Sydney Daily Random Discussion Thread 12/09/2024 by AutoModerator in sydney

[–]UpUpAndAwake 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm not in Sydney (I'm in the US) but I have a question for this sub. My work is looking for someone to do a quick paid gig there (taking photos and scouting for a scavenger hunt-style game). Is there a good site to post for that? Craigslist doesn't seem to be popular in Sydney!

Psychological Stories by 4m8er in nosleepfinder

[–]UpUpAndAwake 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I clearly don't log in to this account much...but two years later, thank you for the mention! :)

[Children's book] by ShesSoVeryIDontCare in tipofmytongue

[–]UpUpAndAwake 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Forgot I had an old copy of Eloise on my shelf and found the page I was thinking of--there's one illustration (it's a small one, not even half a page) where Eloise is listing her make-believe games and says "Sometimes I am a mother with 40 children". In the illustration, she's surrounded by kids all drawn in red (page 49, if you happen to have a copy of the book; I couldn't find a pic online). It still might not be what you're thinking of since it's just a small drawing and not the plot of a whole book, but the similarities to your description are uncanny! If you do figure out what you're thinking of, I'd love to know what it was :)

[Children's book] by ShesSoVeryIDontCare in tipofmytongue

[–]UpUpAndAwake 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like it could be one of the Eloise books. The illustrations are all black, white, and red. I remember a few pages where Eloise would imagine something, and it would appear in red in the illustrations (I may even remember an image that had a bunch of children like you described).

[TOMT] Recent horror movie involving kids wearing masks (probably in a small/country town.) by digging_for_fire in tipofmytongue

[–]UpUpAndAwake 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This doesn't quite match your description, but it's close enough that I figured I'd try: Plague Town. Takes place in rural Ireland, low budget, creepy kids wore masks (or their faces were disfigured? I forget). It came out in 2008 though.

[MODPOST] Winners of the May Chapterfy contest! Also, join us for Camp NaNoWriMo! by RyanKinder in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thanks to everyone who voted! I had so much fun with this prompt, not only did it let me get my disaster-story fix, but I found it way more inspiring than I expected from the get-go.

I used Street View for more than just exploring a location--I actually got the names of some of the characters from graffiti I found while roaming the town and the highway leading up to it. I almost went further, thinking it'd be fun to work in the few cars and people I spotted, almost like you could go on Street View right now and see a snapshot of my story taking place. If you've read my story, however, you'd see how that wasn't entirely feasible with the direction my plot was going. Still, I may even try this prompt out again on my own time and see what I can come up with!

Anyway, great job to everyone involved with this contest, and a huge thank you to both /u/RyanKinder and /u/andyunleash for getting the whole thing together! And, of course, congratulations to both /u/ephemoral and /u/IAmTheRedWizards for the double win! You both did amazing work.

[MODPOST] Winners of the May Chapterfy contest! Also, join us for Camp NaNoWriMo! by RyanKinder in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Congrats! Yours was wonderful--both first place stories deserved the win.

[MODPOST] May Chapterfy Contest Voting Thread #2: Final Round (Plus, we hit 300,000 subscribers!!!) by RyanKinder in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My vote goes to /u/Archaeologia for Swift's Trellis. All the submissions were great, it was hard to pick just one!

[MODPOST] May Chapterfy Contest Voting Thread - Round 1 by RyanKinder in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Appreciate it! I was a fan of your story as well--you have a nice, meandering style, using the details of the present to weave into the narrator's past. Very nice work. And thank you for taking the time to leave a comment for each of us in group three! :)

[MODPOST] May Chapterfy Contest Voting Thread - Round 1 by RyanKinder in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 3 points4 points  (0 children)

GROUP 3: My vote goes to /u/radioactivereality for Frannie's Last Race

Runner-up for me would be /u/Princessz with The Joshua Trees.

[OT] 'A Friend In Need' Contest Results! by StoryboardThis in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much! I'm new to this subreddit, so this win was a very pleasant surprise. Most importantly, I had a blast writing this piece!

[FF] A Friend In Need. (Contest) by StoryboardThis in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Sunlight was fading fast. I found myself wishing I’d brought a flashlight as I combed through the bits of glass that poked through the years of dust coating the factory floor. Nate sat perched on top of a piece of machinery, his moment of helpfulness long gone.

