Script
When Stars Remembered Our Names. AI-Generated.
He first saw her under a flickering streetlight. Not at a party, not through mutual friends — just one of those moments that feel like an accident until you realize the universe probably planned it that way.
By Ahmet Kıvanç Demirkıran4 months ago in Fiction
Why My Body Remembers. Content Warning.
The night bus to Bangalore smells of diesel and longing. I press my forehead against the cool, vibrating window, watching the neon signs of Chennai blur into streaks of fuchsia and gold. My phone is dead. My backpack, stuffed under the seat, holds a single change of clothes and a dog-eared copy of a Rumi translation I pretend to understand. This is not a pilgrimage. It’s a flight. A crack in the surface of my well-ordered life, and I have slipped through.
By Chahat Kaur4 months ago in Fiction
Mastering Expense Tracking in Australia: A Smart Path to Financial Freedom
In today’s fast-paced world, keeping track of your expenses isn’t just a good habit — it’s essential for financial wellbeing. Whether you’re a student in Sydney trying to stretch your dollar, a family in Melbourne managing household bills, or a small business owner in Brisbane juggling multiple expenses, understanding where your money goes can make all the difference.
By Saad Imtiaz4 months ago in Fiction
Choreography for the Devoured
CONCEPT This is an imagined correspondence. It takes place in a speculative world where some of my favorite poets and poetic thinkers exist in rooms of their own. They are beyond time, in a kind of dead letter office for the soul. They cannot see one another. They cannot speak. But they can write.
By Fatal Serendipity4 months ago in Fiction
Akashic Coffee
Victoria Mendoza pushed the door open to Akashic Coffee, the chime overhead a soft whisper against the hush of coastal morning. The air inside was steeped in espresso and wood smoke, the soundscape a mixture of lo-fi beats and soft laughter from other early risers. It was one of those San Luis Obispo mornings when the fog still hugged the mountains, reluctant to leave.
By Tony Martello4 months ago in Fiction
Fiction Exercise
Anne Bernays and Pamela Painter — What if? Writing Exercises for Fiction Writers prompts — The Exercise — Write a two-person scene in which one character tries to break through another character’s barrier of denial. Make the issue both specific and dramatic. Do this mainly in dialogue, but anchor it in a particular time and place. The Objective — To train yourself to be aware of the unconscious forces in everyday life. People are rarely what they seem; motives are cloudy at best and often almost entirely hidden. Fictional characters, like real ones, ought to incorporate this psychic complexity. Remember that occasionally no does mean yes and vice versa.
By Denise E Lindquist4 months ago in Fiction
Couple missing on sea 1998 story
On a warm summer day in January 1998, a young American couple, Thomas and Eileen Lonergan, set out on what was supposed to be the adventure of a lifetime—a scuba diving trip along Australia’s iconic Great Barrier Reef. By all accounts, it should have been an unforgettable experience. And in a tragic way, it was.
By Israr khan5 months ago in Fiction





