The Dark
Smiles of Invisible Women (2500+ Words Long Horror Story)
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Sunday, April 10, 1887
“Would you like to die? I’m sure one of me can
make that happen.” Angelina smiled sweetly, her dimples showing, and Isabella
watched her friend flutter her eyes closed, her tiny hands splaying open
against the worn gray cloth of her skirts.
From behind Angelina a mist began to rise, at
first thin and nearly invisible, like the steam from a teakettle. But gradually
they could all see the form of a man begin to take shape against the dark red
wallpaper, partially obscuring the row of mounted deer heads with their
lifeless glass eyes. The apparition was a massive brute, thick arms bulging in
his collarless shirt, nose broken from a lifetime of battles. “I think I’d like
to kill this ‘un,” he growled, becoming more corporeal with each step he
lurched forward towards the Doctor.
“Stop them!” Dr. Wittmann bellowed. The two
orderlies hesitated for a fraction of a second, then started forward, pulling
leather-wrapped truncheons from their belts. Isabella gripped the tiny silver
charm around her neck, clutching it so hard the tiny points of silver drew
blood and the men were yanked back like dogs on leashes and the nurse, the one
with iron keys and pinching fingers, was slammed against the wall by an
invisible hand.
Still the doctor refused to see the truth, even
as it was taking shape in front of him. “I will not be abused by hysterical
women!” he yelled, yanking open his desk drawer and pulling out a revolver.
Isabella calmly stared into the unblinking eye
of the gun as she gripped the charm her mother had given her, relishing the
bite of the metal into her skin, the blood leaking from between her fingers.
“Dr. Wittmann, I think we need to have a conversation about your attitude.”
Saturday, April 9, 1887
Isabella watched the nurse, the one with keys
that rattled like bones, pause in her circuit of the common room to inspect a
woman’s embroidery. As she pointed out mistakes with jabs of her finger
Isabella leaned nearer to Angelina and said in a low voice, “I have a plan. For
escape.”
Angelina kept her blonde head bent over the
pillow she had been given to embroider with the motto ‘A Woman’s Beauty Is
Silence’. So far she had managed to misspell ‘silence’ three times, and each
time wrinkled her forehead in confusion when a nurse pointed out her mistake.
“Where would we go?” her friend asked through battered lips, as invisible hands
helped her knot the thread into an impossible tangle.
“Does it matter?” Isabella could not bear the
thought of the Treatment Room. Not again. “We’ve made sure no sane man would
want to marry us.”
Angelina smiled a tiny, secret smile. “I do
prefer the insane ones anyway.”
Friday, April 8, 1887
Bruises like purple kisses wrapped around
Angelina’s thin wrists, and blood caked her mouth from where she’d bitten her
lip. Isabella thought that whatever had been done to her friend might possibly
be worse than her own iron chair and the black, icy water.
She wrapped an arm around Angelina as they
huddled together on the threadbare sofa in the dimmest corner of the common
room. The smell of cabbage hung in the air from dinner, and at a table near the
window a woman with graying hair was listlessly pushing the pieces of a jigsaw
puzzle around. In scattered armchairs other women were napping, or staring into
space and mumbling to themselves. A nurse chatted with a guard near the
doorway, occasionally checking the watch pinned to the front of her rusty black
dress, anxious to end the day.
“They’re going to accidentally kill us with
their treatments,” she whispered to Angelina.
The other girl managed a faint smile with her
battered mouth. “It won’t be accidental. Not after I told Herr Doktor Wittmann
that if he touched me again I’d shove an embroidered cushion so far up his ass
he’d be farting proverbs.” Behind her the ghost-like image of an enormous man
grinned evilly and nodded in agreement.
Isabella let out a bark of surprised laughter,
but quickly covered her mouth when the nurse turned towards them and frowned.
Lowering her lashes and trying to look as drugged and befuddled as their
companions she whispered to Angelina, “We’ll get out of here. I’ll find a way.”
Thursday, April 7, 1887
Isabella didn’t question why, after breakfast,
they had her change back into the thin white nightgown, why they led her down
the cold stone steps into the basement, to a room with a white enamel plaque
that read ‘Water Treatments’.
Doctor Wittmann was waiting there, not speaking
a word as the male orderlies pushed her down into a chair with strange
mechanical attachments and a pool behind it, giant blocks of ice bobbing like
tombstones in the black water. Too late she began to struggle and thrash as
they tightened the straps, pinning her in place like a butterfly on paper. When
she tried to scream they forced a strip of leather into her mouth to silence
her, part of her brain laughing wildly that yes, of course, butterflies were
silent.