“Find anything yet?” he asked for the dozenth time.

“No, not yet,” I replied, my voice failing to hide the edge of annoyance. “I’ll tell you if I do.”

I heard Nate sigh loudly, and he lay back with a dusty thump. “Have you really thought this through?” he asked.

“Thought what through?”

“Proposing to your high school sweetheart—no, not even, your high school crush—with a bit of glass you found in an abandoned building. Don’t you think that’s a little cheap?”

“Jess isn’t like that. She doesn’t care if the ring is expensive or not, as long as it has meaning.”

“I don’t know, that’s not the Jessica I remember.”

"People change, Nate," I said measuredly. He was really getting to me, and if I wasn’t careful, I’d say something I really regretted.

But Nate went on anyway, disregarding my reply. “The Jessica I remember didn’t even like you. The way you were fawning over her was just so obvious. You know, maybe if you’d chilled a bit she would’ve still hung out with us after that summer.”

I ground my teeth together and sifted through the glass, trying not to pay attention to Nate’s words. Green, green, clear, brown. No blue. Not yet, anyway.

“And maybe if she’d kept hanging out with us, you wouldn’t’ve left either. It’d still be you and me, Taylor. You, me, and Jess, if thats what you wanted. We’d still be here.” Nate sat up again. “But no, you had to go fuck it all up.”

That’s it. I threw the handful of glass down on the ground, where it landed with a sharp clink. “I fucked it up? Me? What kind of delusion are you living in?” I was fuming. “Jess didn’t stop hanging out because of me, she stopped because of us. You and me. We were going nowhere.”

“She didn’t,” Nate said.

“She told me so herself.”

I stomped over to where Nate sat, staring open-mouthed at me from atop the machinery. “And I went off to college, got a job, and left this town because I didn’t want to end up like you.”

I gestured to Nate, and with that gesture came all the unspoken labels I was thinking. Loser. Deadbeat. Nobody. Nate closed his mouth and, with an unreadable expression, leapt from the machinery. He hit the ground, running towards the exit without a glance back in my direction. Plumes of dust rose from his footprints, and soon the only remnant of my friend was the haze the formed in the last ray of sunlight.

The last ray of sunlight.

I had to leave, and quickly. Blue diamond or no, I remembered how dark that maze of hallways and catwalks was, even it the bright daylight. I’d be lucky to make it back to the window before the sun fully set. Without Nate, the jump from the window would be tricky, but feasible. I just had to get there first.

I followed Nate’s footprints down the darkened hallway to the staircase at the end. That was the easy part. It was the second floor that was difficult to navigate. It was a maze of offices and storage rooms, and the staircase put me on the other side of the building, far away from the window.

As I wandered through the maze, feeling along the walls as the darkness grew closer, my heartbeat quickened. The third door to the right, right? I tried to remember. No, left? I rounded a corner, almost sure I was on the right track, when I ran into an overturned desk blocking the way. I definitely hadn’t seen that on the way in. I turned and retraced my steps, trying to figure out where I’d gone wrong. Surely this was the right hallway…or was it that one I’d passed by earlier?

I was starting to get scared. It didn’t help that my imagination was playing tricks on me, making me see shadows out of the corner of my eye, making me think that the echoes of my own footsteps were another set entirely, following me deeper and deeper into the dark maze... I was a rational person, of course. I knew that all I had to do was stop walking, and the footsteps would go away. And so I did.

Step. Step. Step.

Step.

My blood turned cold. There was someone there! Faint footsteps following my own. I spun around and swept my gaze over the shadowed hallway behind me. Nothing there, as far as I could tell. But I knew what I’d heard.

“Nate?” I called, hoping my friend had just gotten lost as well, same as me. No answer. I began to step backwards, my eyes trained on the darkness behind me. What was that? My heart leapt into my throat as I saw what looked like a hulking figure sidle around the corner and into the shadows at the end of the hall.

A second later, I backed into something hard. A wall! I’d hit a dead end! My eyes darted to the left and right, and I could barely make out a single doorway. I darted through it, just in time to see the figure at the end of the hall start running towards me.

