Login   Sign Up 



 

Specs chapter 5

by Freebird 

Posted: 28 October 2009
Word Count: 984
Summary: back with Barnaby's pov - not sure how the formatting will come out, with the eye test chart. Hope you can read what it says!
Related Works: Specs • Specs Chapter 2 • Specs Chapter 3 • Specs Chapter 4 • 

Font Size
 


Printable Version
Print Double spaced


CHAPTER FIVE



“How’s that, then?” The optician loomed over Barnaby, his oily smile revealing the tips of his canine teeth pressing slightly into his dry, thin lips. He rubbed his hands together with a sound like sandpaper and his tongue darted in and out nervously. “Do you like them?”
Barnaby glimpsed his reflection in the mirror and looked away hurriedly.
“Well? Are they comfortable?”
Barnaby slid the glasses slowly down to the tip of his nose and looked solemnly over the top of them. “They rub on my ears,” he said.
“Ah! That’s easily fixed,” hissed the optician, he whipped the glasses from Barnaby’s face and hurried into an adjoining room, from which was presently heard the hum of machinery.
Mrs. Brownlow studied Barnaby’s face anxiously. “Come on, cherub, cheer up. It’s not the end of the world, you know. Anyway, you only have to wear them for reading and watching TV.”
Barnaby’s face lit up. “So I don’t have to wear them for school, then?”
“Well, you do because you’ll be looking at your work closely, won’t you?”
Barnaby sighed. The optician slithered back into the room, wielding the spectacles triumphantly.
“Here we are,” he said. “Just pop them on and we’ll sit you in the chair and do a quick test.”
Barnaby plumped himself into the big, black, leather chair, enjoying the rude hiss of air that escaped as he bounced on the cushion. He looked straight ahead at the wall chart, showing black letters of ever decreasing sizes.
“I can’t see it very well,” said Barnaby.
“Push the spectacles up your nose,” suggested the optician.
“Up my nose?”
“He means push them further up so they’re not on the end,” said Mum. “Come on, you’re wasting Mr. Sneck’s valuable time.”
Barnaby did as he was told, and suddenly fell sharply back into his seat. Either he hadn’t looked very closely at Mr. Sneck before, or his eyesight was worse than he thought. Mr. Sneck was gazing directly at him; in the centre of his glowing green eyes, where the black decimal points of his pupils should have been, were definite dark pound signs. Just like this: £. Barnaby shook his head and looked again. The optician blinked slowly and paused for a moment with his eyes serenely closed. But as soon as he opened them again, there were the pound signs again. No doubt about it.
“Can you read the first line?” asked Mr. Sneck. His tongue appeared briefly; it was forked.
“I...er...” Barnaby glanced at Mum. She glared back at him. “Ummm... the top one is ‘G’.”
“Yessss?”
“And the next line has ‘I’ and then ‘V’...” Barnaby’s voice trailed off. The chart looked like this:



