
Skyler Saunders
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I will be publishing a story every Tuesday. Make sure you read the exclusive content each week to further understand the stories.
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Stories (2939)
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Businesswoman: Chapter 11
Aromas of sanitizer and rosewater permeated the office. It wasn’t shabby at all. The director of the DelaWhole Medical Center featured cushy chairs and an array of different office doodads and objects related to health. Loreen felt compelled to start asking Ferdinand Aube questions.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in Chapters
There is Still Life
A meeting at the bench in a park in Wilmington, Delaware occurred every 28th day of the month out of a calendar year. They never arrived late. One man, sartorial and demure dressed in staid colors and kept a cane. The other wore loud, vibrant clothes.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in Chapters
Businesswoman Chapter 10
Spring finally sprung. The lushness of the greenery beckoned the mind to be as productive as ever. Loreena knew this. She possessed a slew of speaking engagements during this time, since the weather seemed agreeable. Her first talk consisted of a group of businesspeople who sought to get a sense of their clientele. They wanted to know, in particular, the advantages of being an atheist and an entrepreneur. Loreen collected three million dollars per engagement. She smiled at the thought she spoke, ironically, in church basements for “love offerings” of ten to fifty dollars which accumulated to be around two hundred dollars.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in Chapters
Smartystan
UltraSynth headquarters in Newark, Delaware provided an ample amount of time for research and development. Dr. Keija Frampton relished this. She enjoyed looking at the data and transforming it into reality. With every synth and learned machine, she grew hungrier to solve the world’s problems. Her selfishness always rewarded her. She knew her self-worth and always capitalized on it. Co-COO Branston Welling looked sharp even if he just wore a t-shirt and jeans. The shirt had creases at the sleeves and the jeans looked immaculate.
By Skyler SaundersExclusive • about a year ago
On this 10th Anniversary, Draw the Prophet Mohammad
The slogan, “Je sui Charlie” or “I am Charlie” became a rallying cry for those in support of the twelve people killed in their offices by Al Qaeda brutes on January 7, 2015. Dr. Yaron Brook, Chairman of the Ayn Rand Institute and the host of the Yaron Brook Show pointed out something simple and profound. It was a question: Why didn’t everyone just display the image of Mohammad? That would’ve had a greater, deeper impact on the psyches of those in support of the cause and would have knocked down antagonists a few pegs as well.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in The Swamp
Businesswoman Chapter 9
The next day after the snowstorm, Loreen Breen entered her corner office at ten in the morning. She tried to stay planted in her cushy, ergonomically superior seat. This failed. She got up from her desk and journeyed down to the construction project she had already had relations with during her time with the executives involved.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in Chapters
The White Man's War
Under General Thomasina Pridegon’s command, they prepared to roll into Russia. She already got the pass from the president and the secretary of defense. All of the branches of the United States military participated. But not all colors. Only the American Descendents of Slaves (ADOS) and Foundational Black Americans (FBA) found eligibility to fight. The reason? Reparations. The previous president had reduced the national deficit and debt down to the low hundred thousands by eliminating all governmental regulations and controls and instituing only taxes on consumption. In response, the Department of Defense had been boosted to a quadrillion dollars to round out the budget. Anyone who wished to receive the money but couldn’t serve because of injury or illness, or who would be deemed unfit, would have to take lesser amounts of money, somewhere in the millions. Family members of those who did fight could still qualify for receiving a deposit from the United States government.
By Skyler Saundersabout a year ago in Fiction