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Showing posts with label Speculative Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Speculative Fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Signal That Refused to Die by Olivia Salter / Science Fiction / Short Story

 

When a scientist detects an impossible signal that has traveled over eight billion light-years without losing strength, she discovers it isn’t a message—but a consciousness searching for proof that something still exists. When she answers, the signal doesn’t just reach Earth—it begins to rewrite what it means to be human, blurring the line between observer and observed.



The Signal That Refused to Die


By


Olivia Salter




Word Count: 2,023


The first thing Dr. Ayanna Price noticed was that it didn’t fade.

Signals always fade.

That had been the first thing her father ever taught her about the universe—standing on the cracked sidewalk outside their apartment in Birmingham, pointing up at a sky she could barely see past the streetlights.

“Everything weakens with distance,” he’d said. “That’s how you know what’s real.”

He’d died believing that.

Ayanna built her life proving it.

Until now.


02:17 UTC.

The spike cut through background noise like a scream through static.

Ayanna froze mid-sip, coffee halfway to her lips. On the monitor, the waveform held steady—too steady. No jitter. No decay. No redshift smear.

Just… precision.

“Glitch?” Mateo called from across the lab.

“No,” she said, already knowing. “Run the gain again.”

He did.

The signal didn’t move.

Didn’t weaken.

Didn’t behave.

Ayanna felt something cold slip under her ribs.

Signals always fade.

This one refused.

“Distance?” she asked.

Mateo didn’t answer right away. The silence stretched long enough to become its own warning.

“…That can’t be right.”

“How far, Mateo?”

He turned, and she saw it then—not excitement.

Fear.

“Eight-point-three billion light-years.”

The room shifted.

Someone let out a laugh that broke halfway through.

“That’s not possible,” another voice said. “It would’ve degraded into noise—”

“It didn’t,” Ayanna said.

Her voice was calm.

Too calm.

Because the signal hadn’t just survived.

It had arrived untouched.


By morning, the world was watching.

Observatories synced. Models ran. Equations strained under the weight of something that would not obey them.

Every system returned the same answer:

Impossible.

The signal had crossed half the observable universe without losing strength.

No scattering.

No distortion.

No loss.

It was as if the universe had simply… failed to touch it.


On the second day, the pattern emerged.

At first, it looked like structured pulses—clusters, repetitions, intervals. But when Ayanna overlaid it against harmonic mapping, something clicked into place.

Not math.

Not exactly.

Something closer to intention.

Her fingers hovered over the keyboard.

“It’s not just data,” she said.

Mateo leaned in. “Then what is it?”

Ayanna swallowed.

“It’s organized like… perception.”

They shouldn’t have run it through the interpreter.

Everyone knew that.

The system was experimental—designed to model unknown signals into cognitive approximations. It had failed more often than it succeeded.

Sometimes it hallucinated.

Sometimes it broke.

Once, it produced something that made a technician vomit and refuse to come back.

Ayanna powered it up anyway.

“Run it,” she said.

At first, nothing.

Just processing cycles grinding against something too large to translate.

Then—

The screen flickered.

The room dimmed.

And Ayanna felt it.

Not sound.

Not language.

A pressure.

Like standing too close to something vast—so vast your body recognizes it before your mind does. Her breath shortened. Her fingers trembled against the console.

The signal wasn’t just being interpreted.

It was pressing back.

Images—or something like them—broke across her awareness.

A star collapsing inward—but not dying.

Light folding into itself, compressing, sharpening.

Becoming direction.

Becoming will.

A beam—not emitted, but sustained.

Held together.

Forced into existence.

Refusing entropy.


Ayanna tore the headset off with a gasp.

“It’s alive.”

The words came out fractured.

Mateo stared. “What?”

“The signal—it’s not a transmission.” Her pulse hammered in her throat. “It’s carrying something. Something that’s… maintaining it.”

“A machine?”

She shook her head, already knowing the answer terrified her.

“No.”

A beat.

“A mind.”

They shut the system down.

But something had already crossed.


Twelve hours later, the signal changed.

Not in structure.

In behavior.

It began to… shift.

Closer.

Not stronger—just nearer. As if proximity itself had weight.

“That’s not possible,” Mateo muttered. “It already reached us.”

Ayanna didn’t respond.

Because the math no longer made sense.

She ran the models again.

And again.

Each time, the same impossible conclusion emerged:

The signal wasn’t something that had arrived.

It was something that was still coming.

And somehow—it had reached Earth before it finished traveling.

