CW: Waiting for the world to change.

Nina was nearing the café at which she was to meet Gabriella when her phone vibrated. It was a text from her bestie saying that she was running 15 minutes late. Nina rolled her eyes, let out a deep sigh, and placed her phone back in her jacket pocket without replying. Gabriella was late for almost everything in her life, including her own birth. The doctors had to induce labor two weeks after she was initially due.

Knowing her, it will be more like 30 minutes. Or more,” Nina thought to herself and frowned.

Realizing that she had some time to spare, she stopped to look at what was around. She was hoping for a store with cute clothes or a bookstore. However, before she could do a 360-degree spin to gage what was around, a handsome middle-aged man bumped into her.

“Sorry,” Nina muttered instinctively.

“Try not to stop in the middle of the sidewalk. It is like a highway for pedestrians. You don’t want a pile on because you stopped to smell the roses,” the slightly graying man said.

“I’m sorry,” Nina said with sincerity and blushed.

Without a second word, the man carried on his path, and Nina walked to the side. As she looked for a place to go in to, she noticed a blue poster hanging on the door to her right.

Be a pioneer. Advance our society. Share your time with us, and we will share our wealth with you,” the blue poster adorned with pictures of brains and dollar signs announced.

Become a hero AND get paid for it? Count Me In!” Nina figured and pushed open the door to building number 4.

Once the wooden door shut behind her, a shiver ran down Nina’s spine. The hallway was dark, cold, and musty. She crinkled her nose a little but decided to proceed onwards anyway. As she made her way down the corridor, a single light bulb lit up and illuminated a white door at the end of the pathway. The sign, posted on the door, asked visitors to ring the doorbell to the left before entering.

Nina did as instructed, and only a few seconds later, an elderly man wearing a suit and tie opened the door and ushered her in. Without a word, he pointed towards a flowery couch on the left side of the room. Nina thanked him and sat down in the middle of the sofa. Before she could ask him what the purpose of her being there was, he walked out of the room.

The waiting area was nothing like the hallway. Even though there were no windows, the room was well lit by a large crystal chandelier, and the soothing scent of citrus and lemongrass hung in the air. The multiple ocean paintings on the wall transported Nina onto a warm beach.

Awaiting the return of the guy that let her in, Nina browsed through the two piles of magazines on the coffee table in front of her. She noticed there were different titles available for a varied audience: People magazine, Men’s Health, Women’s Health, National Geographic, Southern Living, and others. She did not recognize the one she ultimately picked up.

It must have been a small, local press edition,” Nina thought to herself, making a mental note to research it at a later time.

Letters to the editor caught her attention on page 2. Nina always enjoyed reading the silly questions from the readers and the even more ridiculous answers from the writers.

As if journalists are experts on love and money,” she snickered.

Halfway through the page, Nina saw the elderly man wearing a suit and tie come out and let in a 20-something-year-old guy wearing a floral shirt, jeans, and flip flops.

He will fit right in with this couch,” Nina thought and giggled, amused with herself.

“Hey, man! I’m not sure wh-,” the new guest began, but before he could finish, the other man disappeared behind the second door, again.

“Hello,” the young man with shoulder-length blonde hair said as he sat down next to Nina.

“Hello,” she answered with a polite smile and instinctively tucked on her mini skirt as she moved slightly away from the newcomer.

Nina felt slightly naked with her deep v-neck top and a skirt that exposed most of her thigh, but she and Gabriella were supposed to grab a coffee and then go clubbing that night.

I’m going to kill her,” Nina thought, promising herself that she would tell Gabriella how she felt about waiting for her. Every. Single. Time.

The man picked up a copy of National Geographic, but before he even opened it, he turned to Nina and asked if she knew what them being there entailed. Nina shook her head and told him she was just walking by when she saw the ad.

“My friend is running late, so I have a few minutes to kill,” she explained and shrugged.

“Cool,” he said and opened the magazine. “I’m Trevor, by the way,” he added an extended his hand towards Nina.

