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Friday, February 7, 2025

The Last Storm by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Disaster Fiction

 



The Last Storm


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 2,296


Zora Castro had always been the kind of person who thrived in chaos. As a storm chaser, she found beauty in nature's fury—how the sky darkened, the winds howled, and snow spiraled like confetti before settling into a pristine quilt over the earth. But this time would be different.

***

The weather report flashed ominously across the screen, bold red warnings cutting through the dim glow of Zora’s motel room. A massive winter storm was brewing, a collision of Arctic air and moisture that promised up to 18 inches of snow and ice. The newscaster’s voice was steady, cautionary, but Zora barely heard it over the electric thrill shooting through her veins. This was what she lived for—the pulse of possibility in the eye of the storm.

She could already picture it: the towering clouds rolling in like an unstoppable force, the winds howling through the trees, snow spiraling into a mesmerizing dance before settling into a thick, unforgiving shroud. She would be there, in the heart of it all, camera in hand, capturing nature’s fury in all its untamed beauty.

Zora moved with practiced efficiency, loading her gear into her battered Jeep, its tires caked with the remnants of past storms. Her camera bag, weather-resistant and packed with extra batteries, was placed carefully in the passenger seat. The tripod, her most trusted companion, was secured in the back. A thermos of coffee, half-full from the morning, rattled in the cup holder. Every detail was routine, every action a step closer to the moment she craved.

She could almost taste the anticipation in the air, thick and charged, like the quiet before thunder cracks the sky. Her fingers tapped against the steering wheel, a nervous energy pulsing through her. This storm could be the one—the footage that set her apart, the images that finally landed her work on the front page of the biggest publications. She had spent years chasing storms, learning their patterns, studying their moods. She was ready.

And yet, beneath the excitement, something else stirred. A lingering doubt.

It was subtle, barely more than a whisper, but it was there. A flicker of unease coiled in the back of her mind, a feeling she couldn’t quite shake. It wasn’t fear—she had faced worse. But it was… something. A warning.

Maybe it was the way the wind had shifted suddenly that morning, carrying an edge colder than usual. Maybe it was the way the news anchor’s voice dipped just slightly when they spoke of “life-threatening conditions.” Or maybe it was something deeper, something she had buried long ago—the knowledge that she had always been chasing more than just storms.

She inhaled sharply, shaking off the hesitation. This was what she did. This was who she was.

With one last glance at the glowing weather map on the screen, she turned off the television, gripped the steering wheel, and pulled onto the road, heading straight for the storm.


The skies grew darker, thick with the weight of an impending storm, as Zora drove deeper into the heart of the tempest. Snow flurries swirled around her like wild spirits, flickering in her headlights before vanishing into the night. The wind howled, a rising chorus of unseen voices, rattling the Jeep’s windows as if demanding she turn back. Her heart pounded in sync with the storm’s growing intensity, each thunderous rumble in the distance a warning she refused to heed.

She navigated the winding roads with a practiced determination, finally pulling into a clearing surrounded by towering pines. Their branches sagged under the crushing weight of snow and ice, their silhouettes stark against the storm-choked sky. The air was thick with an eerie stillness, the kind that came before nature’s fury was fully unleashed. Every instinct in her body screamed at her to leave—to turn back before the storm swallowed her whole. But this was her moment. She had chased this storm for days, studying its patterns, predicting its trajectory. She was here for this. She could not turn away now.

With a deep breath, she stepped out into the cold, boots crunching against the thickening frost. The air burned her lungs, sharp and unforgiving, but she ignored the sting. Moving quickly, she unfastened her camera gear, setting up the tripod with fingers stiff from the cold. She checked the lens, adjusted the focus, and scanned the horizon for the perfect shot.

At first, the snowfall was delicate—thin, fragile flakes drifting gently, as if whispering secrets only the wind could hear. But then, the storm’s whisper became a scream. The snow thickened into a blinding whiteout, an overwhelming force that devoured the landscape. The once-distant thunder grew closer, its deep growl rolling across the sky like an oncoming stampede. The wind picked up with a vicious intensity, whipping through the clearing, rattling the trees, and nearly knocking her off balance.

Zora’s hands trembled as she fought to steady her camera. The satisfaction of capturing nature’s raw beauty began to wane, overshadowed by a creeping, insidious dread. The storm was no longer something she was merely documenting—it was something she was trapped within.

She glanced back at her Jeep, now barely visible through the swirling snow. The wind roared louder, pressing against her chest, making it harder to breathe. The darkness overhead deepened, swallowing what little light remained.

For the first time in her years of chasing storms, she wondered if this was the one that would finally catch her.


Minutes stretched like hours as Zora battled against the blizzard, each step a brutal test of endurance. The wind screamed in her ears, a relentless, unearthly wail that drowned out everything else. Snow lashed against her exposed skin like a thousand tiny needles, and the cold gnawed at her bones, threatening to sap the last of her strength. Every breath felt stolen, each inhalation razor-sharp in the frigid air.

