Writings by C.R. Scott

Month

March 2012

11 posts

(Paradox Lounge) Chpt 1: When You Wish Upon a Star

Title:  When You Wish Upon a Star

Genre:  General

Verse:  Paradox Lounge

Rating:  PG-13

Fandom:  Batman DCU (not DCnU)

Pairing:  Tim/Tam

Summary:  A year has passed since the most recent tragic night of Tim Drake’s life occurred.  When he makes an impossible wish upon the only star he can see in Gotham’s pollution choked night sky, logically he doesn’t expect it to come true.  However, when it comes to wishes and the granting thereof, “logic” is usually the first thing that goes out the window.

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Mar 31, 201210 notes
#Tim Drake #Tam Fox #fanfiction #TimTam #Paradox Lounge
cr1mson5thestranger asked: 3) Tam dying for Tim. Proceed to hate me forever. *strolls around like a boss goddess of being cruel, but secretly loves you and that is why she torments you*

afewnovelideas:

angel-gidget:

3) Tam dying for Tim.

It’s not supposed to be this way. He is supposed to take the bullet for her. Not the other way around. But here he is, once more, just a moment too late. One more person dear to him about be six feet under. But even though he can see both her lungs are punctured, and she’s bleeding out in his arms, the flicker of her eyes and the determined line of her mouth tells him all he needs to know.

For all his regrets…

… she has none.

((Oooh… I know ya love me. Wicked tormentor, you. ;p )

Reblogging this because I just saw this old ask involving two of my favorite bloggers here on Tumblr tonight, and it sparked an idea for a story that I really, REALLY need to write!!!

It’s amazing what a short piece like this can inspire.

*hugs both Gidge and Cr1mson*

Now to the plotting notes:

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Mar 31, 201214 notes
#cr1mson5thestranger #tumblr buddies #gidge blog #fanfic #tim drake #tam fox #timtam #red robin
Story Concept/Plotting: Batman/Warehouse 13 crossover

afewnovelideas:

Came up with a new crossover concept to possibly explore later.

The idea?  A Batman/Warehouse 13 (SyFy original television series) crossover exploring an alternate explanation about why Tim Drake’s parents were hardly ever in his life…

Tim Drake is furious.

While he was out of town working with the Titans, someone broke into the building where all his parents’ belongs were being stored.  Mysteriously, the only thing taken was trunk containing an assortment of souvenirs they had collected on their travels around the world.  It infuriates Tim because some of his few fond memories of his parents as a child were hearing all the wild, made-up stories of all the Indiana Jones-styled adventures his mom and dad had to go through to find them.  He wants them back!

Even more mysteriously, the theft attracts the attention of two federal secret service agents, Agent Myka Bering and Agent Peter Lattimer. 

While trying to run his own investigation as Red Robin, while at the same time being forced to work with Myka and Peter, Tim inadvertently learns about Warehouse 13.  When he goes searching for answers and eventually meets Artie (Arthur Neilsen), the Warehouse’s custodian…

Artie:  Timothy Drake?  You’re Jack and Janet’s son, right?

Tim:  *confused*  You knew my parents?

Artie:  Of course I did.  They were two of the finest agents I ever had the pleasure of working with.  They were two of my dearest friends.

Turns out, the reason Jack and Janet were constantly traveling around the world wasn’t for their business.  In reality, they were Warehouse 13 agents.  The two of them had originally met when they were first assigned to the Warehouse and fell in love there.  After marrying, they both “retired”.  However after Tim was born and had gotten older, there was a sudden influx of active artifacts and they were reactivated by Mrs. Fredric herself because the Warehouse had become very short-staffed in those years.  Jack and Janet also secretly harbored a desire to bring Tim into their work and the Warehouse once he was older. 

Artie:  *sighing*  Janet always wanted you all to work together as a family here.  She was literally counting the days until she could bring you to the Warehouse.

When Janet died and Jack was paralyzed, they were on a Warehouse assignment to recover an artifact from a voodoo witchdoctor. That particular artifact was never recovered.

After losing Janet, Jack retired for good from the Warehouse.  No further contact was made between Jack and Artie.  Arthur only learned of Jack’s death through a news report years later.

The “souvenirs” that were stolen from Tim’s storage were supposedly benign artifacts that his parents never brought back for storage at the Warehouse.  They were going to use those things to eventually introduce Tim to the existence of artifacts and their work. 

