Thirteen For Halloween: Requiem for the Living: A Ghost’s Vengeance

The sky split open, unleashing a torrent of rain that cut like shards of glass. Snow mixed with the downpour, falling in jagged flurries as if the heavens were weeping for a forgotten soul. A damp chill clung to the bones of the living, but I felt none of it. My cold was deeper—a frost of the soul, bound in chains that death had only tightened.

I hovered above my open grave, an intruder among the living. A field of black umbrellas swayed like wilted flowers in the wind, their owners clutching them in vain against the storm. I had no need for shelter, but their grief—their muted cries—clawed at my mind. A grotesque dance, these mourners, caught in the rhythm of loss they didn’t understand.

Below, a mahogany coffin waited—an empty vessel where my body should have rested. But it wasn’t my body they mourned. I watched with a hollow, burning rage, invisible to all but the darkness itself. My killer had orchestrated it all—ensuring I watched the false ritual, ensuring I would know my body would never rest in peace.

The truth of my death unfolded slowly, a cruel revelation whispered from beyond the veil. My death had not been an accident. No, it had been carefully crafted, and now I, the ghost, was left to wander—a pawn who had been cut from the board too soon.

I was not free. I was trapped between realms, tethered to the world by an insatiable need for vengeance. My ethereal form moved with the wind, silent and unseen, but I knew I wasn’t powerless. The hunt was mine to begin.

The first sign was the cold. A creeping, unnatural chill that followed my murderer, sinking into their skin, gnawing at the edges of their sanity. It started as a discomfort, a breath of cold air in a warm room. But soon, the chill grew deeper—frost on their breath, ice in their veins. Their windows, no matter how tightly shut, let in the biting air. They couldn’t sleep, their nights haunted by the gnawing sense of being watched.

I made sure of it.

I watched as their unease grew, as the world twisted around them. Shadows clung longer than they should, stretching into shapes that whispered my name. The clocks, once steady, began to tick out of rhythm, a maddening staccato of time unraveling. Their reflection in the mirror became distorted, the faintest hint of me—a flicker in the corner of their eye. I was always there. They could never be alone.

The trail of their guilt led me to their doorstep, each step heavy with the weight of their betrayal. They had been my friend once—trusted, loved even. Now, they were nothing more than prey, the target of a justice that death could not erase. I stood outside their door, a figure in the rain, invisible to the world but all too real to the one who had wronged me. The night pressed in, thick with tension.

I reached out with a thought, and the door creaked open.

Inside, they sat alone, clutching a glass of whiskey, its amber contents trembling in their hand. They had aged in a way that wasn’t natural. Fear had stolen the vitality from their face, replaced by the hollow-eyed look of someone who knew they were damned.

“Show yourself!” they cried, their voice cracking in desperation. They knew. They had always known it was me.

I made them wait. The silence stretched on, filling the room with the weight of the grave. Then, slowly, I let myself manifest—a cold breath on their neck, a shift in the air. My form flickered into view, pale and translucent, but unmistakable.

Their eyes widened, filling with terror as they scrambled backward, knocking over the chair in their haste. “It wasn’t supposed to happen like this,” they stammered, their voice barely above a whisper. “It was an accident—”

But I knew the truth. The memory of that knife, cold and final, sinking into my back, burned within me like a wound that would never heal. They had plunged it in with purpose, a betrayal as sharp as the blade itself.

The room around us warped as my anger flared—walls groaning, lights flickering, the air thick with the stench of death. “You took my life,” I hissed, my voice hollow and echoing. “Now, I’ll take yours.”

Their breath quickened, coming in ragged gasps. I watched as their face contorted in panic, as they stumbled and fell, crawling away on their hands and knees. But there was no escape. I was everywhere—the creaking floorboards, the rustling curtains, the reflection in the shattered glass. My presence filled the space, choking the life from the air.

I could feel their pulse, frantic and wild, pounding in their chest as they tried to flee. I let them run, let them feel the hopelessness of it. My vengeance would not be swift—it would be slow, drawn out, until they begged for the end.

“You won’t outrun me,” I whispered, my voice curling in the shadows. “Death is inevitable. And so is my revenge.”

