Heart Racing Tales
54 pages
English

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54 pages
English

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Description

Do you remember your first day in school or your first day at work? Recollecting these memories often bring a smile to our faces, some even let us relive the moments. Here the author has penned some of her heart racing moments throughout the years she spent away from home as a student and as an educator. Some of these stories are witty and have unexpected endings. While others are reminiscence of beautiful memories to keep the heart racing. Her narratives are not always of the harrowing kind, some may even leave you in stitches. To add color to her narratives, the author did not shy away from using some commonly used local words and phrases.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 28 novembre 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781543772142
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

HEART RACING TALES
 
 
 
 
LEE ZSA
 
 

 
Copyright © 2022 by Lee Zsa.
 
ISBN:
Hardcover
978-1-5437-7215-9

Softcover
978-1-5437-7213-5

eBook
978-1-5437-7214-2

 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
 
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
 
www.partridgepublishing.com/singapore
Contents
Preface
Tale 1: The Drive Home
Tale 2: Night Nongkrong 4
Tale 3: The Gate
Tale 4: The Merry Ferry
Tale 5: The Crying Child
Tale 6: Shattered Glassdoor
Tale 7: Kampong 20 Life is so Fun
Tale 8: The Whistling
Tale 9: The Unwelcomed Visitor
Tale 10: The Apartment
Tale 11: Not a Filming Site
Tale 12: A Harrowing Kampong 20 Adventure
Tale 13: Kuala Lumpur Railway Station
Tale 14: Phobia
Tale 15: A Retreat Gone Wrong
Tale 16: Drifting on the Highway
Tale 17 (I): Who was it?
Tale 17 (II): Who was it?
Tale 18: The Explosion
Tale 19: Be Careful of What You Wish For
Tale 20: Alone
Tale 21: The Midnight Players
Tale 22: The Cavalry
Tale 23: Surprise
Tale 24: Night Call
Tale 25: Hysteria
Tale 26: The Strange Voice
Tale 27: Broken
Tale 28: Teeny Boppers
Tale 29: The Cliff
Tale 30: The Lonely Eid 69
Tale 31: Especially for you
Preface

I am just an ordinary person with neither a third eye nor sixth sense, just someone with a lot of nonsense. I am not able to heal, foresee, or caste any spell. However, I can spell words in English and Malay really well and my uncle says I ‘Banyak spelling’ 1
In the beginning, the lockdown or circuit breaker as it is called here in the Lion City drove me to absolute boredom. Then, I began to fear for my brain cells; I needed to make sure that they do not die in vain, nor should they die faster than the speed of light. As I began to write, my brain started to remember long forgotten stories in vivid detail.
After months of stringing words together, finally those sleeping cells produced this piece of work. This is my humble collection of narratives from my teenage to mature years. I hope these stories entertain you as much as I found enjoyment in putting them into words.
The continuous encouragement from family and friends have made this collection of short stories possible. I do hope you will enjoy this collection.
Thank you for your support.
LeeZsa
April 2022
List of non-English expressions :
1 Banyak spelling is nit-picking
Tale 1: The Drive Home

