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eyes I dare not meet in dreams

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eyes I dare not meet in dreams

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eyes I dare not meet in dreams

Undead girls begin re-entering the world of the living, emerging from refrigerators.

Illustrated by Yuko Shimizu

Edited by

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Published on June 14, 2017

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Undead girls begin re-entering the world of the living, emerging from refrigerators.

 

The staring. A leaf alone in the horrible
leaves. The dead girl. The staring.

—Joshua Beckman, “[The dead girl by the beautiful Bartlett]”

At 2:25 a.m. on a quiet Friday night on a deserted country road in southeastern Pennsylvania, the first dead girl climbed out of her refrigerator.

So the story goes.

 

We never saw the refrigerators. Eventually we gathered that they were everywhere, but we never actually saw them until the dead girls started climbing out of them. Holes in reality, some people said. Interdimensional portals, real Star Trek shit. There’s a tear between these parallel universes and something falls through, and next thing you know there’s a refrigerator in the middle of the road, or the sidewalk, or someone’s lawn, or a football field, or in the bottom of a dry swimming pool, or on the seventh floor balcony of a five star hotel. On the steps of a museum. Basically anywhere.

Later, watching a shaky video taken on someone’s phone, of a refrigerator on a long, straight line of train tracks. Train not far, nighttime, lights blinding. The blare of the thing sends the sound into an angry buzz of distortion. The fridge, just lying there on its side like a coffin. You can’t even tell what it is, except that it’s a box. Or something like that.

It opens. Kicked. Out climbs a broken doll girl, hair stringy and wet, head lolling to one side. Can’t see her face. Don’t need to see her face to know that she’s fucking terrifying. The train somehow looks terrified but physics is a thing, even now, and it can’t stop. She stands there, broken doll head on a broken doll neck, and over the heavy buzz you hear someone screaming holy fucking shit holy shit holy shi—

Even filmed on a shitty cell phone, a train derailed by a dead girl is quite a thing to see.

 

Okay: the official story goes that the first dead girl stood on that deserted country road on that quiet Friday night for quite some time. She stood motionless, listening to the pat-pat sound of her own blood dripping onto the blacktop. Not listening for her heartbeat, which was not there, nor for her breathing—which was not there either. She was listening to other things: wind, leaves, owls, fox scream, sighing of distant cars. It was a quiet night. That’s the story.

The story goes that the dead girl palmed blood out of her eyes and looked down at her sticky fingers, as if considering them carefully—in their context, in their implications. In the slick undeniability of what was still flowing out of her, like inside her was a blood reservoir which would take thousands of years to run dry. Like she was a thing made only to bleed.

And the story also goes that at some point, after studying the fact of her blood to her own satisfaction, the dead girl dropped her hands to her sides and started to walk.

 

We never would have believed, before the dead girls started climbing out of their refrigerators, that people could be literally resurrected by sheer indignation.

Probably it should have been obvious. People have been brought back to life by far more ludicrous means and for far more ridiculous reasons.

 

The story also goes that no one saw the first of the dead girls. The story goes that when they came they came quietly, unannounced, no particular fanfare. The dead girls did not—then—demand witnesses. They weren’t interested in that.

They wanted something else.

Later the dead girls were emerging everywhere, but the first dead girls climbed out of the dark, out of the shadows, out of the lost places and the hidden places and the places of abandonment—out of the places in which one discards old useless refrigerators. Out of the places in which one discards things which have served their purpose and are no longer needed.

The dead girls climbed into the light in junkyards, in vacant lots, in the jumble of shit behind ancient disreputable institutions one might kindly call antique stores. The dead girls climbed out in ravines and ditches and on lonely beaches and in dry riverbeds. Wet riverbeds. The dead girls climbed out into feet and fathoms of water. The dead girls climbed into the air but they also clawed their way out of long-deposited sediment and new mud, like zombies and vampires tearing their way out of graves. The dead girls swam, swam as far as they needed to, and broke the surface like broken doll mermaids.

This is how the story goes. But the story also goes that no one was present at the time, in the first days, so no one is entirely sure how the story got to be there at all. Or at least how it got to be something everyone accepts as truth, which they do.

 

First CNN interview with a dead girl. She’s young. Small. Blond. Before she was a dead girl she was definitely pretty and she’s still pretty, but in the way only dead girls are, which is the kind of pretty that repels instead of attracts, because pretty like that gives you the distinct impression that it hates you and everything you stand for. Dangerous pretty, and not in the kind of dangerous pretty that exists ultimately only to make itself less dangerous.

