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Wednesday, November 27, 2024
Be the Heart by Olivia Salter | Poetry
She Who Blooms Wild by Olivia Salter | Poetry
She Who Blooms Wild
By Olivia Salter
She rises beneath an endless sky,
A woman rooted in rugged land,
Where shadows sleep and echoes lie—
Untouched by any hand.
She drinks from light that others shun,
Survives where rivers cease,
A soul forged fierce beneath the sun,
Her strength a quiet peace.
No name can hold her boundless grace,
No law can make her yield;
With windswept hair and open face,
She roams the open field.
She blooms beyond what hands can claim,
A wildness pure and free;
In her, the earth and fire flame,
Alive in mystery.
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
The Digital Reflection of Darian King by Olivia Salter | Short Story
The Digital Reflection of Darian King
By Olivia Salter
Word Count: 3,381
The rain fell in steady sheets against the glistening skyscrapers of New York, painting the night in streaks of neon and shadow. Darian King stood by a floor-to-ceiling window, the city lights glimmering in his eyes, his reflection more vivid than his surroundings. Tonight was the launch of his first solo show, and the loft gallery buzzed with artists, critics, and influencers—each of them primed for spectacle.
Eli Basil, Darian’s longtime friend and the artist responsible for tonight’s centerpiece, slipped through the crowd like a shadow, his presence barely more than a whisper amid the clinking glasses and quiet murmurs. His eyes found Darian across the room, and he moved closer, clutching a slim USB drive in his palm.
“Darian,” Eli’s voice was a low murmur, as if he carried a secret meant only for them. “I finished the portrait. The one you wanted.” He held up the drive, offering it like a token of something sacred. “It’s on here. A version of you the world will remember.”
Darian’s fingers closed around the drive, feeling the weight of it, though it was feather-light. “Perfect?” he asked, his voice somewhere between curiosity and a need for affirmation.
“Perfect,” Eli replied, his eyes dark and unreadable. “As perfect as you are.”
They moved toward the back of the gallery, where Darian’s laptop was stashed in a private office. Eli watched silently as Darian slid the drive into the port, the screen flickering to life. And there it was—his image, rendered in high resolution. The version of himself he had always longed to see.
Darian drew in a slow breath. He looked… powerful, magnetic. Eli had somehow distilled not just his face but the essence of his ambition, his insatiable need to be admired and adored. In this digital reflection, his eyes sparkled with something almost otherworldly.
“Unreal,” Darian breathed, his voice thick with awe. “This… this doesn’t even look like me.”
“It’s more than you,” Eli said, leaning closer. “It’s the ideal version of you.”
For a moment, Darian felt a chill. But he brushed it off quickly, savoring the intoxicating thrill of seeing himself like this. This wasn’t just an image—it was a mirror into something deeper, something untouchable.
Eli’s friend, Henry, wandered into the office, leaning against the doorframe with a sarcastic smile. “Oh, don’t let me interrupt,” he said with a slight smirk. “Admiring your own beauty, Darian? Careful—too much self-love can ruin you.”
Darian turned, rolling his eyes at Henry’s provocations. They’d met a few months back, and though Darian couldn’t always trust Henry’s blunt opinions, he liked his cynicism, his bold disregard for anything sincere. Henry was the one who’d taught him to see admiration as currency—to cultivate it, hoard it, and wield it.
“Not everyone can understand the value of beauty, Henry,” Darian replied, his tone light but his words carrying an edge.
Henry only laughed, patting Darian on the shoulder. “You’ve got it all, Darian. Beauty, talent, charm. You’re invincible—at least as long as you never stop looking that good.” His eyes flicked to the image on the screen, an amused glint dancing across his face.
Darian only smiled, looking back at the image. He knew Henry’s praise wasn’t meant to be reassuring, but it didn’t matter. He’d never felt more alive.
***
Two weeks later, the nights in New York blurred together. Darian drifted through exclusive parties, drank in rooftop lounges, and found himself photographed at every corner. His face—always carefully lit, perfectly angled—started appearing in glossy spreads, on social media, splashed across influencer feeds. He basked in the glow, feeding off the applause that followed him.
And yet, there was the portrait.
It stayed hidden on his laptop, locked away where only he could find it. And every time he opened it, he saw something different. Maybe it was just the lighting, or a trick of the screen, but the image looked… different. His eyes appeared a little darker, the shadow beneath his jaw deeper, the hint of a line forming across his forehead. Little things he brushed off as nothing more than an artist’s flourish, a bit of drama added by Eli.
But as the days turned into weeks, Darian noticed the changes growing. He had looked into the mirror just this morning, his skin smooth, unlined, his eyes bright and clear. But in the digital image, his face held a slight, almost invisible strain, as though the weight of all he carried was beginning to etch itself into his skin.
He ignored it, of course. Who cared if a digital portrait showed him with a slight frown, a shadow he hadn’t noticed before? He was living his dream, reveling in the glamour and allure of his own success. The world was his mirror, reflecting back everything he wanted to believe about himself.
But as he closed the laptop one night, the faintest whisper of dread clawed at the edges of his thoughts. He shook it off, pushing it away, but the feeling remained—a lingering sense that something about the image, about himself, was beginning to unravel.
***
One month later, Darian’s nights stretched longer, spilling into mornings. He’d perfected his look for photos, the slight tilt of his head, the exact squint of his eyes to project intensity. Every post on his feed went viral; every comment, every like, stoked the embers of his confidence into a blazing fire.
But the portrait—now a fixture in his nightly ritual— torture him. It had become an obsession. He would check it after every event, every new conquest, seeking confirmation that his allure, his perfection, was as unbreakable as he wanted to believe.