While trying to process everything he’s just learned about his parents’ secret life, Mrs. Fredric approaches Tim in private.  Somehow, mysteriously, she knows about his own dual life as Red Robin, and his history working with Batman.  She believes the combination of the skills he’s developed as a crime-fighter and detective as well as his own pedigree as the son of two stellar Warehouse agents would make him an ideal candidate to become an agent himself.  Tim is firm in his refusal, at first, but Mrs. Fredric is very good at planting tempting seeds of doubt.

Tim:  I don’t have time to work for you people.  I have too many responsibilities in Gotham.

Mrs. Fredrick:  But it is what your parents wanted for you.

Tim:  …

Mrs. Fredrick:  You could use this opportunity to learn more about them.  Learn about who your mother and father really were.  *waves to the greater interior of the warehouse*  Everything they were, all the things you never knew about them, is on those shelves out there.

This is all I have in my head right now.  We’ll see if I take it anywhere later…

Mar 29, 201210 notes
#Batman #Warehouse 13 #Tim Drake #Red Robin #fanfiction #crossover fanfiction #story plotting
A reply to my anonymous cease-and-desist critic

afewnovelideas:

Today I got a set of “cease and desist” anonymous messages in the inboxes of both my personal journal and my writing one:

Anonymous asked:

Your DC/WoW crossover idea is just… horrible. They’re not even remotely compatable, and the DC universe is riddled with “everyone is related to everyone else” and “this person has died a million times” drama, that again, doesn’t mesh with the WoW universe at all. Just, stop. Or make it private. These ideas are horrible and you’re embarrassing yourself.

And…

Anonymous asked:

No, no no no. Stop. The DC universe/WoW crossover is just a horrible idea. I’ve read it, and it just doesn’t mesh at all, unless you’re ignoring all of the character’s personalities and backstories and replacing them with your own childish fantasy. It’s really very bad. Please cease and desist, you’re embarrassing yourself. Really. Make it private and go away.

To that person, I say simply this.

If you don’t like what I’m writing, then simply don’t read it.  Either skip over them, remove my journals from your watch list so they don’t show up on your dashboard, or you can block my journals specifically so none of my posts show up on your tag watch list.

Ultimately, I’m writing for my own pleasure. 

I write fanfiction because I want to create new stories in my favorite fandoms.  If I crossover two completely unrelated fandoms, it’s because I’m curious to see what happens when they are meshed together.  When I share my stories, it’s because I want to make my stories available to those readers who might actually enjoy them.  I do this knowing full well that there will also be people who won’t.  However, I’ve been doing this long enough to realize that if anyone doesn’t want to read something I write, they have the freedom to move along to the next writer/story and see if they prefer that one instead.

So to my anonymous critic, I will end with this:

You are entitled to your own opinions.  However, you are in no position to order me to “cease and desist” writing ANYTHING because you don’t like my “childish fantasies”.

Here’s what we will both do.  I will continue writing whatever I want, whenever I want.  You will then continue to read whatever you want, whenever you want as well.  If, by some twist of fate, you read something I write that you don’t like again, you can write me another cease-and-desist message, if that’s what you want to do.  I can then promise you that I will glance over it briefly, roll my eyes, and send it straight into the trash with the rest of the junk mail.

That is all.

Mar 29, 20125 notes
#anonymous critics #writing #fanfiction #DC/WoW!verse #taking destructive criticism #like water off a duck's back #internet trolls need not apply here #you will be swatted with the common sense bat #and i warn you #it has a tendency to leave splinters
(DC/WoW!verse) Head Canons/Plottings

Stuff that’s been coming to mind as my imagination plays in the DC/WoW!verse sandbox:

  • One of the first real friends Tim makes when he first arrives in Azeroth is Anduin Wrynn, the crown prince of Stormwind.  When they first meet, Anduin is twelve and Tim is seventeen.
  • Anduin is the first to sense a strong potential connection with the Holy Light in Tim, despite being from another world.
  • Tim spends his first year on Azeroth traveling around the planet, looking for leads into possible avenues home. 
  • The first place he starts looking is the capital of the Draenei, since they came to this world via space travel.  That option is negated because the original dimensional ship, the Exodar, was too badly damaged upon their crash landing, and there is no way to create a new ship.  Through records on the Exodar kept by the Draenei and Naaru, though, he learns exactly how far away Azeroth is from Earth.  Simply put, it is insanely far.  Azeroth’s galaxy isn’t even on the map for the known interstellar sectors routinely patrolled by the Green Lantern Corps.
  • The second place Tim goes to do research is to the continent of Northrend and the floating city of Dalaran.  He goes there to see if magic can be used to send him home.  Unfortunately, creating a portal to Earth would require a great amount of energy.  Without resorting to using massive amounts of demonic energy, like the Burning Legion is doing, the only other options would be to tap either the Sunwell or the Well of Eternity, and neither of those will ever be an option.
  • A third option Tim wants to investigate are the ruins left behind by the Titans, the creators of this world and possibly others.  He wants to investigate the various ruins, like Ulduar, Uldum, and Uldaman, but he is not equipped to explore them on his own.  They are infested with creatures too strong to face alone.
  • After attempting to scout out Ulduar on his own, Tim ends up getting drawn into the conflict between the Argent Crusaders and the Scourge in Northrend.  He fights along side the Crusaders, who bear the same banners as the people who saved his life.  It is here that he first meets Tirion Fordring.
Mar 28, 20124 notes
#DCU/WoW!verse #tim drake #red robin #warcraft #fanfiction
(DC/WoW!verse) Not Forgotten

(More for DC/WoW!verse)

Prompt:  Not Forgotten

Previous:  Alone in Shattrath City

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Mar 28, 20123 notes
#DCU/WoW!verse #baman #robin #bruce wayne #damian wayne #warcraft #WoW #fanfiction
(DC/WoW!verse) Alone in Shattrath City

(I couldn’t resist… Plot bunnies have hijacked a muse for their own… DC/WoW!verse)

Prompt:  Alone in Shattrath City

image

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Mar 28, 20125 notes
#DCU/WoW!verse #Tim Drake #Warcraft #Red Robin #Robin #World of Warcraft #fanfiction
An idea for a crossover that may or may not be written...

afewnovelideas:

With my husband playing Warcraft a lot lately, and myself having been out of that particular game for long enough that I’m starting to be tempted back in, I’ve been crossing over the original DCU-verse with Warcraft-verse in my head.

1.  It starts off with Tim Drake reaching the end of his rope with his life and the way it’s been with really rough with his family, friends, his work as Red Robin, and his non-existent real life.  He’s extremely frustrated.

2.  Late one night, while investigating a strange new cult called the Burning Shadow that has been rising up within the world, Red Robin discovers a mysterious portal at the heart of their stronghold in Gotham City.  Before he can report to anyone about it, he’s attacked by a demon.  Red Robin is not at all prepared to hold his own against a demon and is mortally wounded.  However, before the demon can land the final killing blow, a creature of light appears from the portal and strikes down the demon.  Red Robin falls unconscious.

3.  When Tim wakes up, he’s in a strange place.  His wounds, amazingly, have been completely healed.  Eventually, he is introduced to a human wizard named Khadgar.  Khadgar tells Tim that he is in a city called Shattrath, in the remnants of a planet once called Draenor.  From the old man, Tim learns what happened back in Gotham…

4.  An evil demonic force called the Burning Legion has been seeking other worlds to invade.  From a portal located in a region within the Outlands (the remnants of Draenor), the demons had created a doorway to Tim’s world and were sending scouts ahead of them to prepare for invasion.  Forces fighting the Burning Legion, called the Sha’tar, were sent to intercept the demons and close the portal.  Tim had simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time.  The glowing creature who’d saved him had been one of a race called the Na’ru.  That Na’ru was named Xi’ri.  After seeing how badly Tim had been injured, Xi’ri brought the young man to Shattrath for healing.  Unfortunately, for the sake of Tim’s world, the portal had to be destroyed almost immediately afterwards.  For the time being, there is no way to send Tim home. 

5.  Tim is shocked and dismayed to learn that he’s been stranded on an alien world.  He doesn’t know what to do.  Khadgar suggests that he might feel better living among humans on his own homeworld of Azeroth until he gets his bearings.  He sends Tim through a portal that takes him to the human city of Stormwind, with a message from Khadgar to the King requesting sanctuary for the young man.

6.  Years are spent by Tim in Azeroth.  Timeline-wise, Tim enters this world during the events of the “Wrath of the Lich King”.  For the first year, Tim drifts aimlessly.  He feels without a purpose, and while he does strive initially to seek a way back home through science or magic, once he realizes how hopeless an endeavor it is, he sinks into depression.

