Fresh Content : Isolated (rough draft) – Derek Barton – 1/4/2024

INITIAL INVESTIGATION REPORT — 10/28/19: Led by Sedona Police Dept in conjunction with National Forestry Service.

ANNUAL FOLLOW-UP INVESTIGATION REPORT—- 11/15/2020: Investigations & Interviews conducted by Detective Joseph Stouts

ANNUAL FOLLOW-UP INVESTIGATION REPORT—- 11/ 7/2021: Open Investigation led by Detective Reese Arbor

11/14/2021 — My first step is to review the evidence found at the site. I am starting with viewing the video supposedly taken by the cell phone owner. The video has the date and battery amount displayed in the corner.

96% – 10/19/2019

“God! I feel so stupid. I never would have thought I would be doing a ‘found footage’ video, but here I am.” The man on the video spoke angrily and then scanned the surrounding rocks and empty desert landscape about him.

“Okay. Sorry. Let me start again. My name is Merritt Thomas. It’s Saturday afternoon. Or is it already Monday? I kind of lost track after my fall,” he said and then paused to take a deep breath. He is in athletic shape with short blonde hair, light green eyes, and pale but sun-burnt skin. He wore a red rain poncho and a green Coyotes Hockey Team beanie cap. A scabbed-over, bloody laceration ran across his forehead and partially down his left cheek.

“If you are watching this… man, that phrase sounds so weird! I mean I have seen all sorts of ‘disturbing videos’ on YouTube where someone begins their tale with those words, but how did I even get into this position? It’s all so surreal. Anyway, if you are watching this video then that means I may not have made it out of this damn crevice.” He stopped again and looked up off-camera.

“The crevice isn’t that wide, maybe five or six feet wide, but at least seventy feet deep. I was camping by myself which I never normally do. My best friend Marc Gordon had to bail on the trip at the last minute. It’s not your fault, man. Don’t even think of blaming yourself. I chose to come out here alone. It took me a lot of finagling to arrange this time off from work, so I just couldn’t pass it up. I wasn’t going to miss it. In hindsight, I guess, it wasn’t my brightest decision.”

The shadows cover a lot of the area around him. A small pair of cacti grow behind him and a softly babbling stream is somewhere nearby off-screen.

“Friday night went well. I beat the rush hour traffic out of town and came north, near the Sedona region. Hiked till sundown, then made camp. It was perfect weather, no rain, clear starry skies. You’ll see my collection of photos on the phone here.” Birds squawked above in the distance as they flew over the crevice’s opening.

“I made dinner. Caught a pair of bass actually using those new lures you got me for my birthday, Mom.” He laughed, smiled, and then teared up for a second. “Mom, Dad, I love you so much. I really do!  I’m sorry I didn’t always make a lot of effort to show you that. I have been so focused on my work and trying to go up in the chain at Phillips & Grant. It’s not an excuse, but I wanted you to know it was not ever my intention. I’m so sorry if I ever made you feel I didn’t value all you’ve done for me and all the support you have given me through law school.”

He wiped away a couple of streaking tears from his cheek. Then grinned again at the camera. “See, look at me! Already letting my fears get away from me. Well, not this time. I am going to find a way to get home. We can watch this dumb video and laugh at my stupid ass all together. Promise! Anyway, it’s getting dark. Going to try and sleep, I’ll update again in the morning. Lucky me I bought one of those battery rechargers. I should have enough energy on this phone for at least a couple more days or maybe till Wednesday if I am careful. Night.”

Video stops.

93% — 10/20/2019

The video started again. It’s nearly pitch black. There is a raspy sound of cloth moving, perhaps his poncho.

“I am so scared,” Merritt whispered. “I don’t know what it is, but I keep hearing this sound. It’s like a growl, but almost as if it is a person is doing it too. Like someone trying to howl or copy the coyotes out here. On Friday night about 2 AM or so in the morning, I think it was what woke me up originally.”

He paused to listen. Except for the cadence of crickets and other nocturnal insects, there are no other noises in the video. He craned his neck to look up and seemed to scan the surrounding rock. “Anyway, I woke up. I am not a sound sleeper, and this wasn’t the best ground to camp on. Since I was awake, I decided to go take a piss. Again, as I was coming back to the tent, I heard this howling noise. Whatever it was sent chills up my spine. It sounded big too. I sprinted back to the tent and grabbed my phone and my flashlight. If it was a bear or a wolf around, I wanted to scare it off. Didn’t want to get a surprise later when I slept, you know.”

Merritt brought the phone around and spoke again to the camera. “I waited to hear its howl once more. When it did, it was further down the trail than before. I ran after it. I guess I just needed to see it. That’s when I made out these voices. Male voices. Somewhere camping north of me. It was definitely two people having a conversation. One had a deeper tone and sounded older than the other which was a male child. I couldn’t make out the whole conversation, but just some words. I think they were in English. After fifteen minutes of looking for the Howler or maybe the two other campers, I decided to turn back. It was getting cold. On the way back, I stumbled over a root and dropped the flashlight. I didn’t know where it went. It bounced then shut off. It must’ve rolled a bit down the slope and then into this crevice.”

He stopped, shivered, and then wiped beads of water from his forehead. “Crap! Starting to rain again. It’s been off and on since yesterday morning. Well, at least from when I woke up from the fall. Yeah,” he laughed and shook his head in seeming disbelief. “I made the classic, ‘Big No-no mistake’. Went off trail looking for the flashlight in the dark and like an idiot walked right off the edge and fell down here.”

He cleared his throat. “I want to warn you before I turn the camera around to show you the result. This isn’t pretty. Uh, Mom, don’t look!”

The camera shifted and a sudden flash of light showed his legs and feet. His left leg was angled madly off to the side, obviously broken. The white sneaker on his other leg was splattered with blood and a belt was cinched tightly above the ankle on his calf. “Broke both of my legs. Snapped the bone out above the ankle here.”

He then panned the camera showing the small muddy bank of a stream with deep russet-orange rocks and boulders. Sparse river grass and cacti also made up the majority of the landscape.

Above him, off-camera, a horrid grunting and growling howl echoed all about the crevice. The flashlight clicked off. He angled the camera to focus on the bit of sky shown above. It was night, but dark gray clouds mainly blotted the limited light. Nothing appeared to move, and no other sounds were repeated. The night crickets had stopped. Merritt stopped the video.

90% — 10/21/2019

“I am not sure I captured that sound, the howling, or not on video. I don’t want to waste power trying to find out by reviewing.”

It was morning, sunlight lit up the rocky background behind him. His hair was greasy and stuck up on one side. He looked haggard and exhausted.  Most likely he didn’t sleep since the last part of the video.

“It just stopped raining a few minutes ago. May even be sunny up there but it’s not truly getting much in here. The Howler went away after about an hour. It could’ve been hunting this small pack of coyotes I saw the other day on my hike. Not sure—“ he stopped as a spasm of coughing caught him by surprise.

“Well…that’s a bad sign. I might have the flu or worse starting. If this is Monday, then some people at work should notice I’m out or maybe Marc might be wondering why he can’t reach me by now. Either way, I’m looking at another long day and night in here or even two days. I’m in the elements for sure but not out under the sky completely.”

He paused, rubbed at his stubbly chin with a pained expression, then looked at the camera. “I’m thoroughly soaked from head-to-toe by the rain and yet I’m severely dehydrated.” He chuckled weakly.

Merritt rotated the camera around to video the length of the crevice. The small stream ran about a dozen feet from him and cut through the cliff rock. “I am going to try and crawl over there. I want a sip of that stream so badly!”

The camera flipped back to him. “Should I keep the recording going? Do you want to witness the greatest endurance test I’ve ever taken? Or… No. On second thought, I might do some serious screaming and using some choice words that would upset Mom.” Another half-hearted attempt at humor.

The video stops.

82% — 10/21/2019

Merritt faced the camera again. His face looked more haggard and with thicker stubble. Mud smeared down one side of his head to the base of his shoulder. His jacket had been torn. The green beanie was also missing.

“It is right after sundown. The good news is I got to the stream, drank some, and even managed to find an old water bottle to drink from later. The water tastes terrible, but it’s cool and probably filled with every known variant of parasites in existence.” He sneezed hard. Sneezed again and once more. He then trembled. “That’s part of the bad news. I dragged myself through the mud bank by arm strength alone. Hurt so bad! Never would have thought pain could get that intense, but I battled through it. I had to take the rest of the day though to recover. My right leg is getting, uh, what they call Compartment Syndrome.”

He shook his head, a frustrated and pained expression crossed his face. “I have to get help soon! The Syndrome causes swelling under the wall of muscle due to the extreme injury. Basically, blood is welling up, cutting off the oxygen in the leg. Muscle and nerves will die permanently. I may never walk again!”

He stopped, coughed, and choked up with emotion.

“Sorry. Can’t right –” He then reached for the phone and the video ended again.

73% — 10/22/2019

The video restarted but there wasn’t any image. It was pitch dark, but the water still babbled in the background.

A pair of pale orange, almost red eyes opened. They were not near but seemed above his position. Then a soft purring echoed down the cliff walls. It was a striking, odd noise, not cat-like or even feline-like from a lynx or cougar. It had a whining pitch that paired with the purring cadence.

The purring ended and a voice spoke out from above. It was hollow, monotone, and somewhat slurred. The voice was very similar to Merritt’s.

“Sysssdrrrum caws mussel swallin…sssdrem cacawsez mussel swelling… ssyndome cause muscle swelling –” The words cut off as a coyote howl pierced the night. A pair of other coyotes joined in chorus with the first.

“Syndrome causes muscle swellling do-due to the exxksteen…” The words continued as the pair of orange-red eyes moved closer.

“ He-heello? Hi?” The voice asked aloud in the dark.

Merritt didn’t answer or couldn’t.

“Hi? Help you?”

Still no response or movement.

There was a rustling in the brush at the top of the opening then a pair of lupine growlings could be heard. The pack was exploring at the top.

A loud sigh then the glowing orbs climbed back up the rock walls. The soft purring returned. At the ledge, a flash of ivory skin was caught on the video. It was fast and blurred, but it proved that Merritt had definitely not been alone in the crevice.

The video stopped again as the battery slipped to 59%.

46% — 10/22/2019

“I might be delusional, but I think someone was calling my name. I was in and out of sleep all night.” It was daylight and Merritt was recording another entry. His eyes were bloodshot and swollen. His left eye was completely red from a broken blood vessel.

“At least it sounded like my name. And it sounded like a real person. Was that a rescue party?” he wondered aloud. “Not sure what that was last night.” He brought the camera close and whispered intimately. “I mean that happened right? Or was that a hallucination? Did I just record the night air or did you guys hear that voice too?”

His voice sounded raspy, thick, and strained. His eyes had large dark patches under them. His hair stuck out at the sides and his lips were scanned with sores.

“I don’t…I don’t think I am going to make it much longer. If they don’t find me before dark—“ his words were chopped by a series of harsh coughs rattling deep inside his chest. He grabbed the phone and ended the video again.

28% — 10/23/2019

“Hi? Hello? Merritt?”

It was the monotone voice again only slightly more animated and sounded even closer to his voice more than ever.

“Yes. Yes, I’m here. Thank God, you found me!” Merritt called out. His gravely words were barely audible on the recording. Night had fallen in the desert.

“You need help? Where are you?” it asked.

“By the water.”

“Who were you talking to?”

Merritt laughed at the question. “No one. I’m alone with just my cellphone.”

“Stay there. Do not…worry… I’ll help you.”

“I’ll turn on the flash so you can see your way down better.”

The flash of his phone blazed to life. Looming above his prone body was a long, lanky creature. It had a snakelike body with twin legs and clawed arms protruding and gripping the stone walls. The head was elongated with spikey, blonde hair and tan skin. The face was evolving into Merritt’s!

When the brilliance hit its almond-shaped, green eyes it screeched and lashed out with a set of elongated fingers. The camera bounced wildly and then splashed into the mud. The flash was buried but the camera kept recording.

Merritt screamed and thrashed as the creature fell upon him.

“Stop! Help you! Stop moving! Must have you! Help I am.”

Merritt’s blood-curdling screams suddenly stopped. A gurgling sound can be heard over the stream’s noises.

“Merritt. My name is Merritt. I…I was camping.” The voice was muffled as if it were full. “I fell but I am okay now. Don’t worry Mom. Don’t worry or look for Merr-me. I’m fine. Going on vacation. Come home soon.”

