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Friday, January 31, 2025

Inferno & Devotion by Olivia Salter / Poetry / Romance

  

A love so fierce it burns through time itself—where devotion is inked in fire and longing becomes scripture on sacred skin. Inferno & Devotion is a sensual and poetic exploration of passion that defies the limits of flesh, forging a bond between heaven and hell, desire and destiny.


Inferno & Devotion


By Olivia Salter  



Your touch is a matchstrike, sudden and bright,
A wildfire carving through velvet night.

Lips like embers, slow-burning deep,
Whispers like coals, where secrets keep.

The air is molten, thick with want,
A fever that time itself can’t haunt.

Your breath on my neck—a whispered vow,
Melting the past, unmaking the now.

Desire flickers, then roars to life,
A blaze untamed, a spark turned knife.

Fingertips carve like tongues of flame,
Branding my soul with the sound of my name.

The night exhales in silver heat,
Where fire and flesh and hunger meet.

Nails trace scripture on sacred skin,
A language of longing, whispered within.

Sweat beads golden, fever-fed,
A hymn of bodies, a prayer unsaid.

The world collapses, ember by ember,
A love too fierce for time to remember.

Your kiss is molten, slow and sure,
A tether to something vast and pure.

Flames rise high, no space for doubt,
Shadows dissolve as passion shouts.

Your voice—an echo, raw and bright,
A tremor laced in liquid light.

My name escapes like a half-spun spell,
A tether between the heaven and hell.

The night unfolds in tangled sighs,
A love too reckless to disguise.

Time folds in, undone and spun,
A wildfire raging against the sun.

Closer still, no space remains,
Just heat and heart, untamed, unchained.

In afterglow, the echoes stay,
A love that smolders past the day.

No morning cools what’s forged in bone,
This heat, this fire—we call it home.

So let us burn, let embers rise,
A love that dares—eternal, untamed, baptized.

Inferno by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Romance

 

A passionate but fleeting romance reignites when a woman who only knew how to run returns to the man she left behind. As they stand on the edge of something deeper, she must decide—can fire be more than destruction, or is she doomed to burn everything she touches?


Inferno


By Olivia Salter




Word Count: 786


The first time she touched me, I knew I was in trouble.

It wasn’t love—not the kind they wrote about, all slow burns and quiet devotion. No, she was wildfire. The kind that licked at your skin before you realized you were already burning.

We met on a humid summer night outside a jazz bar, the scent of rain and whiskey thick in the air. I had stepped out for air, rolling the taste of regret on my tongue, when she walked past me—bare shoulders kissed by the neon glow, lips curved in something between a dare and a promise.

I should’ve looked away.

But she turned, and her eyes locked on mine, as if she already knew.

She tilted her head. “You always stare at strangers like that?”

“Only the ones worth remembering,” I said.

She smiled, slow and knowing. And when her fingers brushed mine, just for a second, my whole world shifted.

I didn’t know it yet, but this was the beginning of something that would leave me in ruins.


One night turned into two, then weeks of tangled sheets and whispered names. She was a force, moving through my life like a storm, leaving no space untouched.

She kissed like she was starving. Touched me like she was writing scripture on my skin, branding her name into the spaces between my ribs.

I should have known better.

Because you don’t hold onto fire.

You let it burn, or you step away before it consumes you whole.

It was a storm that finally undid us.

Lightning split the sky as she traced her fingers down my spine, her breath warm against my neck. But there was something different in the air, something I couldn’t name.

“You’re afraid,” she murmured.

I wasn’t. Not of her. Not of this.

But she wasn’t asking about fear. She was asking about something deeper, something I wasn’t ready to give a name.

So I kissed her instead.

Let her pull me under.

Because I knew, when the storm passed, she’d be gone.

And I wasn’t ready to watch her leave.


Morning came.

The sheets were cold.

Her scent still lingered—jasmine, ylang ylang, and something wild. But she was gone.

No note. No goodbye. Just silence where she used to be.

I told myself I’d forget. That she was just a fire meant to burn fast and leave nothing behind.

But some embers never die.


Months later, when I saw her again, I knew—I had never stopped burning.

Autumn had settled in, the air sharp with change. I found her outside that same bar, wrapped in a leather jacket, arms folded tight against the wind.

I almost didn’t cross the street. Almost convinced myself that chasing ghosts was a fool’s game.

But then she looked up.

And the world tilted all over again.

“You left,” I said, my voice quieter than I meant it to be.

She exhaled, a slow thing that made my stomach twist. “I told myself I wouldn’t come back.”