The atmosphere crackled with something electric, something primal—a warning whispered through the storm’s fury. The tension in the air was suffocating, pressing down on her like an invisible force, making every movement feel sluggish, heavy, as if she were wading through an unseen current. Her instincts screamed at her to turn back, to seek shelter, but she pushed forward, adrenaline warring with reason.

Then, through the whiteout, she saw it. Something moving. A swirling mass in the distance, twisting and shifting like a phantom in the storm. It wasn’t just wind-driven snow—it had form, purpose, an eerie intelligence in the way it coiled and re-formed.

Heart hammering, she wrestled her frozen fingers around the camera, the lens shaking as she struggled to focus. She knew she had to capture this, had to prove to herself that what she was seeing was real. She pressed record, her breath fogging the screen as she adjusted the settings, trying to steady her trembling hands.

But then—something changed. The storm didn’t just move; it reacted. The swirling force twisted violently, as if aware of her presence, and in that instant, the ground beneath her gave a sickening lurch.

A deafening roar split the air.

The mountainside trembled, and suddenly, the world was in motion.

She barely had time to register what was happening before the avalanche came crashing down. A wall of snow, ice, and debris surged toward her, a monstrous force of nature unleashed with terrifying speed. The sheer power of it sent shockwaves through the air, a deep, guttural sound that made her bones vibrate with the force of impending doom.

Zora turned, lungs burning, legs sluggish with exhaustion, but she knew—there was no outrunning this. The storm had finally claimed her.


Zora’s breath hitched in her throat, the cold burn of fear igniting her senses like a shock to the system. Instinct overrode reason as she dropped her camera, the weight of it vanishing into the thickening snow, forgotten in the face of survival. Her eyes darted wildly, searching for her Jeep, but the world was dissolving into a swirling white abyss. She could barely see her own hands, let alone the path back to safety.

Panic surged through her veins as she sprinted forward, her boots sinking into the deepening drifts. Every step was a battle against the elements, the wind clawing at her with icy fingers, trying to pull her back into the storm’s relentless grip. The cold gnawed at her exposed skin, each breath a razor slicing through her lungs. Her heart pounded, a frantic drumbeat against the eerie silence of the snow-covered void.

Finally, the dark outline of her Jeep materialized like a ghost through the storm. With a final burst of energy, she threw herself inside, slamming the door shut just as the first wave of snow crashed against the windshield, rattling the frame like an unforgiving warning. The vehicle rocked slightly under the force, as if the storm itself was trying to pry her free, to pull her back into its chaos.

In the suffocating quiet that followed, the world seemed to shrink around her. The only sounds were the furious wail of the wind and the relentless pounding of her own heartbeat—thump, thump, thump—like a clock counting down to catastrophe.

Her hands trembled as she fumbled for her phone, her fingers stiff and clumsy from the cold. She pressed the screen, desperate for a signal, for any connection to the outside world. But the bars were gone, lost to the storm’s fury. A fresh wave of fear gripped her chest. She was alone, trapped in the heart of the blizzard, with no way to call for help.

The realization settled in like the snow blanketing the windshield—heavy, suffocating, inescapable. She had spent her life chasing storms, but now, for the first time, one had finally caught her.


In that dark moment, Zora faced herself. She had spent years racing toward chaos, chasing storms as if they held the answers she refused to seek within. The howling winds, the crackling energy of an impending tempest—those were her sanctuary, her distraction. She had convinced herself it was about the thrill, the adrenaline, the raw beauty of nature’s fury. But now, standing in the heart of the storm, she realized the truth: the thrill was hollow, an empty rush that faded as quickly as it came.

She wasn’t just drawn to the storms. She needed them. Needed the way they drowned out the silence of her own thoughts, the way they let her disappear into the roar of something greater. She had mistaken the pursuit of danger for purpose, convinced herself that if she was always moving, always pushing forward, she wouldn’t have to look back. Wouldn’t have to confront the memories she had buried beneath years of relentless motion.

But storms didn’t last forever. They raged and howled, then left behind stillness—a stillness she could no longer outrun. The fear creeping into her chest now wasn’t from the storm closing in around her; it was from the understanding that she had been running from herself. From the nights spent staring at motel ceilings, drowning in loneliness. From the echoes of a childhood filled with promises broken like tree limbs in the wind. From the version of herself she had abandoned long ago, thinking she could replace pain with pursuit.

But no storm could erase the past. And standing there, snow whipping around her like ghosts of all she tried to forget, Zora knew she had a choice: keep running, or finally, finally face the truth.

As the snow piled around her vehicle, an overwhelming sense of calm washed over Zora. In that moment, she wasn’t the chase that fulfilled her; it was the connection to the world, witnessing its power while finding peace within herself. Just then, buzzed violently—she had a signal. With trembling hands, she dialed, determined to reach out, to reconnect.

