PhilK:
Goodgulf:
"Nice" is a word that I've enjoyed using ever since I read a certain book written by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman - if only for the reactions of people who expect it only to mean 5a (pleasing, agreeable).
True, it used to mean all those other things. In current usage, it's been reduced down to 'pleasing, agreeable', like a lot of words that have shifted in meaning over the years. After all, if you said a girl was wearing a 'sleazy dress', I doubt she'd be mollified by you pointing out that it could mean 'light, gossamer'....
Well, I'd venture that meanings #5 (a & b), #6 and #7, which are somewhat interrelated, are still commonly used and accepted in modern society; #3 would likely be represented by "neat" in that sense today.
However, strictly in the #5b aspect of "nice," meaning "well-executed," certainly "Glimpse" would qualify for that description, since it's quite well written.
In the sense that the story includes spanking activity on a spanking-oriented website, the #5c meaning of "nice" as "appropriate" could be argued as applicable, although I'm uncertain about how much of that usage actually exists today. (Seeing a prostitute wearing slutty-looking attire while flaunting herself on the street, how many people would claim that she's wearing "nice clothes," even though they're "fitting" to the activity she's engaged in?)
Semantic issues aside, "Glimpse" certainly is a darkly compelling story--there's a valid reason that people avoid those spooky-looking houses in the middle of scary, off-the-beaten-track wooded areas, isn't there...??

--C.K.