An Encounter with a Wooden Person by Zach Docter

Featured Flash Fiction

     The wooden people are common in this part of the country, at 

least, that’s what I was told when I moved here. The main thing to 

know about them is that they mean no harm. I say this as someone who 

finds them unsettling. Yes, their movements are mechanical and 

repetitive. Their faces, blank and doll-like. But as I said, 

they are harmless, so harmless in fact that when encountered, they 

do not seem to know that you’re there. They’re not really alive in 

the normal sense of the word. Rather, they are more like wind-up 

toys moving in a set pattern, unable to sense the surrounding 

environment. Some say they’re sentient because they’re able 

to choose when they show themselves. Those that disagree claim that 

they don’t choose to show themselves at all. These people say that 

they’re always here among us, hiding in plain sight. They’re simply, 

for whatever reason, difficult to notice.


     In most sightings, they’re usually found acting out some 

kind of role. An acquaintance told me he once saw one acting as 

a ticket agent at a movie theater, complete with booth and uniform. 

One may wonder how to tell them from a genuine human playing the 

same part. Even without looking at their face, it’s easy. In the 

example just mentioned, the wooden man was alone, the theater was 

deserted. And yet, there he sat, repeatedly extending his arm 

forward, collecting imaginary tickets from an imaginary line of 

customers. A wooden person always acts in a role that is 

incongruous to the surrounding environment. That’s how you can 

tell them apart from the real thing.


     One night, many years ago, I encountered a wooden 

person in a deserted intersection in town. He was acting 

as a traffic cop. He stood in the middle of the street, 

swiftly extending his hand this way and that, directing 

traffic that was nowhere to be found. I remember studying 

the man intently as I sat in my motionless car. 

He was silent and expressionless. He didn’t care that I was 

disobeying his orders half the time. He simply continued on and 

on, going through the motions. Stop. Go. Stop. Go. Stop.  

After a while, I lost interest and sped away. I watched him in 

my rear-view mirror as he receded into the distance. A part 

of me was hoping he’d do something unexpected, a glance in my 

direction, anything. But nothing changed. Even when I 

encountered another at the next intersection and the 

next and the next and the next, all remained the same. 

Stop. Go. Stop. Go. Stop.


Zach Docter is a writer and composer from Los Angeles, California. He enjoys writing about strange things, head scratchers, and the bizarre in the mundane. His work has been featured in Joke’s Review and his debut short story collection, “The Great Pyramid and Other Stories,” was released in June 2022 by Curious Curls Publishing.