The video stopped. The Video Tech clerks surmised it ran out of battery.

Merritt Thomas is still missing. His raincoat, boots, tent, and of course his phone were all eventually located.

It is not clear if Merritt had fallen victim to foul play or if this is a very complex hoax perpetrated for the Internet. Some speculate he had faked this to avoid a possible gambling debt but no evidence to that claim has ever been found. Due to remarks made in the video, in my professional opinion, I am inclined to think this is an elaborate setup to gain some recognition or attention. Merritt had a busy Instagram account and a propensity for pranks per friends and family interviewed. However, no financial transaction or credit card activity has been reported since his disappearance. The family insists that this is not within Mr. Thomas’s character, and he had a great bond with his young sister and parents.

To date, with no remains or body ever found, thus the case must remain open.

*Addendum –

 2/19/2022: WITNESS SIGHTING REPORT

On 2/11/2022 a married couple while hiking a trail in the northern tip of Fishlake National Forest in Utah, claim they saw a white man, in his mid-twenties matching the description of Merritt Thomas. They stated that they had been living in Phoenix, Arizona, at the time when Thomas was first reported missing in the news. Upon seeing the couple, this male subject left the trail and went deeper into the forest without any response. He did not have any backpack or camping gear with him.

4/23/2023 WITNESS SIGHTING REPORT

During the evening of 4/15/2023, three men were attacked and severely beaten by a white male in his mid-twenties, after the men entered a cave to go spelunking in Spring Cave Park near Buford, Colorado. Police investigated the cave site and only found animal remains. One worn-out ID bracelet with the only readable letters as TT was collected. Days later, one of the victims came across an image of Merritt Thomas posted on a Missing Persons’ website and identified him as the individual who attacked them.

Detective Reese Arbor

Sneak Peek Excerpt of Beyond The Barrier Of Storms (wyvernshield #5 Rough Draft) – Derek Barton, 2023

The high walls of the cauldron encircled the gathering. Of the Beleardea to be assembled, there were over a hundred of their top warriors. A thousand of the clergy surrounded the warriors. The troops all formed in an upside-down triangle at the heart of the barren cauldron. Also present were seven of the ten Council Leaders. Pontiff Joman-Gregg remained in exile in Rovmantysa. After LLasher had identified him as a high rank in the Cult, it was imperative that he not lead anyone to tonight’s ritual by chance. He had to exclude himself from an event such as tonight.

Bressard Keough would officiate the ritual in his stead and orchestrate the proceedings. He was a tall, robust man and was adorned in his black and red ceremonial robes. His head was neatly shaven except for a short, gray-white mohawk from his forehead down to his neck. Cold, silver-colored eyes pierced his heavily-wrinkled face. He never smiled, his thin lips in a permanent narrow line.

He had retired as a former military general for the Rovmantysa government. In truth, he had also been a malicious agent of the Byas Ko. Byas Ko was an assassination police force and was responsible for dark operations all over Tayneva. He moved up the ranks in the Byas Ko as fast as he had moved up in the Beleardea, using the same brute tactics. His reputation and blood lusts were legendary. This character trait served him dually in the Cult. It earned him his title, Master of Souls.

Bressard stood with his hands clasped behind his back as he waited on a dais in the center of the gathering.  The other six clerical leaders stood in a half-circle behind him. A few torches were lighting the area, but it was not necessary as there was a full moon as predicted.

Behind the dais at the tip of the troop’s upside-down triangle were four small stone monoliths erected. The clergy and mages had spent the last seven days inscribing and enchanting minute runes upon them. Upon each monolith dangled a black iron manacle and chain. More powerful runes and arcane symbols were painted on the ground in narrow circles. The intensive spellcraft literally twisted the air. Tiny waves pulsed from the ground and small bluish sparks popped within the monolith square. 

As the last of the assembly marched in and settled in formation, Bressard motioned with his hand, snapping his fingers. A wagon maneuvered by five stout warriors wheeled in a platform with a metal cage. A figure chained with his hands above his head was inside. It was Broenef Cros’seau.

Broenef’s head was completely shaved. He only wore simple white cloth pants. His bare back exposed a multitude of cuts, deep gashes, and spreading dark bruises. These were from when he was first captured and dragged by horse down a mountain in Risa. He hung unconscious, his legs buckled beneath him. He and his cage were brought forward and finally parked in front of Bressard. Then three black-hooded men brought in silver-decorated chalices and placed them next to the cage.

All were eager to start the bloodletting. The Resurrection had eluded them for too long. It was time to bring forth a new age of power. The God of Rot would rewrite the very fabric of reality and this new cloth would be in his holy hands. The Beleardea were to be richly rewarded and all would be at their transgression as it was meant to be.

The Master of Souls held his arms over his head and recited an arcane benediction. The words flowed from his lips while his hands twitched and wriggled through intricate signs. A dark purplish circle of magical energy grew in the sky above the dais. It stretched and encompassed the length of the Cult’s formation triangle. 

His frantic words died away. He faced the anxious gathering as he slid an ornate red metal dagger renowned as The Kriss of Keri’si from his leather belt. He held it over his head. “Tonight my brothers we take our last steps toward our ultimate destiny! We challenged all and have crushed the multitude of heretics who would deny the power and rightful place of the Three-Horned Viper!! NEVER AGAIN!” His scream crashed across the cauldron like a clap of thunder. The throng took up the chant as he continued to brandish the dagger.

“NEVER AGAIN! NEVER AGAIN!”

“Bring forth the shell, The Epitolii! ARa eTohl shall wait no longer!”

The three hooded men returned to open the cage and retrieved the unconscious Broenef. They drug him before the dais and hold him before Bressard to inspect.

As the Master of Souls examined the prisoner, he made tiny cuts into his own left palm. Blood bubbled up and dripped unnoticed to the ground. Bressard mumbled more of his arcane scripture and replaced the blade in his belt. With his index finger, he drew symbols in blood upon Broenef. After a few more minutes he stopped to analyze the work. Satisfied, he again brandished the blade.

Bressard stares in fascination at his reflection within the red metal of The Kriss. His eyes in the image altered and erupted into flames inside their sockets. Twin forked-tongues emerged between his lips and large canine tusks protruded. “The promise… His Gift of Power…” Bressard murmured as he witnessed the vision of what he would become at ARa eTohl’s side.

He renewed his screeching screams of “NEVER AGAIN! NEVER AGAIN!” He ran about the dais in a frantic blood orgy. “CHAIN UP THE EPITOLII!”

The hooded men carried the prisoner into the eldritch circles, laid him on his back, and bound him by hand and feet.

Bressard forced himself under control and allowed the religious frenzy to finally subside. He held one finger high over his head. “Yofala DrenbaCi xas Hestym.”

From the purplish circle of energy, bolts of lightning snapped and arcs of electricity struck the four monoliths. Broenef’s eyes opened but very little comprehension registered within them.

A second finger was held high. “Lodi Kodo brong Mafa hextas.” A black cloud formed inside the purple aura. It grew and descended toward the monoliths. Tiny black and red hands clawed at the air from within the cloud.

Broenef’s body lifted from the ground, levitating in place. He shouted with sudden fear. “Where? Where am I? What are you doing?”

The Master of Souls ignored him and held a third finger high over his head. “Hea vi Lino MASRA!”

The clawing cloud wafted over Broenef the Epitolii, shrouding his body from view. Only his blood-curdling screams could be heard.

“NEVER AGAIN! NEVER AGAIN!” accompanied Broenef’s shrieks of agony and gradually washed them out.

The Epitolii, the shell of ARa eTohl had been crafted. The new body of The God of Rot waited.


Some exciting news: New short story, Victim One, published in the latest release of The Wordpeddlers Society Magazine!!

Check it out and get your copy today! (Only Ebook copies currently on sale for $2.99, physical copies coming soon.) CLICK HERE!!

Updated & Fresh Content — It Growls From The Corner I & II – Derek Barton, 2023

I decided to go back to this story written back in 2020 and give it an update and add a fresh spin. Hope you enjoy them as much as I did writing them! Here’s my December 2 Dismember Gifts to you!


IT GROWLS FROM THE CORNER

My eyes open instantly to pitch darkness. My heart races, pumped with an instinctual fear. I clutch the sheets of the bed, my breath caught tight in my throat.

I wait. Listening. There was something. A sound. A noise.

Nothing.

It takes me a moment to even realize where I am. Then it comes back slowly in bits. I was in my late cousin Richard’s farmhouse. He left it to me and several days before, I had moved in, with hopes of renovating the small ranch house.

Two days into the renovations.

The lights were off, the windows shuttered. The dead farmland was blanketed with its night shawl. The only light source came from a light pole next to the battered barn in the back of the house. A ring of ash trees encircled most of the property.

Air was stale and still filled the room. Soft light rays filtered down from one partially open window in the living room and dust floated aimlessly in its illumination.

“Hello?” I whisper, my lips dry, my cotton tongue sticking to the roof of my mouth.

“Hello?” I venture once more, praying I don’t get a response.

Seconds bleed into minutes, minutes grow into moments. Nothing responds. Time lapses.

One bizarre note caught my attention. I don’t hear anything. No crickets, no late-night songbirds, no distant cars on the I-77 highway. Even the wind is holding its breath. What the hell?

However, I do ease my grip on the sheets and sigh in relief. Maybe it was a nightmare with the last fragments waking me. I can’t quite yet laugh at myself and the fear that seized me.

New place, new sounds. Just a case of heebie-jeebies.

I raise onto my elbows.

Hissssss.

The sound pierces me. It came straight out of the corner, draped in deep shadows. A low rumbling growl follows the hiss. A distinct scrape of claws on the wood floorboards makes the hair on the back of my neck rise.

I freeze up all over again, my breath locked in my chest.

My eyes strain to make out a form in the dark. Nothing. It’s like a gaping hole torn into the bedroom space, swallowing up the entire corner.

It’s close. I should be able to see whatever the thing is! Dammit, why can’t I see it? I can’t run. The corner is near the doorway.

What is it? A mountain lion? A rabid wolf? A feral stray dog? What is in my house?

No more noises, no more clues to what it is.

I don’t try to speak again to it. It’s obvious it isn’t human so there’s no real point. My mind floods with bad ideas, desperate ploys, nothing that will get me away.

Moments again drag out. I pull my legs slowly up, curling my form into a better-shielded form. Another growl, deep in its chest protests my movement.

Eyes, silvery and large open up. The space between the eyes at least five inches apart. Then heat and a bitter stench of foul breath wafts over me. Whatever is staring at me, just opened its jaws. I think I can hear the bare sounds of panting.

I brace my hands at my sides against the bed and raise with my back pressed to the wall. Standing seems like my only viable option. It gives me half a chance if this thing rushes me.

Again, from inside the shadows, the unseen beast doesn’t like my movement and it hisses violently, pawing aggressively at the floor. I hear its claws, I see its eyes, smell its breath, but yet there’s no form, nothing in the corner!

At the end of the bed, I left another window open for the summer breezes. A thin metal screen is the only thing on the window. Do I dare plunge through it before this thing is upon me?

It somehow senses my thoughts, and it shifts subtly, the shadows moving with it. Now a couple feet closer to the end of the bed, it sits midway between the door, the end of the bed, and the window.

This tells me one thing. It’s intelligent, but it is also waiting on me to make my move. Yet I feel I have already lost this game of strategy before I even woke up.

I try to summon my dwindling courage. Sweat streams down my neck and chest. I bend slightly, coiling my leg muscles.

The beast stands! I still can’t make out any form, but the shadow grows taller and towers over me, the “head” touching the dusty ceiling. Oh god!

It makes no other move. The ball has come back into my court. My plan for the open window has been shattered.

“Wh- What are you? What do you want?” My voice shakes as violently as my body.

s h e l t e r

The voice carries across to me but speeds through me like a gunshot. It gores my senses and I reel in sudden dizziness and nausea. My legs give out and I collapse in a heap by the pillows.

Shelter? What does that mean?

“I don’t understand.” I moan. “You want to stay in the house?”

It’s useless to try and escape. My fate is in this thing’s claws. There’s no choice but to listen to its demands.

I watch in pure terror as it slowly strides across the room, the floorboards creaking under its weight. Shadows stretching and wrapping around my neck and over my screaming mouth.