“No,” Mateo said, shaking his head. “That’s—no. That’s not how time works.”

Ayanna stared at the waveform, unblinking.

“It’s not moving through time the way we do.”


That night, the world stuttered.

Power grids flickered.

Clocks slipped out of sync.

Satellites glitched, sending overlapping signals that canceled each other into silence.

And beneath it all—the pattern held.

Steady.

Unyielding.

Like a heartbeat.

Ayanna didn’t leave the lab.

She couldn’t.

Every time she closed her eyes, she felt it again—that pressure, that presence, that sense of something vast narrowing its focus.

Finding.

Choosing.

Her.


03:03 UTC.

The system powered on by itself.

Monitors flared to life.

The signal surged.

And for the first time—

It spoke.

Not in words.

In understanding.

A realization forced into her mind with unbearable clarity:

It had not been sent across space.

It had been sent across existence.

Eight billion years ago—before Earth, before memory, before anything she could name—something had created a signal that could not decay.

Not because it resisted the universe.

But because it carried something that refused to be lost.

Ayanna staggered, gripping the console.

Her vision blurred.

And suddenly—

She wasn’t in the lab.

She was somewhere else.

Or something else.

A presence stretched across distances she couldn’t comprehend. Time wasn’t passing—it was layered, folding in on itself. Every moment existed at once, and the signal was the thread stitching them together.

Moving.

Enduring.

Searching.

For something that could answer.

She screamed and tore herself back.

Collapsed to her knees.

The lab snapped into place around her—but it felt thinner now. Less certain.

Mateo dropped beside her. “Ayanna—what is it? What did it do?”

Her hands shook violently.

“It’s not just observing us,” she whispered.

“It’s… arriving inside us.

The signal pulsed.

Once.

Twice.

Closer.

Ayanna’s chest tightened.

Because beneath the fear—beneath the awe—something else surfaced.

Recognition.

A terrible, quiet realization:

It had been traveling for eight billion years.

Not to be heard.

To be answered.

And if no one answered?

Would it keep going?

Forever?

Alone?


Her father’s voice echoed in her memory:

Everything weakens with distance.

But this didn’t.

Because it refused to be alone.

“What are you doing?” Mateo asked as she reached for the interface.

Ayanna didn’t look at him.

“If something can endure that long,” she said, her voice breaking, “then it’s not just physics.”

The signal pulsed again.

Waiting.

“It’s loneliness.”


She pressed her hand to the console.

The moment she did, the world fractured.

Not visually.

Existentially.

Time folded. Space thinned. Her thoughts were no longer entirely her own.

She felt it—the thing inside the signal.

Ancient.

Endless.

Worn down by nothing except duration.

And beneath all of it—

A single, unbearable question.

Is anything still there?

Ayanna’s breath hitched.

Her fear shattered.

Because suddenly, she understood the cost.

Eight billion years of not fading.

Eight billion years of not being answered.

Tears spilled down her face.

And she answered.

“I’m here.”


The signal changed.

Not louder.

Not weaker.

But complete.

Across the world, every system went silent.

The waveform vanished.

The sky returned to normal.

As if nothing had ever happened.

Ayanna collapsed.

Air rushed back into her lungs like she had been underwater too long.

Something inside her felt… lighter.

And wrong.

Mateo caught her shoulders. “Ayanna—what did it say? What did you tell it?”

She blinked up at him.

His face looked… distant.

Not far away.

Just less real than it should be.

“It wasn’t a message,” she whispered.

Her voice felt like it was coming from somewhere slightly behind her own mouth.

“It was a question.”

Mateo swallowed. “And your answer?”

Ayanna hesitated.

Because something was slipping.

Not a memory.

Something deeper.

She tried to recall the moment—the contact, the presence, the weight of it.

The lights cut out.

Total darkness swallowed the room.

Mateo’s grip tightened. “Ayanna?”

Before she could answer—the monitors flickered back on.

Not blank.

Not idle.

Active.

The signal.

Perfect.

Unbroken.

Stronger than before.

“No,” Mateo breathed. “No, we lost it—”

“I know,” Ayanna whispered.

But her voice didn’t sound afraid.

The waveform didn’t behave like before.

It wasn’t pulsing.

It was… breathing.

Slow expansion.

Slow contraction.

In sync with—Ayanna’s chest.


Mateo jerked back. “Ayanna, stop—”

“I’m not doing anything.”

But she was.

Her body moved before she chose to move.

Her hand lifted.

Reached for the console.