Instead, each time he opened the file, he found a subtle new flaw. Lines deepened under his eyes, his expression grew harder, his smile twisted into something that bordered on cruel. The darkening image seemed to peer back at him with an accusatory glare, like a version of himself he didn’t want to see.
One evening, he sat alone in his loft, the city’s glow casting long shadows across his face. He had been avoiding Eli since the portrait's completion, a combination of guilt and irritation building in his chest. But tonight, he couldn’t ignore the changes any longer. He needed answers.
“Eli,” he said, his voice blunt when his friend picked up. “Meet me at my place. I need to talk to you about… the portrait.”
There was a hesitation on the other end, and Darian sensed Eli’s reluctance. But after a beat, he agreed.
***
Eli arrived an hour later, shoulders hunched, eyes flickering around Darian’s carefully curated space. The loft was more than just an apartment; it was a stage, every piece of furniture carefully chosen to project an image of effortless style. But tonight, the carefully crafted aura felt hollow, like a set left vacant after the actors had gone.
Darian wasted no time, dragging Eli over to the laptop. “Look,” he said, the edge of desperation threading his words as he opened the file. “Something’s… wrong with it.”
Eli leaned in, eyes narrowing as he studied the screen. Darian watched him, scanning his face for a reaction. He wanted Eli to tell him it was just the lighting, just a trick of the digital display. Instead, Eli’s lips thinned, and his gaze darkened.
“It’s not the same,” Darian pressed. “I haven’t changed, but it has.”
Eli’s face was unreadable as he studied the distorted reflection. “Art,” he murmured, almost to himself, “is a mirror, Darian. Sometimes it shows more than we expect.” His eyes met Darian’s, and for a moment, there was something raw there—an emotion Darian didn’t want to name.
“What’s that supposed to mean?” Darian snapped, though his anger was tinged with a flicker of fear. “Are you saying this thing is changing on its own?”
Eli sighed, rubbing the back of his neck. “Maybe it’s reflecting you. Not your face, but… everything else. The things you’re carrying, the choices you’re making.”
Darian’s jaw tightened. “You’re saying this is my fault?”
“Not fault,” Eli corrected gently, though his eyes were shadowed. “But maybe it’s trying to show you something you’re not seeing.”
Darian dismissed him, slamming the laptop shut. “I don’t believe in that. I don’t believe in… superstitions or some creepy reflection nonsense. It’s just a picture. And I want you to fix it.”
Eli’s lips pressed into a thin line, his gaze heavy. “Some things can’t be fixed, Darian. Not without changing what’s causing the problem in the first place.”
Darian waved him off, irritation flaring hotter than ever. “You’re just jealous, Eli. You can’t stand seeing me successful, loved, and… and beautiful.”
Eli’s expression fell, but he didn’t argue. He only watched as Darian turned away, his face etched with a sadness Darian refused to acknowledge.
As Eli left, Darian felt a pang of something unfamiliar—something that clawed at his chest, an ache that felt close to loneliness. But he shoved it down, burying it under the familiar glow of his phone, the notification bubble lighting up with likes and comments.
Yet as he stared at the screen, the words blurred, and for the first time, they felt hollow. A sea of names, faces he barely knew, strangers propping up the image he had created. An image he wasn’t even sure he recognized anymore.
***
Another month passes, the changes in the portrait escalated, becoming grotesque. Darian’s once-perfect smile now seemed twisted in a sneer, his eyes hollow and dark. He could no longer brush it off as a trick of light. The image was haunting, a reminder of something he couldn’t shake.
Darian tried to drown the nagging fear in new pursuits, relationships that burned fast and ended in silence. He ghosted Sabine, the actress he’d dated briefly, leaving her to deal with the fallout of the press’s scrutiny on her own. She had come to him, tear-streaked and heartbroken, asking for answers, for closure. But Darian, too self-consumed, had pushed her away with a shrug.
One night, while scrolling through old photos, he found an image from when he’d first arrived in New York. He looked… bright, hopeful. That version of himself felt like a stranger. When he opened the digital portrait afterward, the contrast hit him like a blow to the chest. The version of himself in the portrait was barely recognizable now—a hollow-eyed, jagged-edged creature he wouldn’t have acknowledged in daylight.
But it wasn’t just the image. Lately, people had started treating him differently. His once-loyal friends grew distant, their voices tinged with hesitation, their glances skittish. His interactions felt strained, as if they were sensing something off. Even Henry, normally unfazed by Darian’s worst qualities, had grown oddly silent.
***
One evening, unable to take the isolation any longer, Darian called Henry, demanding he come over. Henry arrived late, leaning against the doorframe with a wary look, his casual smirk absent.
“What’s going on with you?” Henry asked, his tone unusually serious.
“Nothing,” Darian replied sharply. “But people are acting strange. They look at me like…” His voice trailed off, frustration flaring as he searched for words. “Like I’m someone else. Like they don’t even know me.”
Henry watched him in silence for a moment before answering. “Maybe they don’t.”
“What the hell is that supposed to mean?” Darian’s voice rose, his fists clenched.
Henry only shrugged, his gaze flicking to the laptop on the table. “I think you know. Deep down, at least.”
Darian’s jaw clenched as he felt the rage simmering under his skin. “No. No, I’m the same. I haven’t changed.”
Henry’s expression was resigned. “Everyone can see it but you, Darian. There’s a price for the things you do, for the way you treat people. Maybe it’s just catching up with you.”
Darian could barely breathe, the weight of Henry’s words pressing on his chest. He glanced at the laptop, the closed screen a silent accusation. His stomach twisted, anger morphing into something darker—an emptiness that gnawed at him from within.