Lifted in the air as a smothering sensation wracks me, a burning agony doubles me over in its grasp, and a lightning icy claw rakes across my back.

Tumbling from its hold, I hit the bed, and then tumble to the floor with the words,

w e s h e l t e r h e r e

searing into my brain.

Hours later, as sunlight drifts in and warms my exposed legs and feet. My eyes open and stare up at the room’s dust-covered ceiling fan. A hunger, a need, a blood-thirsty craving howls inside me. My head rises and I study the far wall.

s e r v e

Etched into the faded green wallpaper are symbols, plans, and demands. None that I understand or want to comprehend.

Inside, it reads the words. It knows its purpose.

s h e l t e r a n d s e r v e

It growls again from the dark corners of my tattered soul.

 

 

 

 

Here is the second victim’s story. Keep in mind, these people are not connected. The demons…well, maybe.


IT GROWLS FROM THE CORNER II

I leaned over and slowly turned the faucet, watching the tepid water pouring into the tub. I sat for a moment absorbed in my thoughts. My world had taken a major hit and nosedived. It all happened right here. Somehow, he turned my own home into a nightmare!

Unable to stop myself, I focused on the cuts and bruises on my hands and arms. A nasty laceration on the top of my left wrist was especially worrisome. It was jagged and deep, held together by twenty-some stitches. A jarring flash image of Jeff’s knife crossed my mind. It had been serrated. One of those hunting knives he collected.

I gasped despite myself as an ugly thought bubbled up. What if it was the knife that I bought him for Christmas two years ago? Would he have done that? I couldn’t recall what the gift had looked like. Before that night, I would have never thought he could be that cruel. Now, I couldn’t honestly profess that I really knew Jeff Huntington.

My hand hesitated as I reached for the shower control lever. First, I glanced at the floor and then stood, pulled off two long white towels from the rack, and laid them out on the gray linoleum. I would never shower behind a curtain again. The bloody and torn-up shower liner from before remained untouched from where it had been wadded up and thrown into the corner by the sink.

Son-of-a-bitch has robbed me of that too. I once cherished long hot showers. Never again. That was exactly how that night had started.

I had driven home after 3 pm from my waitress job at the truck stop, dropped everything, and jumped right into the shower. My uniform always reeked of Anthony’s greasy food and the hated smell coated my skin. It was a habit, the first thing I did every night.  

Jeff knew that.

I never heard him come into the bathroom. He must have hidden somewhere in the house. When we broke up three weeks ago, I had demanded the key back, but he obviously made a copy.

Right after the lights went out in the bathroom, he started swinging his aluminum baseball bat. He caught me square on the right side with his first swing. It broke two ribs. However, he didn’t stop with one swing. I was soaking wet, bleeding, screaming, and crying as he carried me out and into the bedroom. There he had already fastened nylon rope to the bed frame. More beating rendered me semi-conscious. I was barely aware when Jeff bound my hands and feet.

Up to that point, Jeff had not said a single word. He shook me to a somewhat lucid state. “You did all this,” he said with a sneer. His voice was terse, his jaw clenched. “You brought all of this on, you understand? It isn’t up for debate. No arguing. You just don’t have the right to call it quits. I am the man! Okay? You are the woman! I will say when and if you can leave. Got that? And Teresa, you aren’t leaving ME!”

He brutally raped me for hours in between breaks to pound his fists into my stomach or cut my body with his blade.

If my two co-workers, Barbara and Shawn, hadn’t come by to take me out dancing as usual on Friday nights, he probably would have killed me. The police believed the coward fled unseen out the backdoor. I was completely knocked out at that point and bleeding badly. It was early in the morning when I woke up days later in the hospital ICU bed.

Unable to realistically stall any longer, I forced myself to take my first shower since his assault. Maybe baths will be more to my taste in the future? I gingerly stepped into the hot water and rotated the shower lever. The water did feel good as I had only had sponge baths for most of my hospital stay. But it was still too fresh. An open wound not scabbed over. Even with the curtain missing I felt my heart race. I grew anxious, too frightened to close my eyes. Every door and window was locked and secured. I made sure every light in the house was on and all the drapes pulled tightly closed.

He was still out there hiding somewhere in the city. They hadn’t found him yet. Hell, he could still be hiding here waiting to finish his baseball practice and end my life once and for all.

I stopped the shower and grabbed another towel to dry off. Right then I craved – needed – a strong drink. I will never feel safe again.

As I entered the doorway, I caught sight of my reflection in the mirror above the sink. My right eye remained puffed up like a large plum. Three lines of stitches marred my left cheek and the bridge of my nose. My bare skin was exposed in patches where he cut chunks of my red hair from my scalp. Two of my front teeth were missing. Now I knew why they refused to let me go to the hospital floor bathroom. My personal unit’s room’s mirror had been removed. I hadn’t even noticed.

“Ohhh. Ohhhh. God, what did you do to me?” I barely recognized myself.  

I spent hours weeping into my pillows before I passed out from exhaustion and the meds the hospital had given me.

***

Someone said something. Calling me?

I rolled over onto my back, wincing from sudden sharp pain. The broken ribs were not letting me off that easily and punished me for forgetting them. My breath came out shaky and plumed in the frigid air of the bedroom.

Huh? It’s summer!

I shot a look at the window in the southern corner of the bedroom. It was dark outside, and only the streetlights glowed through the beige curtains. The room was pitch black. The hall light was off as well. My hands gripped the sheets in a surge of panic.

Is he back?

A low growl wafted through the room. An ominous patch of pure darkness occupied the corner opposite the window. The patch completely blotted all of the room’s features. Something inside it smelled almost like rotting garbage or old meat. It was truly rank, and I couldn’t help but gag. Yet, I couldn’t compel myself to move. A pair of silvery eyes opened slowly inside the black patch in the corner. They didn’t move, only stared intently and deliberately.

Oh god, what do I do now? I can’t fight him off… Wait! Is that Jeff? What is that?

My frantic thoughts raced, but my body remained locked and rigid under the sheets.

“Wh-wh-who?” The words slipped out from chapped and split lips.

No reply. No movement. Nothing.

I waited several long and drawn-out minutes.

“I see you,” I stated. This time with no stammer, but the fright still had its grip on my heart. “What do you want?”

The patch grew larger. I heard sharp claws scrape against the tiles of the bedroom floor. It made a full exhale of fetid breath before it leaped into the air and landed deftly upon my chest. This shadow beast pinned me to the bed. Razor-sharp points of its claws poking into the pajama top I wore. It was heavy but not unbearable. The patch was now child-size and perched on my trembling body. A dark, blurry face, lean and elongated like a goat with two big watery eyes peered down at me. The creature tilted its head to one side. Wide, black antlers clicked against the wall.

“Are you tired, Teresa?” it asked. The voice was slightly nasal but had a smooth humanlike tone and resonance.

“Wh-what?” I replied, again stammering uncontrollably.

“Tired of always being beaten, put upon. Broken. Your whole life you have lived under someone’s thumb. First Daddy. Then Uncle Ron after your parents died. Later, you let one loser after another take piece after piece of Teresa Rianne Baylor. Did Jeff take the last bit of you? Are you dead after all?”

The haunting words dug deep, shredding my spirit and soul. Tears poured down my sliced cheeks.

“Are you there?” It inquired.

“Yes. Yes to all your questions.”

“Good. Yes. There you are.” It leaned down between furry haunches that I briefly glimpsed in the shadowy patch. The goat face was merely inches from mine. Wisps of black fur on its chin tickled my neck. “Is there enough of you left to finally make a stand? Make them pay. Make them know who they really are dealing with?”

I didn’t know how to respond.

“You will never be powerless again. You don’t have to feel pain like that.”

I nodded. Then whispered, “How?”

“Give me shelter.”

“You want to stay here?” I was lost in the direction of the conversation.

A low rumbling growl from deep within the beast’s chest evolved into a chuckle. “No, no, not this shit hole.” A bony, pale gray index finger came down and pointed to my forehead.  “Shelter.” There was a tangible electricity to the spoken word. I could almost feel the weight of it drop onto my chest from its mouth.

Is this a nightmare? It can’t be real! 

Oh, girl, I am very real. Its voice rang out inside my skull.

“Please! Please don’t hurt me,” I wailed. This was all too much, too sudden after the terror that Jeff had put me through.

STOP! It demanded. Its dead-cold finger with a nail, black as oil and crusted with gore, pressed into my skin.

My words stopped short, my mouth closed, and I gazed in awestruck wonder up at the demonic face.

“Shelter me and you will never walk alone again. Never be weak again. You will face the world fearlessly. SHELTER ME. SERVE ME NOW. I WILL THEN STOP HIM AND THE OTHERS…FOREVER

A simple smile formed on my busted lips. I felt a part of myself return. A flicker of life was restored.

A dark calm passed through my ravaged body as my master smiled a toothy, frothy grin.

***

A loud series of snores vibrated through the trailer, even shaking the walls with their powerful volume. I found the fat pig passed out, slouched onto his left side in a broken recliner. Beer cans were crumpled at his feet, a discarded bag of Doritos lay on the floor and only a muted television set on a crate lit up the room.

Jeff was back home, carefree with all charges dropped. The investigation died since they couldn’t find me. Some even suspected Jeff had found me first and I was rotting somewhere in a  shallow grave. Or some think it was a ploy by me to get attention or a smear campaign because Jeff is such an upright citizen. Either way,  there was no one to testify and no one to accuse him. The police apologized and sent him on his way scot-free. Without a doubt, they were fearing he was going to sue their asses for false arrest.

That was all fine. I didn’t want the police to keep Jeff. He was all alone now.

The air thickened as the temperature dropped. Jeff’s snores subsided some when he hugged his arms across his wide chest and shivered. All but the light from the television darkened, snuffed out under a blanket of silence. A rotating fan standing next to the doorway cruised to a stop.

Jeff didn’t hear the soft whine coming from Cooper, his aged beagle, as he slinked out of the room. His tail was tucked between his legs in resignation and fear.

An infinite patch of darkness swallowed even more light from the room and the shadow expanded above the television set.

Jeff woke up with a start. Tangled fragments of a nightmare drifted away as he blinked himself awake. I plagued his dreams. 

His eyes focused on an old rerun of the Password game show. The colors from the screen had bled away, now only stark blacks and whites were visible. The people were also distorted, their heads elongated as their arms stretched in odd angles. My visit was distorting reality, bending the rules.

“What the Hell?” he murmured, fascinated yet seemingly repulsed by the surreal sight.

I let out a soft hiss that broke his concentration, and he noticed then the patch of utter darkness above the set for the first time. The patch had settled and now appeared crouching on top of his television. It was time for me to enter.

I showed my two slender hands and altered them to an abnormal length.  His eyes bulged at the sight. Then my thin fingers slowly inched their way down. My new blood red nails made tiny clicking sounds on the glass of the screen until they reached the crate. My hands were still pale and feminine, but I kept the cuts and bruises he made. They crisscrossed and wrapped about my limbs. That long laceration that twisted around the wrist especially caught his attention.

Jeff reflexively sat up and pulled his legs away from the crate. He trembled now with fear more than from the chill. 

My soft laughter at the sight of him drowned out his disbelief. “Oh, God. Teresa?”

“Mmm-hmmm. Baby, I’m home. I’m hurt. It doesn’t look like you missed me.” My distorted voice was high-pitched and purposefully mocking

His hands scrambled and plucked a long knife that was sheathed at his belt. He waved it before him. “I will mess you up! Don’t get near me!”

I laughed even louder at his silly show of being a threat. He was about to see who he really was up against. I expanded the patch more and  manifested. I was taller and slender than I was before. A lot of me had changed!

I slid down and flowed out toward him like watery smoke as the television blinked dead without a sound. His entire trailer was dark and dense as a tomb. 

“You did all this,” I said. “You brought all of this on, you understand? It isn’t up for debate. No arguing. You just don’t have the right to call it quits tonight. I am in control now, little man. You are my bitch! I will say when and if you live. Got that? And Jeff, you will never be leaving me!”

I erupted in more malicious gales of laughter as my hand slashed out impossibly fast. The strike flayed open his right cheek. The skin and flesh slipped down and folded over exposing teeth and upper jawbone.

It was the first of Jeff’s bloodcurdling screams, but not the last he was going to give to me.

The last screams came when I squeezed my fingers into his skull and plucked out his eyes one by one and then laid them perfectly on top of the television facing the door.