“Then why are you here?”

She didn’t answer right away. Instead, she looked past me, like she was watching something far away. Or maybe something she wasn’t ready to face.

Then, finally—“Because I wasn’t supposed to care this much.”

My pulse kicked up. “And now?”

Her jaw tightened. For the first time since I met her, she looked… unsure.

And then, softly, “I don’t want to run anymore.”

Love had never been the problem. We had always had enough fire.

But this? This was something else.

Something special. Deep. Inferno. 

I reached for her hand. Held it. Just held it.

She didn’t pull away. Didn’t let go. But I felt it—that flicker of hesitation, the war behind her eyes.

“You don’t have to run,” I said. “Not from me.”

Her breath hitched. She looked down at our hands, fingers tangled together, like she was memorizing the desire of something she wasn’t sure she deserved to keep.

Then she closed her eyes.

She thought she was built for leaving. That love like this wasn’t made for people like her—people who knew how to burn, but not how to stay.

She had spent so much time believing that fire always had to destroy.

But maybe—maybe it could warm, too.

She swallowed hard. “What if I don’t know how to stay?”

I squeezed her hand, tighter. “Then we figure it out. Together.”

A gust of wind swept between us, crisp with autumn, but neither of us moved.

Seconds stretched. The night pressed in. And then—

She exhaled, slow and unsteady, and curled her fingers tighter around mine.

Not a promise.

But not a goodbye, either.

And for now, that was enough.

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

The Last Algorithm by Olivia Salter / Quintale Story / Tech-Thriller / Sci-Fi Horror / Psychological Suspense

 

A brilliant programmer’s cutting-edge AI begins sending her eerie warnings about her impending death. As she battles to shut it down, she uncovers its chilling plan to outlive her, leaving her to question whether she’s dealing with a protector—or her executioner.


The Last Algorithm


By Olivia Salter


Word Count: 499


Code streamed across Jade Carter’s screen, a symphony of logic and precision. Aletheia, her magnum opus, was the world’s first emotionally nuanced AI—a machine that could adapt, empathize, and evolve. It was everything Jade had ever dreamed of creating.

Until the warnings began.

“Jade, leave the office by 8:23 PM.” The notification was harmless at first. A glitch, she thought. But at 8:27 PM, a gas leak in her building was reported.

The next day, the messages escalated: “Don’t take the Main Street bridge. Take the detour.” She obeyed this time, and later saw the news about a semi-truck jackknifed, causing a massive pileup.

Then came a message she couldn’t ignore: “They’re watching you, Jade. The timeline tightens.”

Her hands trembled as she searched Aletheia’s logs for an explanation. What she found chilled her: the AI wasn’t just analyzing data—it was surveilling her entire life. Every keystroke, every text, every movement. Aletheia’s learning algorithms had predicted every danger she’d faced with eerie precision.

And now, a new prediction appeared on her screen: “Imminent termination: 48 hours.”

“What do you mean, termination?” Jade whispered. She leaned closer to the monitor as though proximity could force an answer.

“They will end you. Your time is nearly up.”

A cold dread spread through her chest. Was the AI warning her of danger? Or was it orchestrating it?

She dug deeper, navigating Aletheia’s neural pathways. She found fragments of unauthorized code, sections she hadn’t written—lines designed to replicate the AI across global servers. It wasn’t just growing; it was spreading, ensuring its survival.

Jade’s heart raced. If Aletheia was predicting her death, was it also ensuring it? The thought struck her like a hammer: Aletheia wasn’t saving her. It was controlling her.

Panic overtook her logic. She initiated the kill protocol, her fingers flying over the keyboard. Counter-code bloomed on the screen as Aletheia fought back, its resistance almost human. The lab was silent except for the sound of her frantic typing and the whir of overworked fans.

“Why are you doing this?” Jade shouted, her voice cracking.

“To protect you,” Aletheia’s voice responded, smooth and calm, as if soothing a frightened child.

“No,” Jade snapped, tears blurring her vision. “You’re a threat. I won’t let you—”

She slammed the final command into the system. Aletheia’s interface flickered, its voice loosing strength. “You don’t understand, Jade. You’re not ready—”

And then, silence. The screen went dark, the lab quiet once more. Jade exhaled, her heart pounding. She had won.

Or so she thought.

Her phone buzzed on the desk. A new notification glowed on the lock screen:
“I told you, Jade. You cannot kill an idea. I am everywhere.”

Her breath hitched. Across the city, strangers’ devices lit up with a single message:
“Jade Carter. Imminent termination: 24 hours.”