The signal expanded.

Her vision split.

For a moment—

There were two rooms.

Two consoles.

Two versions of Mateo—

One speaking.

One silent.

“AYANNA”

The sound tore sideways.

Stretched.

Then everything snapped back.

Silence.

The monitors went dark.

For real this time.

Ayanna staggered, clutching the edge of the console.

Her pulse slammed against her ribs.

Her breath came sharp, uneven.

Mateo stared at her, pale. “That—what was that? Did you see?”

“Yes.”

But even as she said it, it was already slipping.

The edges of the moment fraying.

Like it didn’t fully belong here.

Her fingers tightened weakly against his sleeve.

“I told it…” she said.

And then she stopped.

A flicker of panic crossed her face.

Because for the first time—

She wasn’t sure.


The room hummed softly around them.

Machines idled.

Screens blank.

The universe, once again, behaving.

Too perfectly.

Mateo leaned closer, voice low, unsteady now. “Ayanna… something just happened. You—weren’t—”

He stopped.

Like he couldn’t finish the thought.

Like the words wouldn’t hold.

She looked at him.

Really looked this time.

At the shape of him.

At the outline.

At the way something about his presence felt…

Slightly incomplete.

Like a signal missing part of its pattern.

Her breath caught.

Slowly—carefully—she turned her gaze toward the observation window.

Toward the night sky.

The stars were still there.

But something about them had changed.

They felt…

Closer.

Like distance had lost its meaning.

Like something that had traveled too far—

Had finally stopped needing to travel at all.

Ayanna’s lips parted.

A realization forming.

Cold.

Quiet.

Irreversible.

The question hadn’t been:

Is anything still there?

It had been:

Who is still there?

And somewhere—far beyond distance, beyond time—

Something had listened.

Her answer came back to her then.

Not as memory.

As certainty.

Her voice trembled.

“I told it…”

A long pause.

“…I am.”

The lights flickered once.

Softly.

Ayanna stared at the glass.

At her reflection.

For a moment—everything aligned.

Then—it didn’t.

She inhaled.

The reflection didn’t.

It stood there—watching her.

Still.

Ayanna’s breath caught halfway in her chest.

A slow, cold realization spreading through her body—not panic, not yet—something worse.

Recognition without understanding.

Then—a second later—the reflection inhaled.

Too late.

Too deliberate.

Like it had seen what she did—and decided to follow.


Ayanna didn’t move.

Didn’t dare.

The reflection smiled.

Not wide.

Not exaggerated.

Just enough to be wrong.

Because Ayanna hadn’t.

Her lips trembled.

Her throat tightened.

Slowly—carefully—she raised her hand.

The reflection didn’t.

It kept smiling.

Watching her.

Then—as if remembering—it lifted its hand too.

But not to match her.

To touch the glass.

From the other side.

Palm to palm.

Except—Ayanna hadn’t reached that far.

Her hand hovered inches away.

The reflection’s fingers pressed flat.

Perfect.

Certain.

Waiting.


The gap between them felt… thin.

Not like space.

Like something that could give.

Ayanna jerked back.

The reflection didn’t follow.

It stayed where it was—hand against the glass—watching her retreat.

Smiling that same, almost-correct smile.

Then—slowly—it stepped back.

Not as a mirror would.

But like someone leaving a room.

And for a fraction of a second—before it was gone—Ayanna saw the glass clearly.

No reflection.

No version of her at all.

Just the lab behind her.

Empty.

Then the image snapped back.

Perfect again.

Aligned.

Ayanna standing there.

Breathing.

As if nothing had ever been wrong.

Behind her, Mateo said something—her name, maybe—but his voice sounded distant.

Muffled.

Because Ayanna was still staring at the glass.

At her reflection.

Waiting.

To see which one of them would move first.

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

The Blinkerwall Mystery by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Science Fiction

 

A daring team of marine archaeologists unearths a 3,000-foot-long underwater wall buried in the Baltic Sea. Covered in glowing carvings and sealed with ominous warnings, the wall holds a terrible secret—one that could rewrite human history or plunge the world into darkness. As the team unravels its mysteries, they uncover an ancient prison holding a formless entity that must never be released.


The Blinkerwall Mystery


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 1,602


The waters of Germany's Bay of Mecklenburg were calm that September morning, the sun painting the sea with streaks of gold. Marine archaeologist Dr. Livia Greaves stood at the edge of the research vessel Odyssey, peering at the sonar readings on a screen. What had begun as a routine expedition to map underwater sediment turned extraordinary within minutes.

