1.
He hadn’t meant to idealise her, to put her on a pedestal, to overwhelm. Radiant, she was. She drew people in, shook their hands, pulled up chairs for them. Are you the organiser? she’d been asked. No, she wasn’t. Just a woman with a smile, a woman in a sundress who scooted over and made room for others. What was her name again?
And then she directed her smile at him, her warmth, her questions. Matthieu stirred in his seat, gripped tight the neck of his bottle so as not to tremble. He did that sometimes, or rather, the nerves did – as though they were an entity of their own.
“What does your tattoo mean?” she asked, leaning in, both hands on the edge of her seat as though to anchor her curiosity. Juvenile energy, something young and endearing about her gap-toothed smile.
“I drew it,” said Matthieu. A ghost – an illustration he’d scribbled in his notebook the day his dad ignored his new shoes, leather. He’d traded in his scruffy Vans and their worn tongues because real men, not boys, wore real shoes.
“Really?” said the woman, wide-eyed. “What does it mean?”
Cliché question but it was she who’d asked it.
“I think I felt invisible,” he said.
“What does that feel like?”
Right. How would she know?
And how would he know that she was more than a bubbly personality, a pretty face, a question mark?
2.
Do you listen to everything others say, or do you stare through them, do you see what isn’t there? Café, worn leather seats, pamphlets scattered across the windowsill.
Matthieu stuttered, hands jittery as he spoke, responded.
Had she noticed? Her eyes fell upon his trembling fingers, his body quivering like the crown of a tree, voice rustling as light as leaves.
“So, what brings you to Lille?” he asked. Silence. Fill the silence. He felt too visible beneath her gaze, fiddling with a sugar sachet.
He watched as her lips moved in response, how a smile flittered here, there, disappeared. How her eyes crinkled. Brown-green? Hazel? Freckles sprinkled across her sunburnt cheeks. Dead skin on her nose peeling like dry glue, nasal hair untrimmed, upper lip in need of a wax (though plump and pink and soft, he bet). She was far from perfect; she was an ordinary individual with ordinary flaws and ordinary ideas – mediocre, even. He wouldn’t idealise her, not this time, not again. She’d do. Just like this, just as she was. And my, hadn’t he grown? Aware of his own patterns, he was.
“What about you?” she asked.
“What about me?”
“Pourquoi es-tu venu à Lille?”
Sweet accent, hers. Her voice changed in French – regressed, rather. The voice of a girl, always curious, always inquiring, douce – and he might just burst with nervous laughter, might just grab her hand, kiss her feet. Happy, he was, merely to be in her orbit. Happy, he was, to sit across from her in an orange summer dress, doe-eyed, as pretty as a present with ribbon tied. But he was no longer one to idealise, remember?
And happy, it was the right word – ordinary, just like him and just like her. At least that’s what he told himself.
3.
“But you don’t know me,” said Nora, head propped up on a pillow.
“I know,” said Matthieu. “I’ve been reminding myself that you’re just another individual, too, and that you’re flawed. That I’d have to accept that version of you.”
“It sounds like you’ve been thinking a lot about me.”
“I have.”
“Idealising me, really.”
“I’m trying not to, hence why I’ve been thinking about your flaws.”
“But that’s also obsessive. I don’t want to be anybody’s limerent object. It’s reductive. Dehumanising, even. You know, nobody ever sees me. They project their fantasies, their desire, onto me. And that guy from the language exchange, for example, Laurent, he’s already grabbed my waist multiple times, even though I flinched and pulled away. I can’t just be. Ever, it seems.”
“Well, now you’re making me feel guilty for being attracted to you. We can go back to being friends if it makes you feel better, but I’m not sure I’d be able to.”
“Maybe,” said Nora, dragging herself out of bed. “Coffee?”
4.
Hi Matthieu, I think we got carried away last night, and I’m feeling a little uncomfortable. Is it OK if we go back to being platonic? If so, are we still on for the fireworks? I would bring my friend along.
Send.
Pages and pages of text. Nora scrolled indefinitely. Disproportionate, it was. You can’t tell me how to feel – my feelings are mine, and I care about you now. You initiated intimacy. Don’t tell me not to get attached. I don’t resent you but…
Page
after
page
like kissing him was a contract.
You’re afraid of intimacy, but deep down I think you’re open to a romantic connection. It’s just that you’ve been hurt before. You’re closed off, sure, but you’re just scared.
Page
after
page
like kissing him was a sentence.
He’d made her tea and microwaved leftovers, kissed her while she was drunk, and now she was emotionally responsible for this near-stranger? Three times, they’d met. First, the language exchange. Then, coffee. Finally, at a bar after a bad date.
And now he expected love as though it were an exchange, a currency, a food stamp. Starving, he was, and he devoured the thought of her, licked the bones clean.
Matthieu, she wrote, I’m feeling overwhelmed. You’ve crossed several of my boundaries and now you’re psychoanalysing me – me whom you don’t know. Maybe I’m afraid of intimacy, sure, but not with you. I simply don’t want to be with you, and that’s OK.