There was a clattering noise as orderlies turned
cranks and abruptly the chair began to shake. The chains that hung from the
seat like black snakes lifted up, and as they grew taut the chair itself jerked
upward. When she was swinging over the pit of water Dr. Wittmann remarked
calmly in his clipped German accent, “Did you know that your forefathers would
submerge witches in ponds to test for evil spirits?”
He gave a casual flick of his fingers and the
guards began to work the cranks again, slowly lowering her toward the inky
water. Dr. Wittmann continued, “Of course, in this modern age we understand
that water treatments can be an important aid for cooling an overheated spirit
such as yours.”
As her bare feet broke the surface of the
freezing water she thrashed, but she continued inexorably downward, the cold
like knives driving into her bones. Around her neck the charm burned futilely,
kept from her fingers by the straps that bound her.
When the water reached her chin and she was
convulsing from the agony of icy pool, her back arched against the restraints,
the men paused their cranking. The doctor met her eyes with his pale blue ones
and smiled faintly. “Don’t stop, please,” he said to to orderlies. “I do
believe our patient would benefit from a full submersion.”
She tried to scream, but all that came out was a
moan, and even that was muffled by the strip of leather between her teeth. And
then everything was ice and blackness.
Wednesday, April 6, 1877
Three sharp knocks on her door woke her from a
nightmare of grasping hands, the smell of strange chemicals, a train where
strangers stared and then turned away when her numb lips tried to form words.
Now she was in a room she’d never seen before, the cracked plaster walls dimly
lit by early morning light.
Isabella struggled to remember as the door was
flung open and a woman with a face like a clenched fist strode in. “Get up.”
Isabella stared at the woman’s starched black
dress, the heavy iron keys hanging from a ring at her belt. A uniform, perhaps.
Then the memories flooded back into her like black, oily water. Frantically she
store the sheets away, and saw bruises on her arms and a stained nightgown that
wasn’t her own.
The woman tossed a boneyard gray dress onto the
bed. “Put this on. Breakfast is in five minutes.”
The gown wasn’t hers, either—where had all her
clothes gone? But a lifetime of obedience that was only just beginning to
crumble told her to dress herself, and before she could wonder at anything else
the woman in black was leading her through a maze of shadowy hallways, until at
last they came to a large room with a dining table where perhaps a dozen women
were sitting in the mismatched wooden chairs, waiting.
Seeing an empty seat next to a slight girl with
a snarled tangle of blonde curls, Isabella slid into it. Most of the other
women were sitting silently, staring at their plates, or gazing vacantly out
the smeared windows to an empty courtyard where a solitary geranium plant
struggled to survive, red-orange petals scattered around it like drops of
blood.
The tiny blonde woman, perhaps a little younger
than Isabella, leaned over. “I’m Angelina.”
“Isabella.” She noticed that everyone at the
table was wearing the same gray outfit, their shapeless dresses hanging
listlessly.
Another woman in black—were they nurses?—led
them in a prayer that spoke of obedience to their fathers, to their brothers,
to their husbands. Serving bowls of gelatinous porridge were slowly passed from
hand to hand, and cups of tea were poured by the nurse with the iron keys.
When there was a clatter of spoons and the
black-clad nurses retreated the slightly, the pale girl pushed her uneaten
porridge away and said, “Why are you here?”
“I...” Isabella faltered. Why was she here?
Finally all she could come up with was, “I said ‘no’.”
Angelina gave a tiny nod of understanding. “I
let my friends out of my head. My father doesn’t like it when I do that.” She
gave a tiny sigh, the slightest puff of air. “Sometimes it’s very hard to keep
them in.”
Isabella pushed her own bowl of gluey porridge
away and reached for her tea, but Angelina grabbed her hand. For a moment
Isabella thought she saw another woman, gray-haired and frowning, behind her as
the girl whispered, “Don’t drink that. There’s something in it.”
Isabella looked down at the pale liquid in front
of her, then around at the other patients. They placidly sipped from their
mismatched teacups, as sedate as if they were visiting in a friend’s parlor, as
if nothing in the world was wrong. Quickly she set her cup back onto its
saucer, the impact making the surface of the liquid ripple.
Tuesday, April 5, 1877
Her brother was sitting behind the dark wood
fortress of his desk, a man in an elegant suit standing beside him.
