This is topic Here's a spooky story in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
Alice Lone worked from home, spending her day typing away on her computer. She loved her job, the pure simple elegance of numbers.

Alice hated going outside, meeting people. Outside was full of noise and dirt, chaos and danger. You could get hurt outside. You could break a heart outside. Inside was so much better.

Alas for Alice Lone, for her apartment was far from warm and cozy. It was barren and blank. To fill it meant to shop and that meant visiting crowded stores and meeting dangerous people. Alice could shop on-line. She spent her days living on her computer so shopping from it would be not bother, accept for the delivery men. Furniture would require letting strange men into her house to set it up. Fixtures would require starngers doing the installation. Such intrusions should be avoided as often as possible. So Alice lived in a barren house.

One day Alice discovered a neet trick. She stuck a picture of a new shower curtain in a crack in the mirror of her bathroom. By sticking the picture between the glass and the backing, and by looking just the right way and from just the right place, when you looked in the mirror, the reflection back was of the bathroom with the new curtain.

Alice ordered a mirror using her computer. She requested they leave it in the hallway. It arrived a few days later. After the delivery man was safely out of the building, Alice snuck out, grabbed her package, and set the new mirror above her TV in her small living room.

Then she began to take measurements. This was all about perspective and dimension, math and ratios. She then went back to her computer and brought up photos of all the furniture, the fixtures and the accesories she had often wanted for her room.

Using her computer skills, the math and the ratios, she printed out the pictures just the perfect size. Each she carefully glued on the glass of the mirror, then replaced its backing.

When she hung the mirror she looked up and saw the perfect living room she wished she owned.

She was happy. Her living room was still blank and lifeless, but when she looked in the mirror, it was perfect.

She bought more mirrors.

For three years she bought mirrors, printed pictures, sized, fit, and hung her perfect apartment.

At the end of that time there was hardly an inch of wall that was not covered in mirrors. Some were large, some were small. There were antique gilded mirrors, and flat modern ones. There were curved beveled and odd shaped ones that flowed into each other. In each mirror was the illusion of the reflection of the perfect apartment. It was home and cozy, comfortable and warm. It did not reflect the barren apartment, the baren life of Alice Lone.

Alice was happy.

The final straw, I believe, was the cat. It was a large fluffy persian, with kind eyes and soft fur. She printed it out and gently placed it on the paper settee in the middle of her illusionary apartment.

That night she slept on her small ugly bed, staring up into the ceiling mirror which showed her tucked into a big warm oaken bed covered in hand made quilts.

When she awoke she got the oddest impression that she was looking down on the bed.

She moved, mirror to mirror around the apartment. She had grown accustomed to the trick of only looking at the mirrors that showed the right perspective, as if she moved from furnished room to furnished room, not existing in the spaces between.

When she got to the living room she noticed something. The cat was not on the settee. It lay curled comfortably on the couch.

How odd? Alice knew she had left stuck it on the settee. She reached for the mirror, to pull it down and fix it, when she was stopped. Her hands would not go around the mirror frame. It was as if she was hitting a glass wall that wouldn't let her out.

She ran back to the bedroom, this time trying not to look at the mirrors, but that was all she could see. The mirrors were windows to the perfect little apartment with the perfect little cat.

The landlord entered Alice Lone's apartment three days later. The loud crying of a hungry cat had brought him in. He knew Alice's fondness for privacy, and her automated checks were never late, but pets were definately against the lease and others were begining to complain.

Alice Lone was not there.

What was there was beautiful furniture, elegant brass fixtures, warm cozy rugs and quilts. It was beautiful.

When the police came days later searching for the missing person that few really missed, they noted the exquisite taste of Ms. Lone, and the overall comfy feel of the furnished apartment. Seargent Reynolds commented, four times, that going into copwork was his biggest mistake, as apparently all the money was in computers.

They doubted that Ms. Lone would have left this oasis of order and fine taste willingly, and placed her as an official missing person.

The only odd thing they reported in the whole apartment, besides the fondness of mirrors, was a small picture, glued between the glass and the backing of a broken mirror in the bathroom.

