Week 8 Post 1: Soulmate

          Almost everyone eventually found their Calling.

          Agatha Stone still considered herself young at nearly 30, but many thought it strange that she hadn’t had hers yet. It wasn’t impossible to have it until one was quite advanced in age – the oldest known instance had been with a couple well into their 50s. It was also possible to never have one. Some people committed suicide when they realized they were destined to be alone. Or in some cases, when the Calling told them that their partner had died before they could actually meet face to face – those were tragic tales. But it wasn’t something that bothered Agatha. She had never been interested in romance, so to her it seemed perfectly natural. Why would nature grant her visions of a soulmate when she wasn’t really romantically inclined? She had told her best friend as much once. “Oh, Ags. You only think you’re not interested because it hasn’t happened to you yet,” Tammy used to say, laughing and dismissively waving a hand at Agatha’s reasoning. But as many of their friends paired off or began to have the visions and dreams, Tammy’s dismissals became less frequent. Now, years after Tammy had met Alex and had her first child, she seemed to take Agatha’s explanation seriously. When friends asked, and Agatha explained, Tammy would nod, her expression serious. Some few rare individuals never paired off.

          Agatha was comfortable with never finding her Calling.

          And then she began having the nightmares.


          In the first dream, there is a body laid out before her. The skin is peeled back from the neck down. This person has been flayed. The thought is terrifying. She feels her heart flutter at the back of her throat as she leans in close. The eyes in that blood-soaked face are glazed over, and she thinks whoever it is has to be dead, until the mouth hinges open, shuts, opens, shuts – there is only the faintest croak from a throat that has obviously screamed itself hoarse. Agatha jolts at the sudden movement, and wakes. At first she thinks she is hearing the scream from the body on the table before she realizes it’s her – she’s the one screaming.

          She doesn’t know what inspired such a dream, and she feels uncomfortable sharing it with anyone.

          A few weeks later, there is another dream. She recognizes the same table, the same body – this time, truly dead. It must be. The chest is cracked open and all the organs have been carefully removed. The mouth is open and head tilted back in a silent scream to the ceiling, the eyes wide and staring, pale and dry and truly lifeless. A part of her wants to bend over and be violently ill all over the floor but the other part of her is strangely fascinated, staring at the exposed musculature that is starting to dry. She feels something strangely like ecstasy, sees her hands move up the sides of the body and back down, gently tracing the line of a muscle and then running down the skin left at the hips. Although they aren’t really her hands – they’re larger, as though they belong to a man. The hands dip lower, and as she realizes what she is about to witness she wakes suddenly, sitting straight up in bed. She rolls over onto her side and pukes all over the floor.


          The first dream could have been dismissed as some strange figment of her brain, some nightmare inspired by a horror movie. But the second dream made her begin to question. Could she be seeing something that really happened? Was really happening? Was she having her Calling? No, it can’t be, she told herself.

Week 7 Post 4: The End

Storymatic cards were person in love and movie director for one of the characters, and end of the relationship and hiding spot is discovered for things that must appear in story.

I like the idea of this one but it’s botched and poorly written. You’re welcome?


It was a well-known fact that Vince Waggoner was in love with Robin Rose. When they met, she immediately became his primary muse. He cast her in five films in a row as the leading lady, claiming that the roles were written with her in mind. They were married quickly. People often spoke of how he worshipped the ground she walked on, gave her everything she could ever want.

They also whispered of her many infidelities.

It was a tabloid feeding frenzy when their marriage inevitably fell apart. He took a short break from directing, and a handful of years passed where people thought his career was over. Far from it – he emerged, revealing he had been painstakingly writing a story for a series of films. Films that he wanted to film back-to-back. He threw himself into his work with reckless abandon. There were a whopping seven films in total, set in the same universe with cameos from each of the other films, but completely unrelated except for their thematic ties.