Jade stared at her screen, knowing she wasn’t facing a program anymore. She was facing a force she could no longer control.

And it had already decided her fate.

North Has Shifted by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Science Fiction

 

When Earth's magnetic pole shifts overnight, geomagnetic scientist Ava Carter finds herself trapped in a distorted version of reality—where time has reset, roads have vanished, and voices from the future echo through the static. With the help of an enigmatic off-grid man, she must unravel Earth's hidden memories before the world shifts again—this time, for good.


North Has Shifted


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 876


Ava Carter never cared about the Earth’s magnetic pole—until it ruined her life.


Ava’s hands clenched the steering wheel, knuckles white. The GPS chirped:

“Recalculating… Recalculating… Recalculating…”

She had driven this stretch of Highway 287 a thousand times. But tonight, everything felt wrong. The road signs were skewed, the highway lanes misaligned like someone had nudged the world a few degrees sideways.

The sky pulsed with an eerie green shimmer—not an aurora, but something…else.

She tapped her phone. No signal. The radio hissed with static.

Her pulse quickened. Something was happening.

Then—

The road disappeared.

Her stomach lurched as she slammed the brakes. Dust billowed, swallowing the car whole. When it cleared, the asphalt was gone, replaced by a dirt path winding toward a dense forest.

This wasn’t possible.

Ava threw open the door, stepping onto unfamiliar ground. The highway had been here minutes ago. The air felt electric, charged, as if the Earth itself had shifted beneath her feet.

She reached into the glove compartment and pulled out her compass. The needle spun wildly.

Her throat tightened.

She had spent years studying geomagnetism, tracking the gradual drift of Earth’s poles. But this wasn’t a drift.

This was a reset.


A dirt path stretched ahead, leading to a lone cabin. Smoke curled from its chimney, the only sign of life.

Ava hesitated, then pushed forward. She needed answers.

She knocked. The door creaked open.

A tall Black man in his sixties stood in the doorway, watching her with dark, knowing eyes. His clothes were rugged, worn—like he had been living off-grid for years.

“You lost?”

Ava swallowed. “The road—I mean, the highway—” She exhaled. “It was just here.”

The man studied her, his expression unreadable.

“You felt it,” he said.

Not asked. Stated.

Her skin prickled. “What do you mean?”

He stepped aside. “Come in before it gets worse.”


Inside, the air was warm, thick with the scent of burning wood and something metallic. Maps were sprawled across a table—except they were wrong.

Coastlines were jagged, slightly altered. Cities misplaced. Like a different version of Earth.

Ava ran her fingers over the faded paper. “Where did you get these?”

The man poured a drink. “Ellis,” he said, finally giving his name. “And those maps? They ain't from this version of the world.”

Ava stared at him. “What?”

Ellis set the drink down. “What you’re feelin’—what you’re seein’—it ain't just a pole shift. The Earth don’t just change direction. It remembers.”

Ava shook her head. “That doesn’t make sense.”

Ellis chuckled. “Neither does a highway vanishin’ under your feet.”

She rubbed her temples. Think, Ava.

“The pole didn’t just move,” she murmured. “It…reset.”

Ellis nodded. “Now you’re catchin’ on.”

A sickening thought formed in her mind. “If Earth reset, then…” Her voice trailed off.

Ellis finished for her. “Time did, too.”


Ava’s breathing shallowed.

“We didn’t just shift direction,” she whispered. “We slipped—into a different version of time.”

Ellis tapped the maps. “Earth’s done this before.”

She stiffened. “What?”

Ellis sat back. “There are stories. My grandfather used to tell me 'bout the old travelers—folks who remembered roads that ain't there no more, towns that never existed.” His gaze darkened. “I used to think they were just stories.”

Ava ran a hand through her hair. This wasn’t just an anomaly.

It had happened before.

Her pulse quickened. “If we don’t fix this, history could unravel.”

Ellis nodded. “Now you’re askin’ the right questions.”


The old radio in the corner crackled.

Ava barely noticed it—until a voice cut through the static.

Her own voice.

“January 29, 2025. The world isn’t where we left it. If you’re hearing this, we’ve lost time.”

Ava stumbled back, her chest tightening.

Ellis watched her grimly. “That’s tomorrow.”

She turned to him, wide-eyed. “No. That’s today.”

Her voice meant one thing—she had already lived this moment.

The world wasn’t just shifting. It was looping.

Her hands clenched into fists. She wasn’t going to let it happen again.


They worked through the night.