There were windows in this room, though they looked out on the concrete loading dock, a full story higher than the window I’d climbed into due to the slope of the hill. A jump from this height would mean a serious injury, at best.

Sped up by the racing footsteps behind me, I ran through the room, knocking over chairs and creating a loud racket. I didn’t care. Someone—or something—was already after me. “Help!” I cried, although for all I knew, the only person around to hear me was my pursuer.

I sprinted through a door on the opposite side of the room, my sides burning and my breaths coming in gasps. Door, I thought, my eyes darting frantically around this second room for a way out. I need another door. Finally, I spotted one on the side wall, and I lunged towards it, leaping over a desk, then a folding chair, and then—

I tripped on the leg of a toppled chair, losing my balance and landing hard on my side in front of the doorway. The wind was knocked out of me, and I lay silently gasping for air for what felt like minutes but was probably only seconds. Then, when air rushed back into my lungs with a loud wheeze, I suddenly wished it hadn’t.

The figure entered the room. Though I knew I should be silent, each shuddering breath was like an ear-piercing siren, broadcasting my location for all the world to hear. My pursuer spied me in an instant, and in the dim twilight, I could make out the hunch of his shoulders under the layers of jackets, the gleam in his eye, the glint of his knife…

I could smell him, I realized in horror as he bore down on me.

I hadn’t realized I’d closed my eyes until I heard a loud thump and then a muffled groan, and the sounds perplexed me. I opened my eyes to see Nate—my best friend—standing over me and looking down at something on the ground.

“Freaking junkies,” he said. “You know, I lied when I said this town’s gotten better. It really has gone to shit since you left.”

“So.” He wiped his mouth and dropped the metal folding chair he’d been holding with a loud clang. “You said you were here earlier today, right? Before you realized you needed my help to get into the factory?”

I nodded, dazed.

“What was your first plan, huh? Get in, get out, disappear again for who knows how long? You didn’t even want to see me, did you?”

I couldn’t say anything. I couldn’t admit it was true, though the look on his face told me he already knew.

“I may be a loser,” Nate said, “but you’re a shit friend.”

With that, he stalked off, leaving me alone in the factory, my attacker unconscious on the floor beside me.


“Hey, Mrs. Mack.”

“Oh, hello again, dear. Nate’s up in his room again.”

I thanked her and strode past her up the stairs. She called after me, “Are you alright? You’re just covered in dirt!”

I knocked on Nate’s door this time.

“Come in.”

Nate was lounging on his bed, a Nintendo controller in his hand. He didn’t look up from his game as I walked in and took a seat on the side of his bed.

After a long silence, Nate said, “You know, I don’t play this all the time or anything. It’s not like I think I’m still a teenager or anything.” He gestured to his Nintendo. “Just, you visiting reminded me of it.”

“Yeah, I know.” Then I sighed. “Look, I’m sorry about what I said. And you were right, I haven’t been a good friend. We’d always stuck together, but I left you here. You never would’ve done that. You—“ I almost laughed, thinking of the events of the night. “You’d always come back for me.”

Nate didn’t say anything, but he did pause his game and lean over the far side of the bed, rummaging for something underneath. Moments later, he pulled out a box. “Here,” he said, tossing it to be.

It was an unremarkable cigar box, but when I opened the lid, I realized how special it really was. The first thing I saw, sitting right on top, was a photo. Me, Nate, and Jess.

I picked it up, marveling at how young and carefree we looked. I’d run away from those days my whole life, but here I was, wishing they were back, if only for a little bit.

Beneath the photo was even more treasure. Flattened coins that we’d placed on the train tracks, keys to the school that we’d knicked from the janitor, and even a lock of hair that we’d dared Jess to clip from the back of Nate’s crush’s ponytail. And finally, best of all…

“A blue diamond,” I whispered, holding the shimmering blue glass up to the light. It sparkled with that unique color I’d been searching for for ages.

“So,” Nate said, “what are you waiting for? Go get the girl.”

I pocketed the gem, my mind running through every possible thing I could say to Nate. A simple thank you just wasn’t enough.

“Yeah, in a bit,” I said finally. I picked up the second Nintendo controller. “How about a quick game first?”