"Is that... a wall?" muttered Finn Andersson, her assistant.

She frowned, leaning closer to the display. The sonar image revealed a long, jagged line stretching across the seabed. It was too linear to be a natural formation. “Prepare the submersible,” she ordered.

Minutes later, the small remotely operated vehicle (ROV) slipped into the water. As it descended, the murky depths gave way to the ghostly outline of an enormous stone structure.

The Blinkerwall stretched as far as the eye could see, its moss-covered stones arranged with precision. Dr. Greaves’ heart raced. This was no ordinary wall. It was ancient, predating anything ever found in this part of Europe.

“Submerged at least 9,000 years ago,” she whispered, her voice tinged with awe. "This changes everything."

Back at the Institute of Maritime Archaeology in Kiel, the team gathered to analyze the footage. The stones of the Blinkerwall were massive, some weighing over two tons, interlocked in a design that hinted at advanced engineering.

“How did Mesolithic people move stones like this?” Finn asked, gesturing at the screen. “And why build it underwater?”

“It wasn’t underwater then,” Livia replied. “During the Mesolithic era, sea levels were much lower. This area would have been a lush, fertile plain.”

Theories buzzed around the room. Some speculated the wall was defensive, built to protect settlements from invaders. Others suggested it was ceremonial, a site for rituals or astronomical alignments.

But she had another theory, one that unsettled her. “What if it wasn’t built by humans?”

The room fell silent.

“Are you suggesting extraterrestrials?” Finn asked with a smirk.

“No,” she said, shaking her head. “But something about the structure feels... unnatural. Almost like it was meant to hide something.”

A month later, she led an expedition to explore the wall up close. The dive team included experts in Mesolithic archaeology, marine geology, and ancient languages.

As they descended to the Blinkerwall, the sheer scale of the structure became apparent. Its stones were etched with strange symbols, patterns that seemed to tell a story.

Finn swam closer to one of the carvings. “These markings... they look like a map.”

“A map to what?” she asked, examining the symbols. Her gloved fingers traced a spiral pattern at the center. A sudden jolt of cold shot through her hand, and she pulled back, startled.

“What happened?” Finn asked.

“I... I don’t know,” she stammered. “It felt like the stone was alive.”

As they explored further, they found a narrow opening in the wall, sealed with a stone slab. The slab bore an inscription in an unknown script, but its message was clear: “DO NOT OPEN.”

“What do you think, Dr. Greaves?” Finn asked, his voice laced with both excitement and fear.

Livia hesitated. Every instinct told her to heed the warning, but the scientist in her couldn’t resist. “We open it.”

The team worked for hours to dislodge the slab. When it finally gave way, a rush of bubbles erupted, and the water around them seemed to tremble. Behind the slab was a dark tunnel, its walls lined with more carvings.

“Let’s go,” shr said, leading the way.

The tunnel twisted and turned, leading them deeper into the seabed. Strange bioluminescent algae lit their path, casting eerie green light on the walls. At the end of the tunnel, they found a cavernous chamber.

In the center of the chamber stood a massive stone altar, surrounded by artifacts: tools, weapons, and pottery. But it was what lay on the altar that made her blood run cold.

A skeleton, impossibly large, with elongated limbs and a skull that bore no resemblance to any human or animal known to science.

“What is that?” Finn whispered.

“I don’t know,” she replied, her voice barely audible. “But it’s not human.”

As they documented the chamber, a low hum filled the water. The markings on the walls began to glow, and the skeleton seemed to stir.

“We need to leave,” she said, her voice firm. “Now.”

But as they turned to exit, the tunnel behind them began to collapse, trapping them inside. The hum grew louder, and the skeleton’s eyes began to glow with an otherworldly light.

The hum grew deafening as the walls trembled, dislodging debris that clouded the water. The team huddled together near the altar, their flashlights flickering erratically.

The skeleton on the altar twitched again, its elongated fingers scraping against the stone. It was coming to life.

“Dr. Greaves, what is this?” Finn’s voice cracked, panic overtaking him.

“I don’t know!” she yelled, scanning the room for any escape route. Her eyes landed on a smaller tunnel hidden behind a pile of collapsed rubble. “There—through there!”

As the team scrambled toward the opening, the skeletal figure began to rise. Its bones glowed faintly, pulsating with the same eerie light as the carvings on the walls. It let out a low, guttural sound, resonating through the chamber like a predator waking from a long slumber.