I left him alive for now.  When the police found him he was blind, castrated, amputated, and mute. Lying in a pool of his own blood. I did leave him with his hearing intact so that he could hear the whispers of pity and the placating lies that they told him and all would be okay as he was rushed to the hospital. 

The same one that saved my life. 

Fresh Content (rough draft): Late Night Dinner Guests – Derek Barton – 2023


LATE NIGHT DINNER GUESTS


Chuck Broward carefully loaded the last bag of garden fertilizer into the bed of his white pickup truck. Then placed a fifteen-foot roll of hexagonal chicken wire on the passenger seat.

9:08 PM

It was a humid, muggy  evening and far too late for him to be starting this errand. It was way too late for a man of his sixty-two years of age to be out shopping. But he had made a promise to Emmaline, his lovely granddaughter. Last Spring, he said they would build a garden together in the backyard before Fall came to Dermott.

Earlier, on their weekly phone call, she had  admonished him. “It’s already mid-August! Are we going to have to  buy snow shovels before we start?” Her voice rose in pitch whenever she complained. It was cute. And this little eight-year-old knew the exact buttons to push.

So…this was the weekend, Sunday, he would make good on his word. 

He wiped at his sweaty brow and cursed his aching hips. “God! Don’t let me have a heart attack in the middle of setting this up.”

He turned the key and started the old Chevy. Traffic on the surface streets was docile but when he merged onto the I-18 freeway, it was busy. Most were young people heading out for a night of dancing and drinking, he supposed. His days of carousing were long ago and his wife Marcy has also long since passed.

He smiled to himself at the sudden memory of her. Not a day had gone by that he hadn’t thought of her and missed her laughter. He was good at making her giggle or even cackle like an old-timey witch. It was such an endearing trait of hers. Was…

He shook his head to clear away the emotions building inside, leaned over and fished around inside his glove compartment for his pack of cigs. His twenty-eight-year-old doctor had demanded he quit. Easy for him to say but this dirty habit had been going on longer than that little pissant had been alive!

A rusty van coated in splotchy flat black paint roared by him and cut across his lane nearly clipping Chuck’s front end. It careened into the fast lane then tailgated a semi-tractor-trailer. 

“You idiot! Learn to drive before you kill someone!” He screamed. Nothing was more evident to him that the country was going to Hell than the way young people drove nowadays. Always in a frenzied rush, careless and completely unaware of the other drivers on the road.

His sudden temper boiled and he rolled down his window and stuck out his arm to flip the van’s driver off. 

The van’s brake lights flashed for a second. As if the vehicle itself has taken notice of Chuck’s derisive slight. 

Traffic began to slow further as luck would have it due to a minor fender-bender somewhere ahead. Chuck was still in the slow lane but only two cars behind the van. The ugly van’s passenger window was up and tinted very black. He could identify the make now. It was a late model GMC Savana with balding tires, sagging shocks on the back driver side, and two cracked and painted-over rear windows.

Somehow Chuck felt eyes crawling all over him as if he was being studied as well. “Oh yeah?” he yelled. “That’s right! You can go fuck yourself if you won’t drive right!” He flipped them off again.

There was no reply and the lanes restarted their progress.  Yet when the traffic opened up, the van crept along and stayed parallel with his pickup. 

A mile passed then two with the pair of vehicles remaining even in the lanes. 

You don’t frighten me, pal,  Chuck thought. He glanced subconsciously at the passenger seat. There, hidden underneath, was a small, silver aluminum baseball bat. From his past experience as an outside salesman for an office furniture company, he always carried some form of protection. You never knew who you might encounter.  He shied away from guns as it required a lot of paperwork and government bullshit regulation. Yet a knife, sap, blackjack stick or bat was easy and still as effective.

Ahead he spotted the 209A exit ramp, his stop. He veered away. The van slowed then cut back to follow behind him. One of the van’s headlights was oddly dimmed, angled to the side. It reminded him of Chester Conklen, a kid in his childhood neighborhood who had a crooked smile and a lazy eye. Talking with Chester was always awkward and off-putting. His lazy eye gave you the impression he wasn’t really listening and he was more interested in something else behind you.  This GMC van was kind of the same. It was watching you, but it was also angling to see what else was out there to the side. Hunting?…

The exit ramp circled back on itself and then marched up to a red stop light at a busy four-lane street called Adams Avenue. 

Chuck waited on edge, the traffic light taking infinitely long. In his rearview mirror, he watched the van pull up directly behind him. All he could see were a pair of white hands gripping a steering wheel. The interior was pitch black and hid the driver’s features.

“What’s your play here?” he asked aloud. The audacity of the driver was fanning the fires to his anger. ”Didn’t like me cussing at ya? Well, go sit down with the other bitches waiting to see if I give a shit!”

The light turned green, but Chuck paused and sat at the stop. The van revved its engine in irritation but didn’t honk the horn. Finally, he accelerated and made a right turn down the street. The GMC followed. He sighed out loud, feeling put out. He wasn’t looking for a confrontation. He only expressed his irritation about how the other driver was driving. Yet now he couldn’t avoid the guy nor could he even proceed home. 

As he approached another traffic light, he decided to go left versus right. The van roared forward and blasted ahead in a sudden burst of speed. It then pitched to the left, cutting off Chuck again in the same manner he had on the freeway. This time a small, brown paper sack was vaulted out from the passenger’s window. When it hit Chuck’s windshield, a thin orange liquid splashed and coated the glass.

Immediately Chuck had to brake and park. He cursed vehemently as he switched on the wipers. A broad, half-circle smear followed the wipers. It was a cheap paint of some kind!

Check stepped out from the truck and dug around in the collected trash inside the truck bed. He found a pair of red rags. “You son-of-a-bitch! I’m going to call the cops. No screw that! If I see you again, I’m going to go to third base on your head with my bat!” His words and rage flowed profusely from his mouth. “You went too far. Now I have the right to bash your freaking head in! Goddamn—“ his ranting faded away, his attempts to mop at the paint stopped. The black, intimidating van sat idle along the street facing him. Watching and waiting…Hunting?

“YOU ARE GONNA PAY!” Chuck screamed as he bolted back into the truck. He slammed his foot on the pedal and his Chevy jumped forward as it gunned toward the van. The truck’s door swung closed with a bang. He hadn’t even shut it before taking off. He only saw red. His fury controlled his actions.

The black van raced off going past Chuck who had to do an awkward, ugly u-turn in the middle of the street. Now with the orange paint spread all over, he only had a tiny circle of window to see through where his rag had cleaned off some of the coating. He didn’t care. He sped up until he was nearly crashing into the other vehicle’s back bumper. There was an Ohio license plate swinging back and forth as it was held on by one bolt. He didn’t bother with memorizing the numbers. This guy was not getting away from him now.

Together the pair of vehicles raced at dangerous speeds through a residential neighborhood.  Chuck was panting, sweat dripping down his temples. However, he was grinning. A big, toothy smile that promised pain and punishment. 

The van abruptly took a hard right that he couldn’t anticipate or copy. His truck went straight and plowed into a chain link fence and exploded through someone’s mailbox. Letters, advertisements, and junk newspapers went everywhere and somersaulted in the air. He had the presence of mind now to stop and catch his breath. If that had been a car or a house he would have careened right through them. Could have even died or killed someone in the process. 

“Aw shit,” he moaned. “What the hell am I doing?”

At that moment bright lights lit up his truck’s interior. Two headlights on full bright, one lamp still skewed to the left, came straight on. Oh god! He’s going to ram me! Chuck screamed inside.

Again with supernatural agility, the van twisted to the side narrowly missing the Chevy. A soda bottle arched high into the air. It came again from the passenger side window. The plastic container hit and lodged in the hood between the wiper blades spilling its contents. A putrid, acidic odor of urine filled Chuck’s nose. It burned as if the bottle was poured directly into his nostrils.

HE JUST PISSED ON YOU! His brain screamed in outrage, stunned again by the audacity of this bastard. HE JUST PISSED ON YOU! HE PISSED ALL OVER YOUR TRUCK. PISSED ON–

He saw the man at the same time he shot his arm inside and put a dirty, white t-shirt against Chuck’s face. It reeked of strong chemicals. The other driver was young, in his late twenties and had long, choppy black hair obscuring his eyes.

His vision blurred. He didn’t get a chance to mutter even a word before he fell away into nothingness.

Hours later maybe, it could’ve been days. Chuck didn’t know, but he finally woke up. The night was still very dark and without wind. Stars peeked down at him from behind wisps of clouds as if curious as to what he was doing. His whole body ached and protested at the strain it was under. His head was held back by layers of duct tape, exposing his neck. HIs arms were tied together behind a tall telephone pole with a lamp that hung over him. A long rope of Christmas lights was wound around his chest and down his legs. The wood of the pole poked into his back through the thin material of his gray and blue t-shirt. 

Standing and smoking a cigarette was the young man who had attacked him. He wore faded blue jeans, a dingy green shirt and a cheap black leather jacket. The kid faced away and hadn’t noticed Chuck was awake yet.

In his limited field of vision, he saw an old dark barn, the black GMC Savana was parked there. A dozen or so yards behind it, he saw his Chevy Tahoe parked and abandoned with other neglected cars and trucks in an overgrown field. Beyond the small parking lot of vehicles were mounds of trash. They encircled the area. The smell of rot and discarded refuse hung heavy in the air like pollution. Chuck guessed it was a local junkyard.

“Mister?” Chuck mumbled. His throat and his lips were sandpaper dry. “Mister? I’m–I’m sorry.”

The lanky young man turned slowly around. His face was pasty white, tattoos blanketed his neck, silver skull earrings dangled from wide, gauged earlobes. “What?” he asked.

“I said, I am sorry. So very sorry. Can we forget all this happened?” Chuck pleaded. Moisture gathered at the corners of his eyes. He had never had this type of intense experience. Never been so afraid of what could happen next.

“Sorry? For what? I don’t understand.” He seemed genuinely confused.

A raspy, high-pitched voice called out. “Is he awake? Is he awake now?” The words were frantic and rushed, tumbling over each other in their urgency.

“Please, man. Let me go. I have a family. I…I have a beautiful granddaughter I very much want to see again. Please!”

The youth laughed. “We all have family. All have someone we need.” A shadow seemed to pass over his features. The mirth was stolen from his smile. “I have a sister, man. Well…they have, I mean.”.

“What?” It was Chuck’s turn to be lost in the conversation.

“He’s awake! He’s awake! Hey! He is awake!” The other voice crooned. Laughter followed after it. Then other sources of laughter joined in from the dark gloom. The laughter surrounded them.

“What’s going on? What do you want, sir? I apologize for cursing you. You upset me when you came close to my truck. I am sorry!” He was earnest. Just want to go home.

“Don’t worry. I’m not mad. It’s all part of the deal. I’m Neal by the way. You are?” he asked.

“Chuck Broward.”

“Ooooo Charlie! Charlie! Charlie!” The other voices filled the air.

“Hey, Chuck. You see, man, you chose the wrong night. You chose the wrong person to vent on, that’s all. I mean, shit, lucky for me, but, yeah, shit deal for you.” He stopped, turned toward the dark building and whistled.

At first, only the reflection of a pair of eyes could be seen. They were an odd faint blue. Then another pair opened, followed by two more behind it. Chuck gasped in terror when a small, thin gray creature crept out of the gloom of the barn. It had a tiny, softball-sized skull, the whitish skin stretched very tight over it. It didn’t have a nose but a wide maw that crossed over the entire skull. The mouth was filled with tubular teeth, translucent and very pointed. A pair of gray and pink tongues flashed snakelike in and out. Their eyes were solid, white buttons in the light. They were surrounded by triangular patches of red flesh that pulsated in obscure rhythms. The wolf-size beasts crawled on two legs but had three sets of arms, the smallest near to the face, obviously meant for feeding scraps to the mouth.

“What the fuck is that?” Chuck cried out.

“Dinner guests! Dinner guests! Dinner guests!” One of the monsters bleated out. 

Another one climbed out of the passenger side window of the GMC. It was broader than the others. Its back had two rows of small, ebony spikes sticking up from its skin. It said, “We accept! We accept! We accept your donation, Neal!”

Glumly, Neal took one last long pull from his cigarette and snuffed it out under his boot. He glanced again at Chuck who was trembling and gasping for air. “I am really sorry, too. Like you said, man, I have family and I want to see her again too. Sorry.”

