Hey there Inter-neighbors! Rose here, with a little story from the earliest days of this project’s life.
Once upon a time two sisters decided to write a science fiction story inspired by classic adventurers. The elder sister picked a few stories she liked best to work off of while the younger sister went around collecting notes from scientific journals about the different kinds of planets currently known to exist and what it might be like to live on those strange worlds.
Then, one day, the elder sister said something to the younger sister along the lines of:
invent a couple of religions
The elder sister did in fact say quite a bit more than that, but - regardless - the idea of inventing wholly new religions for the wholly new galaxy put the younger sister into a bit of a mood. Have I mentioned the sisters live a good many miles and state borders apart? Well, they do, and a good thing or else the younger sister may have pitched a fit and smothered her elder sister in her sleep.
After this hyperbolic mood had subsided, the younger sister recalled that she had a few years prior been inspired by the formal technique of variation - in music - to start writing a handful of "holy books" as the basis of religious beliefs for any number of stories she may care to write for any number of worlds she may care to build.
I think you know which sister is which, but - just in case - you should know that I did not "invent a couple of religions" from my old variation notes for The Janitors; I invented four (each with various subsects) which - although all founded upon the same books - each have their own ideas as to who’s in charge.
Remember how, in Chapter One, Duke recited to himself the Virtuous Chants while rubbing a feather-shaped pendant and then later spouted poetry over a dead plant? This is all to introduce by illustration the fact that he is a creature of faith.
The Virtuous Chants come from a book called The Songs of Fire believed to be written by Vesta the Flame of Consumption. Those who create elaborate rituals from this text in honor of Vesta and for the glory of Veritas (the Seed of All) are known as the Vestales. Theirs is a very formal faith.
The poem for the Posea-herb (only partially recited in the first chapter) comes from a book called The Songs of Clay believed to be written by Hestia the Flame of Provision. Followers of Hestia’s example are called Hestians and each of their songs is a bundle of agricultural wisdom. There is some cross-over in who recites what with regards to the two books of songs, but is mostly limited to those songs which are sung in praise of Veritas.
The feather is a symbol of Bennu the Tongue of Fire, the Living Flame, the Life Fire, the Great Blaze, whose Book of Sebayt was faithfully recorded in partnership by Vesta and Hestia as Bennu spoke her wisdom in the form of fables. Parlens and Talents each have their view as to the exact nature of Bennu. Though most agree she is blue with arms and wings, she is often illustrated in profile and kneeling with her winged arms stretched before her as a mother waiting for the child who is rushing toward her embrace (though this is based on a little thing called the Bennic Vision).
Sorry, not sorry. I get more than a little excited just writing notes about the religion-building because of all the worlds-building that goes along with it. Carrying on:
Duke was raised in the traditions of the Vestales and found himself feeling an affinity for all faiths. He is in a way a Vestale and a Hestian and a Parlen and a Talent. He truly believes each faith is his own whenever he turns his attention to it and considers its teachings, and he spends a lot of time considering those teachings. It’s kind of his thing.
Hey! Look at that, some behind-the-scenes religion-building and character development stuff. You’re welcome, haha.
As thanks, you should totally recommend and share our project (and my whackadoo updates) with folks who know just love science fiction ... and adventure ... and fun. We’d be all the thankful for that!
Emily’s original "About The Janitors" for posterity
Hello fellow readers & writers! We have a treat for you.
THE JANITORS was created by myself (Emily) and my sister Rose. We have been writing and creating projects both together and as individuals since elementary school. This project is an accumulation of some of our favorite elements in storytelling: epic, adventure, humor, and heart.
Every story needs a hero, what’s a rallying cry without a rallying point?
We created our heroine, Xan, wanting a highly skilled young woman with the sort of disadvantage that causes people around her to discount her. For her, it’s an illness that she will carry all her life and is likely to kill her at a young age. This knowledge doesn’t stop Xan’s ambitions as she seeks to join the acclaimed Guard.
