Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2021

"How 'Bout That?"...She Pointed To A Facade Of An Old Creepy House


 "AAhhhh!" Becky screamed.

"I hate it when they sneak up on me like that," Becky said to her best friend Sarah.

"He didn't sneak up on you--if you'd ever get your head out of your phone, you'd have seen him coming."

Becky thought of responding in a manner only appropriate from one teenager to another, but decided against it. After all, it was Becky that practically begged her friend to come to the amusement park where "all things fun" had transformed into "all things scary" for the Halloween season--a season in which Sarah was not a fan.

"Hey..." Sarah said stopping, which in turn caused Becky to stop.

"Yeah?" Becky asked.

"You want to try some of those Haunted Houses they have here?"

The question surprised Becky. A sly smile crossed her face. "Sar--that's not like you. I don't know if I can trust you now that I don't recognize a person I thought was my friend."

Sarah began walking. "You think you know me, huh?"

"I thought I did," Becky matched Sarah's stride. "But, to be honest, I don't think you have the guts to even step foot in one of them."

"Wanna bet?" Sarah said.

"You're on." Becky still couldn't believe her friend wanted to actually go inside an actual haunted house. "But," a thought suddenly came to Becky. "I get to chose which one we  go in."

Becky noticed a look of determination cross her friend's face. "Okay--you got a deal. Which one?"

Becky looked around. They ended up near the old arcade. "How 'bout that?" She pointed to a facade of an old creepy house.

"I think you have to get tickets--it costs extra," Sarah said.

"You backing out?" This time Becky knew she had her friend--no way Sarah was backing out.

"Nope--let's get tickets and get in line."

The two walked to the ticket booth. "Two tickets, please."

The girl with BROOKLYN on her name take took her card, processed the transaction, and handed back the card and two tickets.

"So, is this scary?" Becky asked.

"You've never heard of this?" Brooklyn asked. Both girls shook their heads. "It's terrifying," Brooklyn said with a knowing smile. "If you like to get scared, you'll love it."

"Well, we like to get scared, don't we Sarah?" Sarah made a face. Becky laughed.

The two made their way to the lines in front of the house. The sun had set and darkness surrounded the group of others who bravely chose to "be terrified." Becky scanned the faces of the others--some scared, many exited, several with faces illuminated by the warm glow of their phones.

"Excuse me," a man smartly dressed complete with suit, vest, pocket watch, and wearing a white theater mask to shroud his identity interrupted the teenagers as they waited. His appearance slightly unnerved the pair. "Have either of you ever seen our show before?"

"Nope," Sarah said.

"Well...," the man began and the teenagers's lives changed forever.



Wednesday, December 16, 2020

The Beginning...Of Something I've Been Tinkering With


 I've started so many stories over the years...to many to count, and even more have lived in my head that never made it to the page or screen. The other day I thought of a character, then I gave him an occupation, then a situation. Here's the first couple of pages.

New Story

How To Succeed At Solitaire


A man once said every solitaire hand ever dealt is solvable. 

That man’s an idiot.

I play solitaire every day. I’ve played since my grandfather taught me the game when I was five-years old and he, seventy-five. For me, the game equals perfection, a singular player, a singular deck of cards, endless possibilities. Being born before the “digital age,” I played with good old-fashioned cards, frayed edges and all. I cannot tell you how many decks literally disintegrated in my hands. But as technology infects us more and more each day, I’ve converted to the binary of 1s and 0s that exist on my phone.

I am, in a word, addicted.

And will most likely be until I die.

But, that’s okay—of all the things to be addictive to, a “simple” card came isn’t one of them.


Ainsley Todd stopped typing. A thought that actually made him chuckle moments earlier evaporated into the darkened room. He looked up, as if the fleeting thought may somehow miraculously appear above his head, but no such luck.

“Damn,” he said to a room occupied by only himself and his cat, Mr. Meowskerton, the cat currently asleep on the desk next to his MacBook Air. Ainsley re-read the words newly created hoping his clever thought might return.

A rumbling in his gut reminded him he forgot to eat dinner yet again. Maybe food would help.

It wouldn’t hurt. He mentally scanned the kitchen, the small pantry…nothing much, five-day old pizza, some Chinese of an undetermined age. Better go out, again.

“Mr. Meowskerton, I’ll be back.” Ainsley grabbed his leather jacket from the back of his chair, threw it on and dug into the inside pocket for the keys to his aging Jeep Wrangler. One quick look at the cat before he closed the door to his 1400 square foot bungalow—the feline hadn’t moved a whisker.

“Ah, to live a cat’s life…” Ainsley said and the door closed behind him.