G

I V

E M E

L O T S

O F M O N E Y

Barnaby removed the glasses and rubbed his eyes.
“Is everything all right?” asked Mr. Sneck, hovering close to Barnaby’s cheek.
Barnaby turned to look at him. His eyes seemed to be perfectly normal.
Barnaby put the glasses on again. Instantly, the heavy pound signs glowed in the optician’s eyes. Barnaby whipped off the glasses and snapped them into the plain brown case Mr. Sneck had given him.
Mum retrieved Dylan from a heap of magazines he had been tearing into strips and stuffing in his mouth. A streak of green ink was bleeding down his chin as was swept up from the debris of papier mache. Mr. Sneck cried out, and swooped on a mangled pair of glasses that had been hidden beneath the papers.
“Ah, no! I have made a mistake! These spectacles would be much better than the ones I have given you.”
Barnaby’s fist closed round the case in his hand. “But I’d rather have these.”
“No, no. You cannot have those. You won’t be able to see properly through them.”
“Oh, but I can see better than I’ve ever seen before!” Barnaby assured him.
Mr. Sneck made a sort of choking sound in his throat, and lunged at Barnaby. Mum walked between the two of them at that precise moment, so that Mr. Sneck ended up grabbing the front of her coat.
“Excuse me!” she said, in a voice that would freeze lava. “I think it’s time we were leaving.” She swept Dylan into her arms and marched Barnaby out of the door.
As they left the shop and emerged into the gusty swirls of paper chasing each other down the gutters of the high street, Barnaby clutched the glasses case in his pocket.
“Mum?” he ventured at last.
“Yes, cherub?” Mum was distracted, waiting for a space in the traffic so they could dash across the road to the parked car. Dylan tugged at her hair, wrapping it across her eyes so she couldn’t see.
“Did you notice anything...strange... about Mr. Sneck?”
“Strange? In what way?”
“Just – well, you know – unusual.”
“Barnaby, dear, you mustn’t make fun of someone with a speech impediment.”
“What’s one of those? Is it something to do with money?”
Mum laughed. “Wherever did you get that idea? No, it means you can’t say certain letters properly. Or should I say, certain ‘letterssssss’!”
Barnaby giggled. “Let’sssss go back to ssssschool!” he giggled, “or Mr. Golightly will go ballisssstic!”
Barnaby clambered into the car, pulling the door shut just as a big, black limousine pulled up at the kerb. A tall woman with orange hair and heels like daggers stepped out of the car. She stalked into the optician’s and spoke to Mr. Sneck. Barnaby could see them through the window. Mr. Sneck held up his hands and said something. The woman screamed at him. Mr. Sneck pointed. The woman swivelled round and stared directly at Barnaby as though she would like to fry him for breakfast.
Barnaby ducked down and pretended to tickle Dylan’s feet as Mrs. Brownlow pulled into the heavy traffic and sped away.






Favourite this work Favourite This Author


Comments by other Members



Freebird at 12:56 on 28 October 2009  Report this post
ooops, the second half isn't meant to be all in italics - please ignore!

And the chart is laid out to look like a proper eye test chart

freebird

Ben Yezir at 16:38 on 28 October 2009  Report this post
Hey Freebird,

This is really coming together. I caught myself laughing out loud at one point and had to pretend I was reading a funny script... otherwise people in the office would start to wonder about me (not that they don't already).

"The woman swivelled round and stared directly at Barnaby as though she would like to fry him for breakfast." You certainly win Line Of The Day for that!

I have very little to say that would add much here. The only thing that did jar was when the optician found the other glasses under the pile of shredded magazines. This seemed a bit forced to me. I know there has to be a mix up but wouldn't he have noticed? Were the frames the exact same? And what were the other glasses doing under a pile of magazines in the first place?

Finally: "A tall woman with orange hair and heels like daggers stepped out of the car." Do you have her phone number as she's also borderline psychotic, she's probably my type. ;

Ben Yezir


Pat M at 23:01 on 28 October 2009  Report this post
Ben, you do this in the office? How do you get away with that?

Hi Freebird. What a brilliant description of the optician. I can see him, hissing and slithering! Some lovely choices of words, especially verbs, like 'plumped himself into the chair' and 'green ink bleeding down his chin'. Great! You build some amazing descriptions.

enjoying the rude hiss of air that escaped as he bounced on the cushion.
well, every boy is going to laugh at that!

I have to disagree with Ben about the second pair of glasses. I often lose my reading glasses under a pile of newspapers. Seems quite logical to me! And I love Dylan's part in their discovery!

Can't find anything at all to criticise (and I have tried!) I love it and hope Barnaby doesn't get 'fried for breakfast' (what a great way to describe her stare.)

Pat





belka37 at 06:15 on 29 October 2009  Report this post
This was a fun read! I loved the idea - especially since I regularly undergo the torture of both the optician's and the dentist's chair. I never know where to put my eyes when the X looms ever closer to my face.
I offer one comment about the writing. Some sentences seem overly cluttered with adjectives and adverbs. As they stand, they tend to make some sentences a bit long - which, in turn, reduces the impat of the sentence itself. Not that I think they need be omitted altogether - just slightly rearranged. I think it is important to avoid "ly" words especially at the end of a sentence.
For example:
“How’s that, then?” The optician loomed over Barnaby, his oily smile revealing the tips of his canine teeth pressing slightly into his dry, thin lips. He rubbed his hands together with a sound like sandpaper and his tongue darted in and out nervously. “Do you like them?”
Barnaby glimpsed his reflection in the mirror and looked away hurriedly.
“Well? Are they comfortable?”
Barnaby slid the glasses slowly down to the tip of his nose and looked solemnly over the top of them. “They rub on my ears,” he said.
“Ah! That’s easily fixed,” hissed the optician, he whipped the glasses from Barnaby’s face and hurried into an adjoining room, from which was presently heard the hum of machinery.
Mrs. Brownlow studied Barnaby’s face anxiously. “Come on, cherub, cheer up. It’s not the end of the world, you know. Anyway, you only have to wear them for reading and watching TV.”
Barnaby’s face lit up. “So I don’t have to wear them for school, then?”
“Well, you do because you’ll be looking at your work closely, won’t you?”
Barnaby sighed. The optician slithered back into the room, wielding the spectacles triumphantly.
“Here we are,” he said. “Just pop them on and we’ll sit you in the chair and do a quick test.”


