Hi! I'd like some help and feedback with my creative story, and these are a few things I need help with in my story:
1. My teacher said that the present day character needs more backstory/more depth - how can I achieve this without adding more words to the story? (word limit is 1000 and I'm already above)
2. Teacher also said that the discovery happens too quickly, and I realize that, but I'm not sure how I can make it develop through the story? (I'm trying show that the Australian character discovers to devalue materialism and to instead value human connectivity/enjoy the moments around him, while also conveying that the Vietnamese character has learned forgiveness for the destruction of his home)
3. We have to incorporate the stimulus into a significant moment of discovery, and I'm not sure which one would fit best (the two I'm deciding on is "I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight" or "All torment, trouble, wonder, and amazement inhabits here")
4. I'm also not sure how to convey/show the character's background/culture/context without telling - Walter is Australian and the man who owns the restaurant is Vietnamese
15th September, 1976
I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight.
A lifetime of seeing only death and destruction has left me with the lasting impression of a macabre world, deprived of any humanity; a constant fight for power between nations, driven by greed. Which is why, as the wave gently nudges our boat closer to the land, I just stare blankly ahead. I see the cluster of buildings first, which replace the dense, green jungles of Vietnam. The green rice paddy fields have been replaced by concrete roads.
The air is laced with a gentle breeze that is calming, but it is unfamiliar, different to the hot and humid days of my childhood. Even though we celebrate our safe arrival to Australia, I desperately clutch onto the familiarity of the only photograph I have of my family, as if it could dissipate into a smoky haze, just like our home did.***
It was in the early hours of the morning when Walter stepped out onto the front porch steps of his home, the heat immediately hitting him. It didn’t help that the weather was humid last night, earning Walter yet another sleepless night. Not that that it mattered. Walter hardly slept at all anyways. He’s always typing away at his computer, his mother used to say, meeting deadline after deadline, he doesn’t want to spend time with his mother anymore, she used to joke. He took his pride in it after all; earning enough to buy whatever he wanted, by writing what people wanted to read. Even as Walter walked through the front yard of his house, he was subconsciously thinking of the next headlines for his article.
(Insert headline) <-- haven't decided what to put yet - I want to put in something that shows how Walter writes articles that doesn't really hold any meaning for him just to please the public by giving them things they like to read if that makes sense? Any suggestions?Tomorrow would be another deadline, and today, Walter was out of ideas.
Mrs Healey who lived next door, cheerfully exclaimed a “Good morning, Walter!” as he passed by – her ageing body did not stop her from tending to her flowers – “Have you got time to help me –“
It reminded him of the times his mother used to ask him to fix the constant leaks in the roof of their broken-down home. They couldn’t afford a new place; his father gone before Walter was even born. He brushed off the memory. Those times were long gone now, and he would make sure it never happened again.
“Sorry Mrs Healey, I’ve someplace I gotta be,” Walter mumbled, hurrying past her. Mrs Healey was always asking him to help her with things.
Slinging his bag over his shoulders, he made his way to the shops. Being the early hours of the day, the streets were quiet except for the sound of the occasional car going by. He passed by the park; empty, with its rusting benches covered in a layer of dried, yellowing leaves. He racked his brain for ideas on his next article, but it was as if the heat had consumed with it his ability to think clearly. Desperately needing a quiet place to write, away from the mess at home, Walter turned the corner, to find that the only place open this early in the morning was a small café with neon lights that spelled Nhu’s Cafe.
The doorbell tinkled as Walter pushed the door open, eyes already scanning for the seat in the corner that would isolate him from any distractions. No one else had come in yet and the room was empty, but he could hear the faint sound of sizzling and clink of metals from behind a thin curtain, and the smell of fresh, hot food wafted into the room, a delightful mix of spices.
But his appetite was ruined.
He had a deadline tomorrow, and he had to come up with something today. He took his laptop out of his bag, opened the lid, hands on the keyboard.
Finally, in this peace and qui – “Anything from the menu sir? Drinks? The special for today –“
“Just coffee, please.” Walter replied dismissively, hardly looking at the man.
(Insert headline), Walter typed and deleted. He could not concentrate. He looked up from his laptop and stared ahead, his mind gradually wandering away from the blank document in front of him, subconsciously trying to avoid the thought of the deadline tomorrow. Staring blankly in front of him, he suddenly took notice of the painting in front of him; distorted shapes of green and blue, resembling the ocean or a field perhaps, and also saw what seemed to resemble the triangular shape of a small run-down house. He could not rub the strangeness from his eyes. Beside the straw coloured house, three figures stood. What was that –
“It’s my home. Back in Vietnam.”
Walter started. He had not seen the man come back through the curtains, who must’ve caught him staring at the painting.
A moment of silence before Walter gave a slight nod. The man set his coffee down on the table.
“We used to run around those fields on hot days like these,” he continued, “the village children and I.” He turned back towards the kitchen, but Walter couldn’t help but notice the slight sadness in his voice, hidden beneath his amiable nature and polite smile.
“Who are the three figures in the painting?” Walter asked abruptly. The man turned back, slightly surprised to find that he had taken an interest. He stood there, fishing for something in his pocket, and took out a photograph, which Walter assumed to be of his family.
“My parents,” he said, pointing to the man and woman in the picture, both in simple clothing, sandals on their feet. In the middle, a child about 8 years, looking up at both parents with a wide grin plastered on his face. “A napalm bomb was dropped on our village. They mistook us for enemy soldiers.” the man explained.
“And your parents?”, Walter asked, though he was afraid he knew the answer.
The man shook his head. “It doesn’t matter. I can’t change what happened. I was angry at first, but it’s not anyone’s fault; it’s the nature of war. I arrived here to find that there is still kindness in humanity. The nuns who met us with clothes and food when we arrived taught me that.”
He excused himself to serve the customers that had just walked in. It amazed Walter that for an experience that horrible, a person could still see the goodness of others. It hit Walter that he had been too caught up with his own life that he did not know anything about the world around him.
I realize this bit still needs some editing to convey a more meaningful discovery. This is also where I think the second quote/stimulus may fit in where he realizes about the history behind the man's life which has allowed him to appreciate life more?It was noon, and although the heat still lingered, a pleasant breeze flowed through the windows and gently settled in the room. He watched the leaves on the trees outside for a while, as the breeze rustled through, and he set his fingers on the keyboard.
Insert headline.It would be his greatest article yet, but it would have to wait. Walking out of the café doors, he breathed in the fresh air, through the park, turned onto his street, walked up onto the steps of Mrs Healey’s door, and knocked.
THANK YOU!!