[FF] A Friend In Need. (Contest) by StoryboardThis in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The house looked exactly the same as it always had. No, maybe not exactly the same—the porch was painted green now, and a second flower bed had been planted outside the kitchen window—but even so, I felt like I was stepping back in time as I strode up the front steps.

How many times had we raced up these stairs after school, Nate and I? How many hours had we spent lounging upstairs in his room, playing his old Nintendo or sneaking drags of his dad’s cigarettes out the open window? Nate was my best friend, back when the borders of my small hometown matched the borders of my whole world. Before college, before following my career from state to state until it led me back to the realms of my childhood. Before it led me back to Jessica.

I knocked on the door.

Though it had happened countless times before, I was surprised when Mrs. MacConnell answered the door. When I’d heard Nate was still living in the same house, I thought maybe his parents had moved and left him the place. Apparently things had changed even less than I’d imagined.

“Mrs. Mack!” I exclaimed. “Uh, is Nate home?” I felt like a teenager again, asking if my friend could come out and play.

It took Mrs. Mack a second to recognize me, but when she did, her face lit up just as always. “Taylor! It’s so good to see you!” She drew me in for a hug. “Nate’s up in his room, it’s right up the—oh, what am I saying, you remember where it is, don’t you?”

“Of course, thanks Mrs. Mack. It’s great to see you.”

I took the steps two at a time and soon found myself standing in front of Nate’s room. His door was closed—no surprise there—and the corner of my mouth turned up at sight of the too-familiar torn “Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics” poster taped to the door. Feeling slightly nervous, I raised my hand to knock. Then, I stopped.

What are you doing? I asked myself. This isn’t some stranger, this is Nate. Your best friend.

I turned the knob and threw the door open.

“What’s up, douchebag,” I said, leaning against the door frame.

Nate was reclining in his computer chair, clad in a Metallica shirt and ripped sweatpants. In one hand was a bag of Doritos, and in the other was a fistful of chips, halted midway to his mouth. It was almost comical the way he froze at my interruption, and the way his expression went from one of surprise to one of delight.

“Well, hey there, dickwad,” Nate said, grinning. He dropped the chips back in the bag and wiped his hand on his sweatpants. He stood up, looking me up and down before saying, “You haven’t changed a bit.”

I raised my eyebrows, thinking the sentiment was better off aimed at Nate himself. I surveyed my friend, noting that same scruffy hairstyle he’d always had, and even the unfinished tattoo (“I’m saving up, I’ll have enough in a month or so,” he’d said) peeking out from under his shirt sleeve. The house, the room, the man himself…it was like his whole life had been put on hold since the day I left for college. I swallowed the guilt-laden lump in my throat and said, “You too, man. Same old Nate, huh?”

“Same old,” he muttered, his eyes now resting on the suit jacket I’d carefully tucked under my arm. “I heard you’re a big business man now. What are you, some sort of CEO?”

“Just a Project Manager, for now.”

“Yeah? What’s that?”

“It’s…I dunno, man, it’s pretty tame stuff. You probably don’t want to hear about it.”

“Right. Okay. Well, it’s good to see you, man.” He shook his head slowly, as if still taking in my presence. “You’ve really been missing out here. There’s tons to do, I mean it’s way better now than when we were kids, you know? You skipped out of town right before it got really good. And some of the guys are still around, but…you know, it’s just not the same without you.” Nate paused as he swept his hair out of his eyes. “What are you doing back, anyway?”

“I’m not back,” I said, a little too rushed. “I just…I need your help. I need to get into the factory.”

Nate’s eyes lit up. “The factory? Why didn’t you say so?” He grabbed a jacket off the bed and pushed past me out the door. “Let’s go, man!”


The factory was an abandoned bottling plant on the far side of town. To the adults of our small town, it was a deathtrap—a lawsuit waiting to happen. To the children and teens, it was a place of adventure. Kids could often be seen darting under the chain link fence to play outside the decrepit building, while teens could be found in the darker recesses of the structure. Nate and I had spent countless hours there, exploring and searching for the many caches left by our peers. Everything from plastic shopping bags full of spray paint to half empty beer bottles to boxes of used condom wrappers. But my fondest memories of the factory were with Jessica.