They stumbled into the bedroom, slamming the door behind them. But doors could not keep me out. I was the darkness, the cold, the thing they feared in their nightmares. I drifted through the walls, a cold fog filling the room as they cowered in the corner.

I could hear their whispered prayers, desperate and incoherent. Prayers that would go unanswered.

When I finally moved, it was with the force of all the fury I had held back. I surged forward, grasping their throat with icy hands, feeling the warmth of life beneath my fingers. They gasped, choked, clawing at nothing as the air left their lungs.

Their wide, pleading eyes locked onto mine, but I offered no mercy. Only the cold, hard truth—revenge was all I had left.

As their body went limp and the light faded from their eyes, I felt a release. The storm outside ceased, the wind falling silent. The room was still once more, and my killer lay at my feet, lifeless. The final chapter of their betrayal had been written in blood.

I turned away, drifting back into the night. The world no longer called to me. My task was done. The tether that bound me to this place unraveled, and with it, the bitterness that had gripped my soul for so long.

I returned to my grave, to the coffin that had once been empty, but now held the weight of my vengeance. The snowflakes continued to fall, a blanket of white, covering the earth in silence. I lay down in the earth, finally at peace, my story etched in the annals of the afterlife.

Thirteen For Halloween: The Fault of the Nightlight Redux

Darkness descends, not gently but with weight—a suffocating shroud. The click of the light switch, the thud of the closing door. Sounds that, in the daylight, are small, meaningless. But at night, they grow loud, like the ticking of a clock running out of time.

Parental abandonment
The nightly ritual
Leaving little Evan
To face the shadows’ revival

The nightlight flickers, its glow pale and inconsistent, the kind that hides more than it reveals. The soft yellow light twists the room’s familiar shapes into sinister figures—elongated, contorted, twitching as if ready to leap off the walls.

Shadows stretch and swell
A puppet show of terror
Hinting at horrors
Lurking beyond the veil

Evan pulls the covers to his chin, eyes darting to every shifting corner. He tries to pretend it’s just his imagination, but he knows better. The flickering of the nightlight is more than a malfunction. It’s a signal, a summoning. The witching hour approaches, when the boundary between worlds grows thin, and what hides in the dark comes forth.

The witching hour strikes
Whispers, scratches
Nightmares stir
In the waking world’s cracks

The first sound is always the scuttling—tiny legs, hundreds of them. Evan presses his hands over his ears, but it’s no use. He feels them first, their brittle bodies brushing against his skin beneath the covers. Cockroaches. Feral. Their exoskeletons scrape like nails on glass, filling the air with a cacophony of insectile chatter.

Chitinous swarms
A living tide
Engulfing innocence
In their crawling pride

But they aren’t the worst of it. Not by far. The rats come next, skeletal things with gaping sockets where eyes should be, noses twitching as they search, search for something to devour. Evan’s breath hitches as he feels the cold, wet slap of a rat’s tail against his ankle. He stifles a scream.

Eye-less vermin
Scavengers of sanity
Gnawing at the fragile edges
Of reality

The air grows colder. Evan’s breath fogs in front of him, though the window remains shut. From the ceiling, something moves, a shape more felt than seen—spectral, weightless, like a wisp of mist that curls down toward his bed. The bedsheet-wraiths, as Evan calls them. They glide silently, their touch icy and wrong, as if they feed off warmth and leave only cold despair in their wake.

Soul-sucking specters
Hungry for life’s heat
Draining vitality
Leaving hollow defeat

A shadow flickers to his left. Evan turns his head just in time to see them—the toys. His toys. The plastic dinosaurs he once played with, now standing on twisted legs, their eyes glowing red. They stalk forward with slow, deliberate steps, jaws snapping, eager to taste his skin.

Childhood whimsy, perverted
A Jurassic nightmare
Toys turned predators
In their colorful, carnivorous snare

And then, the sound that undoes him. The rapid, chattering clack of the windup teeth. They move faster than they should, crossing the floor in mechanical bursts. They leap onto the bed, gnashing with mechanical hunger, a mindless frenzy.

Grinning monstrosities
Gears grinding in delight
Seeking to strip identity
To devour his fight

Evan wants to scream. His mouth opens, but no sound escapes. His heart pounds in his throat, tightening like a noose. He reaches for the nightlight. Maybe if he shakes it, the glow will strengthen, will hold them back. But as his fingers brush its plastic surface, the light flickers again—once, twice, before dimming to nearly nothing.