She shook it but not without hesitation. She was not really the handshake type of person. Or the hugger, either. She preferred to keep people at arm’s length whenever possible.

“Well, I’m just trying to make a few bucks,” Trevor explained.

He placed the magazine back on the table, and then went on and on about his hobbies and passions, which, apparently, do not pay much. 

Nina smirked, hoping Trevor had not noticed.

If he did, he did not let it show. After a few minutes of talking about surfing and playing guitar, he picked up the National Geographic back up and leafed through the pages.

Suddenly, the man who opened the door before appeared again to let someone else in. Nina hoped it was someone with more substance than Trevor. Someone she could have an intelligent conversation with. Or at least someone who would let her be. She had a feeling Trevor was the kind of person who could not keep still or talk for more than a minute at a time.

“Am I in the right place?” the man at the door asked.

Like before, the elderly man did not answer. Instead, he pointed to the couch and then vacated the room.

“Sup, bro?” Trevor asked, standing up.

The latest arrival looked a bit perturbed.

“Hello,” he said cautiously to Trevor as much as to Nina.

When Nina’s and his eyes met, he uttered a single word: “You?!”

It was the man who bumped into Nina earlier on the sidewalk.

“I’m sorry about earlier. My friend just texted me an-” she tried to explain herself, blushing slightly.

“It’s alright. I do not need your whole life story,” the man said with a smile.

There was something alluring about him. Nina was not sure what it was exactly, but she could not stop looking at the man.

“I’m Trevor, and this is…”

“Nina.”

“I’m Trevor, and this is Nina. And you are?”

“I can’t do it,” the man from the street said more to himself than the others.

“Do what? It’s just your name, bro,” Trevor tried to make him comfortable.

“Normally,” the man cleared his throat. “Normally, I would pretend to be one of you. I would say that I saw the ad in the paper and had nothing better to do on a Friday evening since my wife died last year. Or that I was walking by and got curious. I would fraternize with you and observe you. But today, I do not have the energy, so let us get down to business.”

Trevor sat back down. It was not the quest for knowledge that made him sit but the presence of the new arrival.

“My name is Dr. Biggs, and you are here today to take part in an experiment that could revolutionize the world we live in. Would you like to know more?”

Nina and Trevor nodded as they stood up and followed Dr. Biggs out of the room through the door the elderly man would disappear behind every time he let someone into the waiting area.

A chill ran down Nina’s spine. The room they entered resembled the hallway that brought her into the waiting room. In the middle of it, there were two metal chairs, and the elderly man was standing between them.

“Please, take a seat. You will be a part of a private screening of a movie that is not out yet. As you watch, we will play with your brains a little to see what brings you joy and what causes pain,” Dr. Biggs announced with no hint of a joke in his voice.

“The door is locked, so don’t try to escape,” he added.

Without a word, the elderly man pointed towards the chairs.

Trevor looked at Nina for support, but she had no plan.

“Gabriella!” Nina screamed in her head.

***

“Write a story about waiting —
but don’t reveal what’s being waited for until the very end.”
– prompt used for this CW piece.
[Source: Reedsy]

***

P.S. As always, you are more than welcome to use this prompt to inspire your post. If you decide to write something, be sure to pingback to this post so that I can get an alert and check out your piece. (A post on how to do pingbacks can be found here.) If pingbacks are not your thing, feel free to simply leave a link to your piece in the comment section below. The more, the merrier!

Stay golden,

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***

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Stay golden,

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***

Did you enjoy reading this post?
Hit LIKE.
Have some thoughts on the topic?
Share in the COMMENTS.
Do you regularly enjoy my blog?
Be sure to FOLLOW.
Are my posts getting lost in your busy Reader?
Try SUBSCRIBING.
Want to get to know me better?
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40 thoughts on “CW: Waiting for the world to change.

Add yours

  1. Enjoyable chilling story. I like how Nina’s sense of danger ratchets up slowly as she ventured deeper into the isolated building. Then she felt her clothing was appropriate for clubbing, but not alone with the talkative stranger Trevor. You captured a very real human emotion.