“Isabella, this is Dr. Ferdinand Wittmann. He
runs a private hospital.”
Isabella froze, her fingers clutching the
doorframe, until her brother motioned impatiently at the hard wooden chair in
front of his desk. “Sit.” Too late, already in motion, she realized her fiancé
was in the other chair, staring stonily ahead, a thin cut like the slice of a
razor running down one cheek.
Carefully arranging her skirts as she sat, she
glanced from her brother, who was drumming his short, stubby fingers on the
desk, to the doctor. Dr. Wittmann coolly returned her gaze, his pale blue eyes
boring through her as if her very soul was a open book he could pick up and
read whenever he wanted. “Miss Vandenberg,” he said with the faintest clip of
German in his voice, “your brother informs me that you were disturbingly
emotional with your husband.”
“My fiancé—“ she began.
The doctor cut her off with an impatient slice
of his hand. “Fine. Your fiancé.” He paused, staring at her with his glacial
eyes, until he appeared satisfied she wouldn’t interrupt him again. “You became
hysterical and shouted at him, then threw something and broke an extremely
valuable mirror.”
Had she thrown something? No, she was sure she
hadn’t. “He was attacking me—“ she tried, but this time her own brother stopped
her.
“No, Isabella, you attacked Alfred. I went to
great pains to arrange this marriage, and the moment you’re alone with the man
who will be your husband you become completely hysterical.”
There was that word again, ‘hysterical’. As her
brother droned on about ingratitude, vulgarity, and, of course, hysteria, the
doctor strolled around behind her. A part of her mind, the part not listening
to the words ‘rehabilitation’ and ‘asylum’, told her to flee, to hide, that a
predator was near.
Then a hand snaked around, a piece of cloth
clamped down over her nose, and the more she struggled the more the
sickly-sweet smell flooded her lungs and dripped into her veins. Some part of
her mind made her start to reach for the silver chain around her neck, but it
was too late. And the world slipped out of her grasping fingers.
Monday, April 4, 1877
Isabella thrashed, pinned to the sofa by her
fiancé’s smothering weight and the carnivore-reek of his breath.
“No,” she gasped, twisted up in the snare of her
silk gown, those layers of fabric and lace, of undergarment and corset, that
the world claimed were there to protect her.
Alfred didn’t even bother to respond, to point
out the fact that she couldn’t buy or own or even rent the word ‘no’. Instead
he pawed at her, as if he were an animal and she was another piece of meat, a
carcass, for him to tear apart and devour.
In her thrashing her hand snagged in the chain
around her neck and found the tiny magnifying glass encircled by silver that
hung there. The embossed silver might have shown the face of a saint, but if so
it was a saint no church had ever spoken of. An engagement gift from her
mother, silently slipped around her neck an hour ago
Isabella clutched the charm with its strangely
sharp corners, and one of the tips pricked her thumb. An injury so small she
didn’t notice, didn’t realize a drop of blood the size of a grain of sand was
welling out as she fought as hard as if she were battling for her life.
Although perhaps she was.
Her vision tunneled, then refocused through the
prism of the tiny magnifying glass, and she felt as if she could see through
time and space and into another world. There were flickering images, strange
women who waved and smiled, and other darker things she couldn’t name.
Isabella felt something snap into place.
From over the marble mantelpiece the gilt-edged
mirror, a massive piece of glass that was meant to reflect tea trays and silk
gowns, satisfied paunches and tumblers of whiskey, plummeted to the carpet.
When it shattered into a thousand pieces each shard reflected back Isabella’s
wild eyes, her fiancé’s animal snarl. As he jumped back, a thin trickle of
blood running down his cheek to bloom red on his snowy collar, Isabella could
feel the dark smiles of her invisible women.
Sunday, April 10, 1887
...after...
They wiped their hands clean with stacks of
embroidered pillow coverings they found shoved in a cupboard, smearing ‘A
Woman’s Joy Is in Her Home’ with streaks of red.
There was no changing their clothes, so they
tugged the coats from the limp arms of men who wouldn’t need them anymore. A
metal box in the desk had a surprising amount of cash. Angelina didn’t hesitate
at all and also grabbed the half-empty bottle of whiskey she found in a bottom
drawer, and Isabella slid the comforting weight of the doctor’s pistol into her
pocket.
Then the two women—hysterical, insane and
unrepentant—opened the French doors that led out to the dark grounds of the
asylum and simply walked away.
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