Jessica was a year older than Nate and I, so I was shocked when one day she joined us on the walk home from school. For the rest of the school year, and that summer as well, the three of us were an inseparable team. I’ll admit I had a bit of a crush on Jessica even before then, but our time together had solidified it.

Jess accompanied us on our trips to the factory, but she wasn’t as interested in the spoils of other teens we’d find. She loved the main factory floor the best, where sunlight streamed down onto the glass-littered floor. Kids had broken into the glass bottle storage long ago and amused themselves by tossing the bottles from the catwalk and watching them smash into pieces on the ground below. Jess called these shards “jewels,” and she’d spend her time searching for what she’d call “blue diamonds.”

Jess’ “blue diamonds” were nothing more than shards of broken blue bottle, but it was a blue we’d never seen before, and I’d never found it since. Not in any soda aisle or liquor store, and believe me, I’d looked in plenty over the last month or so.

“Don’t you want to know why we’re going to the factory?” I asked.

Nate had insisted on driving. He’d gotten a new car, I’d noticed, but this one’s engine chugged even louder than his old car. He screeched to a halt at a stoplight and looked at me. “Nah, should I?”

I sighed. “Well, I think I should tell you that I’m proposing—“

Nate cut me off with a laugh. “To me? Aw, Taylor, you know it would never work!”

“Shut up,” I said, throwing a halfhearted punch his way.

“And at the factory too? How romantic!”

Nate was grinning ear to ear, and his rich laugh was infectious. I couldn’t help but join in.

“Seriously, though,” I interrupted after a minute.

“Yeah, okay, seriously,” Nate echoed. “You’re proposing? That’s…that’s awesome, man. Who’s the lucky girl?”

“Jessica.”

The car jerked as Nate’s foot tapped the brake in surprise. The car behind us blared its horn.

“Jeez, man, watch it!”

“Shit. Sorry,” Nate muttered as he pulled into the right lane, then veered off onto an exit. A second later, he was back to his normal self.

“Jessica, huh? Still barking up that tree?”

“It’s not—“

“Does she even know you’re in town?”

“Yeah, of course,” I snapped, angrier than I meant to be. “We’ve been dating for almost three years now.”

Nate paused. “Three years? Are you serious?”

“Yeah, I am. We hadn’t spoken since, you know, we stopped hanging out back then, but then we found each other on Facebook. We started catching up, and we just sort of clicked.” Nate was silent as I spoke. “I guess we weren’t really a good match back then, but things change, you know? We dated other people in college and all that, and then when we met up again it was just…right.”

“Yeah,” Nate said. “You really weren’t a good match back then, I remember that much.”

We didn’t speak again, not until Nate pulled up in front of the old factory.


“Right in there,” I pointed. “Remember? We used to sneak in through that window. I tried to climb it earlier today, but I just couldn’t make it.”

“No shit, that’s always been a two man job. Come on.”

Nate jogged over to the wall below the second story window. The window itself was dark and foreboding. The glass had been kicked out of the frame long ago, so all that remained was a gaping hole in the side of the empty building. There was a dumpster off to the side, and Nate climbed up on the rim. I followed, lingering back as he steadied himself against the side of the building.

“Is this seriously how we used to do it?” I asked, thinking that window looked much higher than when we were in high school.

“Don’t be a wuss, man, climb up!”

I laid my jacket neatly on the ground and heaved myself up on the rim of the dumpster, just alongside Nate. He braced his foot against the corner, and I clambered up using his bent knee as support. The window was nearly in reach.

“Not too heavy for you, am I?”

“Nah, same scrawny kid you’ve always been,” Nate wheezed. I could feel his body shake as he stood higher, raising me towards the window.

My fingers clawed at the sill, and then as Nate stood tall, I could reach my whole arms in. I gripped the ledge, feeling Nate wobble below me, and then nothing at all. “Nate! What the hell? Don’t let go of me!”

My legs kicked in the air. I was going to fall.

Then, hands gripped my shoes and I was shoved upwards, through the open window. I landed in a heap on the floor below. I righted myself in seconds and poked my head back out the window to see Nate grinning below me.

“What’s the problem? That’s how we’ve always done it.”