It was an unflattering picture of Ms. Alice Lone, laying on the bathroom floor, crying. If you looked at it from just the right angle, at just the right distance, it almost appeared as if she were really there.
 
Posted by Evie3217 (Member # 5426) on :
 
Wow... That is a really spooky story. Did you come up with that? I like it, but it gives me chills.
 
Posted by BandoCommando (Member # 7746) on :
 
Nice!
 
Posted by Bella Bee (Member # 7027) on :
 
That is spooky. Makes you glad you're not agoraphobic. I like the way it's told, with the little details. It feels like a Hallowe'en fireside story.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
I came up with that while putting Sasha to sleep. It hit me hard and I had to write it down somewhere. Here I knew it would be appreciated. Please pardon the rough draft typos, spelling, and the need to work on more detail, especially before the switch.
 
Posted by TheTick (Member # 2883) on :
 
I hope you told the poor kid a happy version of the story! [Wink]

(that's really cool)
 
Posted by ctm (Member # 6525) on :
 
Cool story, I like it.
 
Posted by Tante Shvester (Member # 8202) on :
 
Thanks for the story.
 
Posted by xxsockeh (Member # 9186) on :
 
Awesome story, great work! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
Is the name too gimmicky? Alice Lone--A. Lone.
 
Posted by Ginol_Enam (Member # 7070) on :
 
Given the kind of campfire/Are You Afraid of the Dark type feel to the story, I think the name is actually very appropriate.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
Dan, you rock!
Very spooky.
 
Posted by Tante Shvester (Member # 8202) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
Is the name too gimmicky? Alice Lone--A. Lone.

Yeah.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Only if you actually used the abbreviation, Dan [Smile]

Very, very cool story. Glad I didn't have to wait for the Christmas Gift Exchange to read a new one [Taunt]
 
Posted by CoriSCapnSkip (Member # 9153) on :
 
Very Twilight Zonish. Great story!
 
Posted by Dr Strangelove (Member # 8331) on :
 
Very nice. I'm kinda glad I didn't open this up last night when I was sitting in my room ... staring at the mirror above my computer. Here in the brightly lit tutoring lab, all is good, there are no mirrors. I'm with Leonide about the name - since you didn't actually use the abbreviation, it didn't strike me as 'gimmicky'. Though if you wanted to change it, I don't think it would mess up the story at all.
 
Posted by breyerchic04 (Member # 6423) on :
 
I hope his Mama usually tells Sasha stories, because if not, he'll never sleep.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
Don't worry. I thought of this while Sasha was going to sleep. I didn't read it to him. I didn't even read it to his mother, to save her from a bad night's sleep.
 
Posted by peterh (Member # 5208) on :
 
I caught on to the name gimmick right off. Not necessary.

Great little story. I liked it...
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
Nice story. I'd go with "Lohen" or something a little less obvious than straight "Lone" -- it jumped out at me.

Reminds me of the classic sci-fi/horror shorts. *shudder [Smile]
 
Posted by Wendybird (Member # 84) on :
 
Oooo what a great story!
 
Posted by starLisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Wow. I have chills.
 
Posted by Derrell (Member # 6062) on :
 
[Hail] Dan I liked it.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
Dan, you're a great writer.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
I just realized what is pushing me on this story. I just realized what the story is about. Its not about the dangers of Agoraphobia, or the disconnectedness of modern society.

Its about reality vs perception.
Its about Plato telling Goebells painting the cave walls doesn't help.
Its about spin.

Its about planning a war based on what we want to happen, not on what is happening.
 
Posted by Flaming Toad on a Stick (Member # 9302) on :
 
[Cool]
 
Posted by Hamson (Member # 7808) on :
 
Very nice story, I enjoyed it quite a bit.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
Nice story!

I have one proofreading item, that I hope is helpful. "laying on the bathroom floor," should be "lying". Everybody makes that mistake. "laying" is when it's transitive, such as laying tile on the bathroom floor, or laying the newspaper down. If there's no object, it should be lying, as when someone or something is just lying there.
 