“Charlie! Charlie! Charlie!” they taunted. “Bad driver! Bad driver! Bad temper! But is he sweet? He he he!”

He walked past the streaming horde of beasts as they crept out of the shadows and the barn. From his jacket, he retrieved some earbuds and settled in behind the wheel of his van. 

He refused to look up until the meal was done.

Fresh Content — Tenth – Derek Barton – 2023

Here’s another short story. The special theme to this one is “bittersweet”. This tale is a bit different than my norm. Little less horror and more engaging aspect — pulling on your heartstrings. Hope you enjoy it!

TENTH

10/28/19 – The Day Of

“When do I get tippy-toes?” Mattie asked from the backseat as they pulled into the parking lot of Graham Park. 

“Oh! I want some! Me too. Me too,” cried his five-year-old sister, Lilly.

From behind her SUV steering wheel, Kelli muttered, “What are you talking about, bud?”

“I heard on TV, the man said, you can reach the box if you stand on your tippy-toes. I am ten now. I want my tippy-toes. I’m grown-up and deserve to have them!” Mattie said proudly, puffing his chest out. The day before was his tenth birthday. His mother, Melissa Brandon had thrown an early Halloween/Birthday party for him and all his little classmates.

Kelli Jarvis, his exasperated nanny barely into her nineteenth year, was exhausted. She had assisted with the party and the late-hour clean-up. “That’s not how it works. It’s only  a saying.”

“No,” insisted Lilly, shaking her head. “Mattie is right. We deserve tippies!” She began to drum her hands upon the armrests of her child seat.

“Yeah! We want tippies! We want tippies!” he laughed and chanted with her.

“Settle down, now. Or we can just go back home?” Kelli grumbled.

The siblings dropped the matter immediately. They had been dying to go to the park all day. It had been constantly drizzling and they had been stuck inside, festering with “Bore-dumb Syndrome”.

The public park was decked out with four sets of slides, twin rows of swings and several wooden obstacle structures to play tag around.

They scrambled out of the car and bolted away in a frenzy. Kelli glanced at her phone for the fifteenth time. Jessie still wasn’t answering her texts. She opened up her door and followed the kids into the busy park.

Since the sun was shining for the first time that Saturday, many families were out including two family birthday parties.

Kelli removed her jacket. She tied it around her waist and sat down near the yellow slides. Mattie left his sister and found an empty swing.

Lilly was decked out in a baggy, red onesie. She was still chubby with baby fat and waddled slightly like a duck. Kelli couldn’t help but grin at the cute toddler. Lilly spied her looking at her and waved from the top of the slide.

Her phone buzzed. It was a text.

No. I am going with Brett to the Derby at the Lewiston Fair. Stop asking. I told you this. 

Jessie could be so rude. It was their six-month anniversary after all!

Before she could respond, Lilly’s scream cut through the air. The little girl was on her stomach and blood was oozing out from a swollen lip.

Kelli rushed over to assist the wailing child.

Mattie left the swings and walked alone into the Men’s Restroom.

***

Two hours had passed.

First, Kelli strolled about, scanning the park. Then, twenty minutes later, she began calling his name. Her voice was strained and catching people’s attention. Then she was frantic, dragging a sobbing Lilly behind her as she screamed for Mattie. Other parents by this time joined in the search. Matthew Joshua Brandon was nowhere.

“I am sorry, sweetie, it’s time. You have to call his mother. She deserves to know. The police are on the way.” One middle-aged mother advised her.

***

A slender, athletic man walked across the park, holding a clipboard and a walkie-talkie. A gold badge adorned his shoulder. He was young with black hair and a thin babyface.

“Miss Brandon?” he asked, extending his hand. She was sitting on a bench.

She wiped tears away with the back of her hand instead of shaking his. “Yes.”

“Uh… Well, I am Detective Dax Roberts, ma’am. I am lead on your son’s disappearance.”

“Okay,” she mumbled, distracted as a roaring helicopter passed overhead. A brilliant light swept the grounds beneath it.

“We are doing everything—”

“Stop! Stop! I don’t want your placating words, things you were taught in the academy. I just want to know you know how to bring back my little boy!” Her rant melted into a wail. She couldn’t continue.

He squatted low to look into Melissa’s face. He took her hands in his. “I am sorry. I didn’t mean to give the impression I wasn’t seriously involved or dedicated to you. I want you to know, I won’t stop. I won’t back off till we get Mattie back to you.”



8/15/20 – Day of Discovery

Chuck and Daniel were similar in age, appearance and even build. Good old hard-working fellas with some skills and reliable reputations as handymen. They had been hired by the city and on that morning were off in their white work pickup heading to Tandam Pond.

“Investigators are estimating last night’s thunderstorms cost the county over $7 million in property damage. Only minor injuries were reported stemming from a collapsed construction scaffolding. The rest of the week’s weather is expected to be clear.”

“Sounds like we are going to be busy,” Daniel said.

“Sounds good to me. That’s money I can use.”

“You still planning that Chicago trip?”

He nodded as he drove them to the edge of the pond. Three wooden piers had been built here but only one was untouched. Another was completely submerged, the last listing to one side with broken boards sticking up like broken teeth.

Daniel whistled at the site.

***

As Daniel wiggled into his plastic waders, he spotted something floating under the partial pier. It was black and maybe two to three feet long.

“What do you think that is?” he pointed at the debris.

Chuck, who was already at the pond’s edge, shrugged and made his way carefully into the pond.

The water was murky from the silt stirred up from the storm. The object was a duffle bag. Chuck spotted one end was tied with a moss-covered nylon rope. Another piece of the rope was partially secured on the other end but rotted through.

He lifted the black bag out of the water. A sickening stench filled the air around them. Immediately, he lurched backward and thrust the bag away. He bent over and retched his breakfast into the churning water.

“Oh God! Call 911!”

***

Detective Dax Roberts left his car. His heart was beating like a jackhammer. He saw the two handymen who had called the find in. They were noticeably shaken up. Officers were mulling around the pair.

“Detective, we haven’t cut it loose yet. We can–” said a young rookie officer.

 “No, I want a pro diver in there. Make sure there’s nothing hidden by the water. I don’t want any mistakes here.” Dax waved him away.

An hour later, the diver rose from the depths of the pond, the bag held in his arms. The outline of a small body in a tight fetal position was clearly evident.  A tuft of brown hair stuck out from a zipper on top. The sight would haunt his nightmares for years.

Dax didn’t need DNA or an autopsy to know who was inside the bag.



10/28/29 – The Day to Remember

The detective angled his car into a spot near the main building of Humbolt Cemetery. The day was unusually hot for the time of the year. Dax removed a couple of plain manilla folders from underneath his jacket on the bench seat.

He sat for a few seconds to collect his thoughts. He glanced at the rearview mirror. Quite a few wrinkles had gathered around the edges of his eyes. He had lost his babyface years ago. He rubbed at the black and gray stubble on his chin.

He asked his reflection, “She’s not going to be easy on you. You must know that.” He nodded to himself and shot a look at the folders on his lap. Sighing in resignation, he opened the door.

At the east side of the building, paths were laid out with white gravel. They wound their way over to different plots. He took the path that ascended a small grassy hill with some towering oaks on top. When he crested the hill and stood in the shade of the trees, he spotted Melissa Brandon in a shady section at the bottom. She faced away from him, looking down on a silvery blue headstone.

Dax ran his hand through his hair, smoothing it out as best he could.  The detective didn’t say anything as he joined her before Mattie’s final resting place. For several minutes, they remained silent.

Finally, she said, “Thank you, Detective Roberts for agreeing to meet me here. It’s rather nice, isn’t it?” She was looking up, scanning the woody area ahead of them. A short, black iron fence ran along the northside and continued along the west border of the cemetery. A lazy stream cut through diagonally and meandered further east to skirt the grass hill.

“Yes. That it is, Miss—”

“Oh please, call me Melissa,” she interrupted him.

“Okay, Melissa. You found him a very proper lot with a beautiful view,” he said awkwardly. He was uncomfortable and fumbled for his words. This meeting was highly unusual and technically, he could face some repercussions for allowing it.

Yet, she deserved something, didn’t she? He thought to himself.

“I know you expect I am here to chew you out or throw a fit or such. But I’m not,” she said and looked at him with a genuine smile. “I wouldn’t do that here. And there’s not much good that would do.”

“The case is still open. The investigation has grown cold, but you never know. Sometimes it just takes one thing to break…” His words faded off as she shook her head slowly, a tear trailing down.

“I already know that. I became a true crime junkie after all that happened. Hell, I became a lot after your call that night to let me know, the identification was positive.”

He still had no words, had no way to relate to the profound loss she had as a mother. He waited for her to continue.

She returned to studying his headstone. “I lost myself in booze, lost my job, nearly lost my girls. My sponsor finally hit home with me. Said that someone stole my child and took the wonderful years he had ahead of him. A life that was meant for great things. I could let him keep that or I could take it back, live my life in honor of him. Find a positive way to move forward. Not ‘move on’ but ‘move forward’. I liked that!

“I work again, but now from home. I do tax work for six months then the other six I spend with my girls and my grandson, Marcus. I also volunteer at a non-profit organization that focuses on other grieving parents like me. We are a resource to offer therapy, provide networking and even assist in funding for investigations. My life before Mattie was taken was so different… so selfish. I could’ve been there at the park that day. I thought it was more important for me to finalize a product presentation—”

“No, don’t do that, ma’am. I mean, Melissa. Don’t put that guilt on yourself. Mattie was targeted. Your good intentions of providing for your family didn’t make your son vulnerable to what happened.”

“I realize that. It took a lot of soul-searching to find a way to forgive myself for what I had no control of. Anyway, I was a mess, but things have come together after all this time.”

She spotted the folders in his hand. “Will those get you in serious trouble, Dax?”

He shrugged. “Nothing I can’t really handle. In a few years, I am due for a promotion or retirement. Either way, it’s not more important than the promise I made to you ten years ago.”

Dax handed the copies of the case files over to her. They had his preliminary findings and the police reports of the day her son was taken. Everything he had done then and every step he took after the Feds stepped in.

“What isn’t in there is something I cannot give to you in documentation. After his remains were found, the CSI labs found trace amounts of red paint chips on his clothing. The FBI immediately took the case from me going forward.”

“Oh, I know. That FBI Task force is a black hole. They suck all the information in, any progress, any evidence, everything. Suck it all in and refuse to share any insight with us. Nine years of stonewall silence.”

“I have kept tabs with a contact in the Bureau. I can tell you there are no suspects, but there are plenty of rumors and opinions. Seems your son matched with a string of other murders. The red chips of paint, the gender and the age. Even the Tenth month of the year. It all –”

“Was he… messed with? Raped?” she asked, her lips quivering.

“They don’t think he was. He and the others showed no signs of it.”

“Oh, thank God.”

“The task force will not release anything to anyone because should this guy make a mistake. They need the details to be sure they have the right person, you understand? They can’t find him yet and they cannot be sure of how many other boys. I am only telling you this as I want you to know I haven’t forgotten. Your son still matters to me and a lot of people.”

“I didn’t doubt your words and your dedication. Yet, after all this time, I really don’t need justice. It won’t change what happened. My boy was returned to me. I have met parents who have never had their answers, never had closure. I buried my little angel. Do I want the man caught? Of course! But I refuse to let this end my life. I have my girls and I owe it to them to be there for them too.”

She goes quiet, continues to quietly weep. That is when he spots an odd engraving cut into the left corner of the gravestone. Dax stoops then squats down to get a better look at it. It was a QR Code.

“That links to a website I have as memoriam for Mattie. The site has a video we took of him on his last night. He’s in his little Frankenstein costume pretending to be scared of the candles on his birthday cake. ‘Ooo fire! Fire bad, mommy.’ He was so funny and so curious about everything.” She went silent again.

“You see, Detective, while that bastard took and killed my son, his spirit remains here in my chest. Living on in my heart where no one can dare ever take him again. Mattie is forever.”

Dax rubbed his fingers over the engraving and nodded in agreement.

Fresh Content Short Story — The Wheels on the Bus… – Derek Barton, 2023

2:38 AM.

It was the beginning of the hard hours. The hours of 2:00 to 4:00 AM where the ghosts in my head shouted. Sometimes they screamed at me. Sometimes at each other. Or hell, sometimes the ghosts just wanted to scream. I guess in eternity, you have that luxury. What else are you going to do?