7.  He eventually meets Tirion Fordring, the leader of the Argent Crusade during his wandering.  Tim feels more at ease around Tirion’s commanding presence than anywhere else in Azeroth.  He has an inner strength that reminds Tim of Bruce, but exudes a sense of light and hope that the Batman never did.  Alternatively, Tirion sees echos of his own murdered son’s spirit and desire to do good for others within Tim.  When Tirion offers to take Tim under his wing and train him in the ways of the Paladin, as a way to both fight evil and heal the sick and injured, Tim accepts.

8.  Tim becomes an exceptional Paladin.  It suits him exceptionally to have the ability to both fight evil forces and heal others.  While, in the past, he had never been a religious person, practically an atheist at times, the concept of “The Holy Light” that powers many healers in Azeroth is something that he can embrace whole-heartedly, as it doesn’t rely on the worship of any deity.  He also appreciates immensely the fact that he can do good work as a Paladin, and not have to hide his identity.

9.  5-10 years (?) after being stranded in Azeroth, shortly after the events of Shattering right before Cataclysm started, the Burning Legion manages to create another portal to Earth, this time from a location in Azeroth, not the Outlands.  Due to the complexities of cleaving portals through time and space, only a few weeks have passed on Earth since Red Robin went “MIA”. 

10.  Tim’s family and friends had been frantically searching for him since he went missing when the first portal in Gotham City had been destroyed.  When the new portal is discovered, Batman and Robin go to investigate it, but happen upon a conflict between the Legion and the Argent Crusade already in progress.

11.  Batman and Robin both help the Crusaders defeat the demons, though Robin is hurt badly in the process.  Tim, the Paladin leading the party, keeps his helmet drawn down hiding his face even as he heals Damian’s injuries, much to the boy’s amazement.  Tim, though was initially thrilled at having finally found a portal leading back to Earth, was shocked and almost horrified to see that so little time had passed on his homeworld.  He’d been gone for years, and clearly it hadn’t been that long if Damian was still 10-11 yrs old.

12.  Still, when the other Crusaders try to set the charges to destroy the portal, Tim orders them not to, convincing them that they need to inform this world’s protectors of the danger of the Burning Legion, in case they (the Argent Crusade) cannot stop an invasion from happening.  So, his voice distorted by his helm, Tim advises Bruce to collect a diplomatic part to come to the portal within three days’ time, while take that same time to secure the portal for their own use.

13.  The diplomatic party from the Justice League is gathered and they are escorted through the portal to Azeroth and are eventually brought to the Argent Crusade base and Tirion Fordring.  They are led by Tim, though he keeps his helmet on.  Something about this Paladin makes Bruce and Damian suspicious, but nothing they can voice specifically.

14.  After the initial meeting with Tirion, once they are guests in his home, does Bruce and Damian finally see Tim.  Tirion recognizes Batman and Robin immediately, since Tim told him all about them when he was younger.  The older Paladin arranges a reunion with the reluctant Tim.  Bruce and Damian are both, understandably, shocked by the changes in Tim.  However, Bruce is still very much relieved to see his missing son alive and well.

15.  Once Tim is revealed to the others, it’s Tim who leads the others in a tour of Azeroth and Outlands to show his old friends and family exactly how big a threat the Burning Legion is to Earth.

—-

And that’s all I have.  This plot bunny sprang to mind, and I had to write it.  It’s not really a cohesive story.  I’m not even sure if I’ll flesh it out into something more substantial later.

I think I’ll leave this just as a separate DCU/WoW!verse that others can possibly request short story prompts from.

In my head, as a Paladin, Tim wears a set of armor that resembles the Judgement Armor set in WoW.

image

He’s also traded using a bo staff for a sword and shield as his primary weapons.  Tim’s strength comes from his healing, though.  After all the loss he suffered in his life, learning how to heal was something he put most of his focus into during his training.

cross-posting to keep a copy of this on my writing journal.

Mar 28, 20128 notes
#DCU/WoW!verse #DCU #WoW #Warcraft #Tim Drake #Red Robin #Robin #Fanfiction #plot bunnies... please stop breeding #although I would love to see an image of Tim Drake decked out in Judgement armor... #in my head Tim simply never stays a Bat... #he does his best when he's doing his own thing... #and has time away from Bats so he can heal the wounds he's gotten from life as one... #oy... stupid plot bunnies... #i need to write other things...
When Life Makes Writing Hard

I need to write more.

