoughts and our actions. Love Theories
is a fly-on-the-wall moment into how others interpret and ultimately
function given varying heart-to-heart interactions involving the
universal feeling of LOVE.
Xiomora
is a bi-racial teen struggling to find her place in life. Antonia, a
recent college grad, meets a disc jockey and ends up in a world of
trouble. A blue-collar working Wyatt, battles an unfair system to
clear his name after his wife’s sudden disappearance. Majesty and
Ainslie, best friends, face life challenges but with different
responses. Jordan—the fearless, punctual, and sometimes ruthless
venture capitalist—stands her ground in a male dominated industry.
A Barbadian girl with big dreams leaves her home country in pursuit
of higher education in the United States. A career-driven Angelina,
once blinded by love, tries to give Cupid’s arrow another chance
despite her mother’s interference. And the list goes on along this
journey into the lives of an interracial couple, a culturally-biased
doctor, a fraud examiner who has to withdraw from a case that
involves her ex-lover, a rich man seeker, and a single mom who left
her former church on bad terms.
They
are each normal, everyday people, but they all are dealing with the
most common and universal emotion known to man. Love Theories asks
the question: How
do YOU equate LOVE?
Buy Link:
Excerpt:
In
The Middle
The
breezy weather blows the palm tree leaves in a mild way as the
green-violet colored hummingbird sucks out the nectar from one of her
neighbor’s plants. Out of nowhere, a large honey bee goes around in
circles, making loud buzzing noises while she’s moving in the
opposite direction, trying to fan the stinging creature away from
her. Obviously the Cotton Candy scented Calgon body mist she sprayed
after swim class caught the bee’s attention. Just like Calgon’s
slogan, she was hoping the day would could where someone would take
her away from the madness at home.
The
cookie-cutter, Orange County homes with driveways filled with cars,
motorcycles, and children playing in the nearby park, wasn’t much
different than the interior of her home. It was a neighborhood that
screamed of peace, comfort and security.
Looks
can be deceiving.
Before
reaching the steps to the house, a sharp pain rushed through her ear,
reminding her of that terrible day.
“Look at you. Rough hair, light eyes, thick lips and you’re much too big for a Chinese girl. You won’t make any friends. In my country, your kind is nothing more than peasant farmers.” Her mother spoke in a tone slightly above a whisper as her daughter’s eyes began to flood her face with tears.
“Look at you. Rough hair, light eyes, thick lips and you’re much too big for a Chinese girl. You won’t make any friends. In my country, your kind is nothing more than peasant farmers.” Her mother spoke in a tone slightly above a whisper as her daughter’s eyes began to flood her face with tears.
“Showing
feelings means no self-control.” A grin appears moments before the
wooden spoon is swung across her daughter’s head. And to make
matters worse, this was her first day of starting kindergarten.
As
the door opens, she sees her mother mopping the kitchen floor. A curt
whisper of “hello” escapes her lips as she makes a beeline to her
room. The blinking cursor on the blank email silently mocked Xiomora
as she stared at the computer screen in front of her. Mei enters the
room without as much as a knock on the door.
“Is
something wrong?”
Xiomora
has been through this same routine enough times to know that
something’s behind the act of kindness coming from her mother’s
lips.
“No,
mother, nothing’s wrong.”
Mei
stares for a moment, but Xiomora continues to sit at the computer,
staring at nothing and praying that she could be left alone.
Immediately, the door is shut and Xiomora is happy as a clam in high
tide. At times, she feels like Waverly from The Joy Luck Club. Just
like Waverly, she’s criticized by her mother for having too many
American ways, which puts a relationship barrier between the two of
them. Just like Lindo Jong, Mei left her home country under
unfavorable terms and hasn’t gotten mentally acclimated with North
America. Bother Waverly’s and Xiomora’s mothers wanted them to
become a prodigy for showoff purposes.
Xiomora
goes to her Facebook account and her friends Svetlana, Kate, and
Moon’s pages. Svetlana’s part Russian and Native American. She
used to attend UHS with Xiomora, but her family moved to a small
British Virgin Island of Bequia to tend to their boating business.
She’s tall, blond, slim, piercing baby blue eyes and has the
typical directness of an Eastern European. Kate, on the other hand,
is popular, a teen model, fashionista, and a little envious of
Xiomora because her runway walk is better. Moon is the complete
opposite of all four. The raspberry colored haired, gothic-clothing
wearing Latino hodgepodge, likes to smoke and read about Astrology.
Xiomora looks at pictures of Kate’s modeling shoot on her page.
I
wanted to be a model, but she prefers the violin and I hate that
thing. She says inside her mind. Kate must have read her mind because
she sends a chat message to Xiomora.
“How’s
everything with you and your mom?” she asks out of pure concern.
“The
same,” Xiomora quickly responds without giving it a moment’s
thought.
She
then types, “Hello” in the small chat box to Moon, but she hasn’t
noticed that Moon has already logged out.
Svetlana
sends an inbox message to her.
Before
she could respond to her friend, she hears her mother’s footsteps a
distance away from the room. To be on the safe side, Xiomora abruptly
shuts down her computer. She then lays on her bed to listen to music.
Xiomora had used her savings from her allowance to buy a MP3/MP4
player so she could have a chance to listen to music that she liked.
She setup a password on her laptop to make sure that her mother
couldn’t repeat her previous action of deleting all her old songs
and replacing them with classical and traditional Chinese music.
“Mei,
why did you do that?” Mr. Greene was home from work early one day
and clearly not in the mood for nonsense.
Mei
proceeded to tell her father every associated superstition she could
think of as rationale for why she changed the music. Mr. Greene, on
the other hand, had no problem with the music selection she listened
to. His main concern as a parent was to keep her off the pole and to
make sure she didn’t follow the tradition of some of his trifling
sisters and nieces by depending on the government system for the rest
of her life. He was willing to work three jobs a day to make sure
that never happened.
“You’ve
been home all day, why is this house untidy?” Clyde asked his wife
in a mean manner.
Mei
remained silent.
Clyde
is offended, “Mei did you hear what I just said?”
Not
in the mood to be confrontational with him, she quickly spits, “I
was getting around to it.”
She
walks away without giving him a chance to ask anything else. Xiomora
is glad Mei was out of sight, so she resumes listening to her music
while Clyde walks to his study.
Later
that same day, Mei still tried to harass Xiomora. While behind the
sanctity of her closed bedroom door, Xiomora heard her mother’s
footsteps long before she came barging in.
The
weekend came and went. Monday evening came quicker than a black mamba
hunts down its prey. Xiomora had a light day at school, no homework
and she was in her room reading a fashion magazine. As usual her
mother was in one of her moments. “Why aren’t you reading music
sheets?” She sighed loudly when she noticed that the wooden spoon
hadn’t hit XiXi as intended. “When you come home, you are to
study violin.”
After
her initial questioning, Mei began to chastise Xiomora for not being
smart and dependent like traditional Asian girls and belittling her
for not having a GPA over 4.0.
“I’ll
excuse your ignorance since you are part of that other race.”
Not
believing what she just heard, Xiomora was speechless. Her father
happened to be standing behind his wife. He took off his glasses and
gave Mei a disgusted look before uttering, “What did you just say?”
No comments:
Post a Comment