Dangerous pretty like a carrion goddess. You’ve seen that pretty picking over battlefields and pursuing traitors across continents. You’ve seen that pretty getting ready to fuck your shit up.

Small young blond pretty dead girl. Broken doll. She stands facing the camera with her head tilted slightly to one side. Her face is cut, though not badly. Neat little hole in her brow. The back of her head is a bloody crusted mess. It was fast, what made this dead girl a dead girl, but it wasn’t pretty.

But she is.

Looking at the camera—it’s somewhat cliché to say that someone is looking right into you, but that’s what this is like. The eyes of the dead girls aren’t cloudy with decay, or white and opaque, or black oil slicks. The eyes of the dead girls are clear and hard like diamond bolts, and they stab you. They stab you over and over, slowly, carefully, very precisely.

Can you tell us your name?

The dead girl stares. Anderson Cooper looks nervous.

Can you tell us anything about yourself? Where did you come from?

The dead girl stares.

Can you tell us anything about what’s going on here today?

Behind the dead girl and Anderson Cooper, a long line of dead girls is filing slowly out of the Mid-Manhattan Library, where approximately fifteen hundred refrigerators just came into material existence.

The dead girl stares.

Is there anything at all you’d like to tell us? Anything?

The dead girl stares. She actually doesn’t even seem to register that there’s a camera, that there’s Anderson Cooper, that she’s being asked questions. It’s not that she’s oblivious to everything, or even to anything; she’s not a zombie. Look into that diamond-point stare and you see the most terrifying kind of intelligence possible: the intelligence of someone who understands what happened, who understands what was done to them, who understands everything perfectly. Perfectly like the keen of the edge of a razor blade.

She’s aware. She just doesn’t register, because to her it isn’t noteworthy. She doesn’t care.

Can you tell us what you want?

The dead girl smiles.

 

What they didn’t seem to want, at least initially, was to hurt people. The train thing freaked everyone out when it hit but later as far as anyone was able to determine it hadn’t been done with any particular malicious intent. Mostly because the only other times anything like it happened were times when a dead girl needed to act fast in order to keep from being…well, dead again.

Dead girls wreaked havoc when they felt like someone or something was coming at them. So don’t come at a dead girl. Easy lesson learned quickly.

Dead girls have itchy trigger fingers. They hit back hard. You shouldn’t need to ask about the reasons for that.

 

Something like this, people struggle to find a name for it. The Appearing. The Coming. The Materializations. All proper nouns, all vaguely religious in nature, because how else was this going to go? By naming something we bring it under control, or we think we do—all those stories about summoning and binding magical creatures with their names. But something like this resists naming. Not because of how big it is but because of the sense that some profound and fundamental order is being altered. Something somewhere is being turned upside down. The most basic elements of the stories we told ourselves about everything? A lot of them no longer apply.

A bunch of dead girls got together and decided to break some rules with their own dead bodies.

So the mediums of all the media looked at this Thing, whatever the fuck it was, and they tried to attach names to it. Dead girls on the street, just standing, watching people. Dead girls in bars, in the center of the place, silent. Dead girls on the bus, on the train—they never pay the fare. Dead girls at baseball games—just standing there in front of the places selling overpriced hot dogs and bad beer, head slightly cocked, looking at things. None of them have tickets. Dead girls at the movies, at the opera, dead girls drifting through art galleries and libraries.

Very early on, a mass migration of dead girls to LA. Not all together; they went via a variety of transportation methods. Flew. Again, trains. Some went by bus. Some took cars—took them, because again: you don’t go up against a dead girl. Some—as near as anyone was able to tell—just walked.

Steady. Inexorable. The news covered it, because the dead girls were still always news in those days, and while even news made up of a wildly diverse collection of media and organizations usually adopts a specific tone for something and sticks to it, the tone for this coverage was profoundly confused.

Watching dead girls standing in the aisle of a jumbo jet. Refusing to be seated. Staring. Interrupting the progress of wheely carts and access to the tail-end restrooms. This specific dead girl is missing half her face. Blood oozes from the gaping horror. Flight attendants don’t look directly at her, and one of them gets on the PA and apologizes in a slightly shaking voice. There will be no beverage service on this flight.