Nora flinched at his response: You should be more considerate about the feelings of those you decide to initiate intimacy with.
Hi Matthieu, we don’t know each other well enough to be having this kind of conversation or this level of emotional intensity. It's inappropriate and unfair. I won’t have it.
Blocked her, he did.
Unblocked, new message: Sure, I shouldn’t have sent you all that at once, but I stand by what I said. And it’s none of my business what you’re like with other men regardless of my opinion. And I was dishonest about my emotions yesterday because I felt used and rightfully so. Just send me your bank details so I can pay you back for the beers you insisted on buying me despite me expressing my discomfort. But I wish you the best here in Lille.
5.
We don’t own the rights to how we’re perceived or imagined by others. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t violating. What had he done with the thought of her? And why could she feel it? Why was it palpable? Why could she smell it hanging in the air like spoiled milk? Why could she taste it in every forkful of instant noodles? She pushed her bowl aside, fork cluttering against the porcelain. She’d lost her appetite. Dry gagged. Everything tasted, sounded, smelled of him – of him taking liberties with the idea of her, pulling her apart and reassembling her like a Mrs. Potato Head, all the while unaware that he was doing it, that he’d reduced her to a plaything and stuck ears where they didn’t belong, chose his favourite set of eyes, removed the mouth. Who needs one, anyway, when you’re a blank face projected onto? Arbitrary, you’re rendered. But you have just enough of an identity, of individuality, to serve as the screen – to personify all their desires and projections, and for them to think it’s not their imagination but you.
6.
Nightmares sometimes linger, their fingerprints loud and luminescent on the waking world. Nora lay in bed, heart pounding in her chest. He’d followed her, he had. Wide awake. Bad dream. And now she rose, afraid she’d find him outside her apartment door or in her stairwell. Fastened the chain lock, she did. Shut the curtains three-stories high. Turned on the kitchen light above the stove to dispel the darkness should it morph into a man who’d lived God knows what with the fantasy of her, a man who resented her autonomy, her boundaries, her refusal to assume the role he’d cast her in. But what if he was outside somewhere? What if he saw her light come on? Nausea and goosebumps evoked by a near-stranger. A near-stranger who’d conjured up a narrative centred around her—her and him—a narrative which he seemed to believe despite its nonreciprocity.
Limerence, it wasn’t flattering but degrading, reductive, dehumanising. He’d poured into her all his expectations, as though she were a container, a heart-shaped cake pan.
7.
Matthieu pulled at the doorknob, but it caught in its frame. Locked. If he could just speak to her in person…
Cold, it was, wind climbing up his spine and caressing his neck. He sat on the kerb, shoulders hunched, watched a group of drunken girls trip over themselves, squeal, their heels clinking like Go stones. One stumbled across the road, and past him, jangling keys, metal scratching against the keyhole, creaking door. His dirty shoe, a doorjamb just in time. Then, he followed her in and sat in the stairwell outside Nora’s door. Rehearsed his lines in his head. Then aloud. Knock, knock. If he could just speak to her in person… Knock, knock.
Knock, knock.
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The pacing and the wording is so well done, although there's no depiction of physical violence, I was tense all the way through. I have a really good sense of what probably came after the story ended. Every woman could, I'm afraid.
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Hi Y,
I'm glad you felt tense throughout! I think there's an inherent violence in projection, in the objectification of somebody, even if it ought to be "flattering." I think we've all felt that in the body without even having been touched! Visceral.
The ending is open - you're welcome to fill in the gaps. Thanks for engaging with my work!
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Well done!
Congrats on the win!
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Hi Marshall,
Thank you!
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Beautiful. How original and fresh narration is. Loved it.
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Thank you, Sudhakar! <3
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Your storytelling is absolutely magical I feel like I’m living in your world!
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Thank you, Sherlin! That means a lot! <3
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Your story gave me creative ideas for character art I’d love to share them! 🎨💫
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Absolutely chilling. Congrats on the win!
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I'm glad! Thank you, Charis!
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Congratulations on winning the contest. The story is well written and intriguing,
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Hi Mohsin,
Thank you!
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This is a sophisticated, quietly devastating story — rich in emotional nuance, sharp in its psychological insight, and formally daring in its fragmentation.
It is an elegant, unsettling, and timely exploration of desire, projection, and emotional overreach. It avoids clichés about romance and instead offers something much more challenging to pull off: an unflinching portrait of what happens when someone mistakes their imagination for consent, and fantasy for connection. It doesn’t moralize, but it warns.
Nicely done.
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Hi Donald,
Thanks a million!
"...when someone mistakes their imagination for consent." You hit the nail on the head!
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Just read this. Awesome. I would advise calling the police on the guy but there's that chance that they would take his side.
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Hi Patrick,
Thanks for reading, and for the suggestion!
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wow describes a stalker to the tea
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Hi Mary,
Thank you! :)
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I hope I never run across someone like Matthieu; he's a spooky dude.
This story is intriguing with it's expert use of metaphors and similes, Carina. You pulled me in and kept me on the edge of my seat from the first word to the last.