Fall in Logan Utah can be unpredictable. It snows as early as September and can be in the mid-70s into November. It’s a crap-shoot. To quote Mr. Gump, “You never know what you’re going to get.” Tonight—cold, maybe snow, and it was only mid-October. That’s okay, Ainsley thought. He chose to live in this little valley only a half hour from the Idaho border. He told anyone who cared that his “official” job was that of a columnist, but being a handyman paid the bills. And living in a college town meant there was never a time when those kids weren’t breaking something, malfunctioning doorknobs, shattered windows, clogged toilets—you name it. He had verbal contacts for handyman services with several apartment complexes—he never wanted for work. No, he chose to live in Cache Valley, but he could live anywhere.

But, he’d tried anywhere and it suited him poorly. Having grown up in a smaller yet similar valley to the south, the mountains and ever-shrinking solitude of Logan suited him. If the valley kept growing, however, he’d consider moving. Maybe Wyoming. He’d be farther away from his kids and ex, but closer to his only brother, Matt, the good-for-nothing deadbeat who still owed him a couple of grand from gambling debts.

Tough choice.

Ainsley climbed inside his 1994 Jeep and silently prayed. After a few cranks, his prayer was answered as the engine roared to life. He sat and revved the engine a few times—failure to do so resulted in the engine dying. 

Ainsley exhaled—his breath visible. Saturday night, deadline for his column due in a few hours. He survived another week, a particularly tough week. He thought back on the past seven days and tried to remember if he’d heard from his kids, Mark and Trisha—twins—one living an hour away, one living two states over.

His ex-wife…her he’d heard from.

It’s not that he hated Vivian, at least, not anymore. He’d spent a decade hating her until finally, he stopped. It took too much work, and when he realized the end result never changed regardless of whether he hated her or not, he just gave up. He’d been happier ever since.

But, not completely happy. This was Vivian after all. The woman who convinced herself that she needed more in her life, and by more she meant more money. Ainsley tried to give it to her, nearly killed himself working two jobs and even going back to school to finish that degree. Still, something in her changed and no matter what he did, the woman could not be satisfied.

After years of pretending, they both agreed to part ways. The kids were teenagers and they would understand. All their friends’s parents (it seemed) were divorced, and they seemed to be surviving. Vivian kept the house in Salt Lake. Ainsley moved north. After a few years, he moved north again finally ending up in Logan. The kids grew, graduated, chose different colleges, and started lives of their own.

Not hearing from the twins hurt, but Ainsley understood. He knew they loved him, deep down, and when Vivian tried pitting them against their father, he backed down and let her.

Was it manly?

He didn’t care. He felt it was the right thing to do. Eventually, the kids would one day understand why he did what he did. If not, well…can’t change some things, no matter how hard you want to.

Vivian’s e-mail resurfaced in his mind. She wanted him to come down and fix her new boyfriend’s truck…timing belt. One thing he hated more than helping her out was helping out her new fella. The e-mail came hours earlier. He hadn’t responded, hoping to give her the impression that he hadn’t checked his e-mail, even though they both knew he had, that he had received the request and was avoiding her.

As the inside of the Jeep warmed, he glanced out at a couple of college co-eds walking past. He made eye contact and he noticed the familiar, “you’re killing the planet by driving that hunk of junk” look he received from so many students. Mostly, he agreed, but the realities of a non-steady paycheck and alimony prevented him from buying anything “green” or even a pale mint.

If he could just remember that thought for his column. At the moment this proved his most immediate problem. It was really good, too. It was the perfect thing to complete the column, a side-gig he’d had for the past five years. He still remembered getting the call asking if he’d want to write a weekly column on playing Solitaire of all things.

“Is that really a thing?” He asked Stephen, the geeky-sounding man on the other end of the phone. The silence that followed told Ainsley he’d offended the man. He quickly said, “Just kidding—I would love to help out any way I can.”

And five years later, fifty-two times a year, another column became part of all that mankind had created, a column on the secrets of the ever-illusive and never-fully mastered Solitaire.

Ainsley engaged first gear, popped the clutch, and turned onto 5th North toward downtown.

So, it's a start, a start that was actually started. Hope you liked it.

Monday, October 26, 2020

"Closing Time"...The Podcast Version--Such An Honor


 A friend contacted me a few weeks back and asked if she could create a podcast of a short story I wrote a year ago.

"Of course," I said.

What an honor.

Today the In The Telling podcast released my little story entitled, Closing Time, and it was so cool. She asked for the story--I told her where she could find it online, so when I listened to it this morning, I had honestly forgotten what happened or how it ended. This is not a long story, only twenty-six minutes. If you'd like to hear it yourself, just click: HERE for the link.

When I wrote this story, I was working at Lagoon's Frightmares and I wanted to write a story for the Halloween season. It took seven blog posts to finish it up. As I listened to Amanda Angerbauer narrate Closing Time (she did a great job, by the way...), I cringed a little. There's some glaring technical issues I could and should have fixed, but my blog posts are "down and dirty" since I write them every day. I'm lucky if I can find all the misspelled words (and sometimes I don't...).