But before the call could connect, the ice beneath her Jeep cracked—a violent snap that sent the vehicle teetering. In one swift motion, Zora was thrown against the window as the Jeep tipped over, her scream lost in the howling winds.


As the storm raged on, Zora’s spirit clashed with the tempest outside, a battle of forces both external and internal. The wind howled in her ears like distant voices from her past, whispering truths she had long tried to silence. Ice and snow battered her body, but the real struggle was within—the relentless fight against the fear, the loneliness, the gnawing emptiness that had driven her to chase storms in the first place.

For years, she had mistaken movement for purpose, mistaking the pursuit of danger for a life well-lived. But now, standing in the heart of the storm, she understood: running had never been the answer. No matter how many storms she outran, she could never outrun herself. The chaos she sought was only a mirror, reflecting the turbulence she had never been ready to face.

Yet in that final moment, as the storm threatened to consume her, something within her stilled. The fear that once gripped her loosened its hold, and for the first time in years, she saw clearly. Life was not about the storms she chased, nor the fleeting rush of adrenaline. It was about what came after—the moments of calm, the connections made in the aftermath, the people who stood beside her once the skies cleared.

Zora Castro may have become a victim of the storm, but in those final moments, she was no longer lost. She had found the truth she had spent a lifetime running from: life is not measured by how fiercely we chase the storm, but by the love, the memories, and the quiet moments of understanding left in its wake.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

The Playbook of Love and Lies by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Romance / Contemporary

 


A high-powered business executive and an NFL star with unfinished history cross paths again in Lawrenceville, Georgia. When Vincent claims he’s leaving football to rekindle their love, Christine hesitates—until she discovers a lie that changes everything. Can love survive when trust is the ultimate gamble?


The Playbook of Love and Lies



By Olivia Salter




Word Count: 2,111


Christine thought she had control over every aspect of her life—her career, her emotions, and her past. But when Vincent Carter, a man she once loved and lost, walks back into her world with a promise too good to be true, she faces a question she never expected: Can love exist without trust?


***


Christine Marshall wasn’t in the business of second chances.

She had built her consulting firm from the ground up, commanded respect in every boardroom, and learned the hard way that love was the one investment with no guaranteed return.

She had walked away from deals that weren’t worth the risk.

She had walked away from people too.

So when her assistant casually mentioned that Vincent Carter was back in Lawrenceville, she barely reacted.

She didn’t ask why.

She didn’t ask if he was alone.

She didn’t ask if he still looked the same, if he still carried himself with that easy confidence, if the years had changed him the way they had changed her.

She simply nodded, finished reviewing the quarterly reports, and moved on.

Then he called.

Her phone lit up with a name she hadn’t seen in years.

She could have let it go to voicemail. Should have.

But she didn’t.

"Hey, Chris," Vincent’s voice was lower than she remembered, steadier, but there was something underneath it—hesitation, maybe regret.

She tightened her grip on the phone. "Vincent."

"Can we talk?"

Christine hesitated. "Talk about what?"

"About us."

The words landed heavier than she expected.

There hadn’t been an us in years.

She should have said no. Instead, she found herself saying, "Meet me at Aria. Eight o’clock."


Aria, a sleek but intimate spot in Buckhead, was perfect for business dinners and quiet conversations she wasn’t sure she wanted to have.

By the time she arrived, Vincent was already there, waiting by the entrance.

He was taller than she remembered—6’4” of presence that filled a room. Dressed in a tailored black sweater and dark jeans, he looked effortlessly put together.

Christine, on the other hand, had chosen her armor—a fitted emerald-green dress, sleek heels, and a confidence that had never failed her in negotiations.

Vincent’s gaze swept over her, something flickering behind his eyes. "You look good," he said.

She met his gaze evenly. "Cut to the chase, Vincent."

He let out a quiet chuckle, shaking his head. "Still direct."

She didn’t respond, just raised a brow.

He sighed, hands slipping into his pockets. "I made a mistake, Christine."

She folded her arms. "Which one?"

His jaw tensed. "Walking away from you."

A bitter laugh escaped her lips before she could stop it. "You didn’t walk. You ran."

His expression tightened, a muscle ticking in his jaw.

"I got drafted," he said. "My whole world flipped overnight. I wasn’t ready for—"

"For love?" she interrupted, her tone sharp.

"For losing control."

Christine studied him carefully.

That had always been his fear, hadn’t it? The idea of something—someone—being bigger than the game.

And now, after all these years, he stood in front of her, trying to rewrite the ending of a story she had long since closed.

"And now you’re back. Why?"

Vincent exhaled. "Because I’m retiring, Chris. And I want you back in my life."

Silence.

The words should have meant something. Should have stirred the old feelings she had long since buried.

But she had spent years erasing him, telling herself he was a lesson, not a regret.

And now, just like that, he wanted a do-over?

"Vincent," she said carefully, "people don’t change overnight. And I don’t do second chances without reason."

He took a step closer, his voice quieter, steadier. "Then let me prove it."

Christine held his gaze, searching for the truth.

But trust was a gamble she wasn’t sure she was willing to take.

Not yet.


For weeks, Vincent pursued her like she was the last championship he’d ever win. Candlelit dinners at the finest restaurants in Buckhead, where he ordered for her without asking—remembering that she liked her steak medium and her wine red, full-bodied, and dry. Late-night drives down backroads lined with oak trees, where the hum of the tires on asphalt filled the silence between unspoken words.

They reminisced about college—how he used to leave his playbook open on her coffee table, claiming he studied better when she was near. She reminded him how she used to roll her eyes, saying, Football was your first love, not me. He didn’t deny it back then. But now?

Now, he swore everything was different.

And she found herself softening.

It wasn’t just the grand gestures—though Vincent was a man who understood the weight of presentation. It was the quiet moments. The way he rested his hand on the small of her back when they walked. The way he listened, really listened, when she talked about work, nodding in all the right places, asking follow-up questions that made her heart clench.


One evening, they drove out to the Chattahoochee River. The air was crisp, humming with the first whispers of autumn, and the moon cast silver ribbons over the slow-moving water. The trail was nearly empty, just them and the occasional jogger. Vincent took her hand, fingers warm against hers, his grip firm but unhurried.

"Tell me what you’re afraid of," he murmured, his voice barely louder than the rustling leaves.

Christine stared ahead, her gaze tracing the path where the moonlight kissed the pavement.

"That I’ll love you again," she admitted.

He squeezed her hand. "And?"

"And you’ll leave."

Silence.

She could hear the distant croak of frogs, the rhythmic chirp of crickets. The sound of Vincent breathing, deep and steady, as if weighing her words.

Then he stopped walking.

"I’m not that man anymore," he said, turning her toward him.

She wanted to believe him. She really did. But something nagged at her, a quiet voice whispering in the back of her mind.

There was a hesitance in his words, a crack in his confidence she couldn’t quite place.

She searched his face—the sharp angles of his jawline, the way his eyes flickered, just for a second, before settling back on her.

Before she could push further, her phone buzzed.

She hesitated, torn between ignoring it and breaking the moment. But when she glanced at the screen, her chest tightened. Malik Craig. An old friend from the league. Someone who never called without reason.

"Give me a second," she murmured, stepping away.

Vincent shoved his hands in his pockets, rocking back on his heels as she answered.

"Chris," Malik’s voice was quiet but urgent. "You know Vincent’s not retiring, right?"

Her stomach twisted.

The air around her stilled, the rustling trees and soft river waves suddenly distant, like she had been yanked into another reality.

"What?" she said, gripping the phone tighter.

"He’s still under contract. Three more seasons."

The words landed like a gut punch.

Christine turned slightly, her gaze locking onto Vincent’s silhouette. He was watching her, unreadable, as if sensing the shift in her demeanor.

"That’s impossible," she said, but even as the words left her lips, doubt crept in. "He told me—"

"He told you what you wanted to hear," Malik interrupted. "Look, I wasn’t gonna say anything, but I saw him at a league meeting last week. He’s negotiating an extension, Christine. Not an exit."

The world tilted.

Her fingers curled around the phone, nails pressing into her palm. "Are you sure?"

Malik sighed. "One hundred percent. He’s playing you."

Christine swallowed the lump rising in her throat.

A familiar, bitter taste filled her mouth—the taste of disappointment, of betrayal. Of deja vu. 

She exhaled slowly, composing herself before hanging up. For a long moment, she just stood there, staring at Vincent, her mind racing through every conversation, every promise, every touch.

How had she let herself believe him?

She walked back, slowly, carefully, like she was approaching a dangerous animal.

"Who was that?" Vincent asked, his voice light, but there was something else in his eyes now—caution.

"Just a friend," she said.

He nodded, studying her. "Everything okay?"

Christine forced a smile, the same kind she wore in boardrooms when she smelled a bad deal but needed to play along until she had proof.

"Yeah," she said smoothly. "Everything’s fine."

But inside, she was already planning her next move.

This game wasn’t over. 


Christine paced her living room, gripping her phone so hard her knuckles turned white. Her thoughts raced, colliding with each other, forming a tangled mess of anger, hurt, and something dangerously close to heartbreak.

How could she have let herself believe him?

The warmth of his hands, the way he had looked at her beneath the soft glow of streetlights, the whispered promises—all of it had been a lie.

A sharp knock at her door cut through the chaos in her mind.

Deliberate. Controlled.

She knew who it was before she even reached for the handle.

Christine yanked it open.

Vincent stood there, dressed down in a hoodie and jeans, a stark contrast to the sharp, confident man who had wined and dined her just days ago. But his expression? Unreadable.

She folded her arms across her chest, the only barrier she had left.

"Tell me the truth," she said, voice steady despite the storm raging inside her. "Are you retiring?"

Vincent’s shoulders tensed. His lips parted, hesitation flickering in his eyes.

"Christine—"

"Don’t lie to me."

His jaw flexed, muscles working beneath his skin. He dragged a hand over his head, exhaling heavily.

Then, finally:

"No. Not yet."

A slow, bitter exhale slipped from her lips.

It was one thing to suspect. Another thing entirely to hear it confirmed.

She shook her head, forcing out a dry laugh. "So everything—the late nights, the promises—was all just a setup? A play?"

"No!" Vincent stepped forward, eyes wide, pleading. "It wasn’t a lie. I am changing. I just... I didn’t know if I could have both—the game and you. I wanted to be sure before I told you."

Christine’s stomach twisted. She wanted to believe him. But wasn’t that the problem? She had always wanted to believe him.

"And when exactly were you going to tell me, Vincent?" Her voice was quieter now, but no less sharp. "After I fell for you again? After I rearranged my life—again?"

His face fell, and for the first time, she saw it—the guilt. The doubt. The flicker of regret beneath his defenses.

"I love you, Chris." His voice cracked just slightly, just enough for her to hear the weight of his words. "I just didn’t want to lose you again."

Christine closed her eyes for a brief moment.

Maybe he had changed. Maybe he truly believed he could balance it all. But trust? Trust wasn’t a gamble she was willing to take anymore.

She squared her shoulders, lifting her chin.

"Then you should’ve trusted me with the truth."

She turned and walked away, leaving him standing there in her doorway—just as she had once been left behind.


Days passed. Vincent’s texts went unanswered. His calls, ignored.

Christine buried herself in work, drowning in spreadsheets, meetings, and the endless hum of productivity. It was easier that way—easier to pretend that his absence didn’t sit in the back of her mind like an unfinished sentence.

Then, a package arrived.

A plain black box, unmarked except for her name scrawled in Vincent’s handwriting.

She hesitated before opening it, her pulse betraying her with its unsteady rhythm.

Inside was a football.

Signed.

She ran her fingers over the ink, heart thudding as she read the words scribbled across the leather:

No more games. I’m done playing without you.

Nestled beneath the ball was a single envelope.

A ticket.

To his last game.

Christine sat at her desk, staring at it, her fingers tracing the edges.

She could hear Malik’s voice in her head—He’s negotiating an extension. But now, doubt crept in. If Vincent was still playing the game, why would he send this? Why would he say he was done?

Her walls wavered.

Vincent had made his move.

Now, it was her turn.

She leaned back in her chair, exhaling slowly.

Vincent hadn’t just been fighting for her. He had been fighting himself.

For years, football had been his anchor, his escape, his purpose. His first love. But now, for the first time, he was choosing something else.

Someone else.

And Christine?

She had spent years guarding her heart like a fortress, refusing to let anyone close enough to tear it down.

Maybe it was time to see if love was worth the risk.

But this time—she would call the plays.

She reached for her phone.

And dialed.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

The Weight of Names by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Black History / Supernatural

 

A teenage girl, haunted by the voices of Black historical figures, is drawn into a mysterious journey to uncover a family secret that connects her to a long-forgotten hero of the past. But as she digs deeper, she realizes history is not just something to be learned—it’s something to be reckoned with.


The Weight of Names


By Olivia Salter 



Word Count: 813


The names whispered to her in dreams. Some she recognized—Tubman, Douglass, King. Others felt distant yet familiar, like echoes from a past she’d never lived but somehow carried in her bones.

The first time she heard the voices, Naoimi thought she was dreaming.

She was in history class, staring out the window while her teacher lectured on the Civil Rights Movement. The lesson drifted in and out of her ears like background noise—until something else replaced it.

"Names are more than words, child. They are echoes."

Naoimi sat up, her heart racing. She looked around, but no one else seemed to notice. Her teacher’s voice continued, steady and mundane, but layered beneath it was a whisper—one she could almost feel against her skin.

"Remember us."

The bell rang, shaking her from the moment.

She gathered her books and rushed out, her best friend Amari jogging up beside her.

"You good?" Amari asked, stuffing her hands into her hoodie pocket.

Naoimi nodded too quickly. "Yeah. Just… thinking."

About the voices. About why they felt so heavy, as if they carried the weight of something old and urgent.

That night, she dreamed of names.

They spiraled around her, ink dripping from them like they had been freshly written in history books. Tubman. Douglass. Ida B. Wells. But then there was another. A name she didn’t recognize.

Josephine Calloway.

When she woke, it was still there, lingering on the tip of her tongue like a secret she wasn’t supposed to know.


Naoimi became obsessed.

She searched online, scoured library archives, even asked her grandmother, who was the family historian. But no one had ever heard of Josephine Calloway.

Until the day her grandmother sighed and said, “That name… that’s old history.”

Naoimi’s breath caught. “Who was she?”

Her grandmother hesitated. “A woman who saw too much. Knew too much. And was buried under the weight of silence.”

She wouldn’t say more.

That was when the voices got stronger.

"You need to know."

"Find her."

"Truth buried still breathes."

Naoimi followed their call, chasing fragments of Josephine’s life. She found an old article buried in a forgotten corner of the internet. Josephine Calloway: The Woman Who Defied a Town and Vanished.

She had been a journalist in Alabama in the 1930s, exposing lynchings that local newspapers refused to print. Then, in 1938, she disappeared. No records, no grave, no explanation.

History had erased her.

But history had also left her behind, whispering in Naoimi’s ear.


Each clue Naoimi uncovered made the voices grow louder.

She found Josephine’s old articles—hidden, faded pieces that spoke truth so raw it burned. She tracked down distant relatives who barely remembered her name. She discovered that Josephine had left behind a manuscript—a book she had been writing before she vanished.

No one had ever found it.

Until Naoimi did.

The journal was buried beneath dust and time in a forgotten attic of an abandoned house. Its pages trembled as she turned them, the words aching to be read.

Josephine had written everything—names of the men responsible for the violence, the corruption, the lies. She had died for this truth.

And now, Naoimi held it in her hands.


The night she found the journal, the whispers stopped.

And in their place, a presence.

She saw her reflection in the attic’s cracked mirror—but it wasn’t just her. A woman stood behind her, dark-skinned, sharp-eyed, wearing a suit that belonged to another era.

Josephine.

Naoimi turned, breath hitching.

“You found me,” Josephine said, her voice layered with sorrow and gratitude. “I’ve waited so long.”

Naoimi clutched the journal. “What do I do?”

Josephine’s eyes burned like embers. “Finish what I couldn’t.”

Naoimi knew what it meant. The men Josephine exposed had descendants—powerful ones. People who had spent decades making sure her story never saw the light of day.

And now, it was in Naoimi’s hands.

She had a choice.

She could let Josephine remain a footnote, another name swallowed by silence.

Or she could make the world remember.


The article went live at midnight.

Naoimi published everything—Josephine’s story, her articles, the names of those who tried to erase her. Within hours, it spread. Historians, journalists, activists—people who had spent lifetimes searching for missing pieces—began to piece Josephine back together.

And the voices?

They faded, not in sorrow, but in peace.

As if, for the first time, history had exhaled.

Naoimi stood at her grandmother’s doorstep the next morning.

Her grandmother looked at her for a long moment, then smiled. “You heard them, didn’t you?”

Naoimi nodded.

Her grandmother pulled her into a hug. “Good. That means you’re listening.”

Naoimi hugged her back, eyes burning with something between grief and pride.

Because history was no longer just something she studied.

It was something she carried.

And this time, she would not let it be forgotten.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

Eclipsed Radiance by Olivia Salter / Drabble / Contemporary

 

A man finds himself captivated by a woman’s quiet beauty in a sunlit café, but as he gazes upon her, he realizes that her presence is more than physical—it’s a reflection of the grace and wholeness he’s been missing in his life.


Eclipsed Radiance


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 100


In the dim light of the café, her face was a mosaic of contrasts—smooth ebony kissed by the golden glow of the setting sun, a harmony of shadow and brilliance. Her cheekbones rose like quiet peaks, her eyes deep as midnight oceans, reflecting truths he hadn’t dared to face.

He opened his mouth to speak but hesitated, fearing his voice would shatter the fragile stillness she carried—the kind that softened the ache inside him. In her, he saw more than beauty; he saw a reminder of something he’d lost, the quiet grace that once made the world feel whole.

Monday, February 3, 2025

Fire & Ice by Olivia Salter / Poetry / Romance

 

A tempestuous love story unfolds between fire and ice—two forces destined to clash, yet forever drawn together. As they touch, they destroy and remake each other in an endless dance of passion and restraint.


Fire & Ice


By Olivia Salter



You are the fire, reckless and wild,
flames licking the sky with a wolfish grin.
I am the ice, quiet and sharp,
a glacier’s blade beneath winter’s skin.

You burn with stories, restless and bright,
a wildfire craving the wind’s embrace.
I hold my silence, deep and tight,
winter’s hush on a frozen face.

You touch me—I crack, I flood, I run,
mountains weep where frost once lay.
I kiss you—you flicker, choke on ash,
your heat dims, your embers sway.

We shatter, mend, dissolve, ignite,
twin disasters locked in flight.
Yet when we break, we find a way—
to turn, return, to melt, to stay.


Sunday, February 2, 2025

Black History by Olivia Salter / Poetry / Black History

 

"Black History" is a powerful poetic journey through the resilience, struggle, and triumph of Black people across centuries. With vivid imagery and lyrical depth, it honors icons like Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King Jr., and Malcolm X, while bridging past and present, reminding us that Black history is not just remembered—it is lived.


Black History


By Olivia Salter



Bound in chains, yet never broken,
Hope still whispered, dreams unspoken.
Dragged through fire, drowned in pain,
Still, they rose and spoke their names.


The ocean swallowed cries unheard,
A people lost, a fate deferred.
Yet through the dark, their spirits swayed,
Their songs of sorrow would not fade.


A woman ran with stars as guides,
Through tangled woods and rivers wide.
Harriet whispered, Follow me,
And led the bound toward destiny.


A boy once learned in stolen light,
Carved his mind in ink at night.
Frederick rose with words like thunder,
Tore through silence, split it asunder.


A pen became a blade for truth,
Ida struck with fearless proof.
She wrote through threats, refused to bend,
And made the world bear witness then.


A builder dreamed, a teacher gave,
A road from dust, a mind to save.
Booker lifted, Mary lit,
A path where knowledge would not quit.


War drums called, and Black hands answered,
Fought for nations, left abandoned.
From Crispus’ fall to Union’s fight,
They stood for freedom, claimed their right.


Yet shackles stayed, though war was won,
Freedom caged, the work undone.
Jim Crow's shadow, twisted, cruel,
Turned justice into iron rule.


A man once dreamed a mountaintop,
Where hatred burned but love did not.
Martin stood, and though he fell,
His echoes rang like gospel bells.


Malcolm’s fire, sharp and bright,
Refused to kneel, refused to white.
With words like steel and eyes unshaken,
He called a people to awaken.


Rosa sat and shook the land,
A quiet stance, a bold demand.
They walked for miles, their bodies burning,
Yet never turned, yet never yielded.


Selma’s bridge ran red with pain,
But still they marched through driving rain.
With hands held tight, with voices high,
They faced the dogs, refused to die.


Langston wrote of rivers deep,
Of dreams deferred, of wounds that weep.
His words still pulse like midnight streams,
A people’s grief, a people's dreams.


Maya rose with voice so golden,
Spoke of birds with spirits stolen.
Yet still they sang, yet still they flew,
A song of old, yet fierce and new.


The blues still hum in southern air,
A cry of loss, a whispered prayer.
Jazz erupts, a trumpet shatters,
Rhythm births what history scatters.


Jesse ran with feet like fire,
Ali fought with fists and ire.
From fields of toil to medals bright,
They claimed their space, reclaimed their light.


Mothers wept and fathers bled,
For doors still locked, for words unsaid.
Yet children rose with fists held high,
Their voices stars against the sky.


The fight still breathes in every street,
In protest chants and marching feet.
From Ferguson to cries today,
The past still burns, the echoes stay.


But history is more than chains,
More than sorrow, more than pain.
It is the architects of change,
The hands that build, the minds that blaze.


So here we stand, with voices bold,
A legacy both new and old.
No fire fades, no story dies,
Black history is endless skies.

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Glass Slippers in the Magic City by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Contemporary

 

A young Black fashion designer in Birmingham, Alabama, reclaims her identity and dreams after years of exploitation by her aunt. With the help of a wise seamstress and her own courage, she dazzles at a prestigious gala, exposes the lies that held her back, and steps into her power in this modern reimagining of Cinderella.


Glass Slippers in the Magic City


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 1,201


Ella Mae Brown sat at the old wooden table in the back of Delores’s boutique, the quiet hum of the sewing machine accompanying her as she worked on a design that felt like a quiet prayer to her mother. Sylvia Brown, renowned for her seamstress artistry in Birmingham’s Black creative circles, had sewn magic into every stitch. Now, Ella’s hands, once trembling with the weight of grief, worked with precision and a growing sense of purpose, stitching her own dreams into fabric—a subtle homage to her mother’s legacy. But despite her talent, her designs were hidden, unclaimed, overshadowed by the suffocating walls of Delores’s resentment.

“Ella Mae,” Delores’s sharp voice cut through the silence, drawing Ella’s attention from the sketch before her. “Those dresses won’t finish themselves.”

Ella’s chest tightened, but she nodded without a word, pushing down the frustration that clawed at her. She stood and walked to the front of the boutique, where her cousins, Regina and Portia, twirled in the latest outfits, eyeing themselves in the mirror with smug satisfaction.

“Ella,” Regina scoffed. “You really think you’re cut out for more than this? Stick to designing for us. You’ll never make it anywhere else.”

Portia smirked, her voice dripping with disdain. “Who needs dreams when you’ve got a steady gig? You should be grateful.”

Ella swallowed her retort, her stomach twisting. Her designs—her passion—kept the boutique afloat, yet Delores dismissed them as mere tools to maintain her own fading glory. Ella’s talent, her voice, was something Delores had never allowed her to claim.