It's been a while since I've read the weekly entries because the prompts over the last few weeks just haven't sparked my creativity into motion.
This story is very well-written. Congrats on the win. You certainly deserve it!
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Hi Shauna,
Fingers crossed you don't! "Spooky" is definitely the word!
Thanks a million for reading and commenting in detail, it really means a lot!
As for the prompts, sometimes it doesn't hurt to subvert or challenge them. That, at least, sparks my creativity! "How can I subvert this prompt?" Hope it works for you, too!
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I like that idea, Carina. I'll keep that in mind moving forward.
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Your story engages from first sentence to last. Your language, tempo and astute perspective of potential catastrophe with modern relationship issues are so effective in showing the minds of the characters and leading smoothly to the trouble in the end.
The theme reminded me of another good story, Cat Person, by Kristen Roupenian, but your powerful fiction covered this theme in far less words and in a unique, creative, literary way!
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Hi Laura,
Thanks a million!
I haven't read it but I'll add it to my list!
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Congratulations Carina!! Wow, this story really stuck with me — especially the line: “Everything tasted, sounded, smelled of him – of him taking liberties with the idea of her.” That was hauntingly powerful. The way you wove emotional complexity into Matthieu’s obsession was deeply unsettling, and yet it felt so real, so raw. Nora’s perspective was a breath of fresh air — full of clarity, discomfort, and resistance that many readers will relate to. The evolution from charm to violation was handled with such nuance, it never felt heavy-handed, just human and deeply sad. You really nailed the sense of being consumed by someone else’s imagination of you. I finished this with goosebumps. Can’t wait to read more of your work.
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Hi Mary,
I'm glad it didn't feel heavy-handed! That's excellent praise. Thank you so much! I really appreciate you engaging with my work and writing such detailed feedback!
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Congratulations! Your writing is rich and authentic!
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Thank you, Audra!
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Oh my goodness, Carina! This is glorious! You plunged us in a world of thought, of hearts. Your beautiful details and haunting prose make Mathieu and Norah's mindsets come alive. As a massive fan of literary fiction and classics, I adored your turns of phrase.
I was just discussing my most beloved of Austen books, Sense and Sensibility, with someone. Like Marianne Dashwood and Mathieu, I suppose I'm the type of person who doesn't really have a half option for my heart. Once I love someone, whether platonically or romantically, I go all in. Unlike Mathieu, though, if the object of my affection doesn't feel the same way about me or just wants it to end, then, I wish them the best and let them love who they want. I guess that's the difference between love and obsession. Love means wanting the other's happiness, even if it's without you.
Et du coup, en tant que francophone (J'étudiais la langue pendant 9 ans), j'ai souri au commentaire sur la voix quand on parle français. La mienne, ça se baisse quand je parle français. 😂
Incredible work!
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Hi Alexis,
I'm also one to go all in! There's a quote from The Portrait of Dorian Gray you might like: "I have given my whole soul to someone who treats it as if it were a flower to put in his coat." That stuck with me a decade ago, when I was more prone to idealisation, limerence, etc.
Like you, though, I also accept when somebody draws a line or doesn't want to be with me, as painful as it can be. That's consent, right? And you're right, that is the difference.
I'm sorry I can't reply to the rest of your comment. The "Read more..." button isn't working on either my laptop or phone! I recall you wrote something as a language learner yourself - how one's voice/tone changes in, say, French. I've since looked at your profile and see you're also addicted to languages!
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Why yes! And French is (as I call it) 'L'amour linguistique de ma vie'.
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Mieux vaut les langues que les hommes 🤭
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Ben... il y a un homme particulièrement... *Je rougis et souris.*
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Hahaha ! Tout le meilleur à vous, alors ! ☺️🎀
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Congratulations Carina! Super well-deserved!
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Thank you, Joseph! I appreciate you taking the time to read my work!
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Wow! Definitely left me wanting more! The flow and intensity of emotions kept me hooked while the minimal description of places let my imagination work its charm
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Hi Clare,
Thank you so much!
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congrats on the win, Carina! well done👌
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Thank you! <3 :)
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anytime👍
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This is such an amazingly written story. I was captivated the whole time. At the same time, it's so real. I actually dated a guy (very shortly) with similar vibes as Matthieu, and memories came flooding back. Loved the two POV's as well. Congrats on the win!
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Hi Linda,
I'm sorry you experienced something similar!
Thank you so much! <3
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Very suspenseful. I enjoyed how well you described the feelings of both people, and how his obsession wasn't meant (by him) to be creepy but curious (not realising he'd gone too far). Well done!
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Hi Katy,
Right? Some people are completely oblivious, but I suppose that's part of limerence and idealisation - they aren't treating you like an individual but rather a projection or fantasy.
Hopefully, with time, we can all gain a little more self-awareness. Nobody's perfect.
Thank you for reading and commenting! <3 I really appreciate it.
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Carina, I'm in total awe of this story. It's gripping and yet manages its tension so well. I love your structure and I can't wait to go back and read more of your work.
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Hi Story Time,
Thank you so much! That's very flattering, and I appreciate you taking the time to comment. :)
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