The pull was always there. Even in the good years after AA saved my life. It started at an early age for me. I was 8 and found the key to the liquor cabinet. The taste wasn’t good at all at first. I couldn’t believe that the adults drank what had to be part gasoline. However, when the buzz hit me, the lightheadedness was awesome. I never felt anything like it. It was almost like that thrilling, out-of-control feeling you get when you are on a tall slide. Wind blowing by you, the ground approaching fast. You are helpless but at the same time you are having an amazing experience knowing you’ll be safe. This felt even better as I was plopped down in the center of the kitchen floor. My head spun, my heart raced, and a great sense of joy spread over me. I continued to down the clear vodka bottle.

Anyway, I have been a bad drunk, a recovering alcoholic, a neglectful dad, and finally a hit-rock-bottom survivor in my illustrious forty-eight years of life.

I guide the puttering moped over the curb and up to the bar’s entrance. Janie’s Tavern has been home for a couple of months now. Her arms are always spread wide to welcome her wayward son.

The burly kid bouncer at the door gives me a nod and holds the door open for me. The music is obnoxious and loud but that’s okay. It helps to cover the screaming mimies in my brain some.

“Brett, slide me over a Miller and a Wild Eagle bourbon chaser. It’s gonna be a long night,” I proclaim.

His eyebrows shoot up and he gives me a questioning look.

“Yeah, I’m sure. It’s a night of a bad anniversary and I need a little support. So, hook a fella up!”

I sit at the counter, the stools are all empty. A few tables have other patrons, but in the corner, one man in a jean jacket glances over in my direction. He is scruffy, long straggly beard and greasy brown hair. He is shy of 270 pounds, but I guess the majority of it are in his beefy arms. Maybe at one point he had been in football or was a bodybuilder of some sort.

I nod in his direction and raise my shot glass in a friendly salute to him.

He smiles and lifts up his own tall glass of beer.

I take a deep breath. For the most part I haven’t been on the wagon for nearly five years, but the last three months I tried to keep it at a beer here and there. Mostly. I was throwing out that rule tonight.

I threw back the shot and felt its fiery contents delightfully burn as they went down.

“And let’s not let the poor fella be lonely down there, Brett. Another shot, please!”

“Whoa, easy man. Are you celebrating tonight?” Said the man in the jean jacket. He stood behind me. Must’ve walked up as I drank and was still nursing his own drink.

“No. Not celebrating, but tonight is five years to the day of… to the day of a morning that no one could ever believe.”

I got quiet. The shouting eased back but it left the stage open for the child whispers that were far worse for me.

When are we going to get there, Mister Donner?

What time is it? Are we running late, sir?

Can we go back? I left my homework for Miss Janda’s class.

I have to go potty, Mister Donner. Are we there yet?

What’s that? Is someone in the road…

That last one. That voice in particular was little Susie. Her tiny, high-pitched but sweet voice calling out. The last question she ever said. I hear it over and over in my nightmares. A simple, innocent question.

By gods, where was she? Where were they?

“You okay there, pal?” The man asked as he sat down on the stool next to me.

“Uh, yeah, sorry. Lost in here,” I said as I poked my index finger into the side of my temple.

He extended his hand. “Gary. Yours?”

“Charlie.” I lied.

“Sounds like you have a doozy of a story. Can you spill it? Or are you a secret agent on a classified mission?”

I laughed hard at his joke. Laughed too hard and too long, drawing stares, but the drinks were already affecting me.

“Sorry. Yeah, it’s a weird story.” I paused and stared at him. He was drinking his beer and now starting to light up a Maverick Cigarette. His finger had a white tan line where a possible wedding ring was missing.

“It’s not a happy ending. You sure you are in the right mood for it, Gary?”

“I love stories. Come on, quit stalling.”

I motioned to the bartender one more time. More liquid courage.

After I finished the shot and splashed more beer to follow it, I opened up and relived the worst morning of my life.

“It was… well, I am not going to say what town, but it was your typical small town. I was driving the #237 for this Elementary School. I just passed Munroe Street after grabbing that chubby Darryl Sampson kid. Brat always left wrappers in the backseat and chocolate smears on the seats. Anyway, it was the last of the loop. Now it was time to head to the school lot for the drop off.

“Traffic had been light. Even holiday light you might say, but it wasn’t a holiday. I went down Jefferson and made a left to take Lawson Avenue to the Torv Tunnel. I noticed right away that there were no lights inside, and it was unusually dark. When we entered and as I reached for my headlights, a stupid sedan, I think it was a Prius, nearly swiped my left wheel. It cut across and sped ahead. I had to brake hard and turn the bus into the gravel at the side. ‘Hold on kids. Hold on!’ I shouted as we bumped along and bounced.

“I was instantly hot. I hate bad drivers. Got a bit of that road rage bug, you know.

“I heard lots of screams and shouts at first from the kids as expected, but it was Susie Willey’s question that cut through all the chaos.

“What’s that? Is someone in the road…

“I saw only the thick curtain of darkness ahead and the patch of roadway lit before the bus. No one was there. Not even that damn sedan. That asshat must’ve kept driving and went further into the tunnel.

“I ground the bus to a stop. ‘It’s okay kids. Nothing to worry about. Everyone okay?’

“Not a sound.

“I shot a glance to the overhead rearview mirror. No one was back there. They were just…gone.”

I waited for Gary’s shout of ‘That’s bullshit!” but he only stared back at me. His mouth was open and slack jawed. His drink abandoned on the bar. His cigarette nearly done, smoldering in his hand.

“They were gone. What? What do you mean?”

I waited to see the building suspicion on his face. For five years now, I have seen it often. It goes from shock, disbelief, suspicion to outright anger. Sometimes it goes right to distrust and hate.

“I know how it sounds. But, yeah, no one was on the bus, but me. Their bags were still there, their little lunch pails, and water thermoses, but no kids. I couldn’t fathom what happened and where they went.

“I ran up the aisle in pure panic. I looked out the side windows, but the tunnel was dark and quiet.

“I pulled out my cell phone, but it took me a moment to figure out who to call. What do I even say? What would they understand? What would they believe? ‘All the kids just vanished. Poof!’” I shrugged and took another long sip from my fourth beer.

“The police arrived in seconds. A busload of children missing including the mayor’s own two sons, that gets you their immediate attention.

“As they scoured the bus for any signs of foul play, they took me back to headquarters. I spent the next 48 hours in constant interrogation rooms, explaining what I saw over and over. They refused to listen or to give me any credit.”

Gary cut in. “Did you really think they would buy that? You were the last adult with them.”

“I know. But, I have been a good driver for that school for six years, not a complaint or problem. I hadn’t drunk a sip of any beer or alcohol in all that time. I was good man, good. I told the truth—”

“That’s all that happened? You aren’t leaving anything out?”

He was starting to upset me.

“No! All they saw was some freak, psycho that abducted a lot of kids and did god knows what with them. Wouldn’t accept that I didn’t know. Finally, after the 48 hours, my public defender got me released without any charges. They had nothing, they knew nothing. I knew nothing. They wasted time on me when they should have just found those kids!”

Brett was at the other end of the bar and cleaning out the ice machine. “Wow. No charges?”

I nodded. “Didn’t stop the press, man. Didn’t stop their smear campaign. Suddenly, I was public enemy number one, raging lunatic, drunk dad and overall, must’ve been a ‘closet molester’. Every detail of my life was scrutinized, judged and blasted out for all to know. Would anyone look good after that?”

Gary continued to listen, smoke and soak in every word. He didn’t seem to be getting worked up, wasn’t passing judgment just yet.

“So what did you finally do? What happened?”

“Can I have one of those?” I pointed to the pack on the bar. He slipped one out, lit it and waited for my story to continue.

“I left town after only two weeks. I was getting death threat calls at night. People busted up my car and everything. I couldn’t take the looks more than anything. I left and started using my middle name. Then that didn’t work. I was found and got stalked by a reporter in the neighboring town. So, I packed up and went way West. They have never found me again, but…they never found the kids either. I hate that they never got an answer to that. And I’m sure it didn’t look good – the main suspect in a case with over a dozen kids missing, up and flees.

“But what could I tell them, the police, the parents. I didn’t do anything, I didn’t see anything, and I don’t know how to find those kids.”

“Man… so the police didn’t find anything?”

“No. At least I don’t think so. They wouldn’t share information with me, of course.” I took a large gulp of the beer. “Brett, get me two more shots. I have had 5 years of this shit and I have earned 5 shots.”

Gary laughed and lit up another cigarette as I hammered the shots. It was near closing and only the three of us remained.

He held out his hand. “Bud, I think you should let me take you home. Hand over your keys.”

“Shit, man, I only have a scooter. Lost my license long ago.”

“Oh,” he said and glanced at Brett, looking irritated. He then sighed loudly. Then looked at his glass. I wondered if that was the same beer all this time.

“Then I guess we should call it a night, Roy.”

I snapped a look at him. He knew my real name!

“You don’t recognize me, do you?”

I could only stare in silence.

He pointed at the bartender. “That is Brett Sampson, and I am his brother, Gary Sampson! Daryl Sampson’s uncle and father!” Brett pulled out a wooden bat from under the bar.

Vomit started to rise in my throat, but Gary’s meaty hands wrapped around it too fast. He slammed me to the floor, choking and crushing me. He screamed, “WHERE IS MY BOY, YOU BASTARD? GIVE HIM BACK! GIVE HIM BACK!”

My lungs burned. I gasped and gulped for air without success. He let them loose but plunged his thumb nails into my eyes. He wanted blood and he plumbed my skull for it. I felt sharp pangs of pain as the bat hammered into my rib cage. Gary then grabbed my head in his hands once more and lifted me up from the sticky floor to slam my head again into the floor.

“NO ONE BELIEVES YOUR STORY! WHERE ARE THEY? WHAT DID YOU DO, YOU PERVERT?” Brett cursed.

I heard Gary Sampson roar in pure anger and fury one last time as he blasted the back of my head into–

Fresh Content: Victim One — Derek Barton – 2023

A brutal wind storm had blown up out of nowhere. The weatherman on the radio stated, “Tonight a severe thunderstorm has crossed into the valley. Please take shelter immediately. My personal opinion, folks, I haven’t seen a storm like this suddenly appear and has this much power in my fifteen years of broadcasting. I urge everyone off the streets! Take your Treaters home now. Candy can be bought at the store!” His rant was cut off by abrupt static, then the station began an oldie, Little Red Riding Hood by Sam the Sham and The Pharaohs.

Sheila looked in her rearview mirror and spotted Rascal, her red Doberman among her plastic bags. They were last minute supplies for Brayden’s Halloween costume. Some glue, white cotton, red ribbon spools, and a kit of creme paints. She bent down to turn on her cell phone. It read, “4:55 PM”.

Damn, she fretted, I only have an hour or so to put this together! Gary’s coming from work so maybe he’ll be late to pick him up.

“Even bad wolves can be good…” she sang along with the radio. “Is that true boy?” She laughed as Rascal only yawned in response.

As she crossed the center lane and turned onto I-18, large bullets of rain pelted her window. The storm picked up in its intensity. Crazy rolling thunderheads billowed and blew overhead. It grew prematurely dark outside.

Her fingers strummed along with the tune subconsciously. The air inside became humid and somewhat stale as she had the Camry’s heater turned off.

A high-pitched horn pierced her thoughts. She cranked the wheel to the right on instinct as a red pickup zoomed past narrowly missing her. The driver cursed and waved his fist at her. Sheila had obviously pulled out into his lane. Rascal barked from the back seat, scratching at the window.

“Sorry. So sorry!” she squealed out loud, but of course the truck had already gone down the highway. Shaking at his reaction and at the near collision, she pulled over into the breakdown lane to settle herself.

“It’s not my fault. Right, boy? The storm is clouding everything. And I have no time to delay!”

Not too close behind her, she spied a set of headlights pull into the breakdown lane and park.

“SEE! Other people are having a hard time too.” She whined in defense. Rascal whined in sympathy.

She stretched out her arms, one hand scratching him behind the ear, and she shook her whole frame one last time. She felt ready so she drove the car back onto the road.

On the I-18 the speed limit is 65 max, but no one but the elderly drove that limit. She quickly passed 65 to nudge it closer to 75. There were few other drivers on the road and the drive is smooth again. The radio began a new tune, Sitting On The Dock of The Bay.