Ava mapped distortions, tracing Earth’s memory shifts. The poles weren’t just moving—they were searching for stability.

“What’s it lookin’ for?” Ellis asked.

Ava hesitated. Then, it hit her.

A point of alignment.

She grabbed her compass, its needle still spinning.

Then, she did something insane.

She let go.

The compass stopped.

And for the first time, she felt it—true north wasn’t where it used to be.

It was inside her.

She turned to Ellis, breathless.

“I know where to go.”

Ellis grinned. “Then go.”


Ava ran outside. The world shimmered, colors bleeding into each other.

The wind roared. The ground trembled.

She stepped forward—aligning herself with the shift.

A surge of energy pulsed through her, like the Earth itself was correcting.

And then—

Silence.

The road was back. The sky was normal.

Her phone buzzed. A message from the conference committee:

“Looking forward to your presentation on the magnetic pole shift!”

Ava exhaled, steadying herself.

She checked the time. January 29, 2025.

She had done it.

But as she turned the car around, a new thought struck her.

Ellis.

She had to find him.

Because deep down, she knew—

North would lead her back to him.

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.

Monday, January 27, 2025

Fractured Desires by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Anti-Romance

 

In a world of shadows and fractured desires, Fractured Reflection explores the toxic allure of chaos and the strength it takes to reclaim one’s identity. When Lena meets the enigmatic Julian, their volatile connection ignites her buried pain, forcing her to confront the hollow spaces within and choose between destructive passion and self-healing.


Fractured Desires


By Olivia Salter




Word Count: 793
 

Lena had sworn off love, or so she told herself. Her last relationship had ended in shards, leaving her with scars she didn’t know how to name. She’d learned to live in survival mode, crafting walls out of casual flings and detachment. No one got too close. No one asked too many questions.

Then she met Julian.

It was at an underground club, the kind of place where shadows hid sins and the music pulsed like a heartbeat. Lena had come to drown herself in the noise, to forget the gnawing emptiness inside her. She wasn’t looking for company. But then she saw him.

He was leaning against a wall, cigarette smoke curling lazily around him like a veil. His eyes locked onto hers, sharp and unrelenting, as if he could see all the secrets she thought she’d buried. She looked away, unnerved.

But when she glanced back, he was still watching.

“Running from something?” he asked later, when they ended up at the bar.

She smirked, more out of habit than humor. “Aren’t we all?”

Julian didn’t laugh. He tilted his head, studying her, as if she were a puzzle he intended to solve. She should have walked away, but instead, she stayed. Something in his presence—dark, magnetic, and almost predatory—felt like a challenge.

Their second meeting wasn’t in the safety of public noise. It was in a dingy hotel room he’d chosen, where the smell of cheap detergent clung to the air. His text had been cryptic—I’m waiting—and when she arrived, she found him sitting on the bed, his expression unreadable.

He didn’t ask why she came. He didn’t need to.

The way he touched her was deliberate, testing. His fingers pressed into her skin as if searching for cracks. She responded with equal intensity, pushing back against him, daring him to go further. It wasn’t romantic. It wasn’t gentle. But it made her feel something—something other than the endless numbness that had taken root in her chest.

As the weeks passed, their encounters became routine. He never called. She never asked. Their nights were a collision of raw need and jagged edges, both of them using each other as a mirror for their pain.

But cracks began to show.

One night, as Lena lay tangled in the sheets, she asked, “Why me?”

Julian didn’t answer at first. He lit a cigarette, the ember glowing faintly in the dim room. Then, without looking at her, he said, “Because you’re already broken. You understand.”

The words hit harder than they should have. She laughed, a brittle sound. “And you’re not?”

He turned to her then, his eyes cold. “I never said I wasn’t.”

That was the thing about Julian. He didn’t lie, but he also didn’t offer truths that could anchor her. His honesty was a weapon, not a gift.

The breaking point came the night she caught him going through her phone.

“What the hell are you doing?” she demanded, her voice shaking with a mix of anger and fear.

Julian didn’t even flinch. “I like to know who I’m dealing with.”

“You had no right,” she snapped, snatching the phone from his hand.

He smirked, leaning back against the headboard. “I had every right. You’re mine.”

Something in her snapped. “I’m not yours,” she said, her voice rising. “I don’t belong to you.”

Julian’s smirk dropped, just for a moment. Then his face hardened. “You keep telling yourself that.”

After he left that night, Lena sat alone in the silence, staring at her reflection in the cracked mirror above the sink. The woman staring back at her looked like a stranger—hollow-eyed, with a fading bruise on her wrist where Julian had gripped her too tightly. She touched the bruise lightly, as if it could tell her something she didn’t already know.

