Sci Fi
New Beginnings
Blaster-Track Commander, tall and muscular and upright, stood with feet planted firmly on his skateboard-sized mini-jeep which followed the downward-sliding platform at a geostationary hover. From her position a yard or so below on the elevator itself, Carmilla Neetkins let her eyes range over the lean physique encased in brilliant green spandex, the pair of photon-pistols ready in trim holsters at the breast, the cloak of royal purple flowing from strong shoulders to heels, and the golden-haired head of lofty brow and determined tapering chin.
By Doc Sherwood5 years ago in Fiction
D.O.T
“JEMMA RUN!” Doran shouts and books it over the rubble and holds his spear tight to his arm. I look up and see the giant. 15ft tall with three skinny metal legs, one red skylight eye looking down upon me. Three long pincers slowly fold out from the legs and it starts to make its chase for us.
By Aiden Klimov5 years ago in Fiction
The Future
It was another grey and dismal day in Cityscape, nothing ever changed. There was always a food shortage since we couldn’t grow crops anymore, we had to import everything. Water shortages because of the droughts. Air pollution so devastating masks and re-breathers were not only mandatory, but they were also lifesaving. The old United States back in the day had implemented restrictions on factories and industries, so much that major companies had moved elsewhere, mainly overseas. What happens though when those countries decide to clean up? They buy land in the cash-strapped United States. Major cities like Chicago and Detroit were practically giving industrial land away after the COVID pandemic in the 2020s. Many of the large corporations from overseas just bought it all. Then they moved all their industry here and all of ours right back along with it, including all the waste. So now we live in the worst polluted country in the world. It is a miserable existence if you can exist at all. Many have died.
By Belinda Setzer5 years ago in Fiction
Paying the Price
There was a saying, Elizabeth Wang vaguely remembered, about how the quality of one’s thoughts coloured your happiness, or at least it was something like that - philosophy had always been her weakest subject. Now, however, held captive in her sterile holding cell, awaiting her rehabilitation hearing, she wondered if she might have been better off paying more attention to the subject.
By Gene Foxwell5 years ago in Fiction
The Path to Aradicia
In the night, I saw my breath in front of me as I hid behind a tall birch tree in the Ezekien Forest. There were men trailing a good distance in front of me with their horses and their supplies. Only a few hours passed, but I didn’t know how far I was from my camp or my friends. All I could focus on was the anger boiling inside of me at the sight of the Farrow emblem on one of the horses. A Farrow emblem was a fear-striking one at that; a creature with a cobra-shaped head with devilish horns and fiery eyes. To me, it was just a constant reminder of what I lost years ago.
By Kristin Grice5 years ago in Fiction
Gods Remain
The Locket was a piece of history, torn from its place, steeped in misery, and spit out into the cold husk of rooms that continued uninterrupted for miles in every direction. It was pure information displayed without filter. Like a cylinder seal of ancient Mesopotamia, the surface was crisscrossed with lines, forming a design like Sanskrit or some other forgotten tongue. The Servile held it tentatively, religiously, could barely keep hold of it with trembling hands.
By Paul Adams5 years ago in Fiction





