Excerpt
The Train I Almost Missed. AI-Generated.
The 7:45 train was late again — just like it always was on Mondays. The platform was crowded with tired faces and the smell of burnt coffee. Everyone looked impatient, as if being late was the greatest tragedy of their day.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Fiction
The Sound of Rain. AI-Generated.
It had been raining for three days straight in Lusaka, and the sound had become a kind of background music to Naomi’s thoughts. She sat by the window of her late father’s house, watching water run down the glass, tracing the same paths over and over again — like memories replaying themselves.
By shakir hamid6 months ago in Fiction
His Freckle Too, Stayed Until Morning
I did not notice it before. That small freckle just beneath his left eye, the one the light always seems to find before I do. How many times have I seen his face and never really seen it? The mark itself is nothing special, really, a speck, a shadow of pigment the sun decided to keep for itself, yet tonight it feels like a secret I have finally been allowed to see.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast6 months ago in Fiction
The Light Switch
The door slammed shut behind me, and the darkness swallowed everything whole. I hadn't meant to come inside. The old Caldwell house had been abandoned for thirty years, its windows like hollow eyes watching the neighborhood. But my phone had died mid-walk, and when the October rain started sheeting down, the partially open front door seemed like an invitation rather than a warning.
By Parsley Rose 6 months ago in Fiction
Megara: The Mechanism of Madness
On the Mechanism Cebes and Atlas are enjoying themselves at their favorite coffee shop after a prodigious session of alcohol consumption. They are coming down from their drunken state but Altas is in a cheerful mood for more, while Cebes is in a melancholy mood questioning his thoughts and emotional state.
By G.A. Sebastián6 months ago in Fiction
The Café That Waited for Love
The rain had been falling since morning, soft and unhurried, like the city itself had decided to move in slow motion. Inside Café Loraine, the windows fogged from the warmth of espresso and conversation, turning the world outside into a watercolor blur.
By Atif khurshaid6 months ago in Fiction
The Light Beneath the Leaves
The Light Beneath the Leaves How the Forest Dwellers Built Harmony from Shadows in the Hidden Village of Thaloren Deep within the emerald heart of the Elderwood Forest, where the sunlight danced through layers of ancient leaves and time moved gently like a breeze, lay the hidden village of Thaloren. You wouldn’t find Thaloren on any map, for it wasn’t drawn with lines or walls—it lived among the trees, woven into the roots and branches of the forest itself. Thaloren was home to the Sylari, a gentle people with bark-textured skin, leaf-kissed hair, and eyes that shimmered like dewdrops. They lived in harmony with the forest, crafting homes inside tree hollows, gathering food from glowing fruit-bearing vines, and singing to the stars each evening from treetop platforms. Long ago, however, Thaloren had not always been peaceful. There had been a time when the forest dimmed, when the ancient canopy grew too thick and blocked out the sun. Plants stopped growing, animals grew restless, and the Sylari began to fear the shadows. They blamed each other for the darkness, building small fires to keep it away, which only scared the forest more. But in the midst of this fear, a young Sylari named Liora believed differently. She had always felt the forest breathe with her—each root a heartbeat, each leaf a whisper. "The darkness is not punishment," she told her people. "It is an invitation to listen. To learn what the forest needs." The elders laughed. “You’re too young to understand,” they said. “Fire is safety. Fire is control.” But Liora didn’t give up. Guided by dreams and quiet intuition, she wandered deep into the untouched parts of the forest, further than anyone dared. There, she found something unexpected—not monsters or danger, but light. Gentle pulses of golden glow rising from beneath the roots, where the forest stored its oldest memories. Liora knelt by the glowing soil and whispered, “What are you?” The forest answered not in words, but in warmth. In understanding. The light was life—pure, ancient, and shared. It had been buried, waiting to be remembered. When she returned to Thaloren, her hands glowed with the soil’s light. The villagers stared in awe. "This is the light beneath the leaves," she told them. “It’s not from fire. It’s from listening. From trusting.” With careful guidance, Liora taught them how to tend to the forest in a new way—by restoring the balance. They trimmed the canopy, allowing sunlight to filter through again. They sang to the roots, planted bioluminescent seeds, and slowly, the village began to change. The fires were no longer needed. The fear faded. Homes glowed softly at night from the natural light of moss-lanterns and crystal fruit. Children played in the trees without worry. Elders sat beneath moonflowers and told stories not of fear, but of hope. And Liora became the first “Lightkeeper” of Thaloren, honored not for control, but for care. Years passed, and Thaloren flourished. The forest thrived, not just above ground, but below, where light and life wove together like threads in an ancient tapestry. The Sylari no longer tried to tame the forest—they walked beside it. Every year, on the longest night, the village gathered around the Heartroot Tree—the oldest in the forest—and planted one glowing seed in the soil. It was their tradition, a symbol of trust, and a promise to the forest that had once been forgotten. As Liora grew older, she often sat by the Heartroot, her hands resting on the earth. When asked how she had known what to do, she would smile and say, "Sometimes the light you need isn't above you. It's beneath you—quiet, patient, waiting to be seen." And so Thaloren remained, hidden from the world, not because it needed to be secret, but because some places grow best when they grow together, gently, beneath the leaves.
By Muhammad Saad 6 months ago in Fiction