With a harsh laugh, he shoved Henry out of his apartment, the door slamming shut behind him. He didn’t need this. He didn’t need anyone.
But as he stood in the empty loft, the silence echoed, filling the space where his confidence had once been. And despite himself, he couldn’t stop the trembling in his hands as he reached for the laptop, knowing that no matter what he saw, he couldn’t look away.
***
A week later, Darian was unraveling. The changes in the portrait—no longer subtle, no longer ignorable—haunted him like a shadow that grew darker with each glance. The once-handsome face now looked monstrous, twisted by an expression that was both vacant and menacing, as if every unkind thought, every careless betrayal, had etched itself there. His flawless skin had dulled, taking on a sickly, almost corpse-like hue.
He became obsessed with trying to fix it. He’d spend hours tweaking settings, adjusting lighting, trying to erase the flaws, but every edit made it worse, deepening the darkness, sharpening the hollow lines. It was like the image was fighting back, reflecting a truth he couldn’t accept.
His work suffered, his friends disappeared. He barely left his apartment, the glow of his laptop casting long, eerie shadows across his face late into the night. Each day, he convinced himself that the changes weren’t real—that he was simply overworked, overtired, maybe even hallucinating.
But deep down, he knew better.
***
On a night when the silence was too much to bear, Darian tried to lose himself in the city’s nightlife, drifting from bar to bar in search of distraction. But even the city, with all its lights and laughter, couldn’t drown out the darkness he felt gnawing at him.
At one of his usual spots, he spotted Sabine. She stood with a group of friends, laughing and radiant under the dim lights. When she noticed him, her smile vanished, replaced by a look of thinly veiled disdain.
“Darian,” she said flatly as he approached, her eyes cold. “Still charming the world?”
“Sabine,” he began, his voice softer than he’d intended. “It’s good to see you.” He forced a smile, but her glare remained steady, unmoved.
She crossed her arms. “You’re as fake as they come, Darian. I wasted so much time thinking you cared.”
He chuckled, a hint of bitterness creeping in. “Oh, please. Don’t act like I forced you to be with me. You wanted the fame, the thrill, the drama. Just like everyone else.”
Her face twisted in hurt, but her voice remained firm. “You think the world revolves around you. But you’re just… empty, Darian. Whatever you were trying to prove—whatever made you so hollow—it's eating you alive. You might not see it, but everyone else does.”
She turned and walked away, leaving him standing alone, her words lingering like the faint sting of alcohol on his lips.
But this time, the anger he expected didn’t come. Instead, a cold wave of shame washed over him. He looked around the room, suddenly aware of the distance between himself and everyone else, as if they were all standing in the light, and he was trapped in shadow.
***
Back in his apartment, a grim sense of dread had replaced the smug satisfaction he once felt about his life. He sank into his chair, the laptop glowing in the dim room, the faint hum filling the silence.
Darian’s fingers hovered over the touchpad, reluctant to open the portrait. But the pull was undeniable, the need to see it, to confront the thing that had been his obsession, his curse.
When the file loaded, he recoiled. The image had morphed further. His face was gaunt, skeletal, with sunken eyes that seemed to stare back at him, mocking him. The mouth was twisted in a cruel, sneering grin. It looked barely human—a grotesque mask that captured the very essence of every horrible thought, every cruel word, every selfish act.
With a shudder, he realized it was the face of a monster.
In a fit of rage, he tried to delete it, his fingers feverishly pounding keys. But every attempt failed, the file refusing to disappear, no matter what he did. The laptop froze, the image remaining on the screen, glaring back at him with a darkness that seemed to reach out from the screen.
Panicked, he slammed the laptop shut, but even with the screen dark, he couldn’t shake the feeling that the image was still there, burned into his mind.
***
Days passed, and Darian’s isolation deepened. The bright young face he once saw in the mirror now looked hollowed out, exhausted, despite his efforts to keep up appearances. The makeup he applied to cover his darkening eyes, the careful styling of his hair—all of it felt pointless. People still saw through it, saw through him.
He sought out Henry again, desperate for some way to undo what had been done. They met at a dim, nearly empty bar, Henry’s face unreadable as Darian recounted his desperation, his horror.
Henry’s voice was grim. “So, you’re finally realizing the cost.”
Darian gripped his glass, his hand trembling. “I don’t care about the cost. I just want to be myself again. I want the image… the portrait to stop changing.”
Henry looked at him, pity darkening his gaze. “The reflection isn’t lying to you, Darian. It’s showing you what you are. What you’ve done.”
Darian shook his head, a look of anger and frustration crossing his face. “But I can’t undo it. I can’t… take it back.”
Henry sighed, as if speaking to a child who still didn’t understand. “The only way out, Darian, is to change what’s in here,” he said, tapping his chest. “Until you face what you’ve become, the portrait will keep showing you the truth.”
Henry stood, leaving Darian alone, the words lingering long after he had gone.
***
Haunted, Darian returned to his loft, mind racing. He sat on his couch, laptop on his knees, the dark screen like a gateway into something he could no longer escape.
“I’m not a monster,” he whispered to the empty room, but his voice wavered, betraying him.
In a final, reckless act, he decided to confront the portrait one last time. He opened the laptop, bracing himself. This time, the portrait didn’t show him at all.
It was just a blank, black screen, with two gleaming, hollow eyes peering out of the darkness. They looked straight through him, as if seeing everything he had tried to hide, every weakness, every flaw.
The sight broke something inside him, and he found himself gripping the edges of the laptop, his breaths coming in shallow, rapid gasps.
“No,” he whispered, his voice trembling. “I won’t… I won’t let it end like this.”