The optician loomed over Barnaby as he pressed the spectacles into the boy's face. “How’s that, then?" the man hissed. He rubbed his hands together - and waited. “Do you like them?”
Sandpaper, thought Barnaby. That's the scrubbing sound sandpaper makes when you strip down old paintwork. And that tongue darting in and out. What's he got to be nervous about?

"Do you like them?" The voice was louder this time.

Barnaby shook himself.

He glimpsed at his reflection in the mirror and hurriedly looked away.

“Well? Are they comfortable?”

Barnaby slid the glasses down to the tip of his nose and stared solemn-faced over the top of them. “They rub on my ears,” he said.

“Ah! That’s easily fixed.” The optician whipped the glasses from Barnaby’s face and slithered into an adjoining room.

As Barnaby listened to the hypnotic hum of a machine, Mrs. Brownlow studied her son's expressionless face. “Come on, cherub, cheer up. It’s not the end of the world, you know. Anyway, you only have to wear them for reading and watching TV.”

Barnaby’s face lit up. “So I don’t have to wear them for school, then?”

“Well, you will because you'll be doing close like reading and writing, won’t you?”

Barnaby sighed.

The optician sidled back into the room, a smirk of triunph on his face as he waved the spectacles aloft.
“Here we are,” he said. “Just pop them on and we’ll sit you in the chair and do a quick test.”

Barnaby detested everything about this man - the way the tips of his canine teeth pressed into his dry, thin lips - and his oily smile.



ShellyH at 12:23 on 29 October 2009  Report this post
Hi Freebird, this was great. You really captured the atmosphere of the opticians. Some great descriptions, and loved the bit about pushing the glasses up his nose.
I too was a little confused how the glasses got mixed up. This is obviously an important twist, so maybe it could be a little clearer.
This story is fab and you are so good at writing this kind of humour. My daughter has to wear glasses, so it's nice to have a story that shows them as being a cool thing to have, which I think this story is going to do, (not sure if that makes sense).

Good stuff

Shelly

Issy at 02:53 on 30 October 2009  Report this post
This is such fun and such excellent writing that I know your work is going to get picked up sooner or later, sooner if editors have any sense, for this has got such immediate appeal and must be highly saleable.

No real comment to make. Was so intrigued by the optician, lots of hints - hiss, and slithers, to let us know something odd is going on with him. Very much like the £ signs, unexpected and original, and how Barnaby's mum freezes the guy out.

Was chuckling away as I read. Looking forward to seeing what crazy things are going to happen next.

Freebird at 16:17 on 30 October 2009  Report this post
Thanks for all useful comments, especially re. all the adverbs and stuff. That is something I usually weed out - obviously half asleep when I did this! Still, plenty more drafts to go.... just want to run the story itself past you and then get down to the nitty gritty of cutting and smoothing.

Susie, I've caught your cold - pass that box of tissues, would you?

freebird

SusieL at 19:53 on 01 November 2009  Report this post
Freebird - many apols for passing on the cold - in fact I still have it. Feeling ROUGH - although I've found a nice glass of red wine helps no end!

A streak of green ink was bleeding down his chin as was swept up from the debris of papier mache

..as he was...

The sight chart made me laugh out loud. Love the descriptions of the characters - you've got a real talent for pithily summing people up. And I too want to know how Ben gets away with surfing WW at work - I don't think I can even get access. NOT FAIR!!

Ben Yezir at 19:59 on 01 November 2009  Report this post
I have a hippy job in tele, so things are kinda flexible with surfing quality sites like this! ;

Ben Yezir

SusieL at 20:10 on 01 November 2009  Report this post
Still sulking!


To post comments you need to become a member. If you are already a member, please log in .