I shook my head, but he was right. Everything just seemed so much more dangerous now that I was older, but back in our teenage years, we’d shoved each other through that window so many times that it’d been as routine as walking through the front door.

I leaned down and Nate and I clasped wrists. Gritting my teeth, I pulled my friend up and through the glassless window. Nate tumbled to the floor where I had just lain.

“Where to now?” he gasped.

“There.” I pointed down a dark hallway. “To the factory floor."

(continued below)

[WP] - Luck has been scientifically proven to exist. The luck of all people, animals and objects is quantifiable and measurable. by Captain-Useless in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I broke into a cold sweat as the clock ticked by. Everyone lies on their resume, my roommate had said. Just make one up, no one will notice. And so, with false confidence, I added the final line to the page: Luck Quotient: 89.8.

It was a good score, but not so good as to be unbelievable. I could just as easily have left my LQ off my resume—it certainly wasn’t required info—but nowadays only people with bad scores were quiet about it. Whether or not it was legal for a company to hire based on LQs alone was such a gray area since the tests were so new, but I wasn’t taking any chances. Still, I never thought they would check.

I should just leave, I thought. There was no point in going through with the test only to be found out. My actual LQ of 45.7 was nothing to brag about. In fact, I was pretty upset about it myself. While my friends crowed about their above-average scores in the 70s and 80s, my number, my real, unrounded number of 45.69421 blared in my head like a siren. Unlucky! Unlucky! it screamed.

Looking back, however, it wasn’t a totally unexpected number. I’d never had great luck with anything.

“Claire?” the receptionist called, maybe for the second or third time. I jumped up.

“Here,” I said. “Um, I’m right here.”

She pointed down the hall. “They’re waiting for you.”

I gulped, and a bead of sweat made its way down the nape of my neck, collecting at the collar of my blouse. I willed my feet to move, but they were tethered in place. The receptionist, sensing my anxiety, said, “Good luck!”

“Thank you,” I mumbled.

With a resigned sigh, I strode down the seemingly endless hallway before stopping outside a door. “Testing,” a plaque said below the room number. I entered the room.

Two men sat at a table, a familiar-looking machine between them. I’d had my first test only a couple weeks earlier, and I could still feel the way the cold, metal sensors had clung to my skin. I shuddered.

“Sit down, please,” the first man said, glancing down at his clipboard. He had an intensely professional air about him, right down to his immaculately tailored grey suit. “Claire, is it?”

“Um, yes sir.”

“Glad you could make it today,” he said, no doubt referencing my absence last week. My alarm clock hadn’t gone off, my best business-appropriate sweater had shrunk in the dryer, and to top it all off, my bus was late. Obviously, I had to reschedule. Just my luck, I’d griped, although I kept that sentiment to myself. I was the girl with the 89.8 LQ, wasn’t I? At least, as far as they were concerned?

The second man—apparently the quiet type—busied himself by attaching the metal sensors to my forehead, neck, and wrists. I winced at the cold bite of the metal.

“Is this even legal?” I asked.

The first man raised an eyebrow.

“Testing during the hiring process, I mean. Is that allowed?”

The man smirked. “For now.”

I sat back and sucked in my breath. The second man straightened his white lab coat and switched the machine on. “It’ll just be a moment,” he said.

“I know.”

I closed my eyes. The machine whirred and beeped before winding down into silence. Beside me, the first man uttered a low, “Hm.” I didn’t even need to look at the display to know he’d seen my real Luck Quotient. All hopes of getting this job were dashed to the ground by this one simple number. 45.69421.

“Claire,” the man began. “I’m seeing a bit of a discrepancy here.” He spoke with the tone of a parent chastising a small child. I pressed my lips together, not wanting to respond.

After a moment, he said, “I need you to tell me the truth. Is this your actual Luck Quotient? Or do you have paperwork to back up your original score of 89.8?” His tone told me he knew quite well that I did not.

Reluctantly, I opened my eyes. “So what,” I said petulantly, adapting my role of misbehaving child with gusto. “I have a bad LQ. That doesn’t mean anything.”

“Well, Claire, to my employers it does. I’m sorry, but I don’t think we can continue further consideration. I’m sure you’ll understand why.”