It's a fun little story and I'm so happy my friend decided to turn it into an episode for her podcast. Thank you, Liz. If you'd like to do it again, and I'll come up with another story. Just let me know.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Closing Time...Chapter 7...Conclusion


This is a continuation of a story began October 1, 2019. Find the first of the story on the right side of the page to read the story from the beginning.

Chapter 7 Conclusion

Bret opened the door.

Amber didn't know what surprised her more, that Bret was not only alive, but well enough to drive his car to the police station, or that Todd--who only moments before was a black mist--flew into the police station. How could any of this even be happening?

Bret limped over to where Amber still lay on the ground.

"Are you okay?" he said as he bent down to help her up. Amber saw him grimace in pain.

"I am," she said. "Don't know if I can say the same thing about you."

"I'm okay," Bret said as Amber rose, her doing most of the lifting.

After standing on both feet, she said, "And what kind of a stunt was that? Gunning your green Land Rover directly at me?" A smile hoped she conveyed the right tone. In no way did she want to chid him after he saved her life.

"Oh, an athlete like you?" Bret smiled back. "I knew you'd get out of the way in time."

On an impulse, Amber hugged the man a good foot taller than herself. She heard a soft grown as Bret hugged her back. 

"I'm so sorry," Amber said breaking the hug after realizing he was still in pain. She looked up and realized it was his turn to blush.

"Come on--let's get out of here. I have no idea if we did anything at all to that guy."

As quickly as possible the pair jumped in Bret's running car. He put it in reverse and it rolled backwards. The headlights illuminated the smashed front of the police office. Both Amber and Bret instinctively looked at the building.

Todd appeared in the light.

"Bret?" Amber said, her voice unsteady.

"I see him." Bret stopped the car and waited to see what Todd did.

They didn't have to wait long.

In an instant Todd sprang high into the air and flew directly at the car. Amber screamed. Bret threw open the door and jumped out. He quickly opened the back door and drew out a baseball bat. Amber screamed again as Todd began his descent. As he fell, Bret slammed the bat on the pavement--Amber heard a crack. He then drew back the bat, waiting.

From inside the car, Amber watched as a look of pure rage on Todd's face changed to paralyzing fear. He headed straight for Bret who wound the bat back as if he were about to hit a game-winning home run to end the world series.

Amber buried her head in her hands--she couldn't bear to see what happened.

She didn't see it, but she definitely heard the sound of the bat connect with Todd. She screamed again.

Then, nothing...silence.

The next sound she heard was Bret opening the driver's side door. Amber finally looked up.

"Is it over?"

"Yeah, it's over."

"You sure?"

"I'm sure. That guy's not going to threaten you again. He's not going to do anything ever again."

Bret backed up the car then drove out of the parking lot. Amber couldn't bring herself to look back. The two rode in silence. After a moment, curiosity got the better of her and she asked, "You said back there, you were sure it was over. How do you know? I mean, the guy could change into a black cloud."

"Well," Bret said as he drove through the empty streets. "As I drove over here from the gym, I kept thinking about what in the world this guy could be. I knew he wasn't human, that's for sure. I thought maybe he was a vampire. So, when he was flying toward me, I knew I needed to find a wooden stake. I grabbed the bat and  tried to make it as sharp as possible by hitting the ground. Luckily, the bat split right down the center, giving it a nice blade..."

"No, you didn't?" Amber said, shocked.

"Sure did--the bat cut right into his heart. I'm glad you weren't watching. It wasn't pretty."

Amber wondered where they were going. It was soon evident as Bret pulled into the hospital parking lot as the first orange hues of morning rose in the eastern sky. They probably both needed to be checked out.

Amber hurried and helped Bret out of the car and into the E.R. waiting room. As they approached the desk, Amber said, "Wait--I thought you said you played football."

"I didn't get a chance to tell you, I was high school All-American in baseball, too."

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Closing Time...Chapter 6


This is a continuation of a story began October 1, 2019. Find the first of the story on the right side of the page to read the story from the beginning.

Chapter 6

She felt her lift force ebb away.

Amber fell, first to her knees, then her whole body lay on the cold cement of the police station parking lot. The black fog continued to surround her. Somehow the blackness contained Todd's essence, and what she felt raised questions in her mind. This wasn't the Todd she knew, the slightly quirky co-worker at the restaurant. This was an old soul, a troubled soul, an evil soul.

The thought that this awful person would prove the cause of her demise made her mad. She didn't know how, but she refused to allow this creep to win, even if she had to die in the process.

There was no way he was going to win.

"Get off me, you damned creep!" Amber screamed.

Something happened. Something changed.

The darkness that held her down lifted, and for the first time in what seemed like ages, Amber drew in a huge breath.

"I said, get off!"