But as he stared into those hollow eyes, he felt a terrifying sense of inevitability settle over him. The face was no longer something he could hide, no longer a reflection he could escape. It was him, stripped of all pretense, all illusions.
In a final, desperate moment, he took the laptop and hurled it across the room, the screen shattering on impact. The pieces scattered across the floor, fragments of glass and metal, each one catching the light, like tiny shards of a broken mirror.
But as he stared at the wreckage, the empty eyes still lingered in his mind, haunting him, mocking him.
For the first time, he realized he couldn’t escape himself. No matter what he did, he would always be haunted by the choices he had made, the image he had become.
***
Months later, Darian was scarcely recognizable. The world had moved on, as it always did, forgetting the once-bright star who had captured so much attention. He was alone, his life reduced to quiet solitude, his friends and fame long gone.
Every now and then, he would see his reflection—a glimpse in a window, a flash in a mirror. But each time, he saw something darker staring back, a reminder of the image that had once consumed him.
And every night, in the silence of his empty loft, he felt those eyes watching him still.
Monday, November 25, 2024
Beneath the Veins by Olivia Salter | Short Fiction
Beneath the Veins
By Olivia Salter
Word Count: 1,807
The fluorescent light overhead buzzed softly, casting the room in a sickly yellow tint. Shadows clung to every corner, faint but ever-present, as though waiting to close in. Jared lay strapped to the hospital bed, his chest rising and falling in shallow, labored breaths. A pungent, earthy smell clung to him, and the rough patches along his skin looked almost alive, a patchwork of tiny green specks and veins swollen to unnatural proportions. Each beat of his heart pulsed along his arms and neck, where something dark and rootlike seemed to creep just beneath the surface.
Olivia, the nurse on duty, approached him cautiously. She was used to seeing addicts and people with desperate choices etched into their skin, but this? She’d never seen anything like this.
She reached for his wrist, trying to calm the trembling in her hands. When her fingers brushed against his skin, a roughness rasped against her fingertips, as though the once-soft flesh had been colonized by something else, something that had taken root inside him. For a moment, she could almost feel it moving beneath her touch.
He winced and opened his bloodshot eyes, looking at her with a flicker of something that might have been hope, if not for the overwhelming glaze of pain clouding them.
“What… happened?” she asked softly, her voice barely a whisper.
Jared’s mouth moved, lips dry and cracked as he managed a raspy answer. “It’s… inside me,” he breathed, his gaze drifting away, perhaps to a memory. “I needed… peace. Just a way out of… all this.” His face twisted, as though even speaking took a monumental effort.
Images flickered through his mind: the cramped, cluttered apartment, the buzzing silence he couldn't escape, and the mushroom tea he’d boiled up after hearing from some stranger online that it would take him somewhere “beyond all this.” Anything, he’d thought, would be better than lying awake, feeling nothing but empty walls pressing in around him.
As Olivia watched him, her chest tightened. She understood the loneliness she saw in his eyes, but this… She forced herself to remain professional, but each second tugged harder at her, his desperation resonating deeper than she wanted to admit.
The hospital room’s hum grew louder, and a faint scraping sound caught her attention. Her eyes widened as she looked at Jared’s arm, where dark tendrils traced a path up his skin. Tiny white growths bloomed along the veins, spreading like spores on damp soil, each one digging deeper into his flesh. She pulled her hand back instinctively, heart hammering.
Outside the room, the doctors’ voices murmured, the words “mycelium infection” and “unprecedented” drifting in fragments through the door. She half-listened, the medical jargon sounding surreal against the reality before her.
Inside, Jared was losing ground to the thing growing within him. The tingling itch was now a consuming burn, spreading through his chest and limbs, wrapping around his bones. It hurt in a way he hadn’t thought pain could, every nerve screaming under the relentless invasion. He felt himself slipping away, as if whatever part of him had once been human was receding, replaced by a cold, consuming life that had no empathy and no end.
His eyes flicked back to Olivia, and he saw her watching him, eyes wide with a horror she couldn’t fully hide. He tried to form words, to explain, but they wouldn’t come. Instead, he managed a small, choked gasp, a sound both pleading and resigned. She wanted to reach out, to squeeze his hand, to tell him he wasn’t alone, that he was still human, but the sight of those green veins—of the fungus creeping ever upward—held her back.
Olivia stepped toward the door, her hand on the handle, but she couldn’t bring herself to leave just yet. She glanced back, meeting his eyes one last time, and saw something in them: a flicker of fear, and beneath that, a strange acceptance. He’d surrendered to it, the growing thing that was claiming him piece by piece, filling the emptiness he’d once felt with a living, relentless purpose.
As she watched, another line of spores pushed through his skin along his jaw, branching out like ivy searching for light. Jared’s eyes fluttered closed, and his breathing slowed, steadying as if the pain were fading, as if he’d reached a place beyond suffering.
Olivia took a step back, lingering in the doorway as she whispered, “I’m sorry, Jared.”
The silence that followed Olivia’s apology weighed heavy, pressing against her chest as she turned from the door, ready to leave him alone with whatever strange life was taking him over. But a faint rustle stopped her, pulling her gaze back to the bed. Jared’s body had gone still, the tension in his face melting into an eerie calm. His lips, once dry and cracked, softened, a hint of color returning to them as though blood—and something else—flowed fresh beneath the surface.
And then his eyes opened.
They were no longer clouded with pain or fear. Instead, they held a peculiar brightness, a depth that hadn’t been there before. His pupils seemed to pulse slightly, as though the veins connecting them to his heart now carried something far from human.
"Olivia," he murmured, and his voice was different, a low, steady tone that seemed to echo in her mind. He didn’t sound afraid anymore; he sounded calm, almost serene.
She took a step back, her hand tightening around the doorknob, but something in his gaze held her rooted in place. It was Jared’s face, his features, but there was an unsettling shift to them, a smoothness that made her stomach twist. His skin, pale and nearly translucent, had taken on an odd luminescence, a slight greenish tint beneath the surface. Where his veins had once pulsed, tiny white filaments now spread outward in patterns almost… beautiful.
"Are you… Are you still Jared?" she asked, her voice a hoarse whisper.
Jared tilted his head, as if considering the question. He lifted his hand slowly, fingers curling and uncurling, as though testing how his body worked. "I am… more than Jared," he said finally. “I am the one who found the peace he wanted. And I’m something… new.”
Olivia’s hand tightened on the knob, but she couldn’t make herself leave. There was a pull in his words, a quiet assurance that disarmed her even as it filled her with a creeping sense of dread.
“The loneliness, the hurt,” Jared continued, his voice steady, his gaze fixed on her with an intensity that left her feeling exposed, as though he could see the small, hidden parts of her soul. “I thought I could escape them with a drink, a pill, with this tea. But all I did was feed it… feed the darkness inside. Now I understand. The tea—it didn’t take me away. It showed me a path inward.”
The filaments beneath his skin shifted, growing in thin, delicate lines along his collarbone, down his arms, sprouting like roots seeking soil. His body no longer fought against them; it embraced them, let them flourish and weave with every beat of his heart. Watching him was like watching the quiet spread of moss over stone, the steady, inevitable creep of nature overtaking something once human.
“Jared,” Olivia whispered, a plea in her tone. “Let me help you. There’s still time… maybe they can….”
But he smiled, the expression both serene and haunting. “Help? I’m beyond help now. I’m part of something vast, something that has existed long before either of us. This…” He lifted his hand, fingers curling inward, his skin shifting to reveal a delicate web of mycelium beneath. “This is peace.”
Olivia’s heart raced, her instincts screaming for her to leave, but she hesitated, searching his gaze for some remnant of the man she’d seen only hours ago—a man who’d been so desperate to escape his pain that he’d reached for something unknown, something dangerous.
He seemed to sense her inner conflict and tilted his head. “It doesn’t have to be terrifying, Olivia,” he murmured. “Loneliness, fear, pain—they’re just parts of a world that tells us we’re alone, that we’re separate. But this—” he spread his arms, showing the web-like growths that pulsed with a strange life, a hidden beauty, “this connection runs deeper. We’re all just… threads in a larger fabric. You don’t have to be alone.”
Olivia felt a strange tug inside her, a whisper in the back of her mind, urging her to come closer. Her pulse quickened, and she took a small, involuntary step forward, drawn to him in a way she couldn’t explain, her thoughts muddying as she tried to remind herself of who he had been—Jared, the patient, the man who needed help.
But Jared wasn’t that man anymore. And as she stared into his eyes, she sensed he didn’t want to return to who he’d been.
“Join me,” he said softly, his voice low and soothing, like a soothing song, like a promise. “There’s no loneliness here. Just life. Just… belonging.”
For a fleeting moment, Olivia saw herself reflected in his eyes, her own exhaustion mirrored back at her, the isolation she’d felt, the weariness that came with watching suffering day after day. She understood that pull, that longing for something beyond, for something to fill the empty spaces.
But as her hand reached for his, something snapped inside her. She wrenched her gaze away, her fingers falling to her side, and stumbled back toward the door.
“Jared,” she whispered, a tremor in her voice, “I can’t.”
He watched her for a long moment, that same gentle, otherworldly calm in his gaze. He didn’t plead or try to convince her further. He only nodded, his expression softening, as though he already knew her answer and had accepted it long before she spoke.
As Olivia backed out of the room, she saw him close his eyes, a peaceful smile settling on his face as the filaments continued their quiet journey beneath his skin. He was content, whole in a way she’d never seen him before, a man who had found a place beyond fear, beyond loneliness—a place she wasn’t yet ready to follow.
The door clicked shut behind her, and Olivia took a shaky breath, pressing her back against the wall outside his room. She could still feel the pull of his words, the strange allure of what he’d offered. But she pushed it down, swallowing hard, reminding herself of who she was, of the life she still had yet to live.
And as she walked down the hallway, leaving Jared behind, she couldn’t shake the feeling that part of him had stayed with her, a faint, lingering presence woven like a thread into her mind, his invitation echoing softly in the depths of her heart.
Sunday, November 24, 2024
The Silent Ones by Olivia Salter | Short Fiction
The Silent Ones
By Olivia Salter
Word Count: 1,015
The sky hung heavy and gloomy, deep bruised purples streaking through the clouds as Jackie’s car crawled up the gravel drive. She shut off the engine, the car ticking as it cooled, and stared at the farmhouse ahead, squat and sinking in a field of wild grass. The land was still, almost too still, like a held breath, and the house itself seemed to exhale a stale, earthy scent that made her stomach turn.
The porch sagged under her weight as she climbed the steps. Every inch of this place was wrapped in memories—summers with her grandmother, afternoons on the porch watching storms roll in from the hills, and her grandmother’s whispered stories about the “Silent Ones.” As a child, she’d giggled, dismissing them as ghost stories meant to scare her. But now, standing there, she couldn’t shake the feeling that something was watching her, lurking just out of sight, waiting.
Inside, the house was thick with dust and quiet, the kind of quiet that had weight to it, pressing in from all sides. Faded photos lined the walls—faces she vaguely remembered, people she’d never met. Her grandmother’s favorite armchair sat by the window, empty now, its cushions worn.