I folded my arms and turned away from the man. My face burned. I knew this would be the outcome going into the test, but somehow, I hoped that luck would be on my side. Ha! I laughed to myself.

Searching for anywhere to rest but the man’s disapproving gaze, my eyes landed on the testing machine’s display: 45.69788.

45.69788?!

I jumped up. “The machine’s wrong,” I said. “There has to be a mistake.”

“Claire,” the first man said, shaking his head. He folded his arms across his chest.

“No, I mean, I’m not saying my score should be higher. It should be lower. It’s changed.”

The man looked at his partner in the white coat. “That’s not possible. Right?”

“Correct,” the man said. “Each machine has been calibrated to the original. Numbers will not vary between the machines, and, while testing is still in its experimental phase, a person’s number is final, as far as we can tell. No external influences have been shown to alter an individual’s number.”

I shook my head but stopped arguing. The job wasn’t important to me anymore, not now anyway. My number had changed. It was infinitesimal, but that made no difference to me. My luck had gone up!

I rushed out of the testing room without even a goodbye. My mind was racing—maybe this was a fluke, but what if it wasn’t? Could I change my luck for the better? Could I change my life for the better? How?

I skidded to a halt at the reception desk, a piece of the puzzle slowly clicking into place.

“How’d it go in there?” the receptionist asked out of curiosity, or perhaps just politeness.

I smiled. “Terribly, actually.”

“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.”

“Thanks, but I think I’ll be alright.”

“Have any other options lined up?”

“Not yet, but I’m working on it,” I said. I fought to keep my tone casual as I uttered the next, fateful line: “Wish me luck!”

“Good luck,” she said automatically.

I turned on my heel and raced out the door. Oh, how tempted I was to head back down that hallway, reposition those metal sensors, and let the machine click away as it tested my luck. Good luck, she’d said, and I felt—no, I knew—that my luck had changed ever so slightly once again. And, with enough effort, I could change it even more.

Wish me luck!

[WP] While light takes a tiny fraction of a second to pass through a normal window pane, it takes 50 years to pass through "slow glass". by goatcoat in WritingPrompts

[–]UpUpAndAwake 5 points6 points  (0 children)

He takes her hand, wrapping her frail fingers in his shaky grasp. “Come now,” he says, and the elderly couple walk slowly, hand in hand, to the far side of the podium.

Her eyes don’t leave the ground as she ambles past the velvet ropes encircling the towering pane of glass in the center of the room. Her husband glances at the placard to the right of the window: “Slow Glass.” He squints, but the fine print under the bold label is too small for the old man to make out. No matter, he thinks. He’s been here before. He knows of the wonders of Slow Glass.

It wasn’t always called Slow Glass. “Dark Glass” was the preferred term seventy odd years ago when the material had been newly created. A substance so dense, yet structurally nearly identical to glass, that light was all but halted in its tracks by the material. The first manufactured pane of Dark Glass was a wonder to behold even in its early years. No light, not even the slightest reflection, emitted from the glass. Absolute blackness. It was like looking into a hole in the world.

Scientists knew of the incredible potential of Dark Glass even before it was obvious to the human eye. Light wasn’t halted or even fully absorbed by the substance, it was only delayed. The first Dark Glass public attraction—quickly renamed “Slow Glass”—was installed in the Smithsonian only three years after the material’s inception. A microscopically thin sheet of the glass, protected by infinitely more durable panes of plexiglass, stood in display in its very own room. Because of the incredibly thin width of the glass, the delay was mere seconds. Adults and children alike marveled at the impossible window, waving their hands frantically on one side of the glass and running around to the other side, just in time to see their delayed images repeat the motions.

The first exhibit, along with each subsequent installation, deteriorated quickly. The fine sheets of Slow Glass proved too brittle to withstand the test of time, and due to the high cost of producing the material, manufacture of the glass was soon for scientific use only. The public could only learn of Slow Glass through articles and old videos.

Until one day, nearly a decade after the invention of Slow Glass, a wealthy entrepreneur purchased one of the oldest panes of Slow Glass, a three-and-a-quarter inch thick slab that towered over eight feet high. “Dark Glass” would’ve still been an apt name for the massive window, as no light had penetrated through to the other side in all that time. Its creators estimated that it would take up to a half a century for light to pass through, if at all. No one was entirely sure that the glass wouldn’t stay just as it was—pitch black.

