Elijah

The distant door closed shut behind him with a click....

Invasion©- chapter 1

The morning sun had begun its rise in the far...

DOLL.


This story may contain adult content.
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Written by Terry Collett   
Wednesday, 20 August 2008
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"The doll sat in the chair next to my bed," said Alice. "It had sat there since it was given to me by my mother in 1952. It had been my grandmother's doll before that. It was an old doll; dressed in old clothes. Clothes that never seemed to have been washed. The doll itself was grimy looking; dirt seemed to have invaded the hair on the head. Once when my mother was out, I stripped the doll of its clothes, bathed it in a bowl of warm water and soap and scrubbed and scrubbed. It seemed cleaner after that, but the clothes were still dingy, so I dressed the doll in other doll's clothes that had come with other lesser dolls, dolls I had cast away in the back of the toy cupboard once I had acquired the old doll. She looked smarter, more alive, more pleased with herself. My mother was so angry when she came home, saw what I had done that she beat me, threatened to take the doll away with her saying I was not a fit child to care for such an old doll. However, she relented, put the doll in the chair by the bed, said it was to stay there and once she washed the older clothes I was to put them on the doll and leave her be. The doll seemed to look at me quite sadly; the dull eyes seemed to come alive, stared at me with a hint of tears in the eyes. Once the old clothes had been washed my mother watched me as I dressed the doll in the washed out clothes, then took the other doll's clothes away. The doll sat in the chair for days on end, staring at the wall opposite, gazing at the picture of Christ on his cross. Some nights I took her to bed with me, laid her head on the pillow beside me, felt her body against my arm. Sometimes I'd tell her secrets, kiss her forehead, hold her in a hug close to my cheek. Once my father saw the doll in my bed, threw her on the floor, said it was no place for a toy, that bed was for sleeping, not for toys and playing. Once he had gone I picked her up, sat her gently in the chair, climbed back into bed. It from there in that chair that the doll witnessed many things, things that no doll should have to witness, but which it did. Some nights if my mother was out working, my father would creep into my room, sit on the edge of my bed, whisper words that to my drowsy ears seemed utter nonsense, then he'd touch me, move his hands over my body, then he'd get into my bed, and in the blackness of my room, apart from the light from the street outside, all the secrets began, hushed, dark, secrets, dirty secrets, mother- mustn't-know kind of secrets. And in the dark the doll stared and watched, her head turned away from the painting of Christ on his cross, focussed on my father and me, her eyes eating it all up, her unmoving painted lips seeming to open and wanting to say something, wanting to tell him to stop. But she didn't and he didn't. Until one day my mother came home early, caught him in my bed, screamed at him, pulled his hair, dragged him out, spat at him, and he ran off into the passage; she slammed the door and glared at me. She shook me, slapped me and slapped me, and for a moment, thought she was going to murder me in my bed, but she stopped, stared at her hands, sobbed deeply as if she might choke, as if all her body would convulse to a dead stop and she'd be dead on my bed. After what seemed hours she got off the bed, went out, closed the door with a soft thud; all was silent. The doll sat looking at me, her dull eyes staring, her lips seemingly parted, mouthing words that came from nowhere, that said nothing , that went nowhere, but somehow filtering into my head whispering, I saw, I saw, I've seen it all before. Then she turned her head, gazed sadly at the picture of the tortured Christ on His battered cross, as I watched her eyes glaze over dull and lifeless."



Copyright 2008 Terry Collett
Keyword: DOLL.
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Comments (10)
Posted by philneale1952
2008-08-20 04:50:28
Nice To See You

Good to see you writing prose Terry.

I found this an enthralling and gripping rendition of a very dark subject.

The style was very matter-of-fact until the very end when all kinds of stuff hit the fan.

The only difficulty I had was with the layout in one single paragraph, but that didn't take anything away from the impact.

Great read.

Phil
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Posted by d.dasgupta
2008-08-20 07:01:09
Dark Subject

As Phil observed, this is a dark subject. Undoubtedly so. It was depressing to read through the girl's experiences. What I am trying my best to understand is the role played by the doll in the story. Clearly, it has a deep symbolic meaning. The way I tend to interpret is that it symbolizes the silence of nature or fate if you will, as humanity loses itself in dark abysses. However, the girl's mother's obsession with the doll is not entirely clear to me yet. It was a very good piece of writing though.
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Posted by Eternal_Bliss440
2008-08-20 11:27:53
....

Wow at first I thought it was going to be one of those storeis about dolls coming alive and killing people. But to me it didn't. I loved the dark content and how you present it in a monoluge. Great job
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Posted by Andy6
2008-08-20 13:35:50
Quality

I thought this was a quality piece, really accomplished and you approached a really awkward subject in a stylish fashion. Sadness drips from every word. Your success is that it is an uncomfortable read that you can't stop reading, lesser pieces would've been abandoned as soon as the subject matter became apparent. Nice One!
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Posted by harmattan
2008-08-20 13:40:51
doll

The doll did not need to come alive and kill anybody.

The inanimate object, the silent witness was quite adequately serving up personal torment.

A horror far darker and more frightening than a dozen buckets of blood.

Terry. I am amazed at the skill with which you can take on different personas and write in an appropriate style.

Expertly crafted but disturbing and so sad.

Kind regards

Harmattan
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Posted by Behind_the_Mask
2008-08-20 14:02:20
!

I too thought it was going to be another story about a doll coming to life and killing everyone, but I have to say that what the doll was witness to was far worse that murder.

I have to agree with Phil about the layout, the single paragraph style made it a bit difficult to read at first but I soon forgot about it and was consumed by the story.

Very well done.

Keep up the great work.
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Posted by resistanceisfreedom
2008-08-20 16:12:07
....

well i don't have really much to say because everyone else stated my thoughts already...but, i'm curious as to why alot of your content you submit has abuse towards females in it. i don't know, maybe it's none of my business but it's something i have noticed that comes up quite frequently in your pieces.
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Posted by CliffMitchell
2008-08-21 07:11:44
....

the simple poet; heavy thoughted and it's no wonder why your genius is, reading works like this of yours truthfully pure and back to revisions of mine i go, need a lot of work.
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Posted by Something Indecent
2008-08-25 06:35:13
....

How come everyone thought that the doll would come alive? From the start I thought that the doll would be molested. Sadly though it just watched.

This was an emotional piece but with a step taken back so as to convey the plight and actions of the characters rather than their motivations or ambitions. I'm soooo tired right now so everytime you mentioned bed it made me quiver with anticipation until the clock strikes freedom.
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Posted by Terry Collett
2008-08-25 13:52:58
....

Thank you all for the feedback.This is aprt of a series of stories not placed here yet.
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 20 August 2008 )
 
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