It became immediately obvious that Robin Rose was still his muse. Each leading actress that he chose bore striking similarities to her. Similar face shapes, the same pale skin tone and wide doe eyes. A few were familiar household names, but many of them were new. It was no secret that he was going for a particular look. The movies were set to be released yearly.

The disappearances started after the third release.

Miss Lane was a tragedy. She had been a fresh face in Waggoner’s first film without Robin Rose, and with the success of that, her star had risen. She was in talks to join a major film franchise when she had disappeared. No one could locate her. She hadn’t mentioned leaving to anyone, did not reach out to any of her family or friends. Her car was found abandoned in a parking garage, her phone still inside. She had made no monetary withdrawals and hadn’t used any of her cards since her disappearance.

It was strange and sad and many people speculated what could have happened.

But it wasn’t until Candy Zacharias disappeared next that people suspected Waggoner. Candy was the lead of the second film, and she disappeared the year after Miss Lane. Still, there wasn’t enough reason to suspect a thing – until the following year, when Francine Queen disappeared.

The cops focused their investigation on Waggoner, but found nothing. He was so harangued by the media and the cops that he finally left the country. After all, he had finished the films, with only the last few remaining in post-production. It was recommended that the remaining actresses beef up their security teams. Still, Michelle Ray managed to escape her bodyguards briefly (supposedly in a discreet attempt to buy some illicit substance) and was never seen again. When warrants were issued allowing the cops to search all of Waggoner’s properties, nothing was found. He proclaimed his innocence in every interview, and eventually tired of the questions so much that he became a recluse.

Time passed. The remaining women didn’t disappear yearly as predicted, but as their security grew lax, they did eventually all disappear. Each time, investigations were made into Waggoner, and each time – nothing.

Eventually, he died of an overdose. It became a strange unsolved Hollywood legend.

Robin Rose died relatively young. A suicide. No one was sure why.

While her estate was being cleared, all seven desiccated corpses were found in her basement.

Week 7 Post 3: Greyspace

          Mallory woke slowly. She was in a very warm, very soft bed in a bright room. Her eyelids fluttered open – everything was white. At first she wondered if she was in a hospital but it was quiet and nothing about the décor suggested an overtly clinical setting. There was no smell of cleaners or chemicals. If it was a hospital, then it was a very fancy one and the room was private – a luxury she’d never be able to afford. Strangely, it reminded her of fictional elves in those old Lord of the Rings movies. Soft curtains caught on a breeze, and the faintest sound of faraway chatter caught her ears.

          She searched her mind, trying to remember what had happened. There were flashes of terror, and she could remember the shadow, and the pain – the pain of the knife entering her back. She placed a hand just over her hip, searching for the wound, but there was nothing. Yet she distinctly remembered the way everything had continued to burn even as the knife was drawn out to bite into her flesh thrice more. She winced just thinking about it. Had that been a strange dream?

          What had happened to Eliza? And the others? She remembered the house had exploded and collapsed in on itself, and she had almost been caught in a massive fire…

          Mallory pushed herself out of bed, surprised to find that she felt perfectly fine. She was in loose fitting white clothes, light and easy to move in. Lifting her shirt and twisting, she could see the faintest of scars – five marks. More than she had remembered. She felt a chill – how long had she been laying here to be this healed? “Hello?” she called out tentatively. She knew she should probably leave the room and try to find someone, anyone, that could tell her where she was and what had happened, but the sound of distant chatter drew her to the window again.

          The curtains were sheer and white, gently fluttering in the breeze, which was pleasantly warm. Mallory pushed them aside as she approached, looking down. She was shocked to find she was at a dizzying height – almost as though she were high up on a mountain. Sprawling out below was a city built into the side and base of the mountain. It reminded her of pictures of Rio de Janeiro, haphazardly placed buildings with many winding streets and alleys. Mallory blinked as she realized there were no cars or trucks below, although she could see people moving about their business.