Cut to the ground below. Twenty-four dead girls have run into a biker gang and confiscated their vehicles. They roar down a red desert road in loose formation, hair of all colors and lengths pulled by the hands of the wind. They’re beautiful, all these dead girls. They’re gorgeous. They take whatever name anyone tries to give this and they hurl it off the tracks like that train.

You get the sense they’re pretty sick of this shit.

 

That’s the thing, actually. There are exceptions: girls with horrific traumatic injuries, girls missing limbs, girls who were clearly burned alive. A lot of those last. But for the most part the flesh of the dead girls tends to be undamaged except for the small evidences of what did them in, and there’s always something about those things which is oddly delicate. Tasteful. Aesthetically pleasing.

As a rule, dead girls tend to leave pretty corpses.

 

Dead girls outside movie studios, the headquarters of TV networks. The houses of well-known writers. Assembled in bloody masses. Broken dolls with their heads cocked to one side. Staring. People were unable to leave their homes. This is how it was. Footage constant even though nothing changed. People started throwing words around like zombie apocalypse but no one got chomped on. The dead girls didn’t want the flesh of the living.

Initially police tried to clear them out, then the National Guard. Casualties were heavy. One of them—a girl with long, lovely brown hair gone reddish with blood—threw a tank. So people basically stopped after that. What was this going to turn into? One of those old horror films about giant radioactive ants? More contemporary ones about giant robots and sea monsters? Maybe we weren’t ready to go quite that far. Maybe you look into the eyes of a dead girl and it feels like your options dry up, and all you can do is be looked at.

You were part of this. We all were. Complicit. Look at yourself with their eyes and you can’t help but see that.

 

Except on a long enough timeframe everything has a half-life. Even the dead.

 

You don’t get used to something like this. It isn’t a matter of getting used to. You incorporate.

Dead girls everywhere. Dead girls on the street, dead girls on public transportation—staring at phones and tablets, reading over shoulders. Dead girls in Starbucks. Dead girls on sitcoms—no one has ever really made a concerted effort to keep them out of movie and TV studios, after a few incidents where people tried and the casualty count wasn’t negligible. Dead girls on Law & Order, and not in the way that phrase usually applies—and man there are a whole fuck of a lot of dead girls on Law & Order. Dead girls in the latest Avengers movie. Rumor has it dead girls surrounded Joss Whedon’s house three months ago and haven’t left, and have decisively resisted all attempts to have them removed. Dead girls vintage-filtered on Instagram.

Dead girls on Tumblr. Dead girls everywhere on Tumblr. Dead girl fandom. There’s a fiercely celebratory aspect to it. Dead girl gifsets with Taylor Swift lyrics. Dead girl fic. Vicarious revenge fantasies that don’t even have to be confined to the realm of fantasy anymore, because, again: Joss Whedon. And he’s by no means the only one.

Dead girls as patron saints, as battle standards. Not everyone is afraid of the dead girls. Not everyone meets that hard dead gaze and looks away.

Some people meet that gaze and see something they’ve been waiting for their entire lives.

 

So in all of this there’s a question, and it’s what happens next.

Because incorporation. Because almost everyone is uncomfortable, but discomfort fades with familiarity, and after a while even fandom tends to lose interest and wander away. Because we forget things. Because the dead girls are still and silent, constant witnesses, and that was unsettling but actually they might turn out to be easier to ignore than we thought. Or that prospect is there. In whispers people consider the idea: could all the pretty dead girls climb back into their refrigerators and go away?

Is that something that could happen?

It seems vanishingly unlikely. Everyone is still more than a little freaked out. But it is an idea, and it’s starting to float around.

We can get used to a lot. It’s happened before.

 

A deserted country road in southeastern Pennsylvania—deserted except for a dead girl. Quiet night. Silent night except for her blood pat-patting softly onto the pavement. Palming it out of her eyes, staring at her slick, sticky fingers. Dropping her hand limp to her side.

A dead girl stands motionless, looking at nothing. There’s nothing to consider. Nothing to do. The entire world is a stacked deck, and the only card she can play is that she’s dead.

That might or might not be enough.

The dead girl starts to walk.