She hummed again and began to enjoy the ride. Exit 78 passed by, marking the border to the small burg called Carterton. She smiled to herself in relief. Only 3 more exits then I’ll be inside. Maybe a cup of French Roast?

“How about a couple strips of maple bacon, Rascal? Would that make it up to you. Dragging you out in–“

Red and Blue lights splashed all over the interior of the Camry. Her eyes darted to the rearview. A police cruiser was behind her with its lights whirling. Her eyes darted next to the dashboard. It showed 79. Not too much over, not normally worth hassling me, she thought.

But it is raining pretty hard…

With no other cars near her, she had no issues getting the vehicle pulled over to the side. She parked, turned off the car and leaned over to dig in the glove department.

“DRIVER STOP MOVING. PLACE YOUR HANDS ON THE STEERING WHEEL IMMEDIATELY!” The booming voice came through the cruiser’s speakers.

She froze, shocked by the fierce tone of the voice.

“DRIVER STOP MOVING! SIT UP AND PLACE YOUR HANDS ON THE WHEEL! I AM NOT GOING TO GIVE YOU ANOTHER WARNING!” The voice was masculine, aggressive and agitated.

“Okay, okay!” she said out loud. Rascal pounced around the Halloween packages and whined again in excitement. She sat still behind the wheel with her hands at the 10 and 2 positions of the wheel.

A long minute went by and finally a shadowy figure emerged from the cruiser. It’s a man, all alone. Tall with broad shoulders, a hat and a gray rain poncho. He slowly advanced, checked the license plate, then lit up the backseat with his flashlight. Rascal went berserk until she yelled for him to stop.

Come on, come on. You’re killing me! I have to get Brayden’s costume done. For godsake, just right me up and let’s go already! Sheila’s thoughts cascade around and around.

He tapped at the window with the butt of the flashlight. She hit the button and rolled it down halfway. Rain splattered her immediately.

She looked up but could only see angular shadows and a faint outline of his face. Wide nose, far-spaced eyes, a bushy beard. She noted the fact his mouth was in a deep scowl.

“Sorry, Officer, to make you stand in the rain.” She muttered, trying to be charming and get on his good side. “And don’t worry about Rascal. He’s too old for a fight.”

“All part of the job. License and registration, please.” He ignored her attempt of charm.

As she leaned over, she noticed his hand slid over to his holster, resting down on the top of the gun inside.

It remained there as she handed him the paperwork.

Without glancing at the papers, he said, “All right, Mrs. Glenn, can you step out?”

“Are you serious? Is that really necessary?”

He took a large step back from her door. Rested his hand again on the leather holster on his belt. “Step out! I do not like to repeat my orders, Mrs. Glenn!”

She sighed softly, more to herself than as a protest. She didn’t like his tone and demeanor. She understood he wasn’t to be pushed.

More rain flooded the interior as she got out. Rascal whimpered then emitted a low growl. The storm itself took advantage of her appearance and increased in its fury.

He slipped a hand under her arm and led her to the back of her car in his grip.

“I am going to have to pat you down now. Any sharp items or weapons on you I need to be aware of?”

She shook her head no as his hands roughly went over her shoulders then down her sides. He removed her wallet and car keys from her jean’s pocket. She wasn’t wearing a jacket so she carried nothing else on her.

“What is this all about exactly?” She cried out over the storm’s cacophony.

He seized her left arm, yanked it painfully high between her shoulders. Her breath blasted from her lungs as he bent her over the hood. She heard the sound of the metal handcuffs as they clicked shut on her wrists. Then his heavy body laid on top of her. He was smothering her against her own car!

Leaning into her ear, he said, “Your husband, Gary says he is sick of you not being there for him or your son. Now, you will never be.”

He lifted off, threw a very heavy punch into her ribs, then kicked her hip with his boot to knock her to the ground. As she wheezed and writhed on the ground, he popped open the trunk of her car. Dimly, she heard furious dog barking.

Panic seized her but she couldn’t decide how to act. Her fight-or-flight instincts overwhelmed her, and he kept taking action before she could decide. He was calm, precise and calculated.

He scooped her into his arms and threw her in like a bag of trash into the trunk. The rain ramped up once again and even sounds were drowned out by the pounding flurry. He bent down close to her face. He had bright green eyes, one though was all bloody from a burst blood vessel. His breath smelled equal parts Scope Mint and Buffalo Trace Bourbon.

“A parting gift from me,” he said and showed her a long, black plastic zip tie. Sheila shrieked as he secured it around her neck.

Her final pleas “No, don’t do this, please!” was shut off as he tightened the zip tie. It bit into the skin and blood bubbled up around it as clawed at it frantically. Her eyes bulged and her tongue stuck out obscenely.

He muttered to himself, “I am doing it. I’m getting my first! I am doing it!”

It was over in seconds, but to Sheila it seemed endless before her vision faded, the colors blending then going gray and finally dissolving to an infinite black. The whole time the man bounced from one foot then the other. He continued his stream of words, “I am getting my first. I am getting my first. Yes! All I planned. Precise. So easy…”

Hours later, a group of teens “too old for Trick-or-Treatin'” found Shelia’s empty car. It was a minor inferno, smoke rising and bleeding into the clouds. It was abandoned along an isolated dirt road when the local fire department arrived.

Mysteriously, one backdoor was left open, facing the surrounding forest.

The Deity Staff – Sneak Peek — Derek Barton – 2023

I am hard at work on The Deity Staff. Sorry that I have neglected you!

Here you go. A little sneak peek!!


It actually took her two days to find a lead for Rivyen. Broenef Cros’seau was the first name on his list and the only one De’Embra gained a bit of insight into.

The man was a nephew to Duke Bareth Cros’seau. He had been living with his mother in a farming village near the capital city, Keliada. The same time as the Cros’seau family had been found guilty and exiled, his mother had contracted a severe case of Fleve Virus and died. Having no other relatives, Broenef moved around to differing cities. Eventually, he took up residence in the crumbling Cros’seau mansion. For years, he maintained the estate on the volcanic Leibrec Isle. It had only come to light that the whole place had been deserted for an unknown amount of time.

Rivyen sat uncomfortablely atop Rashae, his black mare, and stared up at the weathered castle. As he studied the ancient, ruined home, he could not shake the feeling he was being watched and studied. The smoky glass windows of the structure resembled dead buglike eyes. Whoever or whatever might roam within remained unseen.

He dismounted and tied Rashae to a hitching post. If there was any way to find and track down this elusive Broenef he hoped he would find it inside.

The front door was not locked but due to inclement weather, the wood frame around it had swollen and sealed tight around it. He decided to walk the impressive grounds and see if there was another entry. Perhaps one of those cheerful windows, he thought to himself.

Near the back eastern wing, he discovered a cellar door which had started to rot. After a few good kicks, the lock gave way. Inside, it was thick with cobwebs and dust piles but nonetheless empty. It did have one set of dilapidated steps leading to another door. His luck had turned and this door was unlocked.

Upon entering however, he was immediately blinded by a bright, orange glare. He fumbled about at the top of the steps, grabbing onto a thin counter to keep his balance. His vision finally cleared, but there was no sign of what had caused the light.

He listened carefully but sensed no other movement or noise.

Rivyen paused at the end of the counter as he noted a tan, stained paper discarded in a trash bin. He unfolded it. The stains were actually lands made upon a map. He did not immediately recognize the area. Alert a few moments he determined it was an old rendering of the Ramanon region. Someone had made handwritten notes and even penciled two letters BK on the edge of one border of the Risa continent.

He folded the map back together and stuffed it inside his pack for later review. Then he closed the cellar door and crossed to a large chamber. It was once a formal dining room he guessed.

Near the center of a table rested an empty wood tray next to a tall glass vase. Wilted flowers and stems sat inside the old stemware. An obvious centerpiece at one time. Dust covered everything as expected, but Rivyen’s eyes fell upon a square shaped print on the tray. It had a barely noticeable layer of dust.

Something was missing. It had been there next to that vase and now it has been removed. It was likely an art piece. He twisted about, slowly scanning the rest of the formal chamber.

Other art from the wall and some from a shelf were taken — he could see more dust impressions. And another sculpture was likely missing. Were the works valuable or were there some personal attachment, he wondered. 

Perhaps if I track down the items, I could—

A fist shot out and rocked his head back to the left. Another followed up, bowling him over as it caught him in the stomach.

Before anything else could happen, Rivyen’s reflexes kicked in  and he dove to the side. He tumbled into a roll, sprung to his feet to face two black and red clad figures. Beleardea!

He caught the dwindling signs of an electrical force wavering in the air behind them. A Gate Spell has been used to drop the Beleardea assassins in unseen. That orange glare upon entering must have been some sort of magical alarm ward. He was foolish to have ignored it. Now he would pay the price for it.

His hand shot to his belt and unsheathed his long sword. The golden bracers he wore lent him an advantage of unnatural speed and he swung the sword point back and forth before him.

“That was quite rude. You did not even say your names and introduce yourselves,” he taunted.

The men before him backed up and spread their legs and arms  into fighting stances. They moved with cat-like grace and remained silent. Each held a dagger in one hand and a companion three-prong clawed Ramseur in the other.

“As you insist!” He thrust in a feint with his sword at the left assassin while slinging with his right hand a small grappling hook hidden inside one sleeve of his robe. The magically-enhanced throw caught the man off guard and snared around his boot.

Rivyen yanked the man off his feet and without mercy violently plunged the sword tip into his exposed throat. Blood fountained up his leg and over his boots.

The surviving assassin backed warily away. “Yevvik coy Hesh maya napa Liss!” The voice was high-pitched, angry, and very feminine. Rivyen had assumed wrong, he realized.

“Now that it is a fair dance, we can take our time to enjoy the music, m’lady.”

She shifted to the left putting the edge of the table between them. Taking her own advantage, she sprang toward a dark chamber attached to the dining room. He chased after her, unwilling to let her escape. As the assassin entered she easily darted up a bare wall and flipped up and behind him.

It had been another clever ploy. Now he was trapped in a room with no obvious exits. She stood poised in the arch of the doorway.

To Rivyen, the best defense was offense. He swept his blade low but rose toward her chest while spinning in to thrust his elbow into her face. She parried the sword easily with her hand claw, securing it between two tines while ducking his elbow jab.

He was impressed and a little worried at her obvious combat prowess.

Continuing his spin, he twisted away and tried the grappling hook again. Aware of it, she easily leaped over it and scoffed at his attempt.

He shrugged, then reset his feet. She abruptly gave up her post at the door and charged him. She slid on her knees as he swung for her again. Looking up into his face, she thrust one dagger’s pommel into his left knee while the other fist came up to fling a purplish powder into his dumbfounded face.

Sputtering the dust from his mouth and lips, he stumbled, now blind. He was in dire straits now. He swung his sword in short swipes trying to keep her at bay stalling while his eyes cleared. He heard movement to his left, but it did not sound like an attack. A hard kick to his hand knocked the blade to the floor. He wanted to retreat but being blind, he had no idea where he would escape.

“Re tad Tass mia mo desc el?” She said but her words were incomprehensible.

His vision would not clear. Through a blur he could only make out some shapes and shadows. The metallic taste in his mouth scared him. Was he drugged, poisoned?

He heard her step forward and pick up his weapon from the floor. She intended on killing him with his own sword!

Having no choice, he clasped his hand on a silvery green medallion at his neck. He muttered the invoking command, “Pre’ema Delta Los!”

A hot flash of heat erupted from the magical charm. The small room bottled the spell’s effect and intensified the explosion. It rocked the assassin off her feet and threw her from the room back into the shady dining area. He heard her hit several chairs and the glass vase shatter in a thousand pieces across the floor.

Flames bloomed upon parts of the walls and doors. Smoke began to fill the chamber.

Her fuzzy shadow now wreathed in green flames streaked back across the chamber and into the kitchen. She was going to escape through the cellar as he had come in. He shook his head. It bothered him to let the assassin run, but he was still in no condition to stop her.

****

Standing again next to Rashae, he caught his breath. His vision had slowly adjusted to normal.

The fire inside was starting to intensify. The castle would be gutted within the hour. He hoped he had not missed any leads of import.

He opened his robe and rummaged in one hidden fold. Inside the tunic of the male assassin, he had found in a pocket a small leather journal. These two had already been ransacking the castle before his arrival.