Finally, Todd released her. His form rose then re-appeared before her, back where he once stood. Slowly, Amber pushed herself up from the ground. She stared up at Todd, no longer afraid of who or what he was.

"What's wrong, Todd?" Amber said. "Didn't you say it was time for me to go? Why don't you finish me off? You too scared, or weak?" Amber continued rising. She now stood on shaky legs before her adversary.

"Shut up," Todd said.

After a moment's silence, Amber said, "Shut up? That's all you got--shut up?" Amber took a step toward Todd.

"Man, you're even more pathetic than I thought you were" She took another step. "I'm going to ask you again--what's wrong, Todd?"

Amber saw disgust and hate on Todd's face. She wondered why he didn't just attack her like he did Bret. Maybe he couldn't, but if not, what was stopping him?

The two stood facing each other, Amber not knowing what to say, not knowing why Todd wouldn't do something, or at the very least, say something.

They both heard the car before the headlights illuminated both of them. The vehicle's tires squealed as the car turned from the city street into the parking lot. Whoever was driving was aiming their car directly at the two, and he wasn't slowing down.

Amber noticed the headlights were higher off the ground than a regular car. This must be an SUV. As it came closer, Amber jumped to avoid it crashing into her. She landed on the hard cement and rolled. Todd didn't move. The SUV hit Todd and sent him flying into the glass doors of the police station. The driver locked up the wheels and a green Land Rover slammed to a stop.

Bret opened the door.

Saturday, October 5, 2019

Closing Time...Chapter 5



This is a continuation of a story began October 1, 2019. Find the first of the story on the right side of the page to read the story from the beginning.

Chapter 5

Todd stepped out.

Amber froze. Her body unable to move--her brain whirled at a thousand miles per hour.

"Todd?" she managed to say.

"Yes, Amber?"

"What are you...how did you...Todd?"

Todd walked down the stairs toward her. "Dear, you must have a million questions right now in the pretty little head of yours."

His voice disgusted her. Still paralyzed with fear, him calling her dear and saying he head was pretty (even though she herself sometimes considered her head little) enraged her. Instead of running back to her car, she felt like running toward him and kicking him in the mid-section.

But she remained where she stood. Todd continued toward her.

"Now, Amber. I can't believe you ran off like that at the parking lot. If I'm being honest, that hurt my feelings."

Todd stopped five feet from where Amber stood. Though a bright light from the police station shown directly behind Todd, hiding all his features showing her nothing but his silhouette, she saw his eyes shine through. She saw his deep blazing red eyes.

"Don't you touch me, Todd," Amber said, her voice more steady than she imagined it could be under the circumstances. "You do, and I'll--"

"You'll do what?" Todd interrupted. The oily sweetness in his voice only moments before vanished, replaced by distain, anger.

"You'll do what? Run off again? Go ahead--try it. You saw what I can do, didn't you? You saw me take care of that pretty hunky-boy thing you were flirting with."

Todd took a step toward Amber. She didn't flinch. Todd stopped, as if prevented by an unseen force.

"You did that to Bret?"

"So, you and pretty boy are on a first-name basis?"

How dare he? Amber thought, now madder than before. She took a step toward Todd.

"You pig!"

She no longer cared about her safety and she made sure Todd knew exactly how she felt.

"Amber, I'm getting tired of both this conversation, and of you."

"Help!" Amber screamed. "Help! Someone--anyone, please help!" Amber hoped someone inside the police station would hear her and come out to see who was screaming bloody murder right in front of their office.

"Oh, please," Todd said and lowered his outstretched hand. Instantly, no sound came from Amber's throat. She knew she was still screaming, but nothing came out. She put her hands to her throat--it didn't help.

"No one inside can hear you. In fact, no one in there will hear anything ever again."

Amber stopped her silent screams.

"My dear, it's time for you go to."

Instead of walking toward her, Todd's body transformed into a black cloud that slowly rose then directly descended over Amber, engulfing her, choking the will to live from her. She felt her life force ebb away.

Friday, October 4, 2019

Closing Time...Chapter 4



This is a continuation of a story began October 1, 2019. Find the first of the story on the right side of the page to read the story from the beginning.

Chapter 4

He never made it.

Amber watched Bret pick up his gym bag, then the light filtering through the sunroof of her Subaru went out, then returned. A black shadow flew directly over her car and raced straight at Bret. Amber watched in horror as the tall man was tackled to the ground, his gym bag flew through the air and hit the side of his Land Rover.

Amber's whole body began to shake. She looked out the passenger side window and saw Bret lying on his side, five feet from his truck. The black mist that attacked Bret rose from the body and hung in midair. 

Amber jammed the transmission into reverse and let out he clutch. 

The car lurched backward, tired squealing.

She jumped on the brakes, then threw the car into first gear and stomped on the gas. The front wheels spun and screamed in the cool night air. Amber looked in the rearview mirror to see if Bret moved, or showed any sign of life.