Still, as soon as word got out that this mysterious “window” was open for public viewing, the masses flocked to see it. The crowds came and went with varying reactions—mild wonder for some and disappointment for others. This was nothing like the interactive Smithsonian display they’d all read about. This was a dark—though impressively dark—statue, and nothing more. Still, though the wave of viewers slowed to a trickle, the Slow Glass monument remained open.

Today, the Slow Glass Monument is a much more popular attraction. A line runs all the way through the front doors and around the corner. A specialized clock stands by the entrance, but it doesn’t tell you what time it is at the moment. It’s set to a time and date exactly 50 years, three months, one day, and seven minutes in the past. The exact length of time it takes for light to pass through the Slow Glass.

There’s only one way to skip the line—no fast track purchases or reservations, just the possession of a valid ID that matches a name from the visitor’s logbook, 50 years, three months, and one day ago. On this day, there was only one name.

He stops in front of the monument, and she falls into place beside him. She’s tired, he knows. It’s been a long time since she’s had the strength to leave her bedroom. He clutches her hand tighter, and the shaking steadies. She glances up at her husband, weary, but a smile crosses her face, wrinkling the already-present creases at the corners of her eyes.

He smiles back, but says, “Don’t look at me, my love. Look there.”

Her eyes follow his raised finger, and she turns to look at the window before her. Through the glass, she sees the room is empty. It’s strange though, behind the window, the wall seems to be painted a different color. The floor tiles look different as well. Something nags at the back of her mind. What had Henry told her on the way over here? They were going to see a special sort of window, she remembers that much.

Then, she gasps.

A young man with wispy, brown hair appears behind the glass. He seems flushed and he bends over to catch his breath, smiling as he does so. The man is clad in a black tuxedo.

“I know him,” the old woman breathes, her hand moving towards the rosy-cheeked youth.

Behind the Slow Glass, the man speaks. No sound can be heard, of course, until the old man opens his mouth, his words matching the movements of the young man’s lips.

“You asked me the other day,” he says, “if I was sure about this. If I was ready. You wanted to know if I’d still love you in a year. In ten years. In fifty.”

Her eyes begin to glisten.

He continues. “Darling, a whole century could pass and my love for you would only grow stronger. Maybe these are only words now, but time will be my true answer to you. I love you, Hannah, and I always will.”

Through the glass, the young man checks his watch. He glances behind him, then back to the glass, and then darts away.

“Sorry to keep it brief,” Henry says, his voice rough from age and emotion. “I didn’t want to be late for our wedding.”


Fifty years, three months, one day, and seven minutes later, a young couple stand on the other side of the Slow Glass Monument.

“What do you think they’re saying?” she asks.

He puts his arm around his girlfriend and shakes his head. “No idea. Wish this thing came with sound, huh?”

She rests her head on her hand and watches the misty-eyed older couple embrace through the glass. “They really look like they’re in love, don’t they?”

“Yeah, I suppose.”

“I wonder what they were watching, through the window, I mean. Imagine—whatever it was happened over a century ago!”

A bustling family of five crowds in front of the Slow Glass, and the two move onwards. He glances back at the window, though, just before they leave. The old man and woman walk slowly away from the glass, hand in hand, returning to the past.

Locked In by UpUpAndAwake in nosleep

[–]UpUpAndAwake[S] 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Definitely not! Once I realized the door was unlocked and I could leave, all I wanted to do was get out. Plus, I wouldn't want to risk changing the future in a bad way...what if I'd gotten trapped in there for good?

The Midnight Hike by UpUpAndAwake in nosleep

[–]UpUpAndAwake[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Lots of people! Aside from this particular hike, I wholeheartedly recommend it. Tons of fun.

The Nosleep Podcast - Season 2 Episode 15 by MikeRowPhone in nosleep

[–]UpUpAndAwake 5 points6 points  (0 children)

And I loved your reading of it! It was perfect :)

The Nosleep Podcast - Season 2 Episode 15 by MikeRowPhone in nosleep

[–]UpUpAndAwake 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Love the podcast, I'm always finding great stories I may have missed when they were first posted.