The Hidden Café
By Jamie F. Bell
The biting wind whips across a desolate, snow-covered urban perimeter, where the monotony of a controlled existence is broken by an unexpected flicker of warmth and the tantalizing scent of something forbidden.
A curated collection of action-adventure short stories to read.
By Jamie F. Bell
The biting wind whips across a desolate, snow-covered urban perimeter, where the monotony of a controlled existence is broken by an unexpected flicker of warmth and the tantalizing scent of something forbidden.
By Leaf Richards
The living room was quiet, too quiet, save for the insistent whisper of snow lashing against the windowpanes. A vast, empty corner waited, a silent sentinel for the tradition that hadn't yet arrived. The air carried the scent of cold fireplace ash and unfulfilled promise. Outside, the world was a blur of white, thick flakes clinging to the glass, erasing the familiar street beyond. The silence was heavy, only broken by the distant, muffled groan of a snowplow that seemed to be losing its battle.
By Jamie F. Bell
Johnnie trudges through the desolate beauty of an early winter forest, the air crisp and cold, stripping away distractions and forcing a somber reflection on the changing seasons and the quiet despair of environmental decline.
By Jamie F. Bell
The wind on this stretch of coast was not a force, it was a personality. It was a vicious, tireless thing that scoured the cliffs and tore at the foundations of Mandy’s cottage. To others, it was a menace. To Mandy, it was a collaborator. It was the engine for the strange, metallic forest she was growing at the edge of the world. Her sculptures, welded together from scavenged fishing trawler parts and shipwreck salvage, were designed to catch it, to argue with it, to turn its fury into a form of erratic, grinding grace.
By Jamie F. Bell
Evan’s atelier was a temple to the analogue. While the city outside hummed with the data-chatter of neural implants and augmented reality overlays, his shop was a bastion of wood, glass, and brass. Hundreds of amber bottles lined the walls, each containing a captured moment: the petrichor of the first monsoon rain, the ozone tang of a distant lightning strike, the precise scent of an old book’s binding cracking open. He didn't sell perfume; he sold access to the past, a service highly valued by a populace that had outsourced its memory to the cloud.
By Jamie F. Bell
The air in the root cellar was cool and heavy with the smell of damp earth and potatoes. It was a good smell. A safe smell. It was the smell of the present, the sanctioned reality. The smells Tanya worked with were dangerous: the faint, chemical tang of a piece of pre-collapse denim, the ghost of perfume