He did not.

"Get to the police station...get to the police station," Amber said to herself as she raced her Japanese import through the nearly deserted streets of the city. By her calculation, she had another three blocks to go. "Get to the police station." There was another reason why she kept repeating the same thing over and over--to take her mind off of several facts--one, the charming man she was just talking to may be dead, and two, she had no idea what in the world killed him, if he were actually dead.

Two blocks. Amber gunned the engine. She prayed a cop would see her and pull her over, then she could tell her insane story to the police all the sooner. Another turn--no cops. Why, she asked herself as Amber fought to keep all four almost-new tires on the pavement, why, when your harmlessly roll through a stop sign when absolutely no other cars are even close is a cop waiting on the other side of the street ready to pull you over and give you a ticket, but when you're flying through town, escaping a confessed killer and another unknown force may (or may not) have killed another man there's not a policeman in sight?

Maybe she should roll through the next four-way stop, then a cop would show up.

No need...she arrived.

Amber slammed on the brakes. Her car skidded to a stop a few feet from the police station's front doors. Through heavy breaths Amber realized her fingers were clenched around the steering wheel with such force, they'd turned white.

She made it.

Safe, at last.

Amber killed the engine, and jumped from her seat. She raced around the car when the door to the police station opened. She thought it would be a cop.

She was wrong.

Todd stepped out.

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Closing Time...Chapter 3


Closing Time...Continued from the previous two blog posts

Amber screamed.

"Hey." Someone outside her car knocked again. "Are you okay?"

Amber stared at the window, positive she'd see Todd's haunting grin looking back at her. A stranger peered back at her.
"Miss, miss? Are you okay?" a man said.

Amber sat, confused at the events around her. She scanned outside to see if Todd had somehow appeared. She then feared for this man's life.

"Run!" Amber screamed at the window.

"What?" he said.

"Get out of here! There's a killer chasing me!"

Amber saw confusion on the man's face change to first surprise, then resolve. 

"Where?" The man asked looking up to where Amber had just been.

"I don't know, but you'd better get out of here." For a moment, Amber forgot about her own safety and focused on someone she didn't even know. "Hurry--there's a killer out there!"

Amber saw the man move away from the car. He scanned the parking lot, even walking around the car, alert. She also noticed his size--huge, probably a football player, or used to be. His blond hair and wide shoulders exuded confidence. Just watching him Amber felt safer. She started her car. The man knocked again, this time on the driver's side window.

"I don't see anyone. Whoever it was must have left."

Amber lowered her window.

"Maybe, but I'm leaving and I think you should, too."

"I was walking to my car from the gym and I saw you sprinting, like the devil himself was after you. Girl, you're fast."

Even as scared as she was, Amber felt the blood rush to her cheeks. From the stranger's reaction, she Amber knew he saw her blush.

"Uh, thanks. I used to run track--probably broke my personal one-hundred meter sprint back there. Too bad no one timed it," Amber said, her words met with a chuckle."

"Track, huh? Me, too. Decathlon."

Figures, Amber thought.

"But I'll bet you never sprinted and caught your flying keys at the same time before." The man placed his large forearm on the hood of the Subaru. He peered into the car and smiled.

Beautiful smile.

"Ha...you saw that?"

"Yup--first-rate catch there. Real Sports Center stuff, there."

Amber smiled back. She felt her face grow hot again, but didn't care. For a moment, all memory of Todd and his evil grin disappeared.

"I think I need to get to the police station." Amber knew she should leave, but the attraction she felt for this man was undeniable.

"Good idea. Tell you what, I'll follow you in my car. You know where the police station is?"

"On Maple."

"Right. I'm in the green Land Rover. I'll be right behind you."

"Thank you...um--"

"Bret," he said. Bret Simmons."

"Thank you, Bret Simmons." 

Bret nodded and jogged to his car. Amber followed him as he picked up a his gym bag on the way. He had obviously dropped it help her out.

"Land Rover..." Amber said to herself as she watched him go.

Amber put the car in reverse and glanced over at Bret to watch him climb into his green Land Rover.

He never made it.

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Closing Time...The Story Continues


Continued from yesterday's blog post...

Amber turned and ran toward her car as fast as she could.

"Stay calm," Amber said between breaths, her lungs burning, her mind racing. "Don't look back...stay calm...don't look back...get to the car...Get To The Car...GET TO THE CAR!"

A million thoughts echoed in her skull as she got closer and closer to the Subaru. Amber ran track in high school, a sprinter. She knew she was fast, but she also knew most boys could beat her, even on the JV squad. Even though Todd was older and didn't appear to be into staying fit, let alone running, she knew if he wanted to, he'd probably catch her before she reached the car, and then...

"Get to the car!"