    Trevor’s character reminded me of a scared little man looking for answers from a woman when he turned to get support from Nina.

    This story is complete, however, I’d love to know what Dr. Biggs has in store, and why did Nina call out for Gabriella? Because she blames her? Why not call mom or dad?
    Your creative writing would be good table talk in a writers group.
    Well done Goldie

    Liked by 1 person

    1. As always, thank you for your feedback. I actually thought about joining a local writing group but then COVID-19 happened, and… well… yea. You really opened my eyes to the possibility of real critique.

      I think it was kind of a curse. If Gabriella wasn’t running late, Nina would have never stepped into that building.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Hmmm… I’m not sure about this one. It didn’t draw me in like your other stories do as there wasn’t much characterisation… Nina and Trevor were more like stereotypes. The ending didn’t give the sense of menace that you usually excel at – watching a movie while being stimulated for pleasure or pain could be a perfectly valid experiment, although it sounded a bit clockwork orange. The only sense of menace came from the statement that the door was locked so there was no escape, but that came across as a bit ‘mad Scientist’. So apologies for the criticism but for me personally it wasn’t up to the standard of your usual work, which is usually brilliant!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. No, I totally appreciate your feedback and I have to say that you make some very valid points. I think I know the answer to why this happened. I will try my best next time.

      Also, were you disappointed by the March 3rd part 2? I thought you were waiting to comment on the story until then? 😉

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Should you? Not necessarily. I’ve been tracking my own hours/progress to see how well time and quality equate. So far, pretty well. That’s the number you might see in my Writer’s Log posts.
        For you? I don’t know your goals but I can guess that writing well is one of them.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Interesting experiment.
          I try to track different things in my life and I have been largely unsuccessful at that recently. It seems that I forget to do it before it becomes a habit. It’s something I will definitely think about.
          Yes, your guess is correct. From observation – the more I write, the more refined my writing is. Or so I would hope. However, time/ practice is not all that counts. I can be writing A LOT and still produce crap. My head and heart have to be in it.

          Liked by 1 person

          1. I don’t track with precision, but ballpark guestimations, which I think are pretty close. 10,000 hours * 100 words/hr = 1,000,000 words. That’s what it should take to master this nearly impossible task.

            Liked by 1 person

  3. By the looks of the prompt tittle you weren’t supposed to go deeper into the story.
    But I have read some books/seen documentaries about these type of experiments. The one I remember is “the little Albert” experiment.

    It might have been before we met, but in my previous blog I described how I was once to more or less an experiment like that. One image in particular has never left my mind. And as far as I can remember, that’s when my fears and anxieties started…
    It’s some scary shit.

    I loved the story and if you ever feel like it, please continue with it 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, the Reedsy prompts recently are… very basic. They’re trying to teach you that you can tell a story about any mundane thing which I think is great. It’s not easy for me to write a story about nothing but I;m trying.

      No, I had no idea about your experimental past. Ever since I first read about fMRI, I’ve wanted to be studied by it. I feel like it would allow me to learn about my emotions better. But you’re right – thee things can go so wrong.

      Thank you. I’ve been thinking a bit about creating a Patreon account (or whatever it’s called). I’d continue the CW pieces there. But I still struggle with time. As long as I can’t fully put my heart and soul into it, I will not dive ine.

      Like

  4. I liked it overall, but definitely wanted more detail at the end. There are so many obvious unanswered questions that I’m not even trying to weight possibilities on their answers to play out the strings; instead, my mind is working on real-life personal stuff.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. It wasn’t meant to be harsh—I actually really enjoyed reading it, but was a little disappointed that at least some of the loose ends weren’t tied up. It was like a breakup out of left field—no resolution, so a bit unsatisfying, but it doesn’t mean the relationship sucked!

        Thanks! 🥰

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I like the humor in the following sentence: “Gabriella was late for almost everything in her life, including her own birth.” If I ever see “a blue poster adorned with pictures of brains and dollar signs”, I’ll be sure to head a different direction, even if I’m in need for cash. Did you start with the end in mind because of the prompt?

    Liked by 1 person

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