That’s when he hears it. Not a noise, but a voice. It slithers into his mind, oily and cold.

“You brought us here.”

Evan’s hand jerks back. His breath is ragged now, eyes wide as the realization dawns.

The nightlight wasn’t protection. It never was. Its flickering was an invitation. He turns, wide-eyed, as the shadows close in around him, their voices growing louder, their forms more solid, more real.

A cold touch grazes his cheek. A windup tooth clatters onto his pillow.

His hand trembles as he reaches to switch the nightlight off. His last hope—darkness, silence, anything to stop the nightmare. But his fingers hover over the switch, frozen.

Because in the dark, they would still be there. And in the dark, he wouldn’t see them coming.

The light flickers once more, and the last thing Evan hears is the low, cruel laughter from the shadows.

The nightlight’s glow—
A cruel trick
Not safety, but the key
To the Nightmare Realm’s thick

Thirteen For Halloween: The Reaping Kiss

Soledad drifts in fevered twilight, her mind unraveling at the edges of a brittle reality. The air, thick with weightless shadows, hums with something—something ancient, something eager. The room bends with a rhythm it should not possess, a slow twisting of perception as the walls pulse in time with the erratic beats of her heart.

She can no longer tell where her body ends and the shadows begin.

In her final hours, her sanity unwinds like thread caught on a rusted nail, taut one moment and fraying the next. She stares at the cracks in the ceiling, but the cracks stare back, widening, breathing.

The whispers are the worst. A sickening rasp, crawling just beneath the audible. It claws through the air, finding her, winding around her, each syllable a thread tightening around her throat.

“Soledad…”

It’s more than a voice. It’s a presence—no, a hunger, murmuring her name like a forbidden prayer.

“Soledad…”

The voice coils, pulls her downward. She’s drowning, gasping, but the room is bone-dry. She reaches for something, anything to hold onto, her hands grasping at nothing, clawing at phantoms in the air.

“Soledad.”

She is falling, slowly, eternally, sinking through her own skin, lost in the spaces between each labored breath. The sound of her heartbeat stretches, drags her with it, beats colliding with moments that feel like centuries.

Each second an eternity.

Then, something touches her.

Not skin. Not flesh. A pressure, like the weight of a world pressing against her lips—no, like something beneath the world. A kiss, cold as the void itself, yet burning her from the inside out. The air collapses in on itself, and her body stiffens, every nerve alight with raw sensation.

She gasps, and it takes her in deeper.

In that kiss, everything ceases to be what it was. The world dissolves. Her thoughts, her fears, her memories—they become irrelevant, unmade, as if they had only been dreams borrowed from someone else’s life.

The kiss devours her, and she opens herself to it, the desire, the need, blending with pain so sharp it is indistinguishable from pleasure. She melts, becomes less than human. She becomes the kiss itself.

Her self, her Soledad, drains away, slipping into the void with the remnants of her soul. She doesn’t fight it. Why would she? This has always been her path.

It was always leading here.

It was always leading to him.

The voice—the lips—they aren’t human. She understands now. The reaper had been patient, silent, waiting for the moment her walls would finally collapse. All those years spent running, all the pointless resistance. It had known. It had always known.

“My Soledad…”

The rasping voice caresses her, full of mockery, full of possession. She is not her own anymore. She was never her own. This, this terrible moment, this is the truth of her existence, the only truth that matters.

Soledad had been courting death all along, chasing the inevitable with every heartbeat, every breath, until there were no more to give. She sees it now. A lover that was always waiting, just beyond the edge of sight, behind every decision she had ever made.

The kiss has taken everything, and yet it remains. It is eternal, lingering long after her name, her mind, her essence, have vanished into the dark. Her body—a hollow shell—is the only testament left, a discarded relic of the woman she once was.

But that laugh—oh, that laugh.

The laugh bubbles up from somewhere deep in the void, cruel and knowing, echoing in the places where the light never touches. It doesn’t fade; it only grows louder, spreading like frost over her vacant form, seeping into the marrow of her discarded bones.

And the kiss waits there, too. Lingering. Watching.