Unfortunately, those dreams come to a halt when a rash decision lands her working for The Janitors, but what Xan doesn’t realize is that this crew doesn’t clean up the galaxy’s refuse. That is merely a cover. This crew specializes in discovering and removing potential threats to the galaxy. It’s a job that requires a unique crew with unique skills... and definitely some unique personalities.
Because everything’s a remix, here’s where we’re coming from:
The idea came from my love of the work of Alexandre Dumas and Robert Louis Stevenson and my sister’s fantastic ability to shape the most haphazard of ideas that spew out of my brain and to create an entire galaxy (maps, religions, economics, etc.) from thin air. It’s an ability she has that I have rarely seen even though I work with writers every day.
Join the adventure!
If you enjoy this first chapter, please pre-order the book! We will be keeping notes on the progress and posting snippets of the book here on Inkshares so readers can follow along in the journey with myself, Rose, and Xan.
Fear not, we totally listen to feedback.
We hope you love THE JANITORS, and more importantly, we want to hear what you love and don’t love about these characters and story. We are still in the process of writing this first book, which we see as an adventure series with an overarching storyline and more episodic plots in the individual books. We welcome and look forward to any thoughts readers have on the series.
Find us on social media (we’re not catfish, we promise).
You can follow Rose and I on Twitter (@RoseJermusyk and @EJemily24) and see the other projects we’re working on. Rose is also working on her own projects (one of whichcontributes to this one).
Thank you!
Emily J.
P.S. Rose made the headings, and also thanks you.
P.P.S. Rose here! I will also be giving away behind-the-scenes goodies in the project updates. You’re welcome.
We created our heroine, Xan, wanting a highly skilled young woman with the sort of disadvantage that causes people around her to discount her. For her, it’s an illness that she will carry with her all her life and is likely to kill her at a young age.
This comes pretty close to being word-for-word what Emily has among her notes for the initial dramatis personae, the list of characters responsible for the momentum of the story. She’s super into using the Royal “We,” and why not? We are writing this thing together.
In working on this project, Emily and I have pretty much split the work so that she is responsible for character development and story structure while I get busy with the world-building and fleshing out the story. We’re playing to our strengths: she studied Writing for Film & Television in college which honed her abilities in foundation work (every director and actor you love make their jobs easier by going after great scripts/foundations); and, I studied acting and poetry and storytelling (and whatever else I happen to be in the mood to study at any given time) which gives me a pool of knowledge both experiential and academic that I layer on to whatever she gives me to create draft one of a given chapter/story.
Now, regarding the quote above, Emily made it known to me she wanted Xan to have some sort of disease and that I should invent something. This is just one of many things that cross-over into both our terrains.
WARNING: THIS DOES GET GRUESOME
Why Emily Wants Xan to be Sick as a Dog
The disease forced Xan into a lesser job than that for which she trained, putting her on the whole “humble beginnings” path. As noted in the chapter:
Nobody wants a corpse defending their freedom.
This line is a variation of a note Emily gave me in the outline for Chapter One. In requesting that I invent a disease for our protagonist, Emily had the condition that the disease be incurable because having it would put Xan in the position of people writing her off as already being dead.
Emily wanted this so that later — probably Chapter Two if someone would finish the outline and send it to me to flesh out — a compelling case of parallels might be used to convince Xan to join the Janitors.
What Xan’s Disease Is and Why I Love It
Dusting. Dusting is a respiratory disease most commonly affecting those who live and work on mining planets rich in the element Desiccan, particularly those underfunded without enough proper masks to go around. The disease has only been thus far proven to be contracted in the mine atmosphere when particles of pure desiccan are breathed in as they are released from the walls of a given mine.
The particles collect in the lungs dehydrating the moist inner tissue. Because the moisture in lungs is due mostly to mucus, and because the dust is absorbent but not spongy, the particles react to their new surroundings and — seemingly — grow. Desiccan particles are similar to salt particles in that they are primarily cube-shaped, or at the very least always have corners.