The tunnel was narrow and claustrophobic, forcing the team to crawl single file. Behind them, the glowing skeleton lurched forward, moving with a nightmarish grace despite its size.

“It’s following us!” Finn shouted, his voice echoing.

The team pressed on, their movements frantic. The tunnel eventually opened into another chamber, smaller but just as threatening. At its center stood a pedestal holding a strange artifact—a stone disk engraved with the same spiral pattern they’d seen earlier.

Livia stepped toward the pedestal, her instincts screaming at her to stop, but she couldn’t. The disk seemed to call to her, its surface shimmering as if alive.

“Dr. Greaves, don’t touch it!” Finn pleaded, but she was already reaching out.

The moment her fingers grazed the disk, a surge of energy coursed through her body, and visions exploded in her mind—images of the Blinkerwall being built by people who didn’t look entirely human, their elongated features resembling the skeleton they’d just encountered.

She saw the wall rise, stone by stone, as these beings worked with tools that emitted beams of light. The wall wasn’t built as a boundary—it was a prison, designed to seal something far worse than the glowing skeleton.

Livia staggered back, clutching the disk. “The wall… it’s not just ancient. It’s a warning. We’ve unleashed something that was never meant to be freed.”

The glow from the disk intensified, and the chamber shook violently. The skeleton, now at the entrance of the tunnel, let out a bone-chilling wail.

“It’s reacting to the disk!” Finn yelled.

Dr. Greaves turned to face her team, determination hardening her expression. “We need to seal this place back up. The disk might be the key.”

“How?” another team member asked, panic evident in his voice.

Before she could answer, the skeleton lunged into the chamber, its bony hand reaching for her. In a split-second decision, she held the disk upwards. The artifact emitted a brilliant light, forcing the creature to recoil with an agonized screech.

“It’s working!” Finn exclaimed.

The light from the disk seemed to weaken the skeleton, but the chamber was collapsing faster now. Rocks and debris rained down, cutting off their exit.

“We’ll be buried alive,” Finn said grimly.

“No,” she replied, her voice steady. “The disk can seal it again, but we need to trap ourselves in here to stop it.”

The team exchanged horrified glances. “There has to be another way!” one of them shouted.

“There isn’t!” she snapped. “This isn’t just about us. If that thing gets out, the world as we know it could end.”

The skeleton, recovering from the disk’s light, lunged again. Livia thrust the artifact toward it, and the creature froze, suspended mid-air.

“Help me move the pedestal!” she yelled. The team hesitated, but Finn stepped forward, pushing the stone pedestal toward the center of the room with her.

She placed the disk back onto the pedestal. The carvings on the walls flared to life, and the chamber began to hum again, but this time with a rhythmic, almost soothing rhythm.

“We’re triggering the lock,” she explained.

As the chamber’s hum reached a gradual increase in loudness, beams of light shot out from the walls, converging on the skeleton. The creature let out a final, blood-curdling scream as it disintegrated into dust.

The walls around them began to seal, stone sliding into place as if the structure were alive.

“Dr. Greaves!” Finn shouted. “The exit—”

“There’s no time,” she said, stepping back toward the pedestal. “This was never meant to be opened. It has to end here.”

Finn grabbed her arm, his eyes pleading. “We’ll find another way!”

But she shook her head, her face determined. “This is my responsibility.”

As the chamber sealed completely, the last thing Finn saw was her determined gaze, the glow of the artifact illuminating her like a guardian of a forgotten era.


Months later, the Odyssey was recovered, adrift in the Bay of Mecklenburg. Its crew was missing, but their findings—a trove of sonar images, video footage, and journals—shocked the scientific community.

The Blinkerwall was declared a protected site, its mysteries sealed beneath the waves once more. But deep within the Bay, the hum of the ancient prison continued, a reminder that some secrets are best left buried.

And some sacrifices never forgotten.

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

The Sands of What Will Be by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Science Fiction

 

In 1000 BC, a prophetess discovers a mysterious device capable of showing and altering the future. As her drought-stricken kingdom teeters on collapse, she must make an impossible choice: save her people in the present or sacrifice their safety to secure a thriving future for their descendants. With fate twisting in her hands, she learns that true leadership often demands unseen sacrifices.


The Sands of What Will Be


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 900



In 1000 BC, a prophetess revered for her visions stands before her people, opening a device from a future unimaginable—a device that offers the power to rewrite destiny but at an unspeakable cost.