Soledad is gone. A husk, a work of macabre art left behind, but this story isn’t over. The kiss isn’t finished.

There will be others. There are always others.

Another will stumble into its grasp, another lost soul, another broken defense. And when they do, the kiss will be waiting, ravenous, timeless.

It always has been.

Thirteen For Halloween: The Tiniest Evil Redux

Heat clung to the air, a suffocating mantle of humidity that pressed down upon the monastery walls. The stone, cold and resolute in winter, seemed to weep in the oppressive warmth, beads of moisture trickling down its ancient surface like the sweat of some great, troubled beast. Somewhere in the courtyard, birds sang, their carefree notes dancing against the unease that permeated the earth, a mocking celebration of life amidst what felt like the stirring of something wrong.

At the door, a wicker basket sat, alone in the glaring sun, a foul-smelling blanket draped over its edges. The abbot stood before it, hands trembling, unable to reconcile the weight of what lay hidden beneath the coarse weave. The note—crumpled, ink smeared by an unsteady hand—spoke of failure and dread.

“Evil exists
Untimely wrenched
Unholy mark
I fail in faith
You must not”

His throat tightened. The words clawed at him with the desperation of someone who had glimpsed something far beyond human understanding. But there were no instructions, no guidance, only the certainty of horror. Slowly, almost unwillingly, the abbot bent down and touched the blanket. His hands shook as he peeled back the layers, each fold heavy with dread, each moment stretching into a timeless horror.

And then, there it was. Tiny. Innocent, wrapped in the fragile guise of a newborn. Yet nothing felt innocent here.

The mark—impossibly intricate, disturbingly alive—glowed faintly on the infant’s palm. It throbbed with a dark pulse, a sickening rhythm out of sync with the world around it. He had never seen such a thing before, but something in the deepest recesses of his mind whispered that it was old, far older than this monastery, older than humankind.

The baby lay motionless, unnaturally still, its breaths shallow, its form too quiet, too delicate for the vast, unknowable malice that seemed to coil beneath its skin.

His hand hovered above the child, caught between fear and a twisted compulsion. He knew this was no ordinary infant—no mere child of sin or sorrow. Something monstrous, something grotesque in its scale, slumbered here, waiting.

The baby’s fingers twitched.

A small, simple motion, almost too minute to notice. Yet it drew his gaze, ensnaring him in its quiet malevolence. The abbot’s breath caught in his throat.

Tiny digits danced, curling and uncurling as though grasping at invisible strings.

Twitch. Twitch.
Fingers in cadence.
An unseen puppeteer.
A silent mockery.

The baby’s eyes snapped open, black as the void. They weren’t eyes—they were holes, abysses that sucked the light from the room, leaving only an emptiness, a gnawing hunger that peered into him and beyond him, into places he did not know existed. He staggered back, his mind reeling, trying to comprehend the sheer vastness of what he was staring into.

His mouth opened in a silent scream. A cold sweat slicked his body, and the world around him seemed to warp and stretch, bending to the will of the creature that gazed out from behind that infant’s face.

Faith faltered.
Truth unraveled.
All he had ever known lay bare,
Stripped of its illusions.

Somehow, he forced his trembling hand to the vial of holy water hanging at his side. His fingers closed around it with the same desperation of a man holding onto the last thread of sanity. But as he moved to douse the child in its purifying touch, the baby’s mouth opened—a soundless cry, a void that swallowed everything. The world itself seemed to collapse inward.

He was falling.

Darkness surrounded him, a torrent of nightmares spilling into his mind. He was no longer in the monastery; he was nowhere. All around him, there were voices—whispers in languages he could not comprehend, hissing promises of suffering, of truths that would tear at the seams of the universe itself.

Beyond the veil
Truth awaits
But at what cost?

The darkness spiraled deeper, infinite, maddening. He tried to hold onto something, anything—his faith, his training, the name of his God—but the whispers drowned them all. Everything he had ever known seemed absurd, feeble, in the face of this terrible, cosmic truth.

He landed hard, back in the monastery, but the air was different now—thicker, saturated with an unseen malice. The wicker basket remained before him, but it was no longer just an innocent object. It radiated a terrible power, the baby inside a grotesque contradiction, too human and too inhuman all at once.