Years ago, when I was still living in Kuala Lumpur I often returned home pretty late at night.
One evening after work, a friend asked that we had dinner together. There were matters we needed to discuss but not on an empty stomach. I was too hungry to care where we were going for dinner. After a delightful dinner and fruitful discussion, we were on our way to drop him off at his place. Our chatter came to a halt. At the intersection into the dark lane leading to his house, we saw a lady in white with long dark hair sitting with her head bowed looking at the ground. We went past the lane leading to his house and drove straight to the end of the narrow lane to reach the main road. Along the way, he asked if I could still see the figure in my rear and side mirrors. Yup, she was still haunting my mirrors for a good few minutes before she disappeared. When we reached the main road, we headed for the brightly lit petrol station. There, I stayed in the car as instructed while he went out to check the car. Later, he instructed me to drive straight home; not to stop anywhere.
I began muttering whatever Qur’anic verses that came to mind. At the tollgate leading into the highway, I wound down my window because silly me did not have the smart tag 2 . As I was driving away from the toll with the ticket between my lips and the window was winding up, I caught sniff of the ylang ylang 3 or was it jasmine fragrance? That shook me quite a bit. I do not know where the scent was coming from. For crying out loud, I was in the middle of a huge open space. When I reached the highway, I pressed the accelerator as hard as the speed limit allowed me to. I could feel my heart thumping rapidly.
When I reached my apartment building, my designated carpark was on the fourth floor. On that very night, on that very floor and on the very row where my designated plot was, the lights chose to flicker. My heart began to sprint as I parked my car. Then I made a dash for the entrance to the apartment units. What usually took me about five minutes to walk felt like fifty mins. When I passed through the secured door and into a small lobby, I felt claustrophobic. The door shut with a loud bang. I jumped and shivered as I repeatedly pressed the lift button. I kept looking at the floor indicator. All the time muttering Qur’anic verses as loud as possible. I looked at my watch and it was close to three in the morning, and I was all alone. When the lift door opened, I rushed in and aggressively pressed the eleventh floor and close buttons. It felt like ages to reach my floor. The lift door opened, and I rushed out like a Mad Hatter; I scrambled and wobbled to my unit door. I fumbled with the keys to unlock the grill then the door. I felt like Alice running and fumbling. Grill and door unlocked, I crawled inside. Then, I slammed the door shut and reached out for the light switch then slammed shut and locked the grill then the wooden door.
I stared into the living room like a zombie. At the end of the room, through the opened sliding doors, I could see the twin tower stood majestically before me.
HOME SWEET HOME!
L ist of words:
2 smart tag is an on-board device that allows vehicles to pass through the toll gate using as an electronic toll collection system.
3 Ylang ylang is another name for frangipani.
Tale 2: Night Nongkrong 4

In the 1990s, I worked in Slim River, Perak (Northwest of Peninsula Malaysia). It was a small campus preparing students to study overseas namely Australia and Ireland.
It is a residential campus, for both staff and students, almost like a mini village. The students were housed in hostels with common bathrooms. In the beginning, the staff lived in a block of hostel rooms with ensuite bathrooms. Each room was fully furnished with two super single beds, two floor to ceiling built-in wardrobes, and chairs. It was a two-storey building. The staff residence accommodated both academic and non-academic staff.
Each evening, the staff had dinners at the campus cafeteria (which was above the students’ dining hall) or we dined out in the nearby towns like Slim River, Bidor or Tapah. Each evening as we walked to and from the cafeteria, we would break into “domestic” chattering. Sometimes, the staff would share incredible tales during these walks. Often there were references to the famous Bercakap Dengan Jinn 5 series because the writer was from a nearby village. So, it was only natural that sometimes we referred to his stories and made our own hunts. After dinner, we often sat along the corridor and continued with our chatting. Sometimes, these chats went past way after midnight.
The upper floor housed mostly the bule (ang mohs) 6 , where the Heads of Departments and academic staff had rooms there. The ground floor was more how do I put it? ... more happening and lively. Most of the local staff shared rooms on the ground floor. The local staff would often stay up late and trade ghost stories. We bonded well.
I was designated to a room on the top floor next to the only staircase. My room had a verandah that overlooked a thick bush and some chiku 7 trees. I did not have to share my room; those on the top floor did not have roommates.
On some evenings, we gathered along the corridor on the upper level and star gazed. One evening, after dinner we decided to go straight to our rooms because most of us were tired, so there was no late night nongkrong 4 that evening. As a habit, after I unlocked the door, I gave salaam 8 , entered my room and switched on the light. Then, I headed into the bathroom to wash my feet, face and both hands. I rested a while on the bed, then woke up again and headed to the bathroom to take my wudhu 9 prior to perform my Isya 10 prayers. I am an insomniac. So, after prayers I reached for a book and tried to read it. I felt uncomfortable, thus I reached out for my phone and started texting one of the staff. She asked if I wanted to come over to her room and sleep over. But I was hesitant. We kept texting until I could feel my eyes slowly shutting.
I was awakened by a soft knocking on my door. It was faint and the knocking went on and on. I could not open my eyes. They were heavy and difficult to lift. The knocking got louder and louder. I reached for my phone. I surfed the bed and under the pillow. Finally, I reached my phone and pulled it from under my pillow. I looked at the phone and my eyes widened. I got out of bed and opened the

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