Fan Fiction
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco Are Ready to Start a Family: Exploring Surrogacy and Adoption. AI-Generated.
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco are officially ready to turn the page on their next chapter. Following their wedding in September, insiders report that the newlyweds are eager to start a family immediately. The couple is reportedly moving with a sense of urgency, actively exploring alternative paths to parenthood, specifically surrogacy and adoption.
By Ann D. Burcha day ago in Fiction
The Kolobok Who Learned to Listen. AI-Generated.
Once upon a time, in a small cottage at the edge of a great forest, there lived an old man and an old woman. One chilly morning, the old woman decided to bake a round bread roll — a kolobok. She gathered flour from the barn, eggs from the hen, sour cream from the cellar, and butter from the pantry. She mixed everything together, shaped it into a perfect golden ball, and placed it in the oven.
By Julia Lemona day ago in Fiction
Panda and smartphone
Once upon a time, there was a panda whose father owned a smartphone. One day, when his father went out for some work, the panda picked up the smartphone and began exploring it. Soon, he discovered a game. Excitedly, he exclaimed, “Wow! A game! Now I can play games on dad’s smartphone!” and immediately started playing.
By Sudais Zakwan2 days ago in Fiction
The Lantern in the Fog
The fog settled over the village like a blanket soaked in silence. At first it was gentle, wrapping the streets in a quiet hush. But as night deepened, it thickened into something heavier, almost alive, crawling along the cobblestones and slipping into the cracks of every home. It was not the kind of fog that simply blurred the edges of things. This fog carried a chill that touched the marrow, a weight that pressed on the heart, and whispered doubts in voices that sounded eerily familiar.
By Sound and Spirit2 days ago in Fiction
I'm Ready: Love More to Be More
A CyberPunk De-claration of Love We are in grave crisis as these dark times, testing our souls and will to exist. We, the New Post Bred, have learned from the CyberPunks that we are really just part of the electronic and part human in the savage jungle of life. Thriving in multi-realities known as cyberspace, which exists as an extension of our electric minds or our virtual multiverse of life.
By SAMURAI SAM AND WILD DRAGONS3 days ago in Fiction
She Smiled Every Day, But No One Asked Why
She smiled every day. Not the kind of smile that demanded attention. Not wide or loud or dramatic. It was small, polite, practiced—something she had learned to wear the way people wore shoes before stepping outside. Necessary. Expected. Invisible. People loved her smile. They said it made her look strong. What they never asked was why she needed it so badly. Every morning, she stood in front of the mirror and adjusted her face before adjusting her clothes. She lifted the corners of her mouth just enough. Relaxed her eyes. Smoothed the tiredness away with habit, not rest. The woman staring back at her looked fine. Fine was convincing. Fine was safe. Fine meant no questions. She had learned early that sadness made people uncomfortable. When she was younger and cried too openly, adults told her to be grateful. Friends told her to stay positive. Strangers told her others had it worse. So she stopped explaining. She stopped sharing. She stopped crying where anyone could see. Instead, she smiled. At work, she was known as reliable. The one who stayed late. The one who listened. The one who never complained. When stress filled the room, people leaned toward her calm like it was something contagious. “You’re always so strong,” they said. She nodded. Strength, she learned, was another name people used when they didn’t want to look closer. At home, the silence was heavier. No one asked about her day because she answered before the question could form. “It was fine.” Always fine. The word filled the space like furniture—useful, unmoving, impossible to trip over. At night, when the world quieted, the weight returned. Thoughts she had carefully avoided all day lined up patiently, waiting their turn. What if this is all I am? What if no one ever sees me? What if I disappear slowly and no one notices? She lay awake, staring at the ceiling, counting breaths instead of dreams. Her phone buzzed often. Messages asking for favors. For advice. For reassurance. Rarely for her. She answered anyway. Smiling emojis replaced honesty. Short replies replaced explanations. She became fluent in sounding okay without being okay. People loved that about her. The breaking point did not arrive with drama. It arrived quietly, like everything else. One afternoon, while standing in line at a café, the barista looked at her and said, “You’re always smiling. You must have a good life.” It was meant as a compliment. Her chest tightened. For a moment, the words stuck in her throat. A thousand truths pressed forward, desperate to escape. But the line moved. The cup was handed to her. And she smiled. “Yeah,” she said softly. “I do.” That night, she cried for reasons she couldn’t fully explain. Not loud sobs. Just tears that came steadily, without urgency, as if they had been waiting patiently for permission. She cried for the girl who learned too early how to hide. For the woman who had become invisible behind her own kindness. She cried because she was tired. Tired of being strong. Tired of being easy to overlook. Tired of smiling when no one asked why. The change began with something small. The next time someone asked, “How are you?” she paused. Just for a second. “I’m… managing,” she said. The words felt dangerous. Honest. Real. The person nodded and moved on. Nothing collapsed. No one panicked. The world continued. Something inside her shifted. She began to notice how often people used her strength as an excuse not to care deeper. How easily smiles were mistaken for happiness. How silence was confused with peace. She started journaling at night. Not pretty words. Not inspirational quotes. Just truth. Messy and unfinished. Some nights she wrote only one sentence: “I needed someone today.” One evening, a friend looked at her differently. “You seem tired,” they said. Not accusing. Just observant. She almost denied it. Almost. “I am,” she admitted. The room did not fall apart. The friend did not leave. Instead, they listened. It wasn’t a miracle. It didn’t fix everything. But it mattered. She realized then that being seen wasn’t about being loud. It was about being honest with the right people. She did not stop smiling altogether. Smiles weren’t the enemy. Pretending was. She began letting her smile rest when it needed to. Letting silence speak when words failed. Letting herself be human instead of admirable. Some people drifted away. Others stayed closer. That told her everything she needed to know. One morning, standing in front of the mirror again, she noticed something new. Her smile looked different. Softer. Less forced. It didn’t appear on command anymore. It arrived when it wanted to—and left when it needed to. For the first time, she didn’t adjust it. She left the house as she was. Later that day, someone asked, “Are you okay?” She considered the question carefully. “No,” she said. “But I’m learning.” The words felt like freedom. She still smiled some days. Other days, she didn’t. And slowly, gently, she learned this truth: A smile can hide pain—but it can also return once the pain is finally allowed to speak. And maybe the real strength wasn’t in smiling every day. Maybe it was in letting someone finally ask why—and staying long enough to answer.
By Inayat khan4 days ago in Fiction
The Angle We Stand On
The first time I saw the crack in the sky, I was late for a date. It hung above the intersection like a seam someone forgot to finish stitching. A thin, silver tear running vertically through the blue. Cars drove under it. People crossed the street without looking up. A man argued into his phone about insurance deductibles. The world continued with the stubborn confidence of a place that had agreed not to notice.
By shallon gregerson4 days ago in Fiction
Dragon in the Basement. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
The dragon was chained in the basement of a failing marriage. No one else knew that. To the city inspector, the building was just another condemned brownstone with bad wiring and a mold problem. To the neighbors, it was the place where the couple on the second floor fought at night, their voices leaking through the radiator pipes like steam.
By shallon gregerson4 days ago in Fiction
🧳 The Thing That Wasn’t in the Bag
Evan knew the exact moment it happened, even though it took him another ten minutes to admit it. The bus had already pulled away from the curb, tires sighing as if relieved to be done waiting. He stood in the aisle, one hand gripping the overhead rail, the other wrapped around his backpack strap. The city slid past the window in its usual indifference. Traffic lights blinked. A man jogged across the street with coffee sloshing dangerously close to regret ☕.
By Karl Jackson5 days ago in Fiction









