Sci Fi
Glitch
There he was. Snoring and lying shirtless inside the backseat of the car while we waited for the end of the world. I wanted to reach out to his husky body, to feel his sweaty skin with my trembling fingers. Or just lay my head on his heaving belly to listen to him while I tuned out the rest of the world that had gone mad.
By Will Coronel5 years ago in Fiction
The End
Who would have thought that opening an old heart shaped locket would kick start the end of the world? I had found the jewelry in my Grandmother's things, tucked away in the attic among her clothes and Knick knacks. It seemed so unassuming. Just a little silver heart on thin chain. Wondering if there were any pictures in it, I opened it.
By Amber White5 years ago in Fiction
The Heart-Shaped Locket
After He’d been walking as long as the ash had been falling, and the ash had been falling for over a hundred days. Sometimes rain fell, but always, ash. All around him, a plain of nothing. An abandoned Buick was pointlessly parked at the side of the road, as if the driver were hopeful that they might one day return to it. To the east, a ridge reached its peak, stretching as far as he could see, which given the consistent fall of ash, was not very far.
By Will Quantrill5 years ago in Fiction
Pushing Up Space Daisies
September 12, 4141 Mission "Saracen" Saffron Dyvora was having a pretty good day before she was almost incinerated. The command deck of HMS Rasputin was in chaos. Captain Mustafa was dead, and every single alert was sounding off across the ship. Energy levels critical, danger close, hull breach.
By Joseph Icha5 years ago in Fiction
In Extremis
“I’ve done terrible things to survive. I don’t know if survival turned me into this, or if I’ve always been this way.” The Young Woman stared out into the endless forest. The heat from the fire she created was providing ample warmth, but what she just scribbled into her notebook sent a chill down her spine. She opened up a heart-shaped locket dangling from her neck. She looked into the bright green eyes of her father, lovingly looking right back at her. She barely recognized the sheepish young girl standing next to him in the photo.
By Dan Marcus5 years ago in Fiction
Year of Rebels
The government’s newest technological advancement; The Nova accelerator. It could manipulate any atmospheric weather patterns to whatever humanity desired. A revolutionary invention of its kind, the thing dreams were made of. America being the first ever humans to dare manipulate something as wonderous and God like as the weather. No more tornedos, typhoons, and other natural disasters.
By Lyndsey Malanche5 years ago in Fiction






