Posts Tagged ‘Brian Barnett’

YOU MAY ALREADY BE A WINNER By: Brian Barnett

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

The sun baked the blacktop that mid-summer day. While most people were away to beachfront vacations and enjoying family getaways, a blurred image could be seen through the heat waves of the pavement.

It was a man. A strange man with scraggly, nit infested hair. His unkempt beard was encrusted with whatever food or drink he had sometime before.

He walked laboriously with a walking stick and a canvas satchel that clung to his shoulder. It bobbed as he limped his way along the two-lane, house-lined highway.

His clothes sagged from his thin, boney body. His thick glasses were yellowed with age. His shoes, long worn out from constant travel, served mostly as a thin leather barrier between his feet and the ground.

He approached a mail box. It read Hundley. He stood for a moment and examined the house. There was someone home, he could tell. He rummaged in his canvas satchel and removed a parcel.

The parcel was wrapped in brown, perfectly creased paper. The twine was tied in a perfect knot. He slid the parcel into the mailbox and unceremoniously continued his trek.

More than an hour later, a man emerged from the house. He checked his mail and found the parcel, along with some bills and a card that misspelled his name and said you may already be a winner.

He checked the parcel for an address. There was no destination or return address. He turned it over in his hands repeatedly. It felt weighty, but nothing rolled around or clanged together. Must be a book, he thought.

He tore into the brown paper and pushed the twine to the side. A glossy mahogany cigar box slid from the wrapping. Symbols and what looked to be hieroglyphs were etched into the wood and gold leaf insets glimmered in the afternoon sun.

Strange, he thought. He ran his fingers over the insets. They were cool and smooth to the touch. He wondered who the box belonged to and why they decided to place it in his mail box. Must be illegal Cuban cigars, he assumed. He opened the box.

He nearly threw the box in shock. The interior of the box seemed to be limitless. There was no bottom or sides that he could see - just vast darkness.

He held the box closer. The smell was strange. It was not a smell of wood, but rather, some type of gaseous smell. Helium or nitrogen, perhaps?

He held the box closer still. He saw distant glints of light. Stars? Impossible, he guffawed. But still he was bewitched by the wonder of the box. He continued to delve deeper into the dark recesses of what seemed to be an entire universe trapped into one tiny box.

Large explosive flashes blasted in the distance. They sounded like distant cannon fire. Shooting stars swept across his peripheral vision. Amazing, he thought. He was completely captivated.

Strange, slow moving creatures resembling squid floated and swam through the inky black sea. He heard their cries. They sounded very similar to whales.

Suddenly a much larger creature, of comparison he had never seen, snapped one out of the air and ate it whole. The other squid-like creatures scattered in all directions.

The larger creature seemed to scan its surroundings for more food. Then the man felt a chill. The creature made eye contact with him and roared like a foghorn.

The large, green orbs with orange centers seemed to hypnotize him. He tried to drop the box and run, he knew he should have, but he remained defenselessly captivated.

There was no warning. No way of avoiding the attack. A long proboscis-like protrusion caught him in the chest. It crushed through his sternum. Two longer, almost snake-like tentacles whipped around his neck and torso and wrapped around tightly. He was yanked off his feet and into the box.

Only his shoes and the box remained behind. The box rolled to a stop and the lid closed with a clap.

The disheveled vagrant man revisited the house immediately afterward. He grinned and fell to his knees by the box. He placed the box back into his canvas satchel, and thanked it repeatedly with a horse voice that shivered with excitement. He removed his old shoes and placed the man’s shoes on. Perfect fit, he gleamed. The gods gifted him the new shoes he asked for. He stroked the satchel and continued to thank it graciously as he carried on with his unrelenting journey.


©2009 Brian Barnett

Brian Barnett lives in Frankfort, Kentucky with his wife, Stephanie, and son, Michael. He enjoys writing during his free time.

WE ALL HAVE OUR DEMONS By: Brian Barnett

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The smell that he knew so well woke him. The smell of sulfur, the devil’s breath. He groaned and rolled out of bed.

Ronnie Kirtley had written hundreds of stories over the years. He was one of the most prolific writers in history. He outsold every contemporary writer and remained as a best-seller for more than thirty years. Thirty-two best selling novels and two dozen short story collections made him millions of dollars over the years. He wished that he was the genius behind them all, but he was a fraud.

He shuffled down the hallway towards the coffee maker. He stopped at the dining room table and opened his laptop to allow it to warm up.

He flicked on the coffee maker, but nothing happened. The power was out. Great, he thought. His eyes rolled to the kitchen window.

He could see their dancing impish shadows through the mini blinds. Countless creatures entered his house to provide him his muse over the years.

Ronnie slapped the mug onto the counter and grumbled back to his laptop. He pulled up the word processor, stretched his fingers and cracked his knuckles.

The battery only had a few remaining minutes before it died. They were going to have to be quick if they intended to get a story out.

As if on cue, the whispers began. The room flooded with prickly shadows and the smell of brimstone. The air conditioner kicked on from the heat they generated. Hushed whispers caressed his ears and Ronnie’s fingers began writing feverishly, as always.

The stories Ronnie wrote were purely fiction as far as anyone knew. But in reality, what he wrote was more of a script of things to come. He wrote of terrible creatures tearing innocent people limb from limb, and it would come to fruition.

He would write tales about natural disasters, mining accidents, ancient malevolent spirits - anything and everything destructive or evil. And they always came true.

Always.

He was nothing more than a wand for the demons that surrounded him, just a conduit for their destructive energy. He knew that one day it would be over and they would move on to another poor sap, but for now, he was their man.

Ronnie tried not to reflect on the stories he had written for them, but often his mind would wander and remember. There were so many innocents that were blindsided by their despicable tales. One that always bothered him was that poor nameless lady in the wheelchair that was eaten alive by a swarm of harpies. He could practically see her face masked in terror. He shuttered.

Finally a blank page was formatted and their whispers intensified. He lamented over what evil he was about to spread into the world.

His fingers flicked the keyboard furiously. The End of Ronnie Kirtley, he wrote. A bead of sweat ran down his forehead. He feared what he was about to write.

He spaced down to the second page. His fingers blazed across the keys again. The writer for the ages began to sweat as he felt the heat of his demons creep up behind him. The end would be swift, yet painful. Spontaneous combustion always is, after all.

Ronnie leapt from his chair, but it was too late. They were finished with him. He had served his purpose. It was time to discard him and start fresh elsewhere. He heard their hollow laughter. The walls flickered to life with their shadows.

He felt the intense heat building in his chest. It spread throughout his body. Before he could mutter a sound, he burst into flames.

The newspapers and magazines were flooded by rumors of what happened to Ronnie Kirtley that night. Only remnants of his scorched flesh were left behind.

New stations attempted intense investigations. Everyone wanted to crack the case first. Church congregations grew. People burned his books. Nobody wanted to take any chances. Something was odd about the circumstances.

Scientists argued that the explanation was purely scientific. “Spontaneous combustion is such a bizarre phenomenon,” they’d say, “There have been numerous documented cases.”

The argument raged on, yet nobody had a solid answer, save for one person. Only he knows what happened for certain. His name is Landon Ray, an up and coming painter. He is about to unveil his first masterpiece. He titled it The Death of a Legend and it depicts the late Ronnie Kirtley bursting into flames amid his final story.


©2009 Brian Barnett

Brian Barnett lives in Frankfort, Kentucky with his wife, Stephanie, and son, Michael. He enjoys to write during his free time.