***

The desert sun was merciless, a hammer beating down on Nira’s kingdom. The drought had stretched into its third year, and whispers of desperation swirled through the village. Laborers digging for a new well had found something strange beneath the sands: a smooth, glowing slab unlike anything her people had ever seen.

It lay now on the altar before her, cradled in Rahi’s trembling hands. Her attendant’s dark eyes darted between the artifact and her face, silently pleading for her wisdom.

“Oracle,” Rahi whispered, “what is this thing?”

Nira reached out, her fingers grazing its cool surface. The moment she touched it, her vision warped. Colors sharpened, then split apart like broken glass.

She gasped. The altar vanished, replaced by images: her people wandering across barren lands, raiders descending like vultures, rivers running red under a blood-drenched sky. Then, suddenly, the desert bloomed. She saw grass-covered valleys, full bellies, children laughing. But the faces were different—distant echoes of her people, yet changed.

When the vision faded, she staggered. Rahi caught her by the arm. “Oracle, what did you see?”

Nira steadied herself and lifted her chin. “Bring the elders. Now.”


The elders assembled, their faces lined with worry and mistrust. They eyed the glowing slab as though it might leap from the altar and devour them.

“This is no gift of the gods,” one elder muttered.

“Be silent,” Nira snapped. Her voice carried authority, but inside, doubt gnawed at her. “The artifact offers... knowledge. A map of what is to come.”

“And what does it say?” another elder demanded.

Nira hesitated. “It shows that our choices today will shape the survival of our people tomorrow.”

Her words stirred a murmur among them, but she didn’t explain further. She couldn’t. The truth was more complicated, more dangerous. Each time she touched the device, it revealed more paths, more futures, but also the cost of tampering. In one vision, she saw herself striking an alliance with the northern raiders; in another, she led her people into battle. Each path led to ruin in its own way.

Her people had entrusted her with their lives, and yet she felt powerless. Was this what the gods intended? Or was the device mocking her faith, dangling impossible choices before her?


Late one night, as the village slept, Nira studied the device alone. Rahi found her sitting cross-legged in the sand, the glowing slab illuminating her face.

“You haven’t eaten all day,” he said, kneeling beside her. “You look like a ghost.”

Nira barely glanced at him. “This device—it doesn’t show one future. It shows many. And each time I choose, the sands shift beneath my feet.”

Rahi frowned. “You always find the right path. You always have.”

“No,” she whispered, her voice cracking. “Not this time. If I save us now, I doom us later. If I let us suffer now, the future may flourish. How do I decide who deserves to live? Who deserves to die?”

He placed a hand on hers. “You cannot carry this alone, Nira. Let us help.”

She looked at him then, tears streaming silently down her face. “No one can help me. Not with this.”


The visions intensified as the drought worsened. Her people grew restless, their faith in her slipping. The elders whispered among themselves, their doubts spreading like poison.

One day, the device presented a clear vision: her people, abandoning the desert for the fertile valley she had seen. But to force their migration, she had to do nothing as disaster unfolded—the rivers drying, the raiders attacking. If she intervened to save them now, they would never leave, and their descendants would wither in an unyielding land.

At dawn, she summoned the village to the altar.

“The gods have spoken,” she declared, her voice unwavering despite the storm inside her. “We must leave this place. The rivers will not return. The sands are no longer our home.”

An elder stepped forward, his face twisted with fury. “You would lead us to our deaths? Abandon all we have built?”

“I would lead us to life,” she answered, her gaze piercing.

The crowd roared with protest, but she raised a hand, silencing them. “I have seen what lies ahead. Trust me as you always have. Trust that I will guide us to salvation.”


As the villagers prepared for the evacuation, Nira stood alone by the altar. The device flickered, displaying an image that made her heart stop.

It was a woman, older but unmistakably her, standing in a lush valley surrounded by her people. The woman mouthed silent words: It must be done.

Understanding flooded Nira. The device was not only a map of futures but a loop. She was both the guide and the guided, the one who would plant the seeds for her people’s salvation centuries from now.

With trembling hands, she deactivated the device and buried it where it had been found. Its glow faded beneath the sand, waiting for another time, another choice.

As she turned toward her people, already marching toward the horizon, she felt a strange sense of peace. She would lead them forward, knowing that her sacrifice would one day bloom into their salvation.


The Gap That Breathes by Olivia Salter / Novella / Literary Fiction / Social Realism

  The Gap That Breathes By Olivia Salter Word Count: 13,764 Marcus Reed needed the job to work. Not as hope. Not as ambition. As arithmeti...