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Monday, February 10, 2025

The Fine Print by Olivia Salter / Short Fiction / Anti-Romance

 

Naya, a successful Black woman, believed she had found true love with Jordan, a charming and ambitious man. But when financial manipulation and control replace romance, she realizes that marriage was just another strategic move for him. As she takes him to court for a clean break, she must confront the emotional and legal battle of escaping a narcissist who never saw her as a partner—only as a means to an end.


The Fine Print


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 1,187


Naya’s fingers curled tightly around the divorce papers, the crisp edges pressing into her skin. The weight of them felt heavier than it should have, as if they carried the full burden of the past two years. She could feel the sting of the paper against her palm, sharp and unyielding—much like the reality she had spent too long ignoring.

The courtroom was cold—too cold—but maybe that was fitting. A place like this wasn’t built for comfort. It was built for endings. Contracts dissolved. Assets divided. Promises reduced to legal jargon and signatures on a page.

She inhaled slowly, resisting the urge to rub her arms for warmth. The fluorescent lighting buzzed faintly above her, casting a harsh glow over the polished mahogany table that separated her from the man who had once vowed to love her.

Across from her, Jordan sat with the same unshaken confidence that had once drawn her in. His suit was crisp, tailored to perfection, the dark fabric smooth as if not even the weight of a failed marriage could wrinkle it. His posture was relaxed, one arm draped over the chair, his fingers tapping idly against the table as if he were merely waiting for a business proposal to be finalized.

Maybe, for him, that’s all this had ever been.

Naya’s stomach twisted, but she kept her face impassive. She wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing her falter.

Her lawyer cleared his throat, his voice steady and deliberate. “Ms. Jenkins is requesting full control of her assets and a clean break—no financial ties.”

For the first time, Jordan hesitated. It was subtle—the briefest tightening of his jaw, the faintest flicker of something in his eyes. Surprise? Annoyance? Maybe even the first stirrings of regret.

Good.

Naya had spent too much time doubting herself, too many nights wondering if she had misread the signs, if she had overreacted, if maybe—just maybe—he had loved her after all.

But today?

Today, she wasn’t the one being played.


Two years ago, she had believed in forever.

Jordan had swept her off her feet with an ease that felt effortless, as if loving her required no thought, no hesitation—only instinct. He had known exactly what to say, exactly how to look at her, exactly when to touch her in a way that made her feel special, chosen. Like fate had led her to him.

Weekend trips to Miami, candlelit dinners at rooftop restaurants, whispered promises beneath city lights—each moment had been carefully curated, each grand gesture leaving her breathless. She had thought it was love.

She had thought he was love.

When he proposed, slipping the ring onto her finger with a dazzling smile, she had felt safe. Secure in the knowledge that she was stepping into a lifetime of partnership. She had said yes, not just to the man in front of her, but to the future she thought they were building together.

But real love wasn’t conditional.

Real love didn’t come with fine print.

The red flags had been there, small but insistent, disguised as care.

Merging finances will make things easier, Naya. Trust me.
You don’t have to worry about the details—I’ve got it handled.
We’re a team, we're all we have. What’s mine is yours, and what’s yours is ours.

Except ours had always meant his.

At first, it had been little things. He would call the shots on where they lived, how they budgeted, which investments made “the most sense.” He had framed it as efficiency, a way to ensure they were on the same page financially. She had wanted to believe him.

Then, after her mother passed and she inherited the estate, the shift had been subtle—but undeniable.

Jordan had stopped asking. He made decisions without her input. He signed documents without her seeing them first. She would find out about transactions after the fact—her name attached to things she had never approved.

The mortgage had been the final straw. A house bought under her name, without her knowledge, yet somehow Jordan had control over the paperwork. When she had discovered it, nausea had twisted in her gut.

She had confronted him, heart pounding, the accusations flying out before she could stop them.

Jordan had barely looked up from his laptop, sighing as he rubbed his temples. “Naya, don’t be dramatic. This is how marriage works.”

No remorse. No concern. No attempt to reassure her that she had misunderstood.

Just a quiet, matter-of-fact confirmation that to him, marriage wasn’t about love. It was strategy.

And now that she was pulling out of the deal?

He didn’t even seem surprised.


Naya forced herself back to the present.

She could feel the weight of the divorce papers pressing into her palms, the thick stack of legal documents holding the finality of everything she had endured. Two years of deception, of manipulation, of watching herself become smaller while Jordan took up more space. But now, the weight wasn’t suffocating. It wasn’t crushing her anymore.

It was just there. A fact. A reminder of what she had survived.

She inhaled slowly, steadying herself as she lifted her gaze to meet Jordan’s. He was watching her, his expression unreadable. But she knew that look—she had seen it before. It was the same one he had worn whenever he was about to convince her, persuade her, turn the situation in his favor. The same quiet confidence that had once made her believe he was right, that she was overreacting, that she just needed to trust him.

But she wasn’t that woman anymore.

Jordan leaned forward, lowering his voice like this was some intimate negotiation instead of the end of a marriage. “Naya, be reasonable. We built a life together.”

She exhaled softly, tilting her head. She didn’t need to raise her voice. She didn’t need to argue. The truth was simple.

“No,” she said, meeting his eyes. “I built a life. You just lived off it.”

A flicker of something passed through his expression. Annoyance? Resentment? For the first time, his control was slipping, and Naya saw it in the way his fingers tightened around the pen.

There it is.

Control had always been his currency, the foundation of his power. He had spent years making sure she felt dependent on him, uncertain without him. He had always been the one holding the pen, the one making the decisions.

But now?

He was bankrupt.

Her lawyer slid the final document across the table. “Sign, and we can all move on.”

Jordan hesitated. His fingers flexed around the pen, his jaw tightening just slightly. The silence stretched between them, thick with the weight of his stalled power. This wasn’t how he had planned things to go.

Naya could almost see the wheels turning in his mind. He had expected resistance, sure, but he had also expected her to waver. To falter. To let the past cloud her judgment just long enough for him to find a new angle, a new way to pull her back in.

But Naya?

She had already decided.

She wasn’t his transaction anymore.



Visit Olivia Salters Author Page at Amazon.

 

© 2026 Olivia Salter - All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the author.

Sunday, February 9, 2025

Shadows in Lawrenceville by Olivia Salter / Flash Fiction / Romance

 

Fifteen years after vanishing without a word, Vincent returns to Lawrenceville, Georgia, to face Tina—the woman he left behind. But his disappearance wasn’t abandonment; it was sacrifice. As old wounds resurface and secrets unravel, Tina must decide whether to hold onto the past or open the door to a future neither of them expected.


Shadows in Lawrenceville


By Olivia Salter



Word Count: 984

Tina had always heard that the past had a way of haunting people, but she never expected it to follow her home on a humid Georgia night—wrapped in a crisp blue suit, standing under the same streetlight where they once planned their escape.

***

The air outside smelled of fried catfish, cut grass, and warm asphalt, thick with the low hum of cicadas. Tina pulled the strings of her hoodie tighter, head down, hoping the exhaustion from her double shift at the diner would drown out everything else.

But the past had other plans.

Glenn.

He leaned against the rusted gate of the old barbershop, hands in his pockets, his frame catching the dull glow of a flickering streetlight. Older. Sharper. The years had carved hollows into his face, the weight of time settled in his eyes.

Tina’s feet stuttered, her body catching up to her mind as her breath came short. It had been fifteen years. He was supposed to be gone.

Glenn stepped forward, the sound of his shoes against pavement far too familiar.

"TeeTee."

Her stomach tightened. No one called her that anymore.

Her voice came out low, cold. "What the hell are you doing here?"

Glenn exhaled, gaze steady. "Came back to make things right."

Tina let out a sharp laugh, but there was no humor in it. "Fifteen years too late for that."

His jaw tightened. "Maybe."

The last time she saw Glenn, they were seventeen, standing in this exact spot, whispering about leaving Lawrenceville behind. She had packed a duffel bag, heart racing with the promise of something bigger than this town. But when the time came, he never showed.

No note. No call. Just gone.

Tina had let the bitterness harden inside her, using it as armor. Glenn had left because he wanted to. Because she wasn’t enough to make him stay.

And now here he was, standing in front of her like time hadn’t carved a canyon between them.

Her arms crossed tight against her chest. "What, you think you can just show up, say sorry, and we’ll be good?"

Glenn’s throat bobbed as he looked down. "No. I don’t expect that."

"Good."

Silence stretched between them, thick with everything unsaid. Then Glenn pulled something from his pocket—a folded letter, yellowed at the edges. He held it out.

Tina eyed it like it might burn her. "What is that?"

"The truth."

Tina sat on the curb outside her apartment, fingers tightening around the paper. The cicadas had quieted, the air thick and unmoving.

She unfolded the letter.

"Tina,

If you’re reading this, it means I finally found the courage to face you.

I left because I had no choice.

That night, my father found out we were leaving. He didn’t yell. Didn’t threaten. Just sat me down at the kitchen table and smiled. Said if I tried to run, I wouldn’t be the one paying the price.

He meant you.

So I stayed. Took the bruises. Took the silence. Took everything, just to make sure he never touched you.

By the time I got free, I didn’t know how to come back.

But it was never you I wanted to leave behind.

Glenn."

Tina’s chest tightened, her pulse drumming against her ribs.

She had spent fifteen years hating him. Letting that hatred fuel her. And now—now she had to make room for something messier.

For guilt.

For grief.

For the love she never let herself admit was still there.

Her fingers tightened around the edges of the letter, her breath uneven. She wanted to tear it apart, throw it at him, scream that he should have trusted her, that they could’ve figured it out together.

But the truth of it settled in her bones.

Glenn had stayed to protect her.

And in doing so, he had broken them both.


Glenn was still outside when she emerged, his hands shoved deep into his pockets. His shoulders, once broad with teenage arrogance, now carried something heavier.

Tina held up the letter. “You should’ve told me.”

Glenn nodded. “I know.”

“You didn’t trust me.”

His throat bobbed. “That ain’t true.”

She scoffed, shaking her head. “Then why didn’t you take me with you?”

Glenn hesitated, the muscles in his jaw tightening. “Because I knew you’d follow me into hell, Tina.” His voice was raw, like gravel dragged over pavement. “And I couldn’t let you.”

Tina looked away, fingers gripping the letter like it could anchor her.

For years, she had convinced herself she was better off without him. That he had abandoned her. It was easier than admitting how much it hurt.

But now, standing here, she realized something else:

Glenn had left to save her.

But he had never stopped loving her.

She swallowed, her voice quieter now. “Why come back?”

Glenn exhaled, rubbing the back of his neck. “He’s dead.”

Tina blinked. “Your father?”

He nodded. “Stroke. A month ago. I don’t know how to feel about it.”

She studied him. He looked different now—not just older, but untethered. Like a man learning how to exist without a shadow looming over him.

He met her gaze. “Figured if I was ever gonna come back, this was my chance.” A pause. “My only chance.”

Tina traced the edge of the letter. Her pulse thrummed, a war between instinct and reason. The past couldn’t be erased. But maybe, just maybe, it could be rewritten.

She took a deep breath, let the words settle before speaking. “You still drink sweet tea?”

Glenn’s lips twitched, the first hint of something almost like a smile. “Depends. Yours or somebody else’s?”

Tina rolled her eyes, but her chest ached in a way she hadn’t felt in years.

She hesitated, then stepped back, holding the door open. Not a grand gesture. Not a promise. Just… a start.

“Come inside, Glenn.”

And for the first time in fifteen years, he did.



Visit Olivia Salters Author Page at Amazon.

 

© 2026 Olivia Salter - All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the author.

Saturday, February 8, 2025

Change of Seasons by Olivia Salter / Short Story / Anti-Romance


A man faces the wreckage of his family as his secret son and estranged wife demand accountability. Struggling to repair his broken relationships, Jared must confront the weight of his past mistakes and earn back the trust of the people he’s hurt most—his family.


Change of Seasons


By


Olivia Salter 



Word Count: 7,336




The Lexus did not idling so much as it purred, a twenty-minute insulation against the damp October chill that had settled over the cul-de-sac. Jared Bennett kept his hands at ten and two on the hand-stitched leather steering wheel. The leather smelled of nothing—no cologne, no fast food, no stray hairs from a golden retriever they didn’t own. He had paid three hundred dollars for a detailing service the previous Tuesday precisely to ensure that the interior smelled like an absolute absence of history.

He turned his left wrist slightly. The dashboard clock read 6:14 PM.

From this vantage point at the foot of the driveway, the Tudor facade of 14 Elmwood Lane looked exactly as it had in the prospectus from the developer six years ago. The copper-tinted uplights he’d buried in the mulch beneath the boxwoods cast long, architectural shadows up the brickwork. On the porch, a large pumpkin sat beside the double doors, its carved face not a jagged grin but a neat, minimalist series of triangles he’d executed with a linoleum cutter.

He reached into his breast pocket, his fingers finding the smooth titanium casing of his secondary phone. It didn’t vibrate. It wouldn’t—he had set the emergency bypass parameters months ago so that it only accepted incoming data between the hours of noon and 2:00 PM on weekdays, under the guise of an encrypted corporate server profile.

He drew a breath, held it for three counts, and let it out through his nose. The transition was mechanical. He adjusted the rear-view mirror, checked the knot of his silk tie in the dimming cabin light, and turned the ignition off. The sudden silence in the car was heavy, almost physical, like the drop in cabin pressure before a commercial airliner touches down.

He opened the door, the crisp autumn air hitting his collar with the scent of burning leaves from three yards over.

The front door opened before his foot hit the second flagstone step. Tasha stood in the frame, her silhouette sharp against the warm halogen glow of the foyer. She was wearing a grey merino wool sweater—one he’d bought her for their anniversary two years ago in Chicago—and she held a small, plastic measuring cup of white vinegar.

"You missed the six o'clock," she said. Her voice didn't rise; it had that flat, rhythmic quality she used when she was negotiating with the municipal zoning board. "Nia stayed on the stage until ten after. They had to move the papier-mâché volcano to the side tank because the baking soda mixture was starting to liquefy the base."

Jared didn't halt his stride. He crossed the threshold, took his briefcase in his left hand, and used his right to cup the back of her neck, leaning down to press a dry kiss against her cheekbone. "The deposition ran long at the firm. The state transit authority brought four separate engineering reports from 2021 that weren't in the initial discovery bundle. I spent three hours in a basement conference room with five men who smell like stale tobacco."

The lie was clean. It had a specific, boring texture that defied cross-examination.

Tasha’s neck muscles remained rigid under his palm for a fraction of a second before she leaned back, looking down at the vinegar. "There’s plates in the warming drawer. The pot roast went in at two. It’s dry now."

"I’ll eat it cold," Jared said, already moving toward the stairs. "Let me shed the jacket."

"Daddy!"

Nia’s voice preceded her down the upstairs hallway by three seconds. She didn't run so much as she tumbled down the carpeted stairs, a whirlwind of purple denim and long, dark curls that had escaped their barrettes. In her hands, she held the cardboard tri-fold presentation board. One corner was wet where the red food coloring had leaked through the plaster of Paris.

"Look," she demanded, thrusting the board into his midsection. "The tectonic plates are made of the insulation foam from the garage. Mr. Henderson said the fault line was 'exemplary.' That’s a sixth-grade word, Daddy. He said it."

Jared caught the board, balancing it against his thigh while he lifted her with his free arm. She was getting heavy; her sneakers caught the edge of his shin, leaving a pale grey scuff on his trousers. "Exemplary means you followed the blueprint," he said, burying his chin in her hair. It smelled of green apple shampoo and wood glue. "Did you tell him about the magma chamber calculation we did on the kitchen island?"

"I told him you did the division," she giggled, her small fingers smudging a trail of purple glitter across his lapel. "But I did the coloring."

From the shadow of the landing above, Ava looked down. She was thirteen, her legs long and awkward in black leggings, her chin resting on the wooden banister. She didn't come down the stairs. She didn't smile. She held a red ballpoint pen between her middle fingers, spinning it over and over through her knuckles with a clicking sound that timed perfectly with the ticking of the grandfather clock in the hall.

"The proposal was on the kitchen counter," Ava said. Her voice had developed a rasp over the summer, a low, adult register that always made Jared feel as though he were being observed by a junior partner from a rival firm.

Jared looked up, his smile remaining fixed. "Which one, sweetie?"

"The Anderson one," she said, her pen stopping mid-rotation. "The blue folder. You left it next to the coffee maker this morning. I looked at the front page because I wanted to see the bridge drawings. The date on the certification stamp said October twelfth. That was last Monday."

The hall became very quiet. Tasha stopped her retreat toward the kitchen, her thumb smoothing the rim of the plastic measuring cup.

Jared let Nia slide down his hip until her feet touched the oak flooring. He laughed—a short, hearty sound he reserved for judges who made poor jokes in chambers. "That’s the preliminary sign-off date, Ava. The actual filings require a wet signature from the county treasurer every Friday before five. It’s standard municipal procedure. Very dry stuff."

Ava didn't blink. She started spinning the pen again. Click. Click. Click. "Oh. I thought you said they brought new reports today."

"They did," Jared said, his hand dropping into his pocket, his index finger finding the side button of his phone to ensure it remained dead. "That’s why we were in the basement. Now, go help your mother with the table. I need five minutes to change out of these clothes."

Three miles south, where the asphalt of Elmwood Lane gave way to the cracked concrete of the industrial corridor near Route 9, the evening smelled of frying grease and diesel exhaust.

Raven Cole stood at the laminate kitchen counter of Apartment 3B, her left shoulder propped against the refrigerator to keep it from rattling while the compressor cycled on. The kitchen was four paces long from the stove to the small linoleum-topped table where her son sat. A single fluorescent tube overhead flickered twice every sixty seconds, casting a greenish, institutional tint over the pages of Brunner & Suddarth’s Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing.

She had four chapters on renal failure to outline before her rotation at the county clinic at 5:30 AM the next morning, but her eyes kept drifting to the yellow margin of her notebook.

"The denominator stays the same because it’s a common factor, right?"

Caleb didn't look up from his worksheet. He was seven, but he had the long, square fingers of a boy who would grow to be six feet tall before his ribs filled out. He held his pencil with an intense, white-knuckled grip that had already worn the eraser down to the metal ferrule.

"Show me," Raven said, wiping her palms on her apron. The apron was from the diner on 4th Street where she worked the Friday night double; it still carried the faint, vinegar-sharp tang of the coleslaw tubs she’d scrubbed out three days ago.

Caleb slid the paper across the Formica. The page was immaculate. Every number was written within the grid lines of the graph paper, small and sharp, like the print from an old typewriter. Beside the final problem—a long-division sequence involving three-digit decimals—was a small, circular red stamp of a star.

"Mrs. Martinez said my logic was non-linear," Caleb said, using the word with a strange, formal pride. "She said most third-graders don't use the reduction method until spring. She asked if my dad taught me."

Raven felt a small, cold knot form behind her breastbone, exactly where her ribs met. She reached out and smoothed the corner of the graph paper, her thumb covering the red star. "Your dad’s good with numbers, Caleb. But you’re the one who sat here until nine last night with the scratch pad."

"Is he coming?"

The question was small. It didn't have the weight of an accusation yet—he was too young for that—but it had the steady, repetitive pull of a tide.

Raven looked at the small black digital clock on the microwave. 7:42 PM. The text she’d sent at noon had been marked as "Delivered," but the small gray bubble that indicated a response had never appeared.

"He’s working on the state bridge project, honey. The one near the bypass. They’re pouring the concrete pillars this week, and he has to be there to make sure the mix doesn't crack while it sets." She hated how natural the technical details felt in her mouth. She had memorized his professional jargon over four years of three-hour afternoons in motel rooms off the interstate, using his talk of tensile strength and curing times to fill the silences between the locking of the door and the sound of his car leaving the gravel lot.

"He said he'd see the star," Caleb muttered, his pencil resuming its rhythm against the paper. "He said he’d bring the scale model of the crane from his office."

"Let's get your shoes in the cubby," Raven said, her voice dropping into that low, flat register she used when the diner got backed up with fourteen orders of hash browns at once. "Tomorrow's a laundry day, and if we don't get the sheets in the machine before the first-floor apartments wake up, the hot water’s gone."

She picked up her phone from the counter. The screen was dark. She unlocked it, her thumb hovering over the thread.

Caleb got all A's this week. He wanted to show you Monday. He sat by the window for two hours, Jared. Two hours with his math worksheet in his lap. I can't keep watching him break like this. I'm done covering for you.

She didn't send it. Not yet. She saved it to the drafts folder, her fingernail digging into the plastic edge of the phone case until her skin turned white. She looked back at the textbook. Renal clearance is defined as the volume of plasma that is completely cleared of a substance per unit of time.

"Mom?" Caleb stood by the bathroom door, his toothbrush already foaming in his mouth. "Why does Dad have two offices?"

Raven didn't look up from the page. "Because he has a lot of work to finish, Caleb. Go rinse."

The breakdown of a system rarely begins with an explosion; it begins with a failure of insulation.

On Thursday afternoon, the rain came down in grey, diagonal sheets that turned the fallen maple leaves on Elmwood Lane into a slick, brown paste. Jared had left his primary phone on the granite island in the kitchen—an oversight that occurred because Nia had spilled a cup of apple juice near his briefcase, and he had used both hands to lift his leather documents out of the splash zone.

Tasha found it because it vibrated three times against the stone, the sound a low, resonant drone that amplified through the hollow space of the lower cabinets.

The screen didn't show a name. It showed a string of eight numbers—an unlisted corporate direct line he’d established under the name Bennett Engineering Services Sub-ledger 4.

She didn't look at the text preview on the lock screen first. She picked it up to move it away from the moisture on the counter, her thumb inadvertently touching the home button. The device was unlocked; he had disabled the biometric lock three days prior when his thumb had been burned by a hot copper wire during a site inspection.

The message thread was long. It dated back to 2022.

The entries were short, precise, and organized like a series of delivery manifests:

Oct 4 - Account transfer completed. 450.00. Caleb’s winter coat.

Oct 11 - Can you do Tuesday instead of Thursday? The clinic shifted my shift.

Oct 18 - He asked why you don't have a toothbrush at the apartment. I told him you were allergic to the water filter.

Tasha sat down on the leather barstool. The vinegar cup from two nights ago was still sitting in the sink, unwashed, a small white ring forming around the drain. She scrolled up. She didn't cry. Her face took on the exact expression she used when she discovered that the contractor had used half-inch drywall instead of the five-eighths inch required by the fire code for the utility room.

It wasn't the existence of the woman that made her throat close; it was the dates.

July 14, 2024. That was the weekend they had gone to the lodge in Vermont for her forty-first birthday. Jared had spent three hours on Sunday morning in the parking lot, his laptop open on the trunk of the car, claiming he was adjusting the load-bearing calculations for the library extension in the city.

The text from that morning read: The park has the paddleboats today. Caleb wants the blue one. We’re by the dock until one.

When Jared entered the house at 6:45 PM, the kitchen lights were off. The only illumination came from the orange LEDs of the microwave clock and the small, flickering candle Ava had lit inside the pumpkin on the porch.

Tasha was sitting in the wingback chair by the dark fireplace. The phone lay on her knees, the screen turned downward against the grey wool of her skirt.

"The wind’s coming up from the north," Jared said as he took off his overcoat. He didn't notice the silence immediately; he was used to the house having a low-level hum of activity—the television in the den, Nia’s markers rolling across the table. "They’re predicting frost by morning. I should probably drain the garden hoses before they split."

"Who is Caleb?"

The name was small, but it filled the room like the smell of gas from an unlit burner.

Jared stopped with his coat half-off his shoulders. The wool hung from his left arm like a dead weight. His mind, trained by fifteen years of courtroom testimony and contract mediation, ran through three separate mitigation strategies in the span of two heartbeats. A client’s child. A charitable fund he managed for the firm. A cousin’s son from Ohio.

Then he looked at Tasha’s hands. They weren't shaking. They were clamped over the edges of the phone, her knuckles grey under the skin.

"He's seven," Jared said. The truth came out dry, without the grease of his usual delivery. It sounded foreign even to him.

"He has your eyes," Tasha said. She didn't look at him; she looked at the unlit logs in the grate. "And he likes math. You gave him the same explanation about the bridge project that you gave Ava when she was six. Word for word. I found the emails from 2019 where you described the concrete curing process to her."

Jared took his coat the rest of the way off and laid it over the back of the sofa. He didn't come closer to her. The distance between the rug and the chair felt like an open trench. "Tasha, it’s not—it’s not an active situation. It’s an arrangement."

"An arrangement," she repeated. The word didn't have any weight behind it. "Like the landscape contract? Or the monthly service on the Lexus?"

"She was a medical technician at the county facility when we did the expansion project in 2018," he said, his voice dropping into the rhythmic cadence he used to calm angry city councils. "It was a very difficult winter. My father had just died in that hospice in Toledo, and I was spending four nights a week in those budget hotels off the bypass. I felt... disconnected from the grid. It wasn't about you."

"Don't do that," Tasha said, her eyes finally moving to his face. They were wide, the pupils tiny pins under the dim light from the hallway. "Don't use your father's ghost to dress up a dirty room in a motel. It’s lazy, Jared. You’re not a lazy man."

She stood up. The phone slid off her lap and hit the rug with a dull thud.

"The girls are at my sister's," she said. "I called her at four. I told her the furnace was backing up and the house smelled of carbon monoxide. I didn't want them to smell this."

"Tasha, let's sit down. We have twelve years of equity in this house. We have the firm’s insurance profile to consider—"

"Get out," she said. She didn't shout. The words were small, sharp drops of water hitting a hot iron skillet. "Take the briefcase. Leave the keys to the garage on the island. I don't want the Lexus in the driveway tomorrow morning when the neighbors come out for the recycling."

Jared stood still for five seconds. He looked at the grandfather clock. The pendulum moved behind the glass, a heavy brass disc shifting from left to right, cutting the hour into tiny, unrecoverable pieces.

"I'll be at the Residence Inn by the highway," he said.

"I don't care where you are," Tasha said, turning her back to him to face the cold hearth. "Just don't be here."



The apartment Jared rented in December was located on the fourth floor of a brick complex called The Heatherton. It had been built in the late eighties, and the walls were made of prefabricated concrete panels that allowed the sound of the plumbing from 5B to travel down through his ceiling like a low, rhythmic cough.

He spent three thousand dollars at a Scandinavian furniture outlet in the city, buying a grey wool sofa, a glass-topped coffee table, and a bed frame made of pale, unfinished pine. The rooms smelled of cardboard boxes and the chemical sealers used on the cheap laminate flooring.

On two nights every week—Tuesdays and alternate Saturdays—he had Caleb.

The boy sat on the edge of the grey sofa, his knees tucked into his chin, his eyes fixed on the blank screen of the television that Jared hadn't connected to the cable box yet. A single box of plastic construction bricks sat between them on the rug, the red and blue pieces looking small against the grey expanse of the wool pile.

"We could build the gantry crane," Jared said, his sleeves rolled up to his elbows. He had taken off his watch—the gold Omega Tasha had given him for his partner selection—because the weight of it against his wrist felt like an anchor.

"We don't have the gears for the pulley," Caleb said. His voice was flat, an imitation of his mother's when she was tired after a shift. "The set from the apartment has the six-millimeter pins. These are just the blocks."

Jared picked up a red six-stud block, turning it over in his hand. The plastic was hard and cheap. "We can get the pins tomorrow at the hobby shop behind the mall. I’ll take you after your math club."

"I'm not in the club anymore," Caleb said. He didn't look angry; he looked distant, like a witness giving a deposition about an accident he’d seen from a bus window. "Mom said the registration fee went up because they’re doing the district meet in the city, and we have to fix the alternator on the Civic first."

Jared felt a familiar, hot prickle at the back of his neck—the sensation he got when a subcontractor submitted an invoice for double the estimated materials. "Your mother didn't tell me about the alternator. I pay the baseline maintenance draw on the first of every month."

"She said she didn't want to ask for the extra," Caleb said, his finger tracing the seam of a blue brick. "She said the paperwork takes too long to go through your lawyers."

Jared stood up, moving to the window that looked out over the parking lot. Below, the rows of sedans were covered in a thin, grey crust of salt and half-melted sleet. A single yellow streetlight flickered near the dumpster, casting a greasy light over the ice.

He had spent forty-two years believing that his life was an exercise in structural integrity—that if he calculated the loads correctly, he could support two separate roofs without either of them sagging. Now, he was standing in a four-hundred-square-foot box with an seven-year-old boy who wouldn't look him in the eye, while his daughters wouldn't return his texts unless they needed a signature for a school trip waiver.

"Caleb," he said, his forehead pressing against the cold pane of the window. "Do you know what a foundation is?"

"The thing under the house," the boy said.

"It’s the thing that keeps the house from sinking into the mud when the ground gets wet," Jared said. "If you don't pour it thick enough, the walls start to pull away from the roof. You don't see it happening for a long time. You just notice that the doors don't shut right anymore."

Caleb was silent for a long moment. Then he dropped the blue brick back into the box. It made a sharp, plastic clatter. "Is that why you don't live at the other house anymore?"

Jared didn't turn around. "Yes," he said. "The foundation was bad."

The lunchroom at Riverside Elementary smelled of steamed corn, floor wax, and the damp wool of eighty winter coats drying on the hooks along the wall.

Ava Bennett sat at the end of the eighth-grade table, her lunchbox open but untouched. She had three carrot sticks left and a container of yogurt that had grown warm in her locker. Across the room, near the milk coolers, the second-graders were lining up for their trays.

She had seen the boy twice before—once in the hallway during the safety drill, and once through the window of her mother’s station wagon when they had passed the public library on a Saturday afternoon. He had been sitting on the steps with a green backpack between his feet, waiting for someone.

Today, he was wearing a blue sweater that was too short in the sleeves, his thin wrists sticking out like two white sticks. He was balancing a tray with a carton of chocolate milk and a bowl of chicken nuggets.

A third-grade boy, running to reach the water fountain before the bell, caught Caleb’s shoulder with his elbow.

The tray tilted. The plastic bowl slid first, hitting the linoleum with a wet, heavy slap that sent the nuggets skittering into the dirt beneath the table. The chocolate milk carton split along the seam, a dark, brown puddle spreading rapidly toward Caleb’s sneakers.

The table of fourth-graders nearby erupted into that short, cruel collective bark that children use when someone else becomes visible.

Caleb dropped to his knees. He didn't cry; his face went completely white, his small, square fingers scrambling to gather the paper napkins from his pocket to block the spread of the milk before it reached the other kids' shoes.

Ava stood up. Her friend Chloe caught her sleeve. "Where are you going? The bell's about to ring for fifth period."

Ava pulled her arm away without looking back. She crossed the grey linoleum, her boots heavy against the floor, until she was standing over the brown puddle. She knelt down, her black leggings soaking up the milk immediately, and reached out to grab the edge of the tray before it rolled into the drain.

"Don't use the napkins," Ava said. Her voice had that low, authoritative rasp she’d developed since October. "They just turn to mush once the grease hits them. Use the tray like a shovel."

Caleb stopped his hands mid-air. His face was three inches from hers. Up close, she could see the tiny, golden flecks in his dark brown irises—the exact same pattern she saw in the mirror every morning when she brushed her teeth before the school bus arrived.

"I know you," he said, his voice trembling slightly but clear.

"I know," Ava said. She took three clean napkins from her own lunchbox and began wiping the plastic tray. "You’re Caleb."

"You’re Ava," he said. He looked down at her shoes. "Your leggings are wet."

"They'll dry," she said, sitting back on her heels. The bell rang above them—a loud, brassy clang that made both of them flinch. The rest of the cafeteria began to scramble toward the double doors, the sound of three hundred pairs of sneakers creating a dull roar like a waterfall.

"He has a picture of you on his desk," Caleb said, his fingers twisting the hem of his blue sweater. "The one where you’re holding the blue ribbon from the track meet. He told me you ran the four-hundred meter in sixty-two seconds."

Ava felt a strange, hot pressure behind her eyes, but she didn't let her shoulders drop. "He doesn't have a desk anymore," she said. "He has a table. It's made of glass."

"I know," Caleb said. "It’s hard to do math on it because the paper slides around if you don't hold the corners."

Ava looked at him for a long three seconds. Then she stood up, offering him a hand. His skin was cold and slightly sticky from the milk, but his grip was surprisingly firm—the long, square fingers of their father's family.

"Come on," she said. "Mrs. Martinez will give you another milk if I go with you. She knows my mom."



The courtroom on the third floor of the county courthouse did not look like the ones on television. There were no spectators, no reporters, and the windows were high, narrow slots that looked out onto the gravel roof of the county jail's kitchen annex. The air smelled of industrial carpet shampoo and the faint, sweet scent of the powdered donuts the court clerk had left on the copy machine.

Raven Cole sat at the small table on the left. She had been awake since 4:00 AM; her shift at the hospital had ended at noon, and she hadn't had time to change out of her dark blue scrub trousers. She had only thrown a beige trench coat over her top to hide the logo of the pediatric ward.

Her attorney—a young woman from the legal aid society whose briefcase was scuffed at the corners—was organizing a stack of blue ledger pages.

"The defendant’s income statement for the final quarter of 2025 shows a discretionary bonus of fourteen thousand dollars from the Bennett-Garrison partnership," the attorney said to the magistrate. "We’re asking that the standard calculation be applied retroactively to include this amount. The child’s dental insurance has a two-thousand-dollar deductible that wasn't covered under the baseline health proxy."

Jared sat at the opposite table. He looked smaller than he had in October. He wasn't wearing his three-piece suit; he had chosen a simple charcoal blazer and a white shirt without a tie. His hair, usually cut every three weeks by a stylist in the city, had grown long over his ears, showing a few strands of grey that hadn't been visible when he lived on Elmwood Lane.

His lawyer—a senior partner whose retainer could have paid Raven’s rent for six months—stood up. "Your Honor, my client has already agreed to cover the medical variance outside the scope of the primary decree. We’re simply asking for a stabilization of the visitation schedule. The current arrangement leaves him with forty-eight hours every two weeks, which doesn't allow for the educational oversight the child requires given his advanced placement in mathematics."

Raven looked across the six feet of linoleum that separated them.

Jared didn't look back at her; his eyes were fixed on the blue ledger sheets. He looked like an engineer studying a set of stress-test results for a bridge he knew was going to fail anyway.

"I don't want his money for the math club," Raven said. Her voice wasn't loud, but it cut through the room with the clarity of a bell in an empty church. Her attorney reached out to touch her forearm, warning her to silent, but Raven didn't move. "I want him to be there when the bus drops the boy off on Tuesdays. Three times last month, Caleb sat on the radiator in the vestibule until five-thirty because the firm had a meeting in the city. If you’re going to be the architect, Jared, you have to stay on the job site."

The magistrate looked up over his spectacles. He was an old man with liver spots on his forehead, and he looked as though he had heard every variation of this particular story three thousand times since 1990.

"Mr. Bennett," the magistrate said. "Is there a reason the Tuesday arrivals are inconsistent?"

Jared cleared his throat. The sound was dry. "The traffic on the interstate near the bypass is volatile during the construction season, Your Honor. I’ve tried to adjust my hours—"

"Adjust them more," the magistrate said, his gavel hitting the wooden block with a single, unceremonious thwack. "The court finds the retroactive calculation valid. We’ll recess until two for the final signature on the custody annex."

As the room cleared, Raven stayed at the table to gather her textbooks. She had an anatomy exam at eight the next morning, and the pages on the nervous system were covered in her own tiny, penciled annotations.

A shadow fell over the wood. Jared was standing three feet away, his briefcase held against his ribs like a shield.

"He looks bigger," Jared said. "Every time I see him on Friday nights, his trousers look like they’ve shrunk an inch."

"He's seven," Raven said, not looking up from her book. "They do that."

"I sent the check for the alternator," he said. "Directly to the garage on 4th Street. They said the belt was frayed too, so I told them to replace the whole assembly."

Raven stopped her pen. She looked up at him, her grey eyes steady under the green glare of the courtroom lights. "Thank you for the belt, Jared. Truly. But don't do it like it's a favor you’re granting me. It’s his car too. He sits in the back seat when we go to the market."

Jared nodded twice. He looked as though he wanted to say something else—something about his apartment or the way the girls wouldn't answer his calls—but the court clerk came back in with a fresh stack of white folders, and the moment closed like a door in a drafty house.



By July, the heat had settled into the valley like a damp wool blanket.

At 14 Elmwood Lane, the lawn had lost its neat, golf-green finish. Tasha had stopped using the chemical lawn service in May; instead, she had spent three hundred dollars on sixteen flat crates of native perennials—purple coneflower, black-eyed Susans, and common milkweed—and had spent three weekends digging up the sod along the southern fence line.

Ava was helping her. They wore wide-brimmed straw hats and old sneakers that were caked in dry clay.

"The root balls have to be loose," Tasha said, her trowel hitting a stone with a metallic clink. "If you don't spread the thin roots out before you put them in the dirt, they just grow around each other in a circle until the plant chokes itself."

"Like a knot?" Ava asked. She was holding a milkweed seedling, its green leaves covered in a fine, white fuzz.

"Exactly like a knot," Tasha said, wiping her brow with the back of her dirty garden glove.

A high, thin whistle came from the porch. Michael O'Connor was sitting on the top step, an old copy of The collected Poems of W.B. Yeats open on his knee, his corduroy jacket replaced by a faded blue linen shirt with the sleeves rolled up. He had a pencil behind his ear and a glass of iced tea in his hand.

"The rhythm of the third stanza is off," he called out to them. "He’s trying to force the rhyme with 'stone.' Nobody rhymes stone with 'alone' anymore unless they’re writing a greeting card."

Ava laughed—that short, sharp giggle she only used when Michael was around. "He’s been dead for eighty years, Michael. Cut him some breaks."

"No breaks for the classics," Michael said, standing up to bring the tea down to the edge of the garden bed. He had been coming over three nights a week since June, ostensibly to help Ava with her preparatory essays for the advanced placement history track, but he usually ended up staying to help Nia tune her acoustic guitar or to drag the heavy bags of mulch from the car.

He didn't look like Jared. He had a soft, rounded nose, thick fingers that were always stained with blue ink from his grading pens, and he drove a ten-year-old Volvo station wagon that smelled of old library books and wet wool.

Tasha took the tea from him, her fingers brushing his for a second. Her skin was brown from the sun, and she had stopped wearing the department store concealer under her eyes; the dark circles were still there, but they looked less like wounds now and more like the natural contours of a face that had lived through a long winter.

"Nia’s inside with the chords," Michael said, his hand dropping naturally to the small of Tasha’s back—not a possessive gesture, but a steady, grounding presence, like the post of a porch. "She’s found the G-minor transition. It’s still a little rough, but she’s not dropping the pick anymore."

From the open window of the living room, the thin, metallic sound of an acoustic guitar drifted out over the hot lawn. It was the same four-chord sequence over and over—a slow, hesitant movement that stopped every three bars when the finger placement failed, then started again from the top.

"She needs to practice the bass note first," Ava said, her trowel digging into the dirt. "She’s trying to hit all six strings at once because she wants it to sound loud."

"Let her be loud," Tasha said softly, her thumb tracking the condensation on the glass of tea. "She’s been quiet for a long time."



The auditorium at the state nursing college smelled of floor wax and the specific, dry heat generated by four hundred stage lights.

It was May of 2031.

Raven Cole stood in the third row of the graduating class, her white velvet cap pinned securely to her dark hair. Her uniform was a crisp, clinical white, the gold pin of the State Board of Nursing resting precisely two inches above her left breast pocket.

When the dean reached the "C" section of the roster, the noise from the back left section of the bleachers was distinct.

"Raven Cole, Summa Cum Laude."

A twelve-year-old boy stood up on the wooden benches, his head clearing the shoulders of the adults around him by a full four inches. He was wearing a dark grey suit—a thrift store purchase that had been tailored at the cuffs by his grandmother—and he had a pair of plastic-rimmed glasses resting on the bridge of his nose.

"That's my mom!" Caleb shouted. His voice had dropped three octaves over the winter, a deep, resonant baritone that filled the rafters of the gym.

Beside him, Tasha Bennett didn't tell him to sit down. She was holding a digital camera—the old one from Elmwood Lane—and she was clicking the shutter every two seconds, her face flushed with the heat of the room. Ava, now eighteen and wearing a green linen blazer that matched her eyes, had her arm pulled through Caleb’s elbow, laughing as he waved a rolled-up program in the air.

Two rows behind them sat Jared.

He had his hands folded in his lap. He was forty-seven now, and the charcoal suit he wore was the same one he’d used for the court hearings five years ago, but it hung loosely from his frame; he had lost twenty pounds during his second year of therapy, and his shoulders had taken on a slight, permanent slope.

He didn't shout. He didn't take pictures. But when Raven crossed the stage, his hands came together in a steady, rhythmic applause that didn't stop until she had taken her seat on the opposite side of the platform.

After the ceremony, the crowd spilled out onto the brick plaza where the cherry blossoms were dropping their pink petals onto the wet concrete.

Caleb reached his mother first, his long arms wrapping around her neck so hard that her white cap tilted to the side. "You did the speech," he said into her neck. "The one about the renal failure protocol. You didn't even look at the index cards."

"I knew the material, Caleb," Raven said, her eyes wet as she kissed his cheek. "When you spend four years reading the same page at three in the morning while the radiator clicks, it stays in the head."

Tasha walked up slowly, her hands tucked into the pockets of her trench coat. She looked at Raven for a long two seconds before she reached out and adjusted the gold pin on Raven’s uniform so that it sat straight against the fabric.

"The pediatric ward at Memorial is a good placement," Tasha said. "The hours are terrible, but the supervisor—Brenda—is a reasonable woman. She let Ava do her volunteer hours there three years ago."

"Thank you for the notes on the shift rotation," Raven said. "The ones you sent with Ava last week. They helped with the scheduling."

The two women stood together in the sun, the pink petals from the trees landing on their shoulders like snow. They didn't hug. They didn't pretend that the last five years had been a seamless transition between two houses. But they stood three inches apart, their shadows long and single on the red brickwork.

Jared stayed by the concrete planter near the library entrance. He had a small white box from the jeweler's in his pocket—a silver watch with a small, unadorned face he’d bought for Raven to use during her rounds—but he didn't take it out. He watched Caleb take his mother's diploma case, checking the gold leaf lettering with his thumb to ensure the seal was dry.

Ava walked over to him. She didn't look like a child anymore; she had the sharp, direct gaze of a woman who had spent two years studying pre-law at the university.

"We’re going to the diner on 4th for the lunch," she said. "Michael booked the big table by the window."

Jared looked at her, his finger tracking the line of his tie. "Is there... is there room for another plate?"

Ava looked back at the plaza where Caleb was trying to pin a fresh carnation onto Raven’s lapel while Tasha held the pins.

"There’s room," Ava said. "But you have to sit at the end near the register. The check comes there first."

Jared let out a short, clean breath—the same sound he used to make when a bridge project finally passed its final load-bearing inspection after the spring floods.

"I can handle the check," he said.



The Lexus was gone. In its place in the parking lot of The Heatherton, Jared drove a grey hybrid hatchback that had two dents in the rear bumper from a tight turn he’d taken in the hospital parking garage during one of Caleb’s soccer tournaments.

The apartment walls were no longer white. He had painted them a soft, low-gloss olive green during his third year of individual sessions with Dr. Matthews, after he’d spent three months realizing that the white walls made him feel like he was waiting for a verdict in a terminal ward.

The walls were now crowded with frames.

There was Nia at fifteen, her fingers long and confident over the neck of her Fender Stratocaster at the regional talent show; Ava in her graduation gown from the state college, her chin held high and stubborn; and Caleb standing by the whiteboard at the district math olympiad, his equation written out in that small, typewriter-sharp script he’d never lost.

It was October again.

The wind was coming from the north, carrying the smell of the river and the wet silt from the industrial park down Route 9.

Caleb sat at the glass-topped table in the corner. He was seventeen, his shoulders as wide as Jared’s had been at thirty, his legs tucked under the metal frame of the chair. He had four separate sheets of advanced calculus spread around his coffee mug, the numbers moving across the pages in long, elegant curves that looked like the drawings of suspension cables.

"The force is distributed through the piers at an inverse ratio to the depth of the bedrock," Caleb muttered, his pen clicking through his knuckles. Click. Click. Click.

Jared sat on the grey wool sofa, a small pile of permission slips and health insurance updates in his lap. He didn't look at his phone. The secondary device had been recycled three years ago at a depot near the mall; the primary one lay on the kitchen counter, its screen dark and silent.

"You’re using the old method," Jared said, not looking up from his paper. "The 1995 standard. The new state code requires a three-percent variance for seismic shift if the concrete is poured within twenty miles of the fault line."

Caleb stopped the pen. He looked at his father over the edge of his glasses. "The fault line’s dead, Dad. It hasn't shifted since 1974."

"It’s not dead," Jared said, his voice dropping into that quiet, steady register he’d learned to use when the old shame started to rise behind his ribs like an old injury before a rainstorm. "It’s just quiet. You still have to build for the shift, Caleb. Even if the ground stays still for forty years, the concrete remembers where the pressure was."

Caleb looked down at the paper for a long five seconds. Then he took his red ballpoint pen and drew a small, neat triangle near the base of the pier calculation.

"Three percent?" the boy asked.

"Three percent," Jared said, standing up to turn on the small, orange light inside the pumpkin he’d carved that afternoon with Nia on the small balcony. "No more, no less. If you give it too much room, the bridge rattles when the trucks go over. If you don't give it enough, the winter kills it."

The apartment was quiet. Through the thin walls, the sound of the television from 3B was just a low, rhythmic hum, like the sound of a distant river running through a culvert. Outside, the maple leaves skittered across the asphalt of the parking lot, their dry edges clicking against the tires of the cars as the season turned once more, moving slowly and without permission into the cold.




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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.



Visit Olivia Salters Author Page at Amazon.

 

© 2026 Olivia Salter - All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the author.

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.



Visit Olivia Salters Author Page at Amazon.

 

© 2026 Olivia Salter - All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form without the express written permission of the author.

The Bats in the Walls.: Some Houses Don't Keep Secrets. They Feed Them.

  The Bats in the Walls By Olivia Salter Get your free copy of  The Bats in the Walls at  Amazon   Kindle Unlimited. The bats appeared with...