A Connecticut Yankee

Image

***

George Bernard Brainard was a born and raised Connecticut Yankee. By the time he reached thirty, he was a billionaire and he owned his own quaint village just next door to Mystic Seaport. His village was named Brainard, of course–his mother’s family name. Father ran off with a red-haired harlot decades ago. Originally his family made its money in tobacco–the outer leaves of cigars. But with the embargo of Cuba, their biggest customer, the business fell into ruin, as did the family.

His sister, Zelda, was a writer and a damn good one. She wrote adventures and mysteries. Our story concerns one of her adventure novels–the one that changed the history of history itself, and caused GB to go on that adventure, from which he returned quite  changed. But I’m getting ahead of myself. It was at another one of the family’s quirky Sunday dinners that Zelda implored her brother to read her unpublished novel. Not being much of a reader, GB hemmed and hawed and just carried on as if she asked him to shoe all the horses at her lucrative horse farm. Finally he agreed. To read the novel of course, not shoe the horses.

It was one rainy evening a few days later that Zelda called and hounded him about the manuscript. GB opened a bottle of Claret and sat down to read for an hour and no more. That hour passed and then another, and another until it was past midnight and GB finally fell asleep in his favorite chair in his favorite room. It was a deep and restful sleep that lasted only a few hours or maybe a few days–GB never did know. When he finally awoke, it was pitch black and damp and smelled rather nasty. He wasn’t sitting in his chair and there was no lamp next to him to switch on or was there?  And then he did it. He changed everything….

GB flicked on his lighter. The tiny flame wasn’t much help to him but the darkness came alive–too alive for his taste.  There were sounds of ughs and ahs and screams and laughter and he spied bleeding colors that bled too much and left behind layers of filth. His lighter would become too hot to hold and he would let it cool down and each time hands touched him and even roughed him up a bit–pushing him off his seat of whatever that was. Rock, perhaps or maybe something worse? As luck would have it, GB’s lighter ran on an experimental chip that provided nearly limitless energy–from his R&D company.

Then the sun came up. He was beginning to wonder if the sun no longer rose but there it was shining into what was obviously but astonishingly a cave, and it was filled with the dirtiest, nastiest tenants. As soon as he returned from wherever he was, he planned to notify social services of the reprobates living in a cave. Surely they must have slipped through some bureaucratic crack or abyss? But now, what to do, what to do?

He looked down and there in his lap was Zelda’s manuscript. He stood up, sore and stiff and holding onto the manuscript while doing sleight of hand with the lighter, insuring its dubious safety. Trying to reach the mouth of the cave was a bizarre obstacle course of sleeping bodies, garbage, rock, babies and rotting everything, and were those bones? Finally reaching the entrance, GB continued out of the cave and looked around. Nothing looked familiar. For as far as he could see, there were woods, a forest so vast GB couldn’t believe he was still in Connecticut. Then he saw it. The escarpment with Bear Rock in the distance was a familiar play ground for GB and his friends.

GB turned and looked at the disheveled group of cave dwellers. They really did need help, he thought. With another sleight of hand the lighter reappeared. He flicked it on, showing them the flame and how to make it. He built them a fire pit of rock inside the entrance and filled it with wood and kindling he gathered near the cave. Then he started a fire. He spent the day instructing them on how to keep it going–they weren’t the brightest group of people and none of them talked. Then he handed the lighter to the male who seemed to be in charge and climbed down the hill to the forest floor. Days turned into weeks, weeks turned into months.

Finally, nearly six months later, he awoke in his favorite chair in his favorite room with Zelda’s manuscript on his lap. He never told anyone what happened to him. But he changed. He was different. He met and married a woman and treated her to candlelit breakfast in bed every Sunday. He donated to charities and he paid Zelda not to publish her manuscript–a tidy sum, and a huge sum of money to add certain details to the story.

Then one night, he and his wife squeezed into his favorite chair together and they took turns reading Zelda’s manuscript. They disappeared and were never heard from again. But the strangest thing was the disappearance of the Village of Brainard. The gap that was left was filled quite nicely by others. No one was missed. But where did they all go? No one noticed, no one cared–except, Zelda who had a copy of the manuscript with her…always.

 ***

Image

***
Inspiration Monday:  Kindergarten Spies
Prompts used:  bleeding colors, candlelit breakfast
Word Count: 905
Photo credit (2nd photo):deviantART

Many thanks to Stephanie Orges at Be Kind Rewrite for hosting Inspiration Monday, week after week, after week…what a darling.

ImageImageImage

About

When I was a kid I wanted to be an "atomic" scientist. Not anything my mother expected of me. Well, I became a scientist, just not an atomic one.

Tagged with: , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in adventure, Connecticut, early humans, fiction, humor, inspiration monday, NaBloPoMo, Nano Poblano, Team Pepper, Yankee
12 comments on “A Connecticut Yankee
  1. markbialczak says:

    Where are they all, Lucy? What did Zelda conjur for Brainard and her brother? Your story scares and delights me.

  2. markbialczak says:

    I was wondering why I came to the other place. I was studying the jeep and antelopes nevertheless, Lucy.

    • Lucy says:

      Yeah, sometimes I get confused due to percocet–you know I had a total knee replacement and sometimes I am weak and must take painkillers. And then I’m confused.

      Brainard and his village went back in time to early humans. He wanted to return to help them and so had Zelda write in the things he needed. If you’re a good anthropologist, you would know: No cave paintings in Connecticut. However, time travel is an unknown factor anyway so I don’t think they’ll take away my anthro degrees because of a piece of fiction.