Amber dug into into the front pocket of her jeans grabbing frantically for her keys. Got em--she yanked her hand out and the keys went flying in front of her, light from a solitary street light glinted off the Disneyland keyring she bought just last year. Mickey's smile mocked her fear. Thankfully, the keys flew forward and hung in the air in front of her. All thoughts vanished as the petit brunette focused solely on catching the keys. If they hit the ground, it could literally cost her life.

The keys descended and fell into her outstretched hand. She caught them without slowing down.

Twenty feet to the car--she just might live through this nightmare.

Instinctively, her thumb moved to the button on the key fob that unlocked the door. The clicking sound of the doors unlocking synced perfectly with the flashing of the car's parking lights. Two clicks, two flashes. At least she wouldn't have to unlock the door.

Ten feet.

Five feet.

"Stay calm, don't look back."

She slammed into the side of the car not wanting to slow down for even a microsecond. She broke two fingernails as her left hand grabbed for the handle. She pulled it back, the door flew open, the force she used caused the door to reach its apex and fly back into her, hitting her in the side.

Amber felt nothing. She jumped in the car and reached for the door as it began to open a second time.
She caught the inside handle and pulled with all her strength. The power of the slamming door carried with it cool night air causing a small pressure imbalance in her ears. Amber quickly hit the automatic door lock and the reassuring click rang throughout the cabin. The only sound remaining was her heavy breathing, mixed with a high wheeze as her lungs pumped air in and out, in and out.

Safe.

Though, she wasn't truly safe until she was as far away from Todd as possible. For the first time, she looked back to the corner where only seconds earlier she stood with Todd. She expected to see him charging after her, even though she never heard any footsteps or sounds coming from him.

She saw...nothing. No charging killer, no murderous co-worker standing at the corner. At the very least, she expected to see him, somewhere.

He disappeared.

Somehow not knowing where Todd was caused more fear to seep into Amber's mind. She had to get out of there and she had to do it now. 

The keys were still in her shaking hand. She tried unsuccessfully to inset the key into the ignition, but the shaking prevented her from making contact. She took one deep breath and blew out the air. The simple act allowed her to focus on putting the key into the ignition.

Now, all she had to do was start the car and get the hell out of there.

She turned the key.

A knock came on the passenger's side window.

Amber screamed.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Closing Time...A Short Disturbing Story


"You know," Todd said to Amber as the two left work. "A guy died in this very building fifteen years ago."

Amber stopped at the restaurant's back door.

"No way," she said. The college junior had already endured two psych classes and an immersion German class before working a six-hour shift at the restaurant. "You're BS-ing me just to freak me out."

"No, really. His name was Jim--my brother even knew the guy. They were in high school together," Todd said, a smile Amber saw through the darkened hallway crossed his lips.

"Stop it," she said. "I'm not in the mood."

And she wasn't. A headache that had simmered just beneath her forehead all day decided at that moment to grow in strength. Hearing about how some guy died in the building where she worked was the last thing she needed. After all, Todd was always talking crazy. She knew her co-worker--ten years her senior--had a slight crush on her ever since she began at the restaurant three months earlier. 

Still, Todd had lived in the college town his whole life, and she'd only arrived three years earlier. If anyone knew about some guy dying, Todd would.

"Okay, just thought you'd like to know about what happened."

Todd followed Amber out of the door. It swung closed and the cool October air seemed to grow colder at the sound of the door's lock catching. Amber breathed in deep, the cold air slightly freezing her lungs.

"Where'd you park?" Todd asked.

"The lot was full when I pulled up, so I'm parked at the gym."

"I'll walk you to your car--"

"No," Amber said, even though she hated going to her car alone in the dark.

"It's okay," Todd said. "I want to."

"All right." The two set out for Amber's Subaru parked a half block away. They walked in silence, the only sound coming from their shoes on the recently rained-upon sidewalk. Finally, curiosity got the best of her.

"So, how'd the guy die?" Amber asked as they rounded the gym's building and her car came into view.

"What? Die?"

"Yeah, you were--"

"Oh, Jim at the restaurant. No, it's probably best you don't know about that."

"No way," Amber said and stopped. Todd walked two steps before he stopped, too. "You can't just blurt out that some guy died where I work--where I sometimes I have to be alone when I'm closing up--and then not tell me what happened."

Todd walked back to Amber. "You sure?" he said, stopping in front of her. His six-foot, four-inch frame towered over her. Amber felt a chill caused by more than the cold air.

"Yup. I want to know."

"Okay, but you're not going to like it."

"Why's that?" Amber asked.

"Because if I tell you, then you and I will be the only ones who will ever know the truth about what happened, and that will be a problem."

"A problem, how?" Amber asked, genuinely confused.

"You see," Todd said looking back toward the restaurant. "When a person is killed at the hands of another, then there's only one person left who knows what happened. And when two people know, well...we can't have that now, can we?" 

