family
The Pond in the Woods
The sound of sharpened metal scraping against ice pierced the frozen air. Everything was perfectly still in the frigid morning, as if frozen in place. The only thing that moved were the two figures that glided easily over the uneven ice of the frozen pond.
By Abigail R Long4 years ago in Fiction
A Mother
“Congratulations Mam, you have a beautiful baby boy” The weary-eyed nurse smiled as she placed the baby into the hands of his mother. “Thank you” The mother smiled. She stared at her baby, though he was not fully cleaned yet, she held him closely within her arms for a brief moment, which for her felt as though the world had stopped. A tear rolled down her cheeks, and she began whispering softly into her baby’s ear. He miraculously stopped crying for a few seconds as if recognizing and listening to her voice. “Even if I have to shift the universe or alter faith itself, I’ll make sure no harm comes to you. I promise.” The baby’s eyebrows relaxed for a split second, quick enough for only his mother to notice, but then his lips began to quiver, and he burst into tears. A nurse gently grabbed him, pulling him away from his mother, in order to get him fully cleaned in time to be given back.
By Tolu Oyeniyi4 years ago in Fiction
Winter Warmth
Fitting everything needed for the week into those brown paper grocery bags was an art form. You had to neatly organize all the food into stacks or else it would bulge out of the sides like an overweight church lady still in the tight clothes she got in her twenties. Then you had to buy things with the weight of them in mind. There was one time, before she knew better, when Sophia had foolishly brought home an eight-pack of sodas. It was when her high school savings started to run dry, and she had to cut back on her subway usage. She struggled the whole way home, and her bag ripped halfway there, spilling cheap ramen packets and wonder bread and pre-chopped vegetables all over the pavement.
By Chris Medina4 years ago in Fiction
The Thaw
To call the body of water in the center of my hometown a lake, was to be very generous. Walking the circumference of its shores wasn’t as much a day hike as it was a pleasant stroll; what's more, standing at any point around its perimeter, one could easily see the opposite side, even on a foggy day. I always thought of it as more of a pond, than a lake. Large pond, small lake. Of course, if it had been any smaller, the ‘last big freeze,’ might’ve actually happened.
By Willow J. Fields4 years ago in Fiction