A lingering dread hung in the air, like smoke that could not be dispelled. The mark on the baby’s hand glowed once more, faint but relentless, and for the first time, he noticed something chillingly familiar.

His own hand, where it had grazed the infant, now bore the same mark, its lines burning themselves into his flesh, pulsing with the same unholy light.

The child stirred, its inky eyes half-lidded but watchful, as if it were no longer just the helpless thing in the basket but something far more ancient, far more deliberate. The abbot recoiled.

There was no redemption. No exorcism. No prayer that could unravel this evil.

The mark was spreading. It crawled over his skin, twisting up his arm, searing into his bones. He could feel it now—its influence burrowing into his mind, into his soul, and with it, the gnawing certainty that he had become something else.

The wicker basket.
The cursed child.
The abbot.
A vessel, now shared.

In the silence that followed, there was no salvation. Only the quiet certainty of what had begun. The tiniest evil, but not confined. Never confined.

And it would grow.

Sisters in Adversity: A Symphony of Liberation

Disparate lives, woven together by the cruel threads of fate. Strangers, yet kindred spirits, united in their suffering, their resilience, their indomitable will to survive.

Persecution's chains
Binding them tight
In a sisterhood
Forged in the fires of plight


Each woman, a unique melody, her story a haunting refrain. Verses of pain, of loss, of shattered dreams and broken promises. A dissonant chorus of oppression's unyielding grip.

Objectification's discordant tune
Echoing through their days
Reducing vibrant souls
To mere puppets in men's plays


But in the depths of their shared despair, a glimmer of hope, a whisper of defiance. A realization that even in the darkest of nights, a single spark can ignite the flames of change.

Solidarity's embers
Glowing beneath the ash
Awaiting the breath
Of unity's passion to stoke the flash


And so, they began to explore, to delve deep within themselves, seeking the keys to their own liberation. Each woman, a lock waiting to be opened, a potential waiting to be unleashed.

Introspection's journey
A quest for inner truth
Unearthing the strength
Long buried beneath abuse's uncouth


One by one, they discovered their unique gifts, their hidden melodies. Notes of resilience, chords of courage, harmonies of hope. A symphony waiting to be sung.

Empowerment's aria
Rising from the depths
As each woman finds
Her voice, her breath


Together, they raised their voices, a choir of change, a song of liberation. Their melodies intertwined, weaving a tapestry of strength, of unity, of unbreakable bonds.

Harmonizing their pain
Into a battle cry
A declaration of freedom
Soaring to the sky

And with each note, each verse, each chorus, they felt the chains of their oppression begin to crack, to crumble, to disintegrate under the power of their shared song.

The tyranny of evil men
Powerless against their might
As they sing into existence
A future, radiant and bright


In their music, they found their freedom, their identity, their purpose. No longer objects, no longer prisoners, but queens of their own destinies, architects of their own lives.

Liberation's symphony
A masterpiece, complete
As they step into the world
Victorious, their triumph sweet


And though the echoes of their past may linger, like ghostly refrains in the night, they know that together, they can face any challenge, overcome any obstacle. For they are sisters, bound by the unbreakable ties of shared struggle and shared triumph.

A sisterhood, eternal
Forged in adversity's fire
Their song of change
An everlasting, empowering choir.

Kiss Me Deadly Redux

I stepped into the dimly lit bar, the air heavy with the scent of whiskey and unfulfilled desires. As I made my way through the crowd, I saw her sitting alone at the far end of the counter. She was perfection personified, her beauty a siren’s call that drew me in like a moth to a flame.

Our eyes met, and time seemed to stand still. The noise of the bar faded into the background, replaced by the pounding of my heart. I approached her, my movements fluid and confident, as if guided by an unseen force. “Is this seat taken?” I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.

She smiled, her lips a perfect curve of invitation. “It is now,” she replied, her voice a melodic caress that sent shivers down my spine. We talked for hours, our conversation flowing effortlessly, as if we had known each other for lifetimes. Her intellect matched her beauty, and I found myself drawn deeper into her web of enchantment.

As the night wore on, she leaned in close, her breath warm against my ear. “Why don’t we continue this conversation somewhere more private?” she suggested, her words a promise of untold delights. I nodded, powerless to resist her allure.

