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Short psychological thriller about a mentally distrubed woman and her bathroom mirror. |
| A 20 something year old woman dressed in hospital clothes stares out a barred window in a mental ward. A male Psychiatrist sits on a couch across the room and says āSo, tell me about this woman you speak of. This woman in the mirrorā āThe woman in the mirror. Those sad dark brown eyes hidden behind green contacts are a dead give away as to what sheās trying to hide. Deadā¦ā She scoffās a laugh. āThatās a funny word. Itās such a simple one syllable word, yet it holds so much meaning and instills so much fear in the living. Those eyes know that fear and those eyes know the meaning of death all too well. Those artificial eyes that belong to the woman in the mirror are so enchanting and mesmerizing that I get lost in the mix of colors.ā She turns to sit in plush leather chair in the middle of the room, folds her hands together between her knees and rocks slowly. A blank stare is fixed in the doctorās direction. āThe woman in the mirror is such a mystery to me, and yet she seems to know all my secrets. Itās her eyes that give her away. She stares at me with accusation.ā She begins to rock faster. āShe knows what Iāve done. She knows my fears and my dreams.ā Rocks faster. āShe knows what I do when Iām alone and she uses it against me.ā She yells, āThat bitch in the mirror! She recites my sins; those horrible things I never should have done.ā Rocking slows to a stop. A finger plays with a loose blond curl. āI would curse myself for telling her, but I didnāt. Iāve never spoken them aloud and⦠somehow she knows. She shakes her head at me and shames me with that finger.ā She mimics her words. āI hate that damn finger⦠One night I tried to help an ex-boyfriend; nothing much really. See, the guy said I was clingy and that I only thought of myself, so to prove him wrong I did him a favor. I blindfolded him ācause I wanted it to be a surprise. I took him to my basement, handcuffed him to a sturdy poll in the cement and slowly with my best knife I sliced the extra layers of fat off his body; he was a real porker.ā She laughs then a perplexed look crossed her face. āI donāt think he liked it very much. He kept screaming and he began to cry, but not tears of joy. He was in pain.ā She shakes her head as if answering a question. āI was willing to continue to prove how much I loved him, but then... he started calling me names, names I donāt even dare repeat. At that moment as much as I loved him, I hated him three times more. I didnāt want to help him anymore. I took my knife and stuck it deep in his heart.ā She begins to laugh loudly. āHe broke mine, so I broke his.ā Her laugh grows uncontrollable, but quickly she silences and grows angry. āI went upstairs and looked at the woman in the mirror. I had every intention of hiding what I had done, but she already knew and she shamed me with that finger. I couldnāt sleep for hours. I found a pair of shears and I went to face that bitch with the finger. I told her I had a surprise for her. When she smiled, I smiled too, she had no idea what I was about to do. I said, āHold out your hand!ā and I held out mine to show her how I wanted her to do it.ā She holds out her hand. āShe did it too. Then I quickly took out my shears and snapped off my right pointy finger.ā She re-enacts the event. āThe pain of my ripping flesh and breaking bone was so excruciating I couldnāt scream as I watched my dismembered finger fall to the floor. But my pain soon faded into gratitude as I looked up to face the woman in the mirror. She was a copy cat; I knew if I chopped off my finger, she would too. She was holding her mutilated finger in the sink, running water over it. So I did it too. I held up my amputated finger and pointed it at the woman in the mirror, āHow do you like it, now?! Does it feel good?!ā Then I laughed a laugh I had never heard before. It was so foreign to me I had to look around to make sure it was me.ā She looks around. āHad I laughed so evilly? Could that manic laugh belong to me? I refused to believe it, I had to ignore it. I looked back at the woman in the mirror and she had this sort of worried, sort of scared look on her face and was crying.ā A long silence fills the room. āI was pleased. Finally, after years of torturing me with the reminders of those horrible crimes I rightfully committed. After calling me awful names like: murderer and psycho, I finally got my revenge. So, maybe I had to lose a finger to get it; it was so worth it to see the pain in the eyes of the woman in the mirror. I wrapped up my stump and put my finger in my jewelry box. I went to bed that night with a smile on my face. The woman in the mirror will bother me no more.ā Two months later⦠(The doctor is called in again. The patient causes a disturbance after stealing the maintenance chart.) The doctors sits in the same chair, the woman paces the floor. āSheās taunting me again. I thought I had showed her. I thought she had learned her lesson. But every time I go in there, every time I see her horrible, ugly face sheās laughing at me. She says I only hurt myself by cutting off my finger. She smiles at how dumb Iāve become. Then without saying it, I know what sheās thinking. I know she thinks Iām stupid. āIām not stupid, youāre stupidā I say before she could get the words out. How juvenile I felt. I wanted to call her a āpoopy headā and leave it at that, but I knew I had to be smarter.ā She stops and looks as if she's pondering something as she sits. āIf only somehow I could get her out of that mirror. She hides behind that glass as if it were stone.ā She smiles. āIf I got her out, oh the things I would do. Those damn fake eyes, Iād pull them out with my fork and cook them up just for fun.ā She puts up her hand like she was holding a fork. āI wouldnāt eat them though, Iām not crazy. But I might make a soup of eyes, fingers and toes. Then just for flavor, you canāt forget the flavor in a soup like this.ā She says, amused. āIād throw in some hair. Iād pluck out each hair on her body one by one.ā She pretends to pluck. āThen Iād leave her alone with no fingers, toes, eyes, or hair. I think she would have had enough; Iām not that insensitive as to kill her. After all, she has sort of been my friend; a rotten one, but my only one.ā She almost looks sad. She waits a long while before continuing with a slight smile on her face. āI would however, cut out her tongue; I hate hearing her mouth. Now, I know what you must be thinking, āThis chick is insane, a real monsterā, but I assure you Iām not. Iām very sweet. Iām the nicest, most caring person you will ever meet. And if youāre nice and kind to me, weāll never have any problems, but that bitch in the mirror tortures me so. Every single day, calling me names. Telling me I donāt deserve to live and I need to die for the lives Iāve taken. But Iāve never taken a life that in someway didnāt deserved to be taken. Should I really be prosecuted for bringing justice to the world?ā She points at herself with an innocent look. āI say no, but that woman in the mirror, she doesnāt understand. Taking lives is not wrong when you have just cause; and I did. I swear I did.ā Her head lowers and face goes blank, she doesnāt look herself. Itās as if a different person speaks. āBut what about those that didnāt die?ā Her head snaps back up. āSheās gotten into my head.ā She hits herself in the head. āIām speechless for a moment I canāt answer this question. Alive, Alive! I had forgotten about those whom Iād left alive. It doesnāt matter now I guess; they wonāt bother me anymore. Done is done as done is done and I did what I did becauseā¦and thatās it. I promise I wonāt do it anymore. She laughed at me again. I couldnāt take it anymore. I slammed the door and nailed it shut. As I drove in the last nail, with the last hit I heard the mirror fall to the floor and break.ā Her head slumps down to her chest, but she looks straight into the doctorās eyes for the first time. āFinally, Iām free.ā She wickedly smiles. |