Sick day

Any thought that my Monday would be more productive than my Sunday was wiped away in the first few minutes, when I realized, hey, I think I’m sick, and I decided to call the doctor for an appointment rather than go into work. What I have seems to be a slight sinus infection — no real fever to speak of, but chills and tiredness all day, a general feeling of ugh. I probably would have shuffled off to work despite all that, if it hadn’t been for the slight pain along my left jawline that seemed to suggest sinus infection rather than just cold.

So I spent most of the morning sleeping, off and on watching more television — the current season of Supernatural, mostly, though also the latest episode of The Killing — and I’m on antibiotics for the week, which will hopefully kick out anything and get me feeling better.

I’m going to try to turn in early tonight — I’m still pretty tired — but I expect to be back at work tomorrow.

In which my Sunday is spent mostly watching TV

I was going to join my weekly writing group, then go see Thor with them afterward, but our plans fell apart. Maybe next week. I spent the day mostly watching television, or at least it seems so in retrospect. I watched the last two episodes of Fringe — which was a lot of fun, if in the end a little disappointing — the latest episode of Doctor Who — which had its moments but…well, next week’s Neil Gaiman-penned episode looks really good — and a couple episodes of Supernatural and Misfits. Oh, and the most recent episode of How I Met Your Mother. I think that’s it. On paper, it sounds horribly unproductive, but it was a pleasant enough day off, lots of good weather all around. I went for a walk, and listened to the Selected Shorts reading of Dan Chaon’s “The Bees” — a haunting story that knocked the wind out of me even though I’d read it before. And I more or less finished the Sunday crossword.

So, maybe not the single most incredible or exciting Sunday — I’d have liked to have done more writing, more reading — but nevertheless enjoyable.

And a happy Mother’s Day, to mine and yours and all mothers.

Monday

You see what I get for saying nothing interesting happened yesterday? It’s sort of like that time in Austin, Texas, when I told the friends I was staying with for the week that I hadn’t really seen anything weird all week…and then we proceeded to see a truck on fire at the side of the road not ten minutes later.

I was actually in the middle of watching an episode of AMC’s The Killing when the news last night broke, and don’t think there wasn’t a tiny part of my brain that wondered, “What would they have announced if I’d been watching A Game of Thrones? Or How I Met Your Mother?” It’s a weird feeling, being glad that someone is dead, but it’s hard not to want to put a little chalk mark in the victory column over it.

Meanwhile, today was every bit a Monday. Nothing very inter–

You know what? I’m not going to tempt fate. I think I’m just going to go to bed.

Such a Sunday as this

Not the most eventful Sunday, but a pleasant one nevertheless.

I finished the Sunday crossword. I watched an episode of Fringe and of Doctor Who. I liked them both, but the former may be laying on the “faith is better than science” a little too thick, and the latter may be doing the same with the “this is all deeply portentous and convoluted foreshadowing for what’s to come.” But still, quite enjoyable. I finally finished writing this, my thoughts on Lev Grossman’s novel The Magicians, and I wrote something else, sillier but more fun, with my weekly writing group:

It wasn’t love that sent Joyce to the island. When she looked back on it, it wasn’t even lust. Pierce had been attractive enough, in a vague, if-you-liked-that-sort-of-thing kind of way, but Joyce hadn’t been marooned on the island for ten years, cut off from all society and — if she was being really honest with herself — going slowly crazy, because of some schoolgirl crush. She had come here, and been stuck here, because of that damn stolen weapon, the Jeweled Blade of Semerkhet, which Pierce had somehow convinced her he had tracked to the island, following a direct trail from pharaoh’ s tomb to grave robber to pirate lair. When Joyce looked back on it, a schoolgirl crush would have been less embarrassing.

Now that he was dead, finally dead, and she had access to his journals, the writings that for those first eight months on the island he had kept hidden from her, Joyce knew the simple truth, that Pierce had of course been lying. There was no Blade of Semerkhet. Pierce wasn’t even an Egyptologist, unless you counted a failed half-semester in some unnamed state school’s history department, where he’d been kicked out for…well, something. Pierce’s scribbled notes, especially near the end, had never been exactly clear. He had been transcribing scraps of his life story for posterity — certainly not for her benefit — but even his more lucid moments, the few the venom in his bloodstream allowed him, were filled with half-truths, misdirections, and bold-faced lies.

That, as Joyce had learned the night their ship crashed onto the island, was just who Pierce was. He was a man with only a casual acquaintance with the truth, who would spin any tale — however elaborate, however ridiculous — just to get what he wanted. Unfortunately, that made her the dumb girl who had believed all the lies.

Knowing the truth hadn’t exactly found her a way home.

But at least she could find some satisfaction in knowing that she was the one who had finally ended Pierce’s life.

And that was my Sunday.

Saturday

Today, I mailed out contributor and subscriber copies of the latest issue of Kaleidotrope. I got a haircut. I cleaned a little. I wrote a little. I saw a little bit of the royal wedding, on repeat, finding myself more interest in the architectural grandeur of Westminster Abbey itself than any of the rest of it. (I wasn’t able to go inside when I was in England.) And I watched Birdemic: Shock and Terror, although I don’t think I could have made it through the film with a little help from RiffTrax.

So that was my Saturday.