Subject: A good start.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-05-21 19:33:00 UTC

The first sentence is often the most difficult, at least to me. How to get the readers' attention, and then keep it, without sparking wrong expectations? Here, I was immediately dragged in, and even when I realized that the first paragraph was a nightmare, it kept me going through Kim's morning routine.

she started toward the bathroom to shower
Right after an early start and before she started the water for her shower, this is a bit too much starting for my taste. Maybe you can find some other way to phrase this sequence.

Also, I was tempted to say that peeling the nightwear off only after starting the water for the shower is the wrong order and a waste of good water. Only when The mirror began to fog over, I realized that this may be a necessary routine to get lots of cold water out of the tubes when you live high up in a multistory apartment building and the hot water comes from a boiler in the basement. And Kim doesn't enjoy the luxury of a thermostat that would keep the water at a preset temperature as soon as enough of the hot water component is available. After that, I didn't even need the mention of a one bedroom apartment to know how Kim lives. This is a good example of showing rather than telling.

It's amazing how much we learn about Kim just from her getting up. Alas, there are two mistakes in this part of the story:
It would have been worse, but some bystanders has pulled her from her car and put out the flames. Should be "had" (plural).
She adjusted to temperature of the water to make it cooler, because her burns were still sensitive to heat. Should be "the".

Unlike J.E., I did not feel like Kim should still be early at the train station. I assumed that her alarm clock is set to give her the bare minimum of time she needs every morning, so getting an early start just allowed her to take more time on everything she otherwise would do in a haste, and still get the same train as usual. I don't know how important it is to take the usual train. Otherwise, the mysterious stranger wouldn't have found her, at least not at this day?

I imagined that Kim cannot afford to buy another car (or to rent a better apartment), but from your comment to Daniel this isn't actually true. Do we learn something about her job and how well she is payed?

The one closest to her was reading a newspaper, the other was too far down the platform for KC to tell where he were looking. Shouldn't this be "was" (singular)?

There was no reason him to be watching her ... Apparently a word ("for"?) is missing there.

She didn’t have much time to wonder as her train pulled up, blocking her view of the other side of the tracks. You may want to insert a comma between "wonder" and "as", but punctuation is one of my weaker points.

I'm not much into creepily being stalked by a mysterious stranger, and much of this looked just too familiar, so I started to feel like I mostly continued proofreading out of a sense of duty.

As she sat at her desk, KC’s mind wandered. This looks a bit clumsy to me. Maybe you should try "While" instead of "As", or maybe I'm just too afraid of as-eritis.

She was thinking of calling it an early day going home. I'm not sure whether something is missing near the end of this sentence.

Oh, and a warning: if you really change the time Kim was early, like you implied in the answer to J.E., don't forget that The loss of over an hour of sleep was beginning to wear on her. [Yep, folks, that's why another (and a third, and a fourth) read-through may be required.]

... she strode out of the lobby and out into the bright, afternoon sun. I'm not sure whether this comma belongs there, although I can't exactly explain why. It's probably that "afternoon" modifies "sun", but unlike "bright" is not an adjective, so you don't have a list of adjectives that should be separated by commas.

I am sure that the police will not see any danger, and that KC will have to go through this alone. How the stranger managed to appear outside of a twelfth floor window and how he may be connected to the accident are still intriguing questions and may keep me interested for a while, but generally I feel like this story is not made for me.

~Lurky

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