Posted by Eduardo_Sauron (Member # 5827) on :
 
Hail Grammar!
(Just Kidding, Tat!)

Great Story, Dan! Gave me the chills!
 
Posted by KarlEd (Member # 571) on :
 
Cool story, Dan. I did notice the name gimmick, but it didn't really bother me. Although I do like CT's idea of going with "Lohen" or some such to make it less obvious.
 
Posted by Deceased House (Member # 9388) on :
 
Dan! that was really good, if ya write any more let us all know plz!
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
I don't want to turn this into a story forum to proof my works. There are other parts of Hatrack for that--mainly Uncle Orson's writing camp.

What I will do is post the finished product after I've rewritten this a time or 20. The above was as pure a rough draft as possible, written on the forum with no spell check or grammar check. What will follow will show the difference between first run and final, and hopefully convince some would-be-writers who read their rough drafts and give up, to try again.
 
Posted by Dragon (Member # 3670) on :
 
wow. [Hail] Dan!

I was just thinking of your Christmas story this morning, I don't know why it popped into my head... This one is great too though; VERY spooky, but amazing.
 
Posted by suminonA (Member # 8757) on :
 
The way the Spanish say it:

"Dos palabras: Im-presionante." [Wink]

I liked it. Thanks for sharing.

A.
 
Posted by imogen (Member # 5485) on :
 
Dan, I am very impressed.

Obviously it's a rough draft, but bejeebus. You gave me chills!

I loved the image of her lying in her small mean little bed and looking up to the lovely big luxurious one.

*shiver*

I think you are right though - it's not really a ghost/campfire story - it has more underlying themes than that.

(Actually, it reminds me of some of the Maps in a Mirror stories.)
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
Thanks, Dan [Smile]
 
Posted by starLisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
It was a little reminiscent of the very beginning of Donaldson's The Mirror of Her Dreams.
 
Posted by MyrddinFyre (Member # 2576) on :
 
Ooo, gave me goosebumps.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
A friend of mine, an editor on an unknown web mag, asked me to contribute something, so I rewrote this.

You realize it was not until I was mostly through the rewrite before I realized the first name and the ending--Alice--Through The Looking Glass.

Here is the other version, to prepare us all for the pre-halloween time:

Allison Stone lived all alone, and love her life that way. Allison Stone worked from home, and could stand it no other way.

She spent her day typing away on her sterile computer. She loved her job, spending her time in the pristine world of virtual numbers and logarithms, computer programs and nameless data strings. There were few interactions with the people, the managers and clients who ordered her work. These were now all accomplished from the safe distance of telecommuting. She was safe.

Alice hated going outside, meeting people. Outside was full of noise and dirt, chaos and danger. You could get hurt outside. You could break a heart outside. Inside was so much better.

Alas for Allison Stone, for her apartment was far from warm and cozy. It was barren and blank. To fill it meant to shop and that meant visiting crowded stores and meeting dangerous people. Alice could shop on-line. She spent her days living on her computer so shopping from it would not be the problem. It was the people. Furniture would require letting strange men into her house to set it up. Fixtures would require strangers doing the installation. Such uncomfortable intrusions she avoided as often as possible. So Allison Stone lived a barren lonely life in a barren lonely house.

Then came the fateful day when Alice discovered the “trick”. She stuck a picture of a new shower curtain in a crack in the mirror of her bathroom. By sticking the picture between the glass and the backing, and by looking just the right way and from just the right place, when you looked in the mirror, the reflection back was of the bathroom with the new curtain.

Alice did not order the new curtain. She ordered a mirror using her computer. She requested they leave it safely in the hallway. It arrived a few days later. After the delivery man was finally out of the building Alice snuck out, grabbed her package, and rushed back into the safety of her apartment.

She set the new mirror above her TV in her small living room. Then she began to take measurements. This was all about perspective and dimension, math and ratios. This was a simple application of safe clean numbers. Alice could work with this. She then went back to her computer and brought up photos of all the furniture, the fixtures and the accessories she had often wanted for her room.