      • markbialczak says:

        My dear wife Karen had knee surgery similar to the total replacement about three years ago when she fell and broke her kneecap. The fracture at the bottom included the small portion that held her ligaments, so the surgeon had to drill and retie all that stuff. We asked why not just a total knee, and he shook his head and said you don’t do that unless … So I can imagine the pain you’re feeling. She had to go through months of PT. Ouch.

        I had an inlking you were putting people and places where they were not supposed to be with your tale. Nice job with George Bernard and Zelda. My first leap was to GB Shaw and Jay Gatsby’s Zelda. What a fictional pairing there. …

      • Lucy says:

        Your wife’s surgery sounds awful. And PT for months? I was walking with a walker on the day after surgery. I was in the hospital 2 weeks. Only 3 days on the surgical floor and then the rest on their Acute Rehab floor where I had PT mornings and afternoons 7 days per week. I only use the walker because I’m a bit unsteady because of the painkillers. Tomorrow I am going on a cane–hopefully.

        With every story I write I leave tidbits or clues or bits of trivia. Not many get them. I put the cave paintings as a clue to WHEN GB went and the cave painting with the jeep hints at WHAT he asked Zelda to write into the manuscript. You got the GB and Zelda connection… as writers we have the power to create or destroy–invent or reinvent. Lucy

      • markbialczak says:

        You are very wily, Lucy, in a great way.

        Because Karen was outpatient from two hours after surgery, I think that’s why her PT was extended. I think, anyway?

    • Lucy says:

      Okay. Here’s that story on the correct blog the Excessive whatever

      A Connecticut Yankee

      Lucy

  3. Connecticut Yankees sure do have a knack for time travel! This was a fun one – a smart man; I can’t say I wouldn’t have done something similar.

    • Lucy says:

      I was born and raised in Connecticut.. You’d have to drag me kicking and screaming back to prehistoric times. I wouldn’t mind being in King Arthur’s Court..

      Glad you liked it. Lucy

Leave a reply to Lucy Cancel reply

IMAGINATION WILL OFTEN CARRY US TO WORLDS THAT NEVER WERE. BUT WITHOUT IT WE GO NOWHERE.
Carl Sagan

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 151 other subscribers
Follow Sapient Chronicles on WordPress.com
Categories
Archives
Follow Sapient Chronicles on WordPress.com
Copyright Notice

© [Lucy Conrad] and [Sapient Chronicles], [2015-2016]. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to [Lucy Conrad] and [Sapient Chronicles] with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

November 2014
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

100 POSTS 9/08/14

Follow Sapient Chronicles on WordPress.com
Blog Stats
  • 4,888 hits
Legal Stuff

Creative Commons License
The Sapient Chronicles by Lucy Conrad is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at conradlucy.wordpress.com.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at conradlucy.wordpress.com.

YeahWrite

Where your words matter.

Author Adrienne Morris

Multi-generational Family Saga Historical Fiction

tales of the restless

fiction, almost-truths & not-poems

Bradscribe

A fine WordPress.com site

Live to Write - Write to Live

We live to write and write to live ... professional writers talk about the craft and business of writing

Notes Tied On The Sagebrush

Writing About Life

BOOKING IT

Debra's Adventures in Reading and Travel

countingducks

reflections on a passing life

Hangaku Gozen

For we cannot tarry here, We must march my darlings

Anne Higa

Out-of-this-World Fantasy Writer

bekindrewrite

write unto others as you would have them write unto you

This is Another Archive

Stuff I wrote from before...

This is Another Story

About life, fantasy, and everything in between

castelsarrasin

The work and activities of a writer/bargee

Yarnspinnerr

Just Fiction and other things that seem fictitious.

Odyssey of a Novice Writer

Aspiring novelist. Avid reader of fiction. Reviewer of books. By day, my undercover identity is that of meek, mild-mannered legal assistant, Kate Loveton, working in the confines of a stuffy corporate law office; by night, however, I'm a super hero: Kate Loveton, Aspiring Novelist and Spinner of Tales. My favorite words are 'Once upon a time... ' Won't you join me on my journey as I attempt to turn a hobby into something more?

First Night Design

Art, Design, Theatre, Literature, History, Food, Laughter ... but mostly Art!

Enchanted Seashells by Princess Rosebud

Beguiling pearls of wit, wisdom, and whimsy-with attitude

The Zombie Blog

Surviving The Zombie Apocalypse

Ray Ferrer - Emotion on Canvas

** OFFICIAL Site of Artist Ray Ferrer **

Don Charisma

because anything is possible with Charisma

Ben's Bitter Blog

"We make bitter better."

belsbror

Simple Living

Leaning on the Son

Inspired by Faith, Hope, Love and Him

Flamingo Dancer's Blog

If I am a goddess why are my feet stuck in the trenches?

Ned's Blog

Humor at the Speed of Life

Adventures in Wonderland

a pilgrimage of the heart

The Brantley Blog

In the eyes of the law, we reach adulthood the day we turn 18 years old. God help anyone who actually believes that.

Pouring My Art Out

Ripping out my guts for your entertainment

The Daily Post

The Art and Craft of Blogging

Mostly Bright Ideas

Some of these thoughts may make sense. But don't count on it.

A slight obsession with books

Crafts, cats and books

Thain in Vain

Writes flash fiction and other stuff

WordPress.com News

The latest news on WordPress.com and the WordPress community.