He kept typing, his reply robotic in its distraction. “Yes, honey,” not hearing or knowing clearly what she had said. Something about going somewhere? He was concentrating on the numbers on his computer. The job always came first, always. This was Wallis Becket's problem. He was addicted to his job; married to it; in love with it. Yes, he loved Helen too, but in his heart of hearts he thought his career was the love of his life. He joked about it, but the joke always had a tinge of seriousness to it.
OR,
Wallis Becket had a problem. He was addicted to his job; married to it; in love with it. Yes, he loved Helen too, but in his heart of hearts he knew his career was the love of his life. He joked about it, but the joke always had a tinge of seriousness to it. The day his fiancee left him, he was completely unaware, lost in the financial world of his clients. He vaguely heard her say something, but was too distracted to understand the ramification of what it was she had said.
OR,
Wallis Becket had a problem. He was addicted to his job; married to it; in love with it. Yes, he loved Helen too, but in his heart of hearts he knew his career was the love of his life. He joked about it, but the joke always had a tinge of seriousness to it. The day his fiancee left him, he was completely unaware, lost in the financial world of his clients. He vaguely heard her say something, but was too distracted to understand the ramification of what it was she had said.
voting for the second one...
ReplyDeleteI like the "Yes, honey" sentence in the first paragraph, and the arrangement in the second one....
ReplyDeleteI went with another story that I had to revise a little, but I will finish this one for other competitions, or for homework. I like the back story, so I just have to flesh it out.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments.