family
The Winter Soltice
She didn't know what, but something always drew Emily back to the pond. At least once a week she found herself there, circling the water. Now that winter was taking hold, her visits were more and more frequent. Sometimes she'd bring a book, thinking she'd sit on the rickety, wooden bench and lose herself in some reading. But she never did. Instead she'd realize she'd spent the last hour staring into the depths below the lapping water of the pond.
By Diana Anderson5 years ago in Fiction
Shattered Ice
Ice was scattered across the floor, shattered in pieces. The table where the cake sat was turned over on its side. A few chairs knocked over and out of place. The streamers and ribbons were hanging skewed and falling down. The barn was empty now but a few hours prior it was filled with laughter. People rushed out as soon as the commotion started including Maddie and Chase. Maddie looked around at the mess; today was suppose to be fun and one for the memory books but then it happened…
By Rebecca Hackney5 years ago in Fiction
The Killing Lake
The walk to the killing lake was so much louder than usual today. The snow crunched under my feet, and the sound of the chains around my wrists was an unwelcome addition to the usual quiet. Every member of our small town was walking through the trees with me, but they were silent. Only their footsteps and the occasional quiet sob could be heard.
By Alyssa Gutierrez5 years ago in Fiction
Happy Birthday
I sit at one of the North facing windows of our family cabin, tucked in at the base of Yoho Valley in the National Park. I watch as the day’s light seamlessly disappears over the mountain range making way for the darkness to creep in and settle across the night sky. It’s snowing and the howl of the constant November winds sweeping around our cabin reminds me of the scenes in the Harry Potter movies when the Dementors arrive. As the darkness descends so too does the icy cold air, sucking the life out of the day.
By Kerie Adamson5 years ago in Fiction
Driving
Metres and metres of tarmac shot under the tires as we cruised down country roads. With my big brother driving and our two best friends in the backseat, life couldn't be better. Everything that had troubled me in the last week was left behind us. Windows rolled down, I found myself singing along to the blaring radio, something I hadn’t had it in me to do for a while.
By Grayson Clayton5 years ago in Fiction
Elder's Tree
In life as we grow, sadly, our loved ones pass away and all we have to remember them by is our memories and pictures. When I was five years old, I experienced my first loss when my dog Bear died from rabies. I was completely heartbroken because my grandparents got him as a puppy when I was just a babe. Bear and I grew up together, we were inseparable. When he passed, my grandfather told me to go back into the house, so that could prepare for Bear's immortal life. He planted a pear tree in front of the house, and told me that if we bury Bear in front of this tree, then he would live on within the tree. This way, he would live as long as the tree. Which outlives human lifetimes.
By ElRey Niffen5 years ago in Fiction
Indigenous
November 21, 1978: Baraga State Park, Baraga, Michigan, 12:03 am. Gerry Brown Bear, a gangly, Native American man walks through the forest with a swift strut. There is no human activity at this hour. Just creatures of the animal variety. The stars paint the sky with an expansive fury. Different sounds fill the area but nothing foreign to the ears of Mister Brown Bear. Gerry made an excursion from the L'Anse Indian Reservation to try to see a meteorite or comet in the Michigan night skies.
By Darren Smith5 years ago in Fiction
No Regrets
Super spy, Samantha Rigby pursued her target by taking a shortcut across a frozen Russian pond. It was a calculated risk. The sound of cracking ice alerted her to danger. Would her risk pay off? She knew this pond was deep enough to trap her in frigid water if she fell through. She quickly…
By Julie Lacksonen5 years ago in Fiction