 

“eyes I dare not meet in dreams” copyright © 2017 by Sunny Moraine

Art copyright © 2017 by Yuko Shimizu

About the Author

Sunny Moraine

Author

Sunny Moraine’s short fiction has appeared in Clarkesworld, Strange Horizons, Nightmare, Lightspeed, and multiple Year’s Best anthologies, among other places. They are also responsible for the Root Code and Casting the Bones trilogies and their debut short fiction collection Singing With All My Skin and Bone is available from Undertow Publications.
Learn More About Sunny
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Roxanna
7 years ago

Why only Dead Girls? Boys don’t get murdered? (Jeffrey Dahmer’s victims?) Boys don’t get pissed over being murdered? Dead Boys just don’t matter?

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Bahufaru
7 years ago

:

> Why only Dead Girls?

Because that’s what the author chose to write the story about. If you need a story about murdered boys coming back to life, write it. Fill the world with the stories you need.

 

> Boys don’t get murdered? (Jeffrey Dahmer’s victims?)

Surely they do. I’d love to read a story about Jeffrey Dahmer’s victims coming back to life out of indignation. Please write it!

> Boys don’t get pissed over being murdered?

It’s your story to write. Write them as honestly and truly as you can.

> Dead Boys just don’t matter?

That’s a great hook for your future story. How can you make murdered boys matter to the world?

In closing, the correct answer to “Why aren’t we talking about X?” is always “Because when we do other assholes ask “Why aren’t we talking about Y and Z?”!

Write the stories you need to see in the world.

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[REDACTED]
7 years ago

For those who don’t get what’s going on – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Refrigerators

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kimikimi
7 years ago

 Sorry but I think you both missed the point. These aren’t about real life girls but the girls in stories who are “fridged” to serve another character’s arc. The fact that the girls are coming out of libraries and making pilgrimages to Hollywood is important. And yes male characters do get fridged sometimes, but the term is in reference to a green lantern comic where a woman’s body was found in a refrigerator. It’s directed at bad writing.

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Roxana
7 years ago

Ah, of course. Forgive me for thinking literally rather than literaturely. But why pick of Joss Wheedon? He writes girls who kill not get killed. Of course they suffer a lot.

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Roxana
7 years ago

@2 Bahufaru: I don’t think I could write for Tor, I’m not lyrical enough. 

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kimikimi
7 years ago

This article might be where the author is coming from. I’ve seen both sides argued, put personally I enjoy his work critically.

https://www.themarysue.com/reconsidering-the-feminism-of-joss-whedon/

 

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meat lord
7 years ago

@8

Oh boy. I definitely suggest that anyone who’s confused about Joss Whedon’s role in this story read that Mary Sue article. I really enjoy a lot of his work, but he’s not as feminist as he thinks he is, unfortunately.

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Eric
7 years ago

There’s an insightful critique of this story in Lady Business (Hugo Award finalist for Fanzine this year). http://ladybusiness.dreamwidth.org/2015/12/15/eyes-i-dare-not-meet-in-dreams.html

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SJN
7 years ago

Was kinda thinking there’d be more story in this story.

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Roxana
7 years ago

Okay, Wheedon isn’t ‘feminist’ but does he refrigerate a lot of girls? I don’t remember that in what I’ve seen.

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Gerry__Quinn
7 years ago

Just hope the NPC cannon fodder in computer games don’t come back to life next, presumably they will be even angrier and (as we are told the dead fictional girls are) more intelligent.

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dunsany
7 years ago

At first I thought this was the old Dan Simmons’s Omni short story.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayers_to_Broken_Stones#.22Eyes_I_Dare_Not_Meet_in_Dreams.22

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Cameron Schiller
7 years ago

Oh MAN this was sharp-edged and angry in the best possible way. The idea of a bunch of dead girls furious that their beating hearts and minds and souls were sacrificed to make men stronger coming up from their refrigerators to show you their own blood and their flesh and their strength is such a powerful one. What a cool concept!

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Roxana
7 years ago

But they’re fictional girls. Their blood, flesh and strength is entirely imaginary. Anybody else reminded of all the pissed off red-shirts in Scalzi’s ‘Redshirts’?

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7 years ago

Excellent story.  Thank you.

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Raenne
7 years ago

Wow – I was unaware of the trope explicitly, though I’ve read it time and time again. I love the stares – the piercing, knowing stares that say “You know what you did.” Thank you!

,

If they were entirely imaginary, no one would write any fiction at all. While these individuals are imaginary, as are the women they point to in previous works, both groups have a huge impact on our world. They have a particularly strong impact on the young men and women who grow up reading and watching the stories where women are tossed away like trash – or stuffed into a fridge, if you will – in service to the greater male story line. 

