Love and Betrayal in The First Person Past Perfect Tense by Robert Villanueva
Two rival writing groups engage in a literary rumble for access to their favoured corner of the Mega-Libro Bookstore. Image generated with OpenAI I had no idea how it had escalated to this, but there we were in the Java Jones Café in Mega-Libro Bookstore downtown ready to rumble, two writers' groups face-to-face in a confrontation that resembled a Saturday Night Live parody of West Side Story. Just beyond the Prose and Cons, a coffee barista had leaned over the customer-free counter and watched our exchange as he sipped away at a foamy mocha-cappa-frappa-something. The Prose and Cons was the other writer's group whose members mentored recently-released criminals, encouraging them to use writing as a creative outlet. I had hated the Prose and Cons. Maybe not so much the whole group, but I had hated their leader, Rich. He was a smarmy, egomaniacal 30-something substitute teacher who had a few publication credits in small magazines. To hear him talk, you'd think he'd won ...