@Nessa Saelind I do have an alternate project that I've picked up instead, and it's going MUCH smoother!
Last year, I wrote a fantasy novella that was published in an anthology. It was set in a story universe I've been playing with for almost a decade now, and I knew before I'd even finished the novella that I wanted to delve deeper into the characters within it and see how their story began/played out. Last NaNo, I actually wrote a bunch of supplemental scenes, and started working toward a conclusion that would tie the story in with the first novel (which has already been drafted once, but needs revision still).
I'm really enjoying visiting this world/character/story again, honestly. I probably should have done this project from the start, and as I'm merging scenes/plot lines and polishing it up, I'm so excited for its potential. The NaNo experience changed drastically this year as soon as I switched projects. Instead of dreading writing, I'm already trying to figure out how to make more writing time just to play in this world more.
So, now that I've gushed about it, enjoy the beginning few paragraphs (heads up, though, the story starts off with a plague, which I'D FORGOTTEN ABOUT UNTIL I READ IT THE OTHER DAY):
Chapter 1 – The Plagues
The Eleventh of Kasna in the year 3761 by Kashtophim Reckoning
The House of Taph was one of the lesser noble houses of Sconnela. While it was once a prestigious house in ages past, they were now only known for providing sacrifices for the mountain gods. It had been many years—not in Rillaph’s lifetime, nor even her parents—since they’d been called on for that particular duty, and so they mostly just happened to be of noble blood, and had managed to maintain their hold on the family lands and wealth, despite having little service to offer the Highest Ones.
Not that it mattered anymore.
All of the servants departed days before, when Rillaph’s parents fell ill. Even her old, loyal nursemaid left, and that farewell was the most upsetting for Rillaph. At least, before the nursemaid left, she’d shown Rillaph how to cook a few basic meals, and written down instructions for tending to her parents, how to keep them comfortable.
The only person she’d seen in days who wasn’t ill or an infant—because her brother was barely two years old and somehow the two of them had managed not to fall ill so far—was the plague marshal appointed to their section of the city. This was the second wave of this particular plague to sweep through the mountain kingdom of Sconnela. The first wiped out only the oldest and frailest in the country, and Sconnela as a whole hadn’t realized the illness was a serious issue until it returned over the winter and began affecting
all, working its way down from the old and the weak to the… not so old. The not so weak.
By the time the Highest Ones had any sort of counteractive measures in place, the plague had wreaked havoc on the noble houses.
Rillaph was still reeling in shock.