Subject: a review
Author:
Posted on: 2017-05-22 02:42:00 UTC

This is a great little set-up, and I hope you can continue this and get it published someday.

Chapter 1
The bulk of this chapter is providing details about KC's car accident, and all the thought you've put into it is amazing. I love how you use the cliche of a nightmare to introduce KC's car accident and mental trauma, but then use the hard reality of her scars, and the time and effort of work she has to put into taking care of them, to bring home just how real and awful the accident was. You've really done an amazing job of thinking of all the little day-to-day details that bring her affliction to life.

I also love, right at the end of the first scene, the hint of a news report that will almost certainly factor into KC's life down the line, which she simply didn't catch. It leaves me intrigued about how much she'll regret not hearing that info, after some plot has happened to her.

Chapter 2
Picking up on the slightly off detail from the end of chapter one, and cranking it up into the realm of the supernatural makes for a great lead-in to future conflict and mystery. I like the contrast between the fairly typical sympathy expressed by Bill and the disturbing, alien behavior of the faceless man.

The one weak point here, I think is this particular sentence: "Her assurance didn’t seem to ease his concern." This is a very tell-don't-show sentence, and stands out all the more plainly for detailed and explicit you make the actions in the rest of the story. The following sentence seems to indicate that Bill paused before answering, so I think explaining a bit of his facial reaction to KC's words, or other aspects of his demeanor, would be a much more descriptive way to show this. Also, Bill's reaction should be attached to his dialogue, not to a part of KC's.

basic errors:
Chapter 1
"It would have been worse, but some bystanders has pulled her from her car and put out the flames."
"Has" should be "had" to match the verb tense of "pulled." The sentence also still works if you remove "has" entirely.

"She adjusted to temperature of the water to make it cooler, because her burns were still sensitive to heat."
"To temperature" should be "the temperature."

"Ten minutes later, KC was in the kitchen of her one bedroom apartment."
"One bedroom" should be "one-bedroom" since that's an adjectival phrase describing the apartment.

"While she waited for her breakfast, she turned on the television that she kept on her counter"
The period at the end of this sentence is missing.

Also, I may have noticed a contradiction between that sentence and the following paragraph:
"She returned to the table and, when she looked up, saw that they had moved on to sports. She wasn’t interested in that, so she turned the television off and ate her breakfast."
That first sentence says the television is on the kitchen counter. The second pair of sentences imply that she moves away from the counter to sit at a table, then turns the television off. I'm not sure if you intended for the television to be on the table in the first place, or if you meant for the reader to understand that she got up and walked to the counter again to shut it off, then returned to the table to eat. This is further muddied by the use of the phrase "returned to the table" when the narration never stated that she had been to the table at that point.

"There was no reason him to be watching her, in particular, and there were at least a half dozen people closer to the man."
You missed the "for" in the phrase "no reason for him to be."

"When she had boarded the train and found a seat, she tried to locate the man on the other platform, again."
You don't need the comma before "again." It's an adverb modifying the verb "tried," so it's a proper part of that clause and doesn't need to separated from it by punctuation.

Chapter 2
"'Hey, Bill,' she said to the balding man behind the desk. 'Mind if I take off a little early today?'"
Since all this dialogue is a single sentence, keep the entire thing together as a sentence. Replace the period after "desk" with a comma, and change the beginning of "mind" to lowercase. ("'Hey, Bill,' she said to the balding man behind the desk, 'mind if I take off a little early today?'"

"'Thought I saw someone out the window.'"
I would usually use "outside" instead of "out" here, but I don't know if this is a speaking quirk/regional dialect sort of thing.

"KC realized that the light had changed when she was jostled by the crowd moving into the cross walk."
According to wiktionary, "crosswalk" is always spelled as one word, though this could be another regional thing.

"She sat down on a bench to wait and looked around at the people on the other platfrom."
"platform"

"He had his back to her, and all she could see, in any detail, were his jeans and tee-shirt."
This one is me being anal-retentive, so feel free to ignore this. Technically, "tee-shirt" is the French word for the English word "t-shirt."

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