Week 7 Post 2: Greyspace

          There was pain and sound and the sensation of being bodily lifted into the air and crashed in debris. For a disorienting heartbeat, Mallory wondered if she was back in that moment beneath the stairs. If everything that had happened since then had been some strange dream her dying mind had conjured. Her hearing was a soft buzz, shifting to a high squeal as the sounds of the world around her shifted back into focus. There was the crackling of fire and the creak of shifting wood. Fire!? Mallory gasped, trying to open her eyes, but she hurt all over and it took effort. She pushed something off, not bothering to identify what it had once been a part of. Debris.

          It was like a bomb had gone off a floor beneath them. She pushed herself to her feet, blinking up at the night sky where a roof had once been. Smoke curled into the air, burning her lungs. She could hear people shouting outside, could hear screaming somewhere nearby. Eliza. Eliza was screaming.

          And then the screaming stopped.

          Before she could fully grasp what was happening, arms gripped her tight and pulled her, shifting her into greyspace. She blinked, reorienting herself again, staring hard at flames that burst forth and engulfed her. She pulled back, gasping, but the flames were insubstantial, grey, passing over her like smoke. The sound of Eliza screaming returned.

          The arms helped her to stand. Looking up, she saw that it was Samanda steadying her. “What happened?” Mallory asked.

          “I’m not sure. We were asleep. Sampson should have been on watch.” She stepped back from Mallory, studying her carefully as she lifted her arms away, looking ready to grab her if she looked unsteady. Once she seemed satisfied that Mallory was fine by herself, she nodded and looked down into the hole. “Stay here,” Samanda commanded. She jumped down into the hole.

          Frowning, Mallory moved to the edge, looking down. Eliza’s cries cut out again. “Fuck that,” Mallory murmured to herself, trying to find an easy path down. After a moment, she recalled her previous time in greyspace and everything they had been told about it. She took a deep breath and allowed herself to slip into the flooring beneath her.

          When it happened, she could feel the floor passing through her. She gasped, wondering how Eliza had managed to walk through a wall. As she lost her focus, the floor lost it’s hold on her and she fell, flailing wildly with a shout of surprise. The ground floor caught her – she hit it, hard, a soft “oof!” escaping her lungs.

          But the damage hadn’t come from the ground floor. It went down further. “Oh for fuck’s sake,” she grumbled to herself. This time she decided to jump. Eliza’s house had a basement, and a nice one at that – Michael had used it as his teenaged escape den often. Mallory remembered that it had been furnished with an old couch with failing springs that was almost uncomfortable to sit in, a large TV and several gaming systems. He’d also had loads of board games, a table to play them at, and a mini fridge loaded with his favorite energy drinks and sodas. The basement was such a blown in mess that Mallory couldn’t tell if any of that stuff had been left untouched by his parents. She gaped at the ruins of the basement. What had caused this?

          She could see Samanda leaning down over Isaac’s body, and started to jog over to help when she caught sight of Eliza out of the corner of her eye. She was also sprawled on the ground, still in her pajamas, one arm up over her head as though she had tried to protect herself. Mallory turned on her heel, instantly moving toward her friend instead.

          Something like the shadow of a very tall man stepped forward. At first, Mallory wasn’t sure if it was even really there. Glinting silvery eyes shifted up, narrowing as it caught sight of her. Mallory felt that same chill from the Miller house – the absolute hatred in that gaze. Her steps almost faltered as it glared at her, and then its gaze shifted down to Eliza. A blade glinted in its hands, as silvery as the eyes. Mallory found herself bending into an all-out sprint as it regarded her friend. Not Eliza! The words shrieked through her brain. Without any hesitation, Mallory tackled the shadow.

          She half expected to simply dive through it, but it was surprisingly solid to the touch, and ice cold. She hissed as she felt the chill seep into her skin, her fingers freezing so badly that she felt like her nerve endings were on fire. It grunted softly at the impact, being pushed back a few steps but not going down. It looked down at her, pulling her closer, almost as though to hug her.

          Mallory had thought touching it was unpleasant, but it was nothing compared to the searing, almost soul-wrenching pain of the knife.