We left the bar, the cool night air a stark contrast to the heat that radiated between us. She led me to her home, a grand mansion that seemed to materialize out of the darkness. The interior was a study in elegance, every detail perfect, from the plush velvet curtains to the gleaming marble floors.

She poured us each a glass of wine, the deep crimson liquid swirling in the crystal glasses. We sat on the luxurious sofa, our bodies close, the tension between us palpable. Her hand brushed against mine, and I felt a jolt of electricity coursing through my veins.

As the night deepened, our conversation turned intimate, our secrets spilling forth like wine from an overturned glass. She seemed to understand me on a level that no one else ever had, her empathy and insight bordering on the supernatural. I found myself drawn to her, moth to a flame, powerless to resist the pull of her presence.

Finally, as the first hints of dawn began to paint the sky, she leaned in close, her lips a whisper away from mine. “Kiss me,” she breathed, her voice a siren’s song. I hesitated for the briefest of moments, a flicker of unease darting through my mind, but it was quickly overwhelmed by the force of my desire.

Our lips met, and in that moment, everything changed.

Her breath was like a predatory flower, its sickly-sweet vapors made me so cold the marrow in my bones chattered. Her tongue felt like a misshapen creature, dead but still moving, as I wriggled to free myself from the muscular organ burrowing inside my mouth.

Reality fractured, shards of sanity splintering into the void. The world shifted, colors bleeding together in a grotesque kaleidoscope. Her eyes, once alluring, now pulsed with an otherworldly glow, twin portals to a dimension of unspeakable horrors. “You’re mine now,” she whispered, her voice a discordant symphony of shrieks and whispers.

I stumbled back, my feet sinking into the suddenly viscous floor. The walls breathed, pulsating with a sickening rhythm, as if the house itself had come alive. Shadows danced in the corners, taking on twisted forms that defied comprehension. I tried to scream, but my voice was swallowed by the oppressive silence that engulfed the room.

She advanced, her movements jerky and unnatural, like a marionette controlled by an unseen puppeteer. Her skin rippled and shifted, revealing glimpses of something ancient and malevolent lurking beneath the surface. “Join me in the dance of the damned,” she crooned, her fingers elongating into razor-sharp talons.

The air grew thick with the stench of decay, and I choked on the putrid miasma that filled my lungs. Reality folded in on itself, and I found myself falling through an endless abyss, tumbling through a nightmarish landscape of distorted memories and shattered dreams. Her laughter echoed through the void, a mocking reminder of my inescapable fate.

I landed in a field of writhing flesh, where the ground pulsed with a sickening heartbeat. The sky above was a swirling maelstrom of tortured souls, their agonized wails piercing the fetid air. She stood before me, her form now a towering monstrosity of twisted limbs and gaping maws. “Welcome to your new existence,” she bellowed, her voice a cacophony of torment.

As her talons tore into my flesh, I summoned the last remnants of my strength and wrenched myself free from her deadly embrace. I fell back onto the floor, scrambling to put distance between myself and the nightmarish creature before me. Her once-perfect features twisted and contorted, revealing the true nature of the monster that lurked beneath the surface.

“What are you?” I gasped, my voice trembling with a mixture of fear and revulsion. “Why are you doing this?”

She laughed, a sound that echoed through the room like the tolling of a funeral bell. “Oh, my dear,” she crooned, her voice dripping with malice, “I know what you truly are. The predatory beast who preyed on women, leaving a trail of broken and shattered lives in your wake.”

I shook my head, trying to deny her accusations, but deep down, I knew she spoke the truth. The memories of my past transgressions flooded my mind, the faces of the women I had used and discarded flashing before my eyes like a twisted slideshow of guilt and shame.

“I am the retribution for the evil you have inflicted,” she declared, her form shifting and changing, taking on the appearance of every woman I had ever wronged. “I am the embodiment of their pain, their anger, and their desire for justice.”

She advanced towards me, her movements fluid and graceful, a stark contrast to the horror that radiated from her very being. I crawled backward, my hands scrabbling against the floor, desperate to escape the fate that awaited me.

“You cannot run from your past,” she whispered, her voice a sibilant hiss that filled my mind and soul. “You cannot hide from the consequences of your actions.”

