Happy December! I thought I was done posting for the year, but it turns out I have more to share.
My friend Robyn Baker at The Ink Grove on Substack publishes monthly writing prompts, and it occurred to me these would be great ways to practice scene structure. I’d use each one to compose a single working scene with all the requisite elements, as a little composition separate from any longer, more serious WIP and meant simply to develop my skills. It seemed like a constructive endeavor and another way to have some fun.
So, on Thanksgiving night, I drafted a scene for Robyn’s November prompt: to write anything in a genre of choice that included a photograph, an unexpected guest, and Thanksgiving dinner.
It was a blast, and I kept gravitating back to this little piece, developing and editing it for a couple days afterward.
I decided to share it here for a few reasons. First, to hold myself accountable in this new practice. Second, to get more comfortable with vulnerability and imperfection. Finally, to share what Robyn’s doing with a few more people.
So, here is my scene for her November prompt. I should have shared it much sooner, but I started it late, we were traveling home from Newport, and then we all got sick. Oh, well. The world’s an imperfect place.
I hope you enjoy this little narrative of contemporary fiction, about a woman whose carefully curated solitude is challenged when an unexpected knock offers the possibility of connection, if she has the courage to hope again.

A CANDLE and a KNOCK
In her tiny living room, Tess sat down at the little round table made of particle board. She’d covered its cheapness with an ivory damask tablecloth, its sheen reflecting the warm lamplight, and she’d placed on it her grandmother’s sterling silver candlestick and crystal vase, filled with burgundy, mauve, and gold-colored mums. Beyond the table, a downhill view of Main Street ending at Lake Champlain, long and gray and still, filled the bottom half of her third-floor window.
Tess had already poured herself a generous amount of Gallo pinot grigio and served food on only her china plate: rolled slices of Boar’s Head smoked turkey, plus servings of green bean casserole and mashed potatoes made from scratch because, why not? And though she was alone, the table would have looked lopsided with only a place set for herself, so she’d laid out matching dinner, roll, and salad plates—the sage Wedgewood a steal from a Waterbury antique shop—plus cutlery, wine glass, and linen napkin on the other side too, for the sake of symmetry. She planned to take a couple pictures on her phone, for posterity. To prove she was, in fact, using what little she had to curate a new, lovely life entirely on her own terms.
Maybe she would post the best pic on her new Insta, if it didn’t feel too weird or pathetic.
But instead of reaching for her phone, perched on a thick library book within arm’s reach, she picked up an old photograph next to her dinner knife. It was an image captured on real film a decade ago, and it had spent years pressed between a page and a plastic sheet in her parents’ album before Tess discovered it.
In the photo, she stood in graduation robes between her linen-suited mother and her robed father, his ceremonial attire matching her own. The university had awarded them both their bachelor’s degrees that day, and in the picture, his gray and her blonde head were tilted toward each other, touching.
That short span of years when her mother was still healthy, her father sober, and everyone beamed.
The picture would be a perfect relic if her then-boyfriend Brad, now her ex-husband, hadn’t taken it.
Well, she couldn’t change that. And really, it didn’t sully all the joy she remembered from that day. Not really. She could still recall the pockets of air beneath her heels, that strange sense of power and possibility. That feeling that if she and Dad just bent their knees deeply enough and leapt, they could touch the sun.
A phantom hand squeezed her heart. It ached almost as much as any cramp, and she slid the photo between the candlestick and silver pepper shaker, the image disappearing in the angle of the wafer-thin photo.
Swiping her cheek, she reached for her phone. Dwelling on any of that was stupid; it wouldn’t bring any of them back.
Instead, she’d snap a quick picture of her table, then disappear for a while as she ate and read her book. She wanted the peace and quiet of a solitary evening, in truth. It was restful. She was just fine on her own.
Happy Thanksgiving.
“Crap.” She hadn’t lit the beeswax taper in the candlestick. She couldn’t take a proper picture without the wick lit.
Tess stood up to hunt for a book of matches, and someone knocked twice at the front door. Quick and staccato.
She paused, then crossed the room quietly. Rising onto the balls of her bare feet, she saw through the peephole a magnified length of blue and a smaller head of brown.
The hell?
Why was he here?
She was a little dizzy.
The thought of making even short, polite conversation with her landlord’s electrician drained what serenity she’d mustered.
But, Josh was a nice guy, despite his couple of crooked teeth. The last thing she wanted to do was be rude to him on a holiday. He’d probably just forgotten something. A thing from his toolbox, a drill attachment or something. This old Queen Anne Victorian, converted into multiple residences, was undergoing a fresh round of renovations. Josh didn’t strike her as the careless type, so of course he’d come back for something he’d forgotten when he’d worked on her apartment earlier that week.