When the mucus dries inside lungs, the desiccan particles — due to everyday movements on the part of the host body — move within the lungs, chipping the dried mucus so that lungs slowly fill with dust. As the desiccan particles “grow” they can weigh down the lungs and the weight will eventually tear into the walls of the lungs so that the Rattler (as some advanced Dusting patients are called) drowns in their own fluids.
With Dusting, you either drown in dust or blood. This fact to those in the know — which now includes you — adds a little more severity to this line that comes near the end of the first chapter:
Xan saw before her a transfer worse than Cano; a fate worse than the dust rattling in her lungs.
What’s great about this disease (phrases I never thought I’d write) is how this affects everything in Xan’s daily life, but she is forced by her dream life to act as though it doesn’t which only exacerbates the illness. If she avoids foods that increase mucus production to keep her lungs from dehydrating she avoids the risk of that mucus becoming more dust; but, then she risks questions about her diet which raises awareness of her health status, plus she increases her chance of becoming a full-on Rattler. Take this sentence from earlier in the chapter:
She drew her breath in too quickly and she felt the sting of dust rattling in her lungs.
The “dust” and the “sting” position her so that she has not yet chosen whether her eventual death will be by dust or by blood, but the “rattling” suggests which of the two is worse and yet still better than being sent back to her home-world:
She wouldn’t be anywhere near this farm station, or Bel, if it weren’t for her lungs and the mines she had been trying to escape in the first place.
Moving forward in the story, there are still more decisions to be made about how her health affects her actions, including kissing. I’m still all over the place trying to decide whether or not Dusting will be a kind of Kissing Disease.
Hey there Inter-neighbors! Rose here, with a little story from the earliest days of this project’s life.
Emily’s original "About The Janitors" for posterity
Hello fellow readers & writers! We have a treat for you.
THE JANITORS was created by myself (Emily) and my sister Rose. We have been writing and creating projects both together and as individuals since elementary school. This project is an accumulation of some of our favorite elements in storytelling: epic, adventure, humor, and heart.
Every story needs a hero, what’s a rallying cry without a rallying point?
We created our heroine, Xan, wanting a highly skilled young woman with the sort of disadvantage that causes people around her to discount her. For her, it’s an illness that she will carry all her life and is likely to kill her at a young age. This knowledge doesn’t stop Xan’s ambitions as she seeks to join the acclaimed Guard.
Unfortunately, those dreams come to a halt when a rash decision lands her working for The Janitors, but what Xan doesn’t realize is that this crew doesn’t clean up the galaxy’s refuse. That is merely a cover. This crew specializes in discovering and removing potential threats to the galaxy. It’s a job that requires a unique crew with unique skills... and definitely some unique personalities.
Because everything’s a remix, here’s where we’re coming from:
The idea came from my love of the work of Alexandre Dumas and Robert Louis Stevenson and my sister’s fantastic ability to shape the most haphazard of ideas that spew out of my brain and to create an entire galaxy (maps, religions, economics, etc.) from thin air. It’s an ability she has that I have rarely seen even though I work with writers every day.
Join the adventure!
If you enjoy this first chapter, please pre-order the book! We will be keeping notes on the progress and posting snippets of the book here on Inkshares so readers can follow along in the journey with myself, Rose, and Xan.
Fear not, we totally listen to feedback.
We hope you love THE JANITORS, and more importantly, we want to hear what you love and don’t love about these characters and story. We are still in the process of writing this first book, which we see as an adventure series with an overarching storyline and more episodic plots in the individual books. We welcome and look forward to any thoughts readers have on the series.
Find us on social media (we’re not catfish, we promise).
You can follow Rose and I on Twitter (@RoseJermusyk and @EJemily24) and see the other projects we’re working on. Rose is also working on her own projects (one of which contributes to this one).