Todd's smile returned, only this time it masked something else.

Amber turned and ran toward her car as fast as she could.

Friday, March 23, 2018

Leaving Home...A Flash Fiction Story


She killed the engine. The already packed car sat idling for several minutes before she turned the key. The aging Toyota sputtered, then died. She thought she should say a prayer—she’d definitely need any help she could get.

Looking west out the passenger-side window she peered down a long back alleyway and a wave of nostalgia washed over her. That alley—it’s where she played hide-and-seek as a child, where she rode bikes as a tween, and where she snuck in after curfew as a teenager. The alley way knew her secrets, her dreams, her joys, her fears…it knew her.

And she was leaving the alleyway and the only life she’d ever known behind.

What if they hate me at college? she wondered. What if I don’t fit in? She was so excited when the letter came from Stanford. She screamed with excitement as shaking hands held the letter of acceptance, but now, the shy Idaho-born-and-bred girl of migrant farmers wondered if she could make the grade—literally.

I should call Mom—no, it’s time for the lunchtime rush. And, she thought, they’d said their goodbyes that morning before her mother left for work. Besides, sh remembered, she’ll be home for Thanksgiving—only three months away. Oh how she wished she could say goodbye to her father, but a drunk driver make that an impossibility.

Her dad…in all the excitement, she hadn’t even thought of him. All the preparations, the packing, getting the car ready for the trip—she had forgotten about her dad.
The girl glanced down the alleyway one more time, took a deep breath, and fired up the trusty engine. She’ll swing by the cemetery on the way out of town. After all, it’s only a few minutes out of her way.

Thursday, January 25, 2018

"Walk A Mile In Dead Man's Shoes"...A Short Story


Dan Jessop kicked the front driver's-side tire on his '97 Subaru and cursed. His usually-reliable car now sat immobile on the side of a two-lane road that linked the small town of Alta Wyoming to the rest of the world.

"You picked a fine time to die, little car." Dan said, his breath shown in the full moonlight then immediately vanished in a gust of cold winter wind. He zipped the zipper on his heavy down coat as high as it would go until the fabric covered his mouth and nose as another gust of wind hit him. He turned so the back of his head took the brunt of the bone-chilling cold.

To make matters worse, Dan left his cell phone at his sister's house. He thought he wouldn't need it. After all, he was just driving the five miles into Driggs Idaho to pick up more ice cream for their mini family reunion. Why his sister decided to move from Malibu California to one of the coldest places on Earth, he'd never know. And why he chose to leave his relatively warm apartment in St. George Utah to visit his sister in the middle of January, he'd also never know.

The twenty-seven year old stood by his car. He thought of trying to get it started one more time, but he somehow knew his latest attempt would yield the same result as the past twenty--no good. He looked at the frozen vista before him and contemplated his choices--stay with the car and hope someone at his sister's house would go searching for him, go back to the road and try and flag down a ride, or walk the mile and a half up to his sister's house.

He chose the latter. Leaving the newly-bought ice cream behind, he started out. 

After all, it wasn't as if he'd never been cold. He'd grown up in Salt Lake and it got cold there. But there was something about this cold, like a physical manifestation of death reaching out to claim its latest victim, it bore into him. The thought made him walk a little quicker.

A few feet into his hike, Dan saw something at the side of the road. At first he thought it was a dead animal. Strange, though,  a dead animal would be a top a foot of hardened snow. Curiosity caused him to deviate a few feet until he stood directly over the thing that caught his eye.

"Strange," Dan said to the lonely night. "I wonder how these got here." Dan looked down at a pair of dress shoes, brown Oxfords. He bent down, picked up the right one, and held it up to the moonlight to get a better look. The shoe was scuffed, the leather on one side scraped as if dragged along the pavement. He turned it over to check the tread life. After all, it's not everyday you find a nice pair of shoes, Dan thought. Written on the bottom of the shoe in black ink, Dan read, "Property of Allen Edmond, Alta WY."

"Hmmmm," a sound came from Dan's throat. "Well Al, hope you find your shoes," Dan said as he dropped the shoe next to its mate. The wind convinced him he ought to pick up his pace before he died of exposure on the state line between Idaho and Wyoming.

Dan tried whistling to break up the boredom, but any sound he produced died in the goose feathers of his coat. The howl of the wind and his own boots crunching on the frozen road kept him company. The unfamiliarity of the area made Dan wonder on more than one occasion if he was truly alone. He turned and looked on more than one occasion to see if he was being followed, or if some animal were tracking him. Each time he look, he saw nothing but darkness and lights from distant homes.

The walk continued. Dan calculated he'd walked about a mile--he used to run cross country in high school. He even spotted his sister's house in the distance and a strange thought crept into his head. Was the ice cream sitting on the passenger seat in the Subaru colder in the car than it would be with him?. Either way, it'd be okay. They'd go get it when he reached the house. Or someone would--all he wanted to do was sit by the roaring fire in the fireplace.