Now he took time to examine it. On its cover of the book was the Cros’seau Family Crest. Inside were some written passages and dates. However, the majority of the book was blank.

Within one entry, he focused on a curious name. A young cousin Broenef mentioned that lived in Ramanon.

A Brielle Kess…

NEW WEB SAGA — Derek Barton – 2023

I have been writing a lot lately but mainly fantasy. So I don’t want to neglect you, my dark horror readers. So here’s my first ever attempt at a zompoc! What’s that, you say? It’s my first zombie apocalypse story!! ENJOY!!

*****

A sour smell, like decaying meat and rotting lemons, struck Manny. It was so powerful he gagged on reflex and covered his nose and mouth with both hands.

What in gods is that, his inner voice screamed at him.

Tonight, however, the stench resonating all through his background storage area was part of the curse. This rank scent would undoubtedly stick with him for a week like it was imprinted into his brain. He literally would relive it over and over. At least that had been his experience.

Manny’s sense of smell head always been a blessing and a curse. It was probably triple the average person’s senses. He used it often to work out the ingredients and spices used in every day meal’s served by his competitors. He was a small-time restaurant owner on the east side of Chicago. And he was quickly gaining ground on the other restaurants and getting a reputation for his culinary talents.

He walked over to a tiny barred window high on the southern wall and slid it partially open to let in fresh air. That was a terrible decision. More of the foul reek barreled into him again, bending him over, and making him retch loudly.

While muttering curse words to himself through his clasped fists, he shuffled over to a set of metal shelves. It took a moment but he finally spotted a strawberry-lemon air freshener. He immediately sprayed it in wide arching swings through the air.

He hesitantly took away his hands and tried to lightly smell the air. It was livable but still nasty. That was when Manny heard a buzzing, scratching sound coming from the alley outside the storage room.

The summer heat and sticky humidity had forced him to keep every door and window sealed shut in the cramped restaurant. Now through that barred window he heard the very distinct insect-like cadence. 

He cocked his head to the left to hear it better. While Manny was blessed with super smell he had lost his hearing in his left ear years ago in his service as a Marine. A rocket shell had been launched into their camp one fine summer evening in Afghanistan. He lived through the war but didn’t come back unmarked.

He could tell that the sounds were from more than one source but from a few, quite a few insects. Grabbing a towel, he wrapped the cloth around his face then unlocked the alley door.

Outside it was near sunset. Only a blinking street lamp at the end of the alleyway was illuminating anything. Next to the door was a large green dumpster and another one opposite his was backed up against an old shoe store. It had been abandoned a year ago so no light from it helped light up the interior of the back alley.

The smell grew stronger and choked him mercilessly. The meaty smell was now combined with a sulphuric taste in the air.

“Carver? Carver, you out here?” Manny managed to call out. Carver was a homeless man that had been residing the last four or five months behind his restaurant.

Manny heard a grunt, muffled but distinct. It came from the other side of the bin.

All over the walls, clinging to the bricks of the buildings, he spotted hundreds of cockroaches. That alien song of buzzing came from them as they fluttered their wings in the air.

They appeared to Manny as though they were fanning themselves like sunbathers at the poolside. He’d never seen anything like it. He was frozen by the spectacle in the alley doorway. On the ground at the base of the shoe store, a sewer grate was askew. Hundreds more of the roaches circled it. They crawled slowly and methodically over each other making a ladder of their bodies to get up and out of the open drain!

A hand slapped at his shoe. Manny shrieked. 

It was Carver! Or at least he thought it was as it was hard to be sure in the faint yellowish light.

Carver’s body was wrong, just wrong! His face, the skin and muscles were wax-like, hung like soft raw dough. Red holes dotted his entire upper torso! Blood bubbled out and dribbled down. His eyes were gone! His mouth open and making a squishy gurgling noise.

Manny shrieked again when he spotted the first sets of antennae inside those red holes! Their tiny heads looking out, staring back out at him!

Carver had become a crawling, mewling human bag of cockroaches!

Fresh Content 6/1/23: I Still Burn — Derek Barton – 2023


“Dang it, Rylund! What the heck was that about?” Stephanie snapped at him as she led him away from the Men’s Room crowd. She yanked his arm and pulled him to the left. He heard a clicking sound, then the telltale sound of a door opening then closing behind them.  The room felt closer and cramped. A musty smell encompassed them.

“Where are we?”

“It’s a storage closet, I think,” she said.

“Why?”

“So you can tell me what happened!”

He bit his bottom lip and thought for a moment. His excitement to reveal what he saw was high but at the same time he was afraid. Not that she would probably ridicule him but she would burst his bubble of happiness at a sign of healing. The first sign he was recovering and could hope to see again someday.

Rylund shook his head. “No. Nothing happened. Let’s get back to our seats.”

“Suurreee,” she over exaggerated the word, clearly not believing him. They didn’t move.

“I’m okay. Honest. Just got sick from too much sun I think,” he lied.

“Suurreee,” she repeated, but this time she took his arm again and opened the door.

The wafting drafts of buttery popcorn mixed with fresh beer came over them. He then heard a wave of cheers as they drew closer to the stands.

He had a thought, a hunch he wanted to test.

“Wait. Let’s go higher. Take me up to the $5 dollar seats.”

“Why?”

“Humor me will ya? The usher won’t bother us. Who goes higher for a worse view on purpose?”

Stephanie didn’t answer but led on, hauling him to the right this time to a set of sticky, concrete steps. “Careful.”

He gripped the metal rail which grew hot as they climbed the stairwell. 

At last they sat down, in the last set of benches of the stadium. The “cheap seats” were high above the playing field and almost too far away to tell who was at bat. Only a few die hard fans sat here. 

“Is there a rail? I want to stand next to it.”

“Are you high?” Stephanie wondered aloud. “You said you got sick from too much sun and now you want to bake in it some more?”

Rylund shrugged. He couldn’t explain anything yet, but he hoped she trusted him enough to know he had some reason to do so.

Sighing, she cupped his elbow and guided him slowly to the rail. From the rail, one could overlook the entire game audience. Which was exactly what he remembered from earlier experiences at the park as a kid. 

As the sun did cook their skin, he gripped the rail with both hands and leaned out over it. He swept the benches below with his blind eyes. 

It worked! Almost hidden under the second level seating near third base, a watery circle appeared. That same elderly black man sat, eating a hot dog and sipping from a beer cup. “Oh my god!” he whispered awestruck.

“What?” Stephanie reacted to his sudden reaction. Her hands clenched his arms and tried to pull him back to his seat.

“No. Stop! Hold up, Steph!” he pointed down. “Can YOU see a black man there?”

Her hands loosened and he sensed her hesitation, but she eventually looked for herself. “Uh…. maybe. Wait! Yeah.”

“He’s drinking a beer, wearing a faded Kepperdine jersey right? Number 9.”

She pulled his hands suddenly hard and twisted him to face her. “How are you seeing him? Are you getting your sight back?” she squealed in curious delight.

Again he shrugged. It wasn’t true sight. Only a tiny window of vision. Only this man…

“I can’t understand it. I don’t know why, but I see him. Just him! He bumped into me in the Men’s Room and that’s how I spotted him the first time.”

“What about the three young girls behind him? Or that fat man two seats down from him in the stands?”

He shook his head. “Just him. And it’s not like I see him clearly. He’s visible but he also has something glowing, but like in yellowish patches. Remember that trip we took two years ago, when mom and dad wanted to go on that cave tour in Kentucky? We saw all those rocks covered in phosphorus lichen? It’s like that! The lichen is covering some of his shoulder and neck.”

They returned to the bench row, keeping their voices low.

“Why? What does it mean? Do you think it’ll get better? You will start to see more people or places. Did this happen before or–” Her questions were peppering him non-stop. Stephanie had a bad habit of rapid questioning when she was nervous and or excited.

He stopped her with a raised hand. “I don’t know any more than you do. From everything I have read online, nothing ever sounded like this. If my eyesight is returning, it is usually marked by dim images. Or I’d see in black and white or maybe shadows at first, I mean.”

“So this hasn’t happened before to you?”

“No.”

“Go back over there and see it is still happening and to only him.”

They worked together to another spot at the rail, about a dozen feet to the left of the first spot. “He’s on his feet, checking his watch right?”

“Yes.”

“Yeah, I can only see him.” Rylund said. “There has to be a reason I cannot see anyone else in the crowd. Let’s follow him!”

Moments later they were standing in a large hallway. It was sparsely populated as the seventh inning had already begun and the Phillies were at bat. They waited for the elderly man. He sat about five rows down in the sun-soaked bleachers. 

“Is he alone?” Rylund asked. 

“I don’t see anyone. There’s a family of five sitting in the same row with him but they haven’t paid him any attention.”

The crowd groaned in unison as the last batter was out after he popped up a foul ball.  

“Here,” she said and guided him back further into the lobby. It was cooler so he assumed they were in a darker section. “We can wait here unseen when he comes out.”

“Good idea.”

“You still can see him, right?” Stephanie asked.

He shook his head. It was truly bizarre and baffled him.

Five minutes later, the other team ended the inning after a flurry of singles and a run scored. The home crowd grumbled at the poor performance. 

“He’s leaving,” Rylund said. 

“Yeah, I see him. Let’s let him go a bit ahead. We don’t want him seeing us!”

The man moved along the corridor, shuffling with a slight limp but still at an even pace. Whenever he passed signs or when someone walked close to him, Rylund caught glimpses. The window that surrounded the man was similar to a see-through curtain, almost aura-like. Or, Rylund mused, it was more like a candle since it lit up anything near him.

The crowd of baseball fans thinned out as the man headed out of the coliseum and toward the parking garages. Stephanie slowed them down even more to remain unnoticeable. However, the man never looked back over his shoulder. 

He came to a set of elevators. He stabbed at the down button. 

“Stay here a moment,” she directed him.

A second later he heard her speak out. 

“Did you like the game?” Her voice energetic and excited. The elevator buzzed, signalling it was at their floor.

“It was s’alright,” he mumbled. His voice was garbled and he sounded distracted.

“Which level?” 

“3 D please.”

“OH! Hold up. I’m sorry, but I forgot my phone in the seats.” She stepped out of the elevator. As the elevator closed, she ran to Rylund. He heard the patter of her sneakers smacking the pavement. 

“Nice job! Are the stairs close?” he asked. He found she was scary clever sometimes.

She took his hand and they jogged to the stairwell door, chasing after the elevator.

At the bottom, the stairwell door was propped partially open with a small red brick. The man’s voice echoed and floated to them.

“Excuse me! Excuse me, Sir,” The man called out. 

Stephanie narrated for him automatically in spite of the new narrow field of vision.

“He’s waving his hand at some police man. He’s trying to get his attention.”

“Are you, uh… Officer Fields? Officer Jason Fields?” he called out again. 

“Yes, sir. May I help you?” The officer came into view as the old black man stepped over to him. The cop dressed in full uniform had been standing at attention next to a doorway. 

“I am sorry to bother you. I think I have gotten lost. Is this the backstairs to the management office suites? My name is Sammy Samuels. I was told to find a Jason Fields. That is you, right?”

“Yes. Do you have business here? I will need an ID.”

“That’s alright, son. I don’t have business there. I really just wanted to get close.” With that his hand flashed out and pulled something white out from his jean’s waistband. It was long and clawlike. It was an engraved bone dagger. 

He plunged the sharp, serrated tip quick into the man’s neck once and pulled back fast to thrust it again into the young cop’s throat. He stabbed over and over. Blood exploded and fountained all over the pair as Fields wrestled weakly with the old man. As his blood poured and the dagger kept making new holes in his neck and upper chest, the officer sank to his knees. 

The old man wheezed and gasped from the effort but held the heavier officer upright. Samuels twisted and turned all about looking to see if anyone was around. He then leaned down and peered into Field’s dead eyes. 

“Oh okay. You’s done now. Nothing left for you to worry,” he said as he let loose of the body which smacked the concrete with a sick thud. Rylund wasn’t sure if he was speaking to himself or the man he murdered.

Stephanie trembled and her hand clutched his arm so tight her fingernails bit into the skin. 

“Don’t let him see us,” he whispered to her. She remained silent but backed them up and against the stairwell wall out of sight.. Unfortunately that meant he couldn’t see the murderer any longer as well.

“Why did he do that?” She whimpered. “How could he do that?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know. Take me home, I don’t want to see anymore.”