Thank you!
Emily J.
P.S. Rose made the headings, and also thanks you.
P.P.S. Rose here! I will also be giving away behind-the-scenes goodies in the project updates. You’re welcome.
Hey there Inter-neighbors! Rose here, just found the "Update Readers" button so now I can share behind-the-scenes goodies right here.
Let’s talk about Dusting, a collaborative disease
On the mainpage for The Janitors, my sister Emily had this to say about the primary protagonist:
This comes pretty close to being word-for-word what Emily has among her notes for the initial dramatis personae, the list of characters responsible for the momentum of the story. She’s super into using the Royal “We,” and why not? We are writing this thing together.
In working on this project, Emily and I have pretty much split the work so that she is responsible for character development and story structure while I get busy with the world-building and fleshing out the story. We’re playing to our strengths: she studied Writing for Film & Television in college which honed her abilities in foundation work (every director and actor you love make their jobs easier by going after great scripts/foundations); and, I studied acting and poetry and storytelling (and whatever else I happen to be in the mood to study at any given time) which gives me a pool of knowledge both experiential and academic that I layer on to whatever she gives me to create draft one of a given chapter/story.
Now, regarding the quote above, Emily made it known to me she wanted Xan to have some sort of disease and that I should invent something. This is just one of many things that cross-over into both our terrains.
WARNING: THIS DOES GET GRUESOME
Why Emily Wants Xan to be Sick as a Dog
The disease forced Xan into a lesser job than that for which she trained, putting her on the whole “humble beginnings” path. As noted in the chapter:
This line is a variation of a note Emily gave me in the outline for Chapter One. In requesting that I invent a disease for our protagonist, Emily had the condition that the disease be incurable because having it would put Xan in the position of people writing her off as already being dead.
Emily wanted this so that later — probably Chapter Two if someone would finish the outline and send it to me to flesh out — a compelling case of parallels might be used to convince Xan to join the Janitors.
What Xan’s Disease Is and Why I Love It
Dusting. Dusting is a respiratory disease most commonly affecting those who live and work on mining planets rich in the element Desiccan, particularly those underfunded without enough proper masks to go around. The disease has only been thus far proven to be contracted in the mine atmosphere when particles of pure desiccan are breathed in as they are released from the walls of a given mine.
The particles collect in the lungs dehydrating the moist inner tissue. Because the moisture in lungs is due mostly to mucus, and because the dust is absorbent but not spongy, the particles react to their new surroundings and — seemingly — grow. Desiccan particles are similar to salt particles in that they are primarily cube-shaped, or at the very least always have corners.
When the mucus dries inside lungs, the desiccan particles — due to everyday movements on the part of the host body — move within the lungs, chipping the dried mucus so that lungs slowly fill with dust. As the desiccan particles “grow” they can weigh down the lungs and the weight will eventually tear into the walls of the lungs so that the Rattler (as some advanced Dusting patients are called) drowns in their own fluids.
With Dusting, you either drown in dust or blood. This fact to those in the know — which now includes you — adds a little more severity to this line that comes near the end of the first chapter:
What’s great about this disease (phrases I never thought I’d write) is how this affects everything in Xan’s daily life, but she is forced by her dream life to act as though it doesn’t which only exacerbates the illness. If she avoids foods that increase mucus production to keep her lungs from dehydrating she avoids the risk of that mucus becoming more dust; but, then she risks questions about her diet which raises awareness of her health status, plus she increases her chance of becoming a full-on Rattler. Take this sentence from earlier in the chapter:
The “dust” and the “sting” position her so that she has not yet chosen whether her eventual death will be by dust or by blood, but the “rattling” suggests which of the two is worse and yet still better than being sent back to her home-world:
Moving forward in the story, there are still more decisions to be made about how her health affects her actions, including kissing. I’m still all over the place trying to decide whether or not Dusting will be a kind of Kissing Disease.