When the Young Magic Makers Gala was announced, the opportunity felt like a calling. The gala promised mentorship from a legendary Black designer, a full scholarship, and startup funding to launch her own line. It was everything she’d ever dreamed of—a chance to step out of the shadows and into her own light.

But Delores’s words crushed that hope before it had a chance to take root.

“No, Ella. I need you focused on Regina and Portia. They’re the ones who matter, not you.”

Ella’s heart cracked, but she nodded, the weight of defeat sinking in. Yet the spark inside her refused to dim. She had come too far to let anyone dictate her future.

Late one evening, after the shop closed, Ella slipped away to Miss Violet’s tiny seamstress shop on the outskirts of town. Miss Violet, an eccentric elderly woman, was known for crafting bridal gowns that were said to “bless” the brides who wore them. But what few knew was how deeply Miss Violet understood the struggle of creative souls, especially those who had been denied their rightful place.

“Sit, child,” Miss Violet urged, her voice as warm and inviting as a summer breeze. “Let me see what you’ve got.”

Ella’s breath caught as she handed Miss Violet her sketchbook, filled with designs that had been locked away in her heart for far too long. Miss Violet’s eyes lit up as she turned the pages, her fingers tracing the edges of the designs with approval.

“This city needs you, Ella Mae. You are the magic they’ve been waiting for.”

For weeks, they worked together, Ella’s vision blossoming under Miss Violet’s gentle guidance. The gown they created was a masterpiece—a stunning blend of white and gold, inspired by Birmingham’s “Magic City” trademark. Every stitch was infused with Ella’s dreams, her grief, and her unshakable strength. But it was the shoes that would prove to be the turning point—crystal-heeled and daring, a symbol of Ella’s courage to take the first step into her truth.

“Take these,” Miss Violet said, pressing the shoes into Ella’s hands. “These shoes will carry you toward your destiny. But only if you’re brave enough to wear them.”

The night of the gala, Ella slipped into the gown and felt a shift within her—a quiet but powerful transformation. The woman staring back at her in the mirror was poised, elegant, and full of strength she hadn’t known she possessed. The crystal heels clicked against the floor as she walked toward her destiny, her heart pounding but her feet steady.

The moment she entered the gala, every eye in the room was drawn to her. The room fell silent, the breath of every person held in awe. Ella didn’t just wear the gown—she owned it, radiating a quiet power that left the audience spellbound.

But then Regina and Portia saw her.

“Ella?” Regina hissed, her voice sharp with venom. “What do you think you’re doing? That dress—it’s ours!”

The accusation rang through the room, and murmurs spread like wildfire. Delores, furious, appeared from the crowd, her gaze hard and calculating.

“This girl works for me,” Delores sneered, her voice dripping with malice. “The dress? My design. She’s nothing but a helper.”

Ella’s heart sank as security began to move toward her. Her mind raced, and for a moment, she wanted to disappear. But then, from the corner of the room, Malcolm King stepped forward, his presence commanding.

“If you’re the real designer, prove it,” he said, his voice calm and unwavering.

Ella hesitated, every part of her screaming to flee, to retreat into the safety of silence. But Miss Violet’s words echoed in her mind: You have to walk toward your truth.

With trembling hands, Ella pulled out her sketchbook, laying out her designs for the room to see. She showed them the sketches—dozens of original pieces, each one a piece of her heart. Her fingers shook, but her voice was steady.

“These are mine. Every last one of them.”

Malcolm studied the sketches carefully, then turned to the crowd, his voice ringing out with conviction.

“This woman is the real designer. And it’s time for the world to see her.”

The scandal broke wide open. Ella posted videos of herself designing the gown, exposing Delores’s lies for the world to see. The community, once unaware, rallied behind Ella. Prominent designers and influencers shared her story, amplifying her voice. Delores’s boutique collapsed under the weight of the public’s outrage, and Regina and Portia were exposed as complicit in the deceit.

Ella was invited back to the gala, this time to accept the award. The judges crowned her the winner, the applause deafening. But Ella barely heard it. Standing at the podium, her heart full, she addressed the crowd.

“My mother taught me that the magic of this city isn’t in its buildings or its history—it’s in the people who dare to create. Tonight, I claim that magic as my own.”

With Malcolm’s mentorship and support, Ella launched Magic Threads by Ella Mae, her fashion line that honored her mother’s legacy while embracing her unique vision. Miss Violet remained her guiding light, a mentor and collaborator in the truest sense. And Malcolm, who had stood by her when it mattered most, became her business partner—and something more.

As for Delores, her regrets were evident, but Ella’s words were firm.

“You taught me what it means to lose everything. Now, I’m going to teach you what it means to build it back—on your own.”

Ella’s journey wasn’t a fairy tale. But it was hers—and that made all the difference.

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 ...