She could pretend to be out.
If she was quiet long enough, he’d go away.
That would be easier. She could get back to her food and the bloated escapism that was A Breath of Snow and Ashes.
She glanced over at the table. The empty chair. Empty plates and glasses opposite her own, gleaming and cold. Beyond the window, the massive stillness and silence of the lake. No boats on the water today. Not even a train pulling in or out of the station down at the lake’s edge.
She considered the hours of silence to come. The long night.
She might go the entire weekend without speaking to anyone. Such a thing was entirely possible, these days.
Gingerly, she turned the top lock. Her stomach clenched at the scrape and click. Now he knew she was there. She turned the cold knob and opened the door, just enough to lean out, her chest tight.
“Hey, Josh.”
“Hi, Tess. I hope I’m not bothering you.” He flashed her a tentative, close-mouthed smile.
“No.”
She opened the door a little wider, still leaning out. It felt wrong to let him see her bare toes. It’d been ages since she painted them. And she was wearing nothing but loose yoga pants and an old V-neck top, no bra. She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear, locks slipping from the clip, and kept her chest hidden lest he see the shape of her nipples against the shirt’s fabric.
“Did you forget something?” she asked.
“I—” He pulled his chin back and laughed. A brief, sharp sound. “Well…” He clasped his hands together. “This is embarrassing. I was around, and I thought I might actually take you up on your offer. Though please, no pressure if you’re busy.”
“My offer?”
Her mind scanned back over their exchanges that week, remembering mostly his words, though nothing beyond the usual Good morning, I’ll be working on the wiring today, I’ll keep this door propped, will the drilling bother you?
Her responses: Would you like a bottled water? I’ll be out for a while… See you tomorrow…
“The potatoes?” he ventured. “The ones you were going to make from scratch?”
“Oh!” A wave of heat engulfed her. That’s right. She’d made an off-hand comment about mashing potatoes by hand, and all the heavy cream and garlic she needed. The recipe would make a ton, she’d said, and she’d be happy to share them with him.
She’d meant as leftovers in Tupperware of course, to give him the day he came back for work, but she hadn’t said that part out loud. And really, it had just been chatter to fill the space between them while he’d been on a break from updating the third-floor wiring. He’d sipped from a water bottle, lingering in her doorway, his eyes never leaving her.
And he’d recently switched from “Ms. Thetford” to her first name. After she’d made him coffee one morning, and they’d chatted a little on his break about embossed tin paneling and the ceiling rose around the old chandelier in the building’s foyer. He seemed to know a lot about old houses. He’d also begun to tease her, lightly, occasionally, after she’d called him her “Go-to House Prof.”
Usually, during the day, she looked better. Hair brushed, some powder, mascara, and lip gloss on, wearing fresh jeans and a turtleneck and vest, maybe. Stud earrings or tiny hoops. With him around, she’d started to make some effort. Today he’d caught her barefaced, her chest floppy in this dull old shirt.
A coat was draped over his arm, and his clothes, usually well-worn, earnest Carhart, were now anything but, though his button-down was a shade too bright, and his jeans, though clean and ironed, looked unfashionably faded, and she’d hardly call his scuffed boots nice. He smelled a little too strongly, too, of… Acqua di Gio?
Holy hell.
She squeezed the doorknob.
He looked like he was dressed for a date.
With her?
Was that what he thought this was?!
Holy fucking hell. Her armpits were hot.
He’d been scanning what he could see of her with his eyes, trying, it seemed, to read her thoughts in her own appearance.
“My apologies.” He stepped back, crimson coloring his cheeks. “I didn’t mean to interrupt you. I’ll head out.” He smiled again, weakly, and hitched his thumb toward the staircase. “I planned to go see my kid, anyway.”
“Give me just a sec!” She held up a finger and closed the door, though she didn’t click it all the way shut. She grabbed a cardigan off the hat stand and slipped into it. She let down her hair, fluffed it, then re-twisted it tightly, refastening the clip.
Okay. So he thought this was a date of some kind. She could do this. She could let him in, even just fix him a container of potatoes to go, if things were too crazy awkward. She would not come across like some thoughtless, disinterested bitch.
That scent.
Fresh, citrusy.
His square shoulders. Veins running visibly under the freckled skin of his well-shaped forearms. The sensual spiral of a dark tattoo. The softness of his tone.
He also had a suspicious gauntness in his pale face, and not for the first time, she wondered about his private life. Did he use any drugs? Was he a recovered addict? From fentanyl, or something else? Around his eyes and cheekbones, he bore creases and shadows he seemed too young for, and he was a tad on the skinny side. Was she being horribly prejudiced?