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7 years ago

It’sshocking to me how many times I’ve seen this trope in different forms of media and have never paused to consider it.

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amy k
7 years ago

I am confused why this is considered an original 2017 story and not a reprint

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GE
7 years ago

 @14 dunsay

 

Both stories take their title from T.S.Eliot’s The Hollow Men.

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Shalini
7 years ago

Speaking purely of the writing style, can’t say I was terribly enamoured with all the repetitive pretty corpses, broken dolls and shit being tossed around with abandon.

@11: Me too.

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Marina
7 years ago

Thank you @10 Eric for sharing the link to this article about the story http://ladybusiness.dreamwidth.org/2015/12/15/eyes-i-dare-not-meet-in-dreams.html As a woman sick of the trope, I stupidly didn’t get the story at all and it only clicked here in the comment section. At which point my mind was blown. 

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james
7 years ago

whatever the politics, you have to start with a good story.  i kept wanting to skip ahead to the end but the images and the lyricism would not allow me. when i was done i wanted to think about it some more. it will probably enter my mind for the next few days. so ,very good story

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7 years ago

wow really interesting story. seems someone is overly sensitive though. 

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7 years ago

I want this to be a big thumping rock song with a punka lady singer.

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Jack
7 years ago

There are definitely some instances of Fridging in Whedon’s work. The most notable is Penny in Doctor Horrible.

The thing about Whedon is that he was fairly progressive for the nineties, when he started out, but never really progressed from there.

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7 years ago

That was uncomfortable reading, and not in a good way. 

I’m all for a writer investing their work with passion, but the way Joss Whedon is singled out? The only target specifically named? That’s personal. That’s the writer finding out their hero has feet of clay, and writing a blog-post revenge fantasy. They even lampshade it in the narrative.

It’s not even as if Whedon codified the “fridge”, or even comes close to being the worst offender. He’s simply not prolific enough to generate the kind the body count the narrative suggests in the number of Fridged surrounding his house.

I’m probably missing something in the narrative about the Fridged’s motivations. I say that because it took reading the comments to realise why the emphasis was on how they are all pretty is because they are all Fictionals. Totally missed that, so I feel like the writing failed for me. Other people picked up in that, so that’s why I’m guessing I’m missing something about their motivations. So what are they actually doing? Is the point to just stare at the perpetrators until they die of guilt? Or the perpetrators retcon them to be un-fridged? Or until society stops creating/consuming narratives which include the fridging trope? Then what? They evaporate through whatever mechanism allowed them to manifest?

Then there’s the reaction of the general public. I know their apathy is supposed to reflect the apathy IRL of the public to the fridged trope, but really? Something capable of dereailing a train (by accident as she was distracted) or throwing a tank around is something to be avoided at all costs. Keeping a safe distance to avoid collateral damage (from when someone tried to interfere with them) would be a priority. If one climbed aboard a train or plane, I’d be getting off. If one manifested mid-journey, I’d pull the emergency stop cord on the train or demand the pilot land the plane at the next safe place. SatNav and traffic reports would advise on routes around any that appeared on roads. 

And finally what’s with the throwaway line about the biker gang? The Fridged riding the Hogs makes a stark image, I grant you, but it suggests that they murdered the biker gang just for their bikes. That hardly fits with the rest of how the Fridged are characterised, and feels again like some revenge fantasy wish fulfilment. I wonder where that little fragment came from, and why they weren’t more specific with the details of the biker gang (agiven how Joss Whedon is highlighted). 

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Brian
7 years ago

Really engaging concept and writing. I loved the simplicity of it. It’s tough to achieve that. 

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Johnny
7 years ago

I loved the hell out of this story!

(If I read one more crybaby dude comment on a story like this and how “it’s not fair” or some other bullshit I might rip out my goddamn eyes and feed them to a MRA.)

I’m going to read Sunny Moraine’s other fiction now!!

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thenameispride
6 years ago

Seriously, reading through the comments, all the whines of dudes saying they disapprove or they disagree or nitpicking on a detail or denouncing the author’s needless emotionality. Once my eyes have returned from the back of my head, I’ll feed them to the same MRAs you are because they’re always hungry for the eyes that roll at this same repetitive, oblivious, unoriginal RUBBISHNONSENSEEXCREMENT. Like, levels of complicity are a thing, and the apologists and the ‘whatabouts’ have an extra helping of dead girl stares. 

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Richard Thomas
5 years ago

Powerful story.