Classical
Thursdays Are for Ghosts
The first time I noticed her was the week after the funeral. A Thursday, to be exact. I was in the kitchen, stirring a cup of tea I hadn’t meant to make, in a house too quiet for comfort. The sugar clinked gently against the mug like footsteps on tile. I wasn’t thinking of her, not directly, not consciously. But there she was. A shape in the hallway mirror—quick, soft, and impossibly familiar.
By Jawad Khan7 months ago in Fiction
The Clockmaker's Garden
There was a village at the edge of the world where time stood still—not metaphorically, but truly. The sun always hovered in the same place. The shadows never grew longer. The leaves on the trees were forever green, and not a single wrinkle ever touched the faces of the people who lived there.
By Lucien Hollow 7 months ago in Fiction
The Lantern of Whispering Trees
by Yahya Asim In a remote village nestled between the emerald folds of two great hills, there stood a forest known as the Whispering Trees. Locals spoke of it with reverence and caution. They said the trees could talk—not with mouths, but with murmurs carried in the wind. Only those who truly listened could understand their secrets.
By Yahya Asim7 months ago in Fiction
Ways to Say “I Miss You” Creatively — Ek Dil Chhoone Wali Kahani
Kabhi kabhi lafz “I miss you” itne mamooli lagte hain ke woh dil ki gehraiyon ko bayan nahi kar paate. Yeh jazba sirf doori nahi, balki dil ki ek gehri khwahish, yaad aur chahat hoti hai jo har lafz ke beghair hi samajh aati hai. Meri kahani bhi isi jazbe se shuru hoti hai, jab main apni sabse qareebi dost Sara se door ho gaya.
By Aman Ullah7 months ago in Fiction
Romantic Promises You Can Text Daily
They say distance makes the heart grow fonder, but no one ever tells you how painful it truly is to love someone you can’t touch, can’t hold, can’t simply sit next to in silence. We lived miles apart, in different cities, under different skies, yet somehow under the same spell of love that refused to break despite all odds. In the beginning, our calls were long and filled with laughter, our chats playful and endless. But as days turned into months, the distance began whispering cruel things in our ears. Doubts sneaked in like uninvited guests. Was she still mine? Was I still enough for her heart that could be tempted by someone nearer, someone real and tangible? One lonely evening, when my mind was a battlefield of love and fear, I decided to do something reckless yet sincere. I texted her, “Let’s try something new. From today, I’ll send you one promise every single day. Some will be tiny, some deep, but each one will be a thread pulling our hearts closer.” The first promise was simple, almost childish: “I promise to always say goodnight, no matter how tired I am.” The next day, it grew braver: “I promise to be patient with your silences.” By the end of the week, I found myself writing things I had never dared to say aloud, like “I promise to never let our fights mean more than our love.” And she… oh God, she surprised me in ways that still warm my chest. She would reply with her own gentle vows: “I promise to tell you when I’m sad instead of pushing you away.” Or “I promise to never let a day go by without reminding you that you are loved beyond measure.” Days turned into weeks, weeks into months, and soon these tiny promises became the very backbone of our fragile, beautiful long-distance love story. We promised to grow old together, to dance in our kitchen when we’re gray and wrinkled, to read poetry under the covers even when our eyes struggled to focus. Yet love, real love, always gets tested. There was a time we fought so badly I thought this was the end. Ugly words were thrown, tears were shed alone in dark rooms. That night, my pride screamed not to text her, to let her be, let her miss me first. But my heart, stubborn fool that it was, picked up the phone anyway and typed with trembling fingers: “I promise to fight for us, even when we’re the ones hurting each other.” Her reply didn’t come instantly. Hours dragged by like slow poison. Then, at 3:07 AM, my phone buzzed: “I promise to never give up on us, no matter how broken we get.” It felt like breathing again after nearly drowning. From then on, our promises grew deeper, more intertwined with hopes and dreams that were too sacred to say before. “I promise to be your calm when the world storms against you.” “I promise to build a home in my heart where you will always belong.” Now, years later, we finally share the same city, the same sunlit mornings, the same coffee mug sometimes. But every single day, without fail, my phone still lights up. “Good morning, love. I promise to still choose you tomorrow, even on days you’re impossible to love.” And I grin like a fool because some rituals are too precious to ever outgrow. Some promises are made to be kept forever. Love, in the end, isn’t built on diamonds or grand gestures—it’s sewn together by tiny, fragile, heartfelt promises whispered across miles and years. And maybe that’s why, even after all this time, when people ask me the secret to loving someone from afar, I tell them: “Make a promise daily. Not to her, not to him—but to your love. That’s how distance turns into destiny.”
By Aman Ullah7 months ago in Fiction
Animal Farm (George Orwell) - Chapter- 8 (Novel)
As Animal Farm enters its fourth year of independence, the gap between the pigs and the other animals is growing rapidly. Napoleon, with the help of his ferocious dogs and the persuasive Squealer, has consolidated his control. The animals are struggling to survive, but their memories of the past are dim, and they cling desperately to hope.
By Echoes of Life7 months ago in Fiction
Animal Farm (George Orwell) - Chapter- 7 (Novel)
The winter on Animal Farm is harsher than ever, and the animals are suffering greatly. Food is scarce, and the cold cuts deep into their bones, but Napoleon’s regime continues to press on. To maintain appearances and maintain control, Napoleon uses propaganda, deception, and brute force to suppress dissent and silence the truth.
By Echoes of Life7 months ago in Fiction
Animal Farm- Chapter- 4 (George Orwell)
As summer turns to autumn, word of the animals’ successful rebellion spreads far beyond Animal Farm. Snowball and Napoleon send pigeons to neighboring farms to tell the other animals about their revolution and to teach them the song of the Beast of England. The pigeons carry the message far and wide, inspiring animals on other farms to rise up just as they have. Meanwhile, the human owners of neighboring farms—Mr. Pilkington of Foxwood and Mr. Frederick of Pinchfield—become deeply concerned that ideas of animalism might spread. They try to downplay the animal revolution, mocking Animal Farm and calling it a failure, but secretly, they fear a similar rebellion among their own animals.
By Echoes of Life7 months ago in Fiction