But, he wasn’t bad looking.
She’d already admitted that to herself.
No ring on his finger, though Jeez, he had a child; that was a lot.
But he seemed to have his life together.
He was kind.
She dragged in a breath, a hand on her chest, willing everything behind her sternum to soften.
Don’t overthink this. Don’t automatically turn this into something it’s not, or not yet…
He wasn’t holding flowers or a bottle of wine, like a man should if he were coming over for a dinner date. Damn, maybe she was misreading all of it. He might be on his way somewhere else and really just want some food on the run. Maybe he didn’t want to sit down to eat with her, after all. Maybe he’d try to pawn the potatoes she gave him off as his own contribution to someone else’s meal. Maybe this was some elaborate strategy to get away with as little holiday cooking as possible. Wouldn’t that be just like a man?
“Tess?” He called quietly from the other side of the door.
Outside, beneath her window, something shattered on the concrete. Muted voices argued.
Maybe he would just use her.
Was she okay with that possibility?
But maybe he won’t.
She opened the door wider, reappearing before him. “You don’t need to go yet, not if you’re not in a hurry.” She gestured, continuing, “Please, come in. I do definitely have a lot of potatoes. Way more than I can eat.”
Her voice was too shrill, her gesture too big.
“Thank you,” he said softly, moving past her.
Closing the door, she tried to crack a joke. “You’re not actually a sun-tolerant vampire, right? Because if you are, be careful. There’s an eff ton of garlic in these potatoes.”
He was already in the room, looking at the elegant table. He looked back at her. “Too late, you’ve let me in.” His smile was easier now. A little more confident, but still warm and sweet. “I think I can probably handle the garlic.”
The issue of a post-garlic kiss materialized suddenly in the air between them. But, of course, Tess wouldn’t go there.
Josh didn’t, either.
“Oh,” he said instead, digging into the pocket of his coat. “Before I forget, this is for you.”
He handed her a small cellophane bag with a familiar deer logo, tied with a little orange ribbon.
“Nonpareils! I love these!”
“I noticed you eating them the other day.”
She giggled. “I shouldn’t, but they’re irresistible.” She held the little bag to her chest. “My dad used to buy these for me. ‘Chocolate snowcaps,’ he called them. We’d eat them together.”
“Dads are kind of awesome like that.” Now, his smile had a quiet, knowing look.
She nodded. “They are.” Her throat threatened to close.
He tilted his head, regarding her. “You look pretty, Tess.”
The way he said her name, this time. Like it was full on his tongue.
“Your hair is nice,” he continued, “twisted up like that.”
It took every bit of control she had to look him directly in the eyes without her own welling up. “Thank you, Josh. This is so… well, thoughtful.”
She wasn’t sure if she meant the compliment, or the candy, or simply his presence.
A fresh warmth had suffused the room. Tess felt it tingling the tips of her ears and the back of her neck. Even the skin on her arms, beneath her sweater.
Josh waved his hand in casual dismissal, but his bright eyes were larger, more pleased.
“I’m gonna go stash these with my other sweets.” She turned quickly away, stepping into her galley kitchen where he couldn’t see her, taking yet another moment to collect herself. She also rifled quickly through all the drawers.
Maybe she was foolish. But, suddenly, she was so damn grateful she’d set that second spot. It was cringey, sure. It probably looked odd or pathetic or still, somehow, overeager, even though he’d figured out she hadn’t expected him.
But at least now it’s not all so sad.
She had a spot for him, possibly. If he wanted to stay.
“Do you happen to have a lighter?” she asked, returning to the living room.
“I think so.” He dug into his other coat pocket and pulled out a black Bic. “I smoke a cigarette every now and then. Just cigarettes, and I’m trying to quit completely.”
“It’s ok.”
She took the lighter, flicked it, and lit the candle.
“Let me get you some food.” She set the Bic down and picked up his empty dinner plate, adding, “Please, sit down.”
Her feet were buoyant on the wooden floor, and over her shoulder, she flashed Josh what she hoped was a dazzling, flirty smile. The high tug at the corners of her mouth felt tight, but she’d perfected this look a long time ago, and she could get it back again.
He flushed a second time.
Yes, she had a spot to offer him.
And it looked like he definitely wanted to stay.
***
Thanks for reading! See you next time.
XOXO,
Jenn




































































