Using her computer skills, the math and the ratios, she printed out the pictures just the perfect size. Each she carefully glued behind the mirror’s glass, then replaced the mirror’s backing. When she hung the mirror she looked up and saw the perfect living room she wished she owned.

She was happy. Her living room was still blank and lifeless, but when she looked in the mirror, it was perfect.

She bought more mirrors. She collected more photo’s. She leaned how to remove all kinds of backings from all kinds of mirrors.

For three years she bought mirrors, printed pictures, sized, fit, and hung them. She learned to layer some of the photos, some in front of the mirror and some behind the glass. Occasionally, multiple layers of glass were used. Wonderful 3-d effects were created.

At the end of that time there was hardly an inch of wall that was not covered in mirrors. Some were large, some were small. There were antique gilded mirrors, and flat modern ones. There were curved beveled and odd shaped ones that flowed into each other. In each mirror was the illusion of the reflection of the perfect apartment. It was home and cozy, comfortable and warm. It did not reflect the reality that was Alisson Stone’s home.

Alice was happy.

She sat on an old torn recliner, but everywhere she looked, from all the angles she dared to see, she saw a soft, comfortable, beautifully brocaded chair impeccably clean and warm. All around her mirror-lined blank room she viewed the perfect recreation of a warm, sunny, loved home. If a speck of dust or a slight realignment dared to threaten her fantasy, she quickly ignored it, and did not even notice when she cleaned off the speck, or realigned the mirror.

She could have lived like that happily ever after if it wasn’t for was the cat. It was a large fluffy Persian, with kind eyes and soft fur. She printed it out and gently placed it on the paper settee in the middle of her illusionary apartment.

That night she slept on her small ugly bed, staring up into the ceiling mirror which showed her tucked into a big warm oaken bed covered in hand made quilts. Her dark unkempt hair appeared as an almost angelic light blonde halo that surrounded her head.

When she awoke she got the oddest impression that she was looking down on the bed.

She moved, mirror to mirror around the apartment. She had grown accustomed to the trick of only looking at the mirrors that showed the right perspective, as if she moved from furnished room to furnished room, not existing in the spaces between.

When she got to the living room she noticed something. The cat was not on the settee. It lay curled comfortably on the couch.

How odd? Alice knew she had left the cat photo stuck on the settee. She reached for the mirror, to pull it down and fix it, when she was stopped. Her hands would not go around the mirror frame. It was as if she was hitting a glass wall that wouldn't let her out.

She ran back to the bedroom, this time trying not to look at the mirrors, but that was all she could see. The mirrors were windows to the perfect little apartment with the perfect little cat. Alice threw herself at them, but to no avail. She ran and ran and ran, trying to break free of the glass prison that held her, to feel anything, anyone, but all she could find were glass walls.

The landlord entered Allison Stone's apartment three days later. The loud crying of a hungry cat had brought him in. He knew Alice's fondness for privacy, and her automated checks were never late, but pets were definitely against the lease and others were beginning to complain.

Alice Stone was not there.

What was there was beautiful furniture, elegant brass fixtures, warm cozy rugs and quilts. It was quite possibly, the most perfect apartment the landlord had ever seen.

When the police came days later searching for the missing person that few really missed, they noted the exquisite taste of Ms. Stone, and the overall comfy feel of the furnished apartment. Sergeant Reynolds commented, four times, that going into cop work was his biggest mistake, as apparently all the money was in computers.

They doubted that Ms. Stone would have left this oasis of order and fine taste willingly, and placed her as an official missing person.

The only odd thing they reported in the whole apartment was a small picture, glued between the glass and the backing of a broken mirror in the bathroom. It was an unflattering picture of Ms. Allison Stone, laying on the bathroom floor, crying. If you looked at it from just the right angle, at just the right distance, it almost appeared as if she were really there.
 
Posted by Tstorm (Member # 1871) on :
 
Still a great story. [Smile]
 
Posted by Lissande (Member # 350) on :
 
Wait, is she supposed to change from Allison to Alice halfway through?
 


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