Jackie shivered, brushing her hand over the chair’s arm as if expecting to feel warmth. But the fabric was cool, lifeless, and as she pulled her hand back, she could have sworn she heard a soft sigh, like someone settling back down after a long wait.
***
Days stretched on, each one dragging her deeper into the house’s silence. She sorted through her grandmother’s things by day, pulling out dusty boxes and weathered envelopes, but each night she lay awake, ears straining in the dark. And each night, the house seemed to breathe a little louder, as if it were coming alive, filling with a faint, eerie hum she couldn’t quite place.
She found an old letter one morning, the paper brittle and yellowed, her grandmother’s cramped handwriting fading. Her fingers traced over the words, “They remember, Jackie. They always remember.”
That night, the silence broke. It started with a faint shuffle in the hallway, like bare feet dragging along the floorboards, and then a whisper—low, thick, a sound that seemed to sink into her skin. Jackie froze, her breath shallow, and waited, her eyes fixed on the door. But the only thing that came was more silence.
She tried to brush it off, but the next morning she noticed something odd. Dark stains, almost bruise-like, had spread along the walls, curling into odd shapes, vaguely human. Their empty eyes seemed to follow her as she moved, and her skin prickled as if she were being watched from every corner of the room.
Her fingers brushed against one of the stains. It felt wet and cold, like something trapped inside was pushing its way out. Her grandmother’s words echoed in her mind, and a chill settled over her: They remember.
***
That night, the silence grew dense, stifling. Jackie moved through the house, hoping the routine would steady her nerves. But as she stepped into the hallway, a figure flickered at the edge of her vision—a shadowy silhouette, melting into the wall, its mouth twisted open in a silent scream.
Then she saw another. And another. Silent figures, contorted, reaching out, their faces twisted with something between anger and sorrow. And finally, her grandmother—her face hollow, empty eyes locked onto Jackie, lips moving but making no sound.
Jackie’s heart raced, the images around her blurring, memories rising to the surface. A flash of her own face, young and hard with anger. Her grandmother begging her to let go of her pride, her stubbornness. A neighbor boy’s face, his bright smile, and the summer night he’d vanished after she’d sent him away. She hadn’t thought of him in years, but now she remembered it all—the storm, the floodwaters, and her own silence that followed.
The weight of her guilt closed in, pressing down on her like a physical force. She staggered back, but the Silent Ones drew closer, their hands outstretched, their fingers cold as they brushed against her skin.
She heard them now, their voices filling her mind, whispering accusations, demanding answers. They surrounded her, her grandmother’s ghost watching, silent, as if awaiting her confession.
***
Jackie’s breath came in shallow gasps as she stumbled backward, desperate to escape. She ran through the house, each step echoing in the dark, but the Silent Ones followed, sliding through walls and slipping between shadows, always just behind her. They pulled at her clothes, their hands cold as ice, their faces filling her vision, crowding her, suffocating her.
She could feel their pain, their anger, all the lives touched by her family’s sins. Each face brought with it memories, flashes of moments she’d buried, pieces of herself she’d tried to forget. And with each memory, the silence grew thicker, wrapping around her throat, squeezing until she could hardly breathe.
Her grandmother’s voice, soft and resigned, whispered in her ear. They remember everything, Jackie. You can’t escape it.
***
Morning came quietly, casting soft light over the farmhouse. Outside, the fields lay calm, untouched, a gentle breeze rustling the wild grass. But inside, the silence was absolute. Neighbors who came to check on the house found it empty, the floors undisturbed except for faint footprints in the dust that led from room to room, stopping just outside the bedroom door.
They left quickly, unwilling to stay in a house that felt so… heavy, haunted. Over time, rumors grew about the house—that if you stood still enough, you could hear whispers slipping through the walls, shadows shifting in mirrors, echoes of footsteps pacing the halls. And sometimes, in the silence, a new shadow could be seen on the wall—a woman’s silhouette, mouth open in a silent scream, her eyes forever wide with the weight of things left unsaid.
The house waited, just as it always had, its silence stretching, ready for the next soul brave enough—or foolish enough—to listen.
Saturday, November 23, 2024
In the Quiet Reaches by Olivia Salter | Poetry
In the Quiet Reaches
By Olivia Salter
Where thoughts unravel, secrets seep,
A chamber yawns, dark and deep—
Where buried truths lie, lost in sleep.
From these walls, a murmur grows,
Echoes of sorrow, cries in throes;
Ghostly laughter falls like rain,
Lingering whispers fraught with pain.
Each thought stirs ripples in the still,
A tempest stir, against our will,
As fears take wing in frantic flight,
And break the silence of the night.
Yet through the chaos, clarity gleams,
A fragile hope in fractured dreams;
Each scream that rips the heavy air
A plea for peace, a soul laid bare.
So listen close, let your heart run free,
In minds where darkness dances, find the key,
For in the turmoil, strength takes bloom—
A quiet light to pierce the gloom.
Friday, November 22, 2024
The Last Autumn Leaves by Olivia Salter | Short Story
The Last Autumn Leaves
By Olivia Salter
Word Count: 2,549
Eva ran her fingers over the cool, silver locket around her neck. She hadn’t taken it off since he gave it to her two years ago, one summer evening under those same maple trees by the lake. That night, his eyes had shimmered with a promise of forever love, and she’d believed him. Now, though, as she waited for him to arrive, she couldn’t decide if it had ever been real or if she’d been clinging to an illusion of him all along.
The air was thick with the scent of damp leaves and woodsmoke drifting from nearby chimneys, a premonition of the first frost. The sun was already dipping low, casting long shadows through the park as the wind played its mournful tune through branches stripped nearly bare. This was where they’d spent countless late afternoons together, where they’d fallen into the habits and patterns that had become a slow poison. She’d loved him here—too much, she realized now.
Isaac arrived late, as always, striding with the kind of ease that made Eva’s heart clench. His hands were shoved deep into his coat pockets, and his face was as familiar to her as her own, yet she felt a strange sense of distance, like he was already slipping from her, a figure in a fading photograph.
“Hey,” he said, stopping just short of where she stood. He smiled, a small, hesitant curve of his lips, and though part of her wanted to lean into the warmth of it, she knew better now.
“Hey,” she replied, her voice barely a whisper. She could feel the weight of every conversation they’d ever had resting between them, a mountain of words that had never quite bridged the space where real understanding should have been.
They stood there in silence for a moment, Eva watching as the last stubborn leaves held tight to the branches above, each one clinging to life even as the season told them to let go. She wondered if she was one of those leaves, too—still grasping for something that had already drifted away, even if she hadn’t wanted to admit it.
Isaac broke the silence. “You…you wanted to talk?” His voice sounded unsure, almost as if he couldn’t quite believe she’d asked him to meet here.
“Yes, I did,” she said, straightening, gathering her strength. She’d rehearsed this in her mind a thousand times, but standing here in front of him, every word felt as if it might shatter before it left her lips. She took a steadying breath. “Isaac, I’ve been thinking…about us, and I don’t think we’re on the same path.”
He looked at her, a flicker of confusion passing over his face. “What do you mean?”
She tightened her grip on the locket, the metal biting into her palm. She didn’t want to spell it out for him, but maybe he needed to hear it, clearly and plainly, no more soft edges. “You know what I mean, Isaac. I’ve been waiting for you to show me that this—” she gestured to the space between them, “—means as much to you as it does to me. But I can’t keep giving pieces of myself, hoping that one day you’ll do the same. I’m tired.”
A flash of something dark crossed his face. “Tired? What are you talking about? I’m here, aren’t I? I came because you asked me to. I thought we had something good.”
She forced a bitter laugh, the sound sharper than she’d intended. “Good? Good isn’t enough, Isaac. Good is you calling me when it’s convenient for you, making me feel like I’m the only one who’s giving anything. I’ve been bending and breaking, trying to meet you halfway, but every time I get close, you pull back. Don’t you see that?”
Isaac stared at her, as if seeing her for the first time, and for a moment, she thought she saw the spark of realization in his eyes. But then his expression closed off, his jaw tightening. “Eva, you’re being dramatic. It’s not that serious.”
Her heart sank. She’d heard that line from him before, the one he used to brush aside her feelings as if they were leaves in the wind, unimportant, fleeting. She’d let him do it so many times, convincing herself that he didn’t mean it, that he cared more than he knew how to express. But standing here, she knew it wasn’t enough. Love wasn’t just showing up when it was easy, and it wasn’t dismissing someone’s pain with a careless word.
“It is serious,” she said, her voice steady. “Maybe that’s the problem—you think it’s all just…light and easy. But love isn’t just about the happy moments. It’s about showing up, even when things are hard. I’ve shown up for you more times than I can count, and I’m realizing that you’ve never really shown up for me.”
He shifted, glancing away, his hands clenching in his pockets. She could see his discomfort, the way he wanted to dismiss her again, brush her off, make her doubt her own feelings. It had always been this way: his needs, his excuses, his half-hearted efforts. And she’d let it happen because she’d wanted so desperately to believe he could be the person she saw in those rare moments when he let his guard down.
“Eva, I never asked you to give so much,” he said quietly. “You chose to do that. I didn’t ask for all this…intensity.”
The words stung, sharp and cutting, like the wind biting into her cheeks. But beneath the hurt, she felt a strange sense of clarity. He was right—he hadn’t asked. She’d given and given, hoping he’d see her, hoping he’d love her in the way she needed. But it had always been a one-sided dance, her chasing after a mirage of the man she wished he could be.
She felt tears prick her eyes, but she blinked them back. She would not cry, not here, not in front of him. “I know, Isaac,” she said softly. “I know you didn’t ask. And maybe that’s the saddest part.”
He looked at her then, a flicker of something—regret, maybe, or even a hint of sadness—crossing his face. But it was too little, too late. She’d spent too many nights lying awake, wondering if she was too much or not enough, trying to twist herself into shapes that would please him. She couldn’t do it anymore.
“Isaac,” she continued, her voice a whisper, “I’ve loved you with everything I had, but I can’t keep doing this. I’m losing myself in the process, and I deserve more than that.”
He reached for her hand, his fingers brushing hers, warm and familiar, a touch she’d once craved. But now, it felt like an anchor, holding her in a place where she no longer belonged. She pulled her hand away, the final severing of a bond that had been fraying for a long time.
“Eva, please…” he murmured, and for a moment, she thought she heard a hint of real sorrow in his voice. But she knew it wasn’t enough. Regret wasn’t the same as love, and sorrow wasn’t the same as commitment.
She took a step back, feeling the weight lift, little by little. The pain was still there, a deep ache in her chest, but beneath it, she felt a strange sense of freedom, a glimmer of the self she’d lost along the way.
“Goodbye, Isaac,” she whispered, the words both a release and a promise to herself. She turned and walked away, her footsteps echoing through the quiet park, each step carrying her further from him and closer to herself.
As she reached the edge of the park, she paused, glancing back one last time. Isaac was still standing there, his figure silhouetted against the fading light, but he no longer held the same power over her heart. He was a chapter closing, a memory she would carry but never again let define her.
She walked away, leaving the last autumn leaves to fall behind her, feeling the dawn of something new blossoming within her—a quiet, resolute love for herself, strong enough to carry her forward into whatever lay ahead.
Eva kept walking, her feet carrying her beyond the boundaries of the park and into the city streets, where lights were beginning to glow against the deepening blue of twilight. With each step, she could feel herself growing stronger, a weight lifting that she hadn’t realized she’d been carrying for so long. She took a deep breath, feeling the crisp autumn air fill her lungs, cold but bracing, as though the universe was reminding her of what it meant to be alive and awake to her own needs.
As she passed a coffee shop, she caught her reflection in the window. The woman looking back at her seemed somehow older, yet more assured, with a glint in her eye she hadn’t seen in years. She barely recognized herself. She had been so lost in trying to mold herself into the shape that would fit Isaac’s needs, she’d forgotten what it felt like to be her own person. To want things for herself.
For years, she had bent herself in half, a shadow of her full self, just to keep the peace in their relationship. But with him gone, she no longer needed to. She could stretch out, unfurl her heart, and ask herself what she wanted—really, truly wanted—without fearing the answer would drive him away.
As she stood there in the fading light, she felt the urge to write. Eva had always loved writing, loved getting lost in the worlds she created with her words. It was a part of herself that Isaac had once admired, but that admiration had grown quiet over the years. He hadn’t actively discouraged her from writing, but his indifference had settled over her creativity like a cold fog. When she’d told him about her latest story idea, he’d nodded absently, barely listening. Over time, she’d begun to question if her ideas had any worth.
But now, with nothing and no one holding her back, she felt a surge of excitement. The realization hit her like a spark in a dark room—she could write for herself, as much and as deeply as she wanted. She could make it her world, one where she was enough.
Driven by a rush of inspiration, she pulled out her notebook and began scribbling thoughts, words pouring from her pen as if a dam had finally broken. As she wrote, a feeling of warmth and purpose bloomed within her, filling up the hollow spaces left by Isaac’s absence. This was a part of herself that had lain dormant, waiting for her to find the courage to reclaim it.
By the time she finished writing, an hour had passed, and the city was alive with the evening hum of people returning home, lights flickering on in apartment windows. She tucked the notebook back into her bag, feeling lighter than she had in years. She wasn’t sure where this path would lead her—she only knew it was one she was ready to walk alone.
Over the following weeks, Eva began rediscovering parts of herself she’d let go during her relationship with Isaac. She spent long evenings in coffee shops, filling pages with stories, her imagination ignited with new energy. She returned to her love for art, spending Saturdays exploring galleries and taking photos of anything that caught her eye, finding beauty in places she’d once overlooked. Each day felt like a journey back to herself, piece by piece, memory by memory.
She found solace in her solitude, in the quiet spaces where she could hear her own voice, no longer drowned out by the noise of someone else’s expectations. She began setting boundaries with friends and family, learning to say “no” when she needed time for herself. She realized that taking up space in her own life wasn’t selfish—it was essential.
There were moments of pain, of course. Sometimes she would reach for her phone, her thumb hovering over Isaac’s number, a familiar ache tugging at her. But each time, she reminded herself of the truth: love couldn’t flourish where there was no respect, no reciprocity. And each time, the ache grew a little softer, a little easier to bear.
One night, as she was settling into bed, her phone lit up with a message from an unknown number. The words were simple, and she recognized Isaac’s voice in them immediately: “Thinking of you.”
Her heart gave a painful lurch, but she knew better than to respond. She had already walked away, already mourned the parts of herself she’d lost in that relationship. She didn’t need to revisit the past, to be drawn back into a cycle that would only leave her hurting again.
Instead, she put the phone down, closed her eyes, and reminded herself of the woman she was becoming—the woman she was proud of. This time, she chose herself.
Months passed, and autumn turned to winter, then to spring. Eva’s life had blossomed in ways she never could have imagined. She completed her first novel, a story that mirrored her own journey, one of finding strength in the face of heartbreak. She submitted it to a small press, and to her surprise, it was accepted for publication. The book, Falling Leaves, was dedicated “To all those who had to let go in order to grow.”
Her friends and family noticed the change in her, too. There was a spark in her eyes, a confidence that came not from someone else’s validation, but from within. She was no longer afraid of being too much or not enough; she was simply herself, whole and unafraid.
On a warm, breezy afternoon, Eva visited the park by the lake where she had last seen Isaac. The trees were vibrant with new leaves, the air filled with the scent of fresh blossoms. She found the bench where they’d parted ways and sat down, taking in the view.
There was no sadness this time, no lingering sense of loss. Instead, she felt gratitude for the journey that had brought her here, to this moment of peace and acceptance. The park had witnessed her heartbreak, her pain, and now it bore witness to her healing.
She thought of Isaac, wondering if he had found his own way, if he had discovered his own path to happiness. She hoped he had, but she knew it wasn’t her burden to carry anymore. They had been two people on different journeys, their paths crossing for a time, only to diverge when they could no longer grow together.
Eva closed her eyes, letting the breeze caress her face, feeling the warmth of the sun on her skin. She was whole, complete, and content with her own company. She had learned that love was not a sacrifice, but an act of self-respect, one that started from within.
As she rose to leave, she glanced back at the trees, the branches reaching toward the sky, full of new life. She smiled, a quiet, knowing smile, and walked forward, ready to embrace the world ahead, where her story was just beginning.
The Quiet Between Us by Olivia Salter / Epistolary Story / Horror
The Quiet Between Us By Olivia Salter Assembled from the diary of Nia Calloway, Whitmore Hall, Room 2B. Entry 1: August 3, 2024 – 10:17 ...

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