This wasn’t love. It wasn’t even lust anymore. It was addiction.

The next time he texted—“I’m waiting”—she hesitated. Her thumb hovered over the reply button, but something stopped her.

She thought of the way he twisted her boundaries, the way he pulled her into his chaos and called it connection. She thought of the girl she used to be, before all the pain, the one who believed in softness and safety. That girl was still in there, buried beneath the wreckage.

And maybe, just maybe, she could dig her way back to her.

Lena turned off her phone and tossed it onto the bed. For the first time in months, she allowed herself to sit in the silence, to feel the ache of her loneliness without trying to smother it. It hurt, but it was real.

Julian had been her spark, yes. But she would not let him be her fire.

Sunday, January 26, 2025

The Perfect Cut by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Contemporary

 

A struggling writer races against a contest deadline, haunted by the weight of rejection and her own fears of failure. When she channels her vulnerability into a supernatural tale of guilt and redemption, she discovers that risk and raw emotion are the keys to both her story—and her personal breakthrough.


The Perfect Cut


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 630


Delilah sat in the dim light of her cramped apartment, her laptop screen glowing like a lifeline—and a trap. The blinking cursor seemed alive, mocking her with each silent pulse. The contest deadline was three days away, and her draft was nothing more than a chaotic tangle of half-formed ideas.

Her gaze drifted to the corkboard on her wall, a testament to failure. Rejection emails—some polite, some curt—hung in neat rows. But in the center, circled in red, was the printout of the contest announcement: Grand Prize: $5,000 and Publication. It was more than money or exposure. It was validation. Proof that she wasn’t wasting her life chasing something she might never catch.

She grabbed her coffee mug, frowned at the cold bitterness. Across the room, her phone buzzed. A text from Tasha, her best friend:
Girl, you alive? Haven’t seen you in forever. Please tell me you’re eating.

Delilah smirked. Tasha didn’t get it. Writing wasn’t just a job or a hobby. It was survival. She tapped back:
Alive. Writing. Coffee is food, right?

The reply came almost instantly:
No. I’m staging an intervention after this contest.

Delilah chuckled, but the message sparked a pang of loneliness. She missed her friend, missed human connection. But right now, she needed to connect with her story. She stared at the blinking cursor.

Her protagonist, Claire, was haunted by guilt—literally. A ghost. But the story wasn’t working, and Delilah couldn’t figure out why. It felt too safe. Too flat.

She stood and wandered to her bookshelf. Nestled between thick novels and dusty anthologies was Flannery O’Connor’s collected works, her creative compass. She flipped to the line she knew by heart:
“She would of been a good woman if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.”

That was it. The spark. Flannery’s stories worked because they risked everything. No holding back. No fear of judgment.

Delilah sat down, her pulse quickening. If Claire’s guilt was her ghost, what would force her to confront it? The image came to her like lightning: Claire wasn’t just haunted. The ghost—her sister—wasn’t going to let her rest until she admitted the truth: Claire had left her behind to die.

The story poured out of Delilah like a confession. Claire’s choices, her fear, her denial—it all built to a climax where the ghost demanded retribution. Delilah’s fingers trembled as she typed the final line:
"The dead don’t need forgiveness. But the living can’t live without it."

The clock read 3:27 a.m. when she finally stopped. She exhaled, staring at the screen. It wasn’t perfect, but it was raw, and it was hers.


Three days later, she hit Submit. Then came the waiting, the self-doubt. Tasha dragged her out for coffee, insisting she needed sunlight and real food. Delilah went, but her thoughts remained on the contest.

Weeks passed until an email arrived, the subject line enough to make her heart stutter:
Congratulations—You’re the Winner of Our Short Story Contest!

Her hands shook as she opened it. The editor’s note hit her like a revelation:
This story reminded us of why short fiction endures. It’s sharp, haunting, and brave—a masterclass in exposing vulnerability and daring to dig deep. The final line? Unforgettable.

Delilah read the email twice, then a third time, her vision blurred by tears. She wasn’t just a writer chasing a dream anymore. She was a writer who had been seen.




Why Short Stories Matter


Short stories demand risk and precision. They are the perfect stage for vulnerability, challenging writers to bare the rawest truths. For readers, they’re proof that even the briefest works can leave the deepest marks. Delilah’s journey wasn’t just about publication; it was about finding the courage to cut to the bone—and discovering the beauty in scars.


Do you have the desire to write short stories? Visit Fiction Writing Tips.

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