Writing Horror on Halloween
It was the night before Halloween on which I sat up late, editing a scene which I'd written many moons ago.
It seemed to get dark earlier that night, and the only thing that was to be seen in the windows was the reflections of the candles I had burning within.
Ironically, I wrote about the darkness too. In the scene in which I dwelt that night, there was no light to see by. But, if there is not sight to write about, the writer's pen takes up other senses. The touchless dark has no surfaces or scents. But sounds it has aplenty; sounds to make the imagination go wild, conceiving apparitions, fabricating frightful fancies. I forced them all onto the poor soul who had wandered into the pitch darkness of my scene.
I paused.
It's dangerous to live this way, I thought, to be so immersed in the page before you that you do not see what goes on around. Anything could happen when the writer is so engrossed in the fictional; anything at all.
People might be peering into their windows; a cat might creep by through the flickering shadows; a raven may call on the tree just outside.
Would the writer notice?
Probably not.
Its dangerous to live this way, to take up one's laptop and sit in a chapter all night, neither seeing nor hearing what goes on behind you, or underneath your chair.
Better not look, that's what I say. It'll only distract you. It'll only give you a fright.
And what goes on in the night is better left up to the imagination.
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