I want to write more.

However, when writing is not tied into the profession that pays the bills, it becomes hard.

Professionally, I work as a graphic designer for a company that creates apps, themes, and other customized graphics for a wide variety of mobile devices. These include cell phones, smart phones, and digital tablets. I’ve been working in this field for nearly a decade now, and overall I love the industry.

Except things in my company have hit a very rough patch, which trickles down to rough patches for all of its employees. Since the beginning of the year, over a dozen of my fellow co-workers have been laid off. Many of the rest of us have had to take on additional responsibilities, with no pay increase, and a cutback in hours for a number of us.

I was one of the people who had to take a cut in hours in addition to everything else. Now instead of working a 40-hr workweek, I am limited to 32-hrs.

Writing is something I have always done for fun. While I would love to one day get published, it’s something that I do for relaxation and enjoyment first. However, because of the things that have happened with my job, I have a hard time writing.

Mostly, I feel guilty.

When I settle down and attempt to pick up a pen, or when I open up my word processing program, I feel guilty. Somewhere in the back of my head I hear a voice that chides me (usually in the voice of my mother):

“Why are you wasting time writing when you should be doing something… anything… more productive to add to your income and make life more comfortable for your family?”

I want to write. However, I also need to consider what I need to do in order to keep a roof over the heads of my children and food on their plates. I know that if I apply myself, I can make a focused attempt on writing poetry and short stories to send to various magazines and e-zines. However, the approval processes take so long for so many of the reputable publications, and there’s no guarantee that my works will be accepted at all.

What do I do?

Mar 14, 20122 notes
#real life is hard #it's hard being a grown up #personal thoughts #writing troubles

thenelsontwins:

theatlantic:

6 Writing Tips From John Steinbeck

1. Abandon the idea that you are ever going to finish. Lose track of the 400 pages and write just one page for each day, it helps. Then when it gets finished, you are always surprised.

2. Write freely and as rapidly as possible and throw the whole thing on paper. Never correct or rewrite until the whole thing is down. Rewrite in process is usually found to be an excuse for not going on. It also interferes with flow and rhythm which can only come from a kind of unconscious association with the material.

3. Forget your generalized audience. In the first place, the nameless, faceless audience will scare you to death and in the second place, unlike the theater, it doesn’t exist. In writing, your audience is one single reader. I have found that sometimes it helps to pick out one person—a real person you know, or an imagined person and write to that one.

4. If a scene or a section gets the better of you and you still think you want it—bypass it and go on. When you have finished the whole you can come back to it and then you may find that the reason it gave trouble is because it didn’t belong there.

5. Beware of a scene that becomes too dear to you, dearer than the rest. It will usually be found that it is out of drawing.

6. If you are using dialogue—say it aloud as you write it. Only then will it have the sound of speech.

Read more. [Image: AP]

Excellent.

Wiser words never spoken with regard to writing.  Thank you John!

Mar 13, 201211,274 notes
Writer's Relief Blog: "Crunching Numbers: Report Shows Some Major Lit Mags Publish More Men Than Women" → writersrelief.com

afewnovelideas:

writersrelief:

GalleyCat, a publishing industry blog, posted this last week just in time for women’s history month:

VIDA: Women in Literary Arts have released a report entitled “The Count 2011,” revealing that male writers outnumbered female writers in many publications last year.

Picking up on where last year’s report left off, this report tracks the statistics of gender balance among writers published at literary magazines, including The New Yorker (overall: 165 women, 459 men), Poetry (overall: 134 women, 179 men) and The Threepenny Review (overall: 19 women, 37 men).

They also looked at authors reviewed, book reviewers, and interviews at certain publications, including: Harper’s (book reviewers: 13 women, 65 men) and The New York Times (book reviewers: 273 women, 520 men).

At Writer’s Relief, we take these numbers seriously; all writers should. Regardless of what factors may be causing this imbalance, the imbalance in and of itself is worth attention and concern.

The good news is that the publishing industry—thanks in part to the analysis of groups like VIDA, as well as the outcries of high-profile authors like Jennifer Weiner and Jodi Picoult—is starting to pay closer attention to its own practices.

And we at Writer’s Relief thought we would do the same.

This…. Above…. This is diappointing…  Those numbers need to be fixed.

Mar 2, 20124 notes
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