The moonlight cast a shadow on the road before him, only this time it wasn't a telephone pole, power pole, or fence. The shadow formed a cross. Dan looked and saw a marker to his right at the side of the road. Poking up a foot above the snow was a wooden cross. Dan knew instantly what it was. As he traveled north--not just on this trip, but on several occasions--Dan noticed white crosses sometimes adorned with flowers or candles. He knew this very spot was a place someone died. 

The practice of honoring the dead this way wasn't as popular in his home state of Utah, but in the smaller towns in the adjoining states, he noticed these memorials more and more. Knowing how close he was to reaching his goal, Dan walked over to the monument. Though hard to see, he bent down to read the words etched into the wood.

"R.I.P Allen Edmonds who was hit by a car and died at this very spot. Your loving family."

"What...?" Dan said. He read the name twice, then again to make sure. "Well, ain't that a kick in the teeth. I know it's not going to do you any good, Al, but your shoes are about a mile down this road. They're next to a piece of crap Subaru, if you need help finding them."

Dan chuckled, then turned to go. He took three steps forward then stop dead. Ten feet in front of him, in the frozen moonlight Dan saw two shoes, brown Oxfords. If it were possible for shoes to have eyes, they'd be staring directly at him.

"What the..." Dan let his words escape into the night. He slowly walked toward the shoes, unearthly light seemed to shine down on them, making the objects brighter than anything else. He drew nearer, almost expecting the shoes to suddenly attack him.

They didn't move.

Dan crept closer until he stood almost directly over the pair. He recognized the scuff marks on the right shoe. He looked up and saw his sister's house. The urge to leave the shoes behind and run overcame him, but he beat it down.

He had to know.

Dan bent down. He extended his right hand, not knowing if the shaking was due to fear or the freezing wind. His skin touched the leather of the shoe. He picked it up and slowly tuned it over.

""Property of Allen Edmond, Alta WY." The words seemed to blaze in the moonlight.

Dan dropped the shoe. It bounced once then came to rest directly next to the other, landing in the exact position it was before Dan picked it up.

The urge to run returned. This time Dan answered it. He ran to his sister's house faster than he had run since high school.

Monday, November 28, 2016

Fields Of Barley...Vol. 20 The Final Chapter



Fields of Barley, Vol. 20

(If you want to read this from the beginning, click the Stories, Short & Otherwise Link above)

Mark could only stare at this woman. With complete joy in her voice she said, “You will soon know everything about me, about what I will do and where I will live.  You’ll know when I bruise my knee as I fall down running after butterflies, and even feel my pain when my heart breaks for the first time. You will see it all and know my every wish and desire and thought and dream, because you…are my father, and I am your daughter. I am the one you wished so desperately to meet. I’m the child you’ve waited for all those years.”

Now it all made sense. The man standing in the room looked upon his child—father and daughter communicating in an unspoken language heard only by hearts, the two speaking together as members of the same family.

This time is was Mark’s eyes that could not stop the tears, nor dare he even try. He grabbed his daughter and held her tight and she held him, both seeing each other for who they truly were.

"Daddy," she struggled to say. “I’m so glad you’re here, but I can’t wait to go, to meet Mom and grandma and everyone else. I’ve been living here with those who’ve gone before you. I’ve spent so much time with Grandpa. I couldn’t love him more and he’s waiting for you. He can’t wait to see you again.”

Mark broke the hold between them and said, “But you’re not supposed to come now. Janie’s only seven and a half months along—you can’t come now. Janie’s not ready. It’s too….”

She stopped him with her eyes. Again Anna-Lisa had an answer for everything. “Dad, she’s ready. It’s going to be okay. She’s been safe with people who love her all day. This day will not only be remembered for you leaving, but also for me arriving.”

She looked deep into his eyes and said, “Don’t worry. This is how it was meant to be, how it was supposed to happen. And in time I will return to you and grandpa an mom and everyone. We will be together again.”

He knew this was true. Of all the revelations heard this day, this last completed the circle. For Mark now knew it was truly his time to go and he also knew it was time for Anna-Lisa to begin her wonderful adventure.

The couple hugged one more time, a long, lasting hug that would resume at some future date. Anna-Lisa moved to her path and walked to the door. She turned and looked at her father one last time, smiled again and brushed away the last of her tears.  And then she did something completely unexpected. She brought her hands together, cupped them under her chin and with a little hop she giggled with joy, just like a young girl anticipating Christmas morning. Anna-Lisa winked at him, turned, and was gone.

Mark stared at the void where moments before held his daughter. An inner warmth ran throughout his body. He looked down and noticed once again the path that shown brighter than the sun at noonday. Slowly he walked to his own door, paused, and then left the room completely empty. He was now truly home.

The End