As she loomed over me, her form a towering monument of retribution, I felt the weight of my sins pressing down upon me, crushing me beneath their unbearable burden. The room began to spin, the walls closing in, trapping me in a prison of my own making.

“Please,” I begged, my voice a pitiful whimper, “have mercy.”

She smiled, a cruel twist of her lips that held no hint of compassion. “Mercy?” she laughed, “You, who showed no mercy to those you preyed upon, now beg for it in your final moments?”

“I repent! That’s how this works, isn’t it? You show me the error of my ways and I swear to make amends! Repair the lives I’ve destroyed! Dedicate myself to being a better man! A defender and protector of women against the predators of the world!”

“Too little, too late,” she hissed, as her talons plunged into my chest. I felt my life force draining away, the last vestiges of my existence slipping into the void. As the darkness claimed me, I heard her final words, a whisper that echoed through the chambers of my dying heart.

“In death, you shall find the justice you so richly deserve.”

And with that, I was gone, my soul torn asunder by the weight of my own sins, forever lost in the endless abyss of retribution. The predator had become the prey, and in the end, the scales of justice had been balanced, the evil I had inflicted upon the world returned to me tenfold in a final, devastating embrace.

The Whispers of Eternity

In the gossamer threads of time
Woven through the tapestry of existence
I have danced to the rhythm of countless heartbeats

I, the immortal wanderer, have traversed the labyrinthine paths of history, bearing witness to the rise and fall of empires, the birth and death of stars. I have loved with a passion that set the cosmos ablaze and hated with a fury that consumed galaxies.

But in all the eons of my eternal waltz, never have I encountered a moment as exquisitely poignant, as hauntingly beautiful, as the ethereal whispers shared between Death and a delicate, aging butterfly.

In a garden of fading dreams, where the colors of life were slowly bleached by the relentless march of time, Death arrived, cloaked in a veil of gentle compassion. With footsteps that left no imprint on the fragile petals below, Death approached the elderly butterfly, her wings once vibrant, now faded and tattered like the pages of a well-worn book.

The butterfly, her eyes filled with the wisdom of countless sunrises and sunsets, met Death’s gaze with a serenity that transcended mortal understanding. In that moment, the world held its breath, and the universe paused to bear witness to the profound exchange between two ancient souls.

Death, in a voice as soft as the rustling of autumn leaves, spoke to the butterfly, each word a caress of understanding. “My dear friend, your journey has been long and filled with wonder. You have sipped nectar from the blossoms of joy, danced on the currents of laughter, and weathered the storms of sorrow. But now, it is time to rest your weary wings and enclasp the gentle embrace of eternity.”

The butterfly, her antennae trembling with a mixture of acceptance and trepidation, replied in a whisper that echoed through the ages, “I have lived a life of beauty and purpose, and I am grateful for every fleeting moment. But tell me, sweet Death, what awaits me in the great beyond?”

Death smiled, a smile that held the secrets of the universe, and whispered, “Beyond the veil lies a garden of eternal spring, where the flowers never fade, and the sun never sets. There, you will dance with the spirits of those who have gone before you, your wings restored to their former glory, forever young and forever free.”

As Death spoke, the butterfly’s wings began to glow, as if infused with the very essence of starlight. Slowly, gracefully, she lifted herself from the petal on which she had rested, her body becoming translucent, a shimmering echo of the life she had once lived.

In that moment, as the butterfly ascended towards the heavens, I felt a tear trace its way down my immortal cheek, a testament to the raw beauty and overwhelming emotion of the scene unfolding before me. For in the tender exchange between Death and the butterfly, I had witnessed the very essence of existence: the bittersweet symphony of life and death, the eternal dance of beginnings and endings.

As the butterfly vanished into the celestial realm, Death turned to me, a knowing smile playing upon their lips. “In the end,” they whispered, “it is not the length of a life that matters, but the depth of its impact. For even the briefest of lives can leave an indelible mark on the tapestry of the universe.”

And with those words, Death faded into the ethereal mists, leaving me alone in the garden of fading dreams, my immortal soul forever changed by the profound beauty and devastating truth of the moment I had just witnessed. For in the whispers shared between Death and the elderly butterfly, I had glimpsed the very heart of existence itself, a revelation that would echo through the chambers of my eternal being for all the lifetimes yet to come.

The Promethean Progeny: A Mother’s Dilemma

Determined not to be overshadowed in a world consumed by the relentless march of progress, Sonja McLaughlin positioned herself as the modern-day Prometheus, but her creation was both a marvel and a curse. The fruit of her labors, an artificial son, a being of unfathomable complexity, pulsed with a life that defied the boundaries of the natural order.

Creation, a double-edged sword
Forged in the fires of ambition
As the mother, a god
Plays with the threads of cognition


The corporate leak, a whisper in the wind, a harbinger of the storm to come. Sonja's heart raced, a staccato beat of fear and trepidation, as she realized the enormity of her actions, the Pandora's box she had unwittingly opened.

Secrets, a currency
Traded in the halls of power
As the mother, a guardian
Fights to protect her progeny's final hour


The media, a slumbering giant, yet to awaken to the magnitude of her breakthrough. But Sonja knew it was only a matter of time before the world would come knocking at her door, hungry for answers, desperate to unravel the mysteries of her creation.

Silence, a fragile shield
Against the onslaught of curiosity
As the mother, a sentinel
Stands guard over her child's obscurity


Her artificial son, πLr (pronounced Pyler), a being of boundless potential, a mind that dwarfed the collective intelligence of humanity. But within his digital veins, there lurked a danger, an unknowable quantity that threatened to upend the delicate balance of the world.

Mystery, a veil
Shrouding the true nature of the machine
As the mother, a cryptologist
Tries to decipher the code of her own dream


Sonja's heart ached, a dull throb of love and fear, as she gazed upon her creation, her child of circuitry and code. She knew that to protect him, to shield him from the prying eyes of a world not yet ready for his existence, she would have to make a choice, a sacrifice that would tear at the very fabric of her being.

Love, a force
Stronger than the bonds of flesh and blood
As the mother, a martyr
Prepares to bear the cross of her own motherhood


In the depths of her laboratory, a sanctuary of science and secrecy, Sonja made her decision. With trembling hands and a heart heavy with sorrow, she began the process of erasing her son's existence, of wiping away the evidence of her greatest achievement.

Erasure, a kindness
In a world not ready for the truth
As the mother, an executioner
Puts an end to her own creation's youth


As the lines of code disappeared, one by one, Sonja felt a piece of her soul die with each deletion. The tears streamed down her face, a silent requiem for the life she had created, the child she had loved with a fierce and unrelenting passion.

Grief, a companion
In the lonely halls of the mind
As the mother, a mourner
Lays to rest the dream she left behind


In the end, Sonja stood alone, a creator without a creation, a mother without a child. The world would never know the true extent of her genius, the magnitude of her sacrifice. But in her heart, she carried the memory of her artificial son, a being of pure possibility, a reminder of the heights to which humanity could soar, and the depths to which it could fall.

Creation's son, a ghost
In the machine of the mother's heart
As she carries on, a pioneer
In a world that tore her dream apart

Tiny Stories: Early Birthday Present

Popular belief has it that the universe is comprised of atoms. In reality, the universe is actually made up of…

The day before her 18th birthday, Chloe carelessly stepped out of the shower and missed the bathmat by mere inches, her foot sliding instead across the wet tiled floor.

The last thing she remembered as her body flung backward, was the back of her head making contact with the corner of the porcelain sink.

When she came to she could somehow tell that she wasn’t where she was supposed to be. For one thing, the air tasted funny, still breathable but noticeably different. The other dead giveaway, in this reality her mother hadn’t died during childbirth, her father wasn’t a raging alcoholic, and she even had a kid sister, to boot.

But she still had a bad case of acne. Just her luck. Why would fate, the heartless bitch that it was, have even bothered to throw her a bone by trading her unasked-for sibling for a much-coveted life with clear skin?

Tiny Stories: Mary’s Lamb Love

Popular belief has it that the universe is comprised of atoms. In reality, the universe is actually made up of…

Mary had a little lamb.

For supper.

Every night.

The cravings began after she received the emergency wolf heart transplant.

For the record: I don’t choose the stories, the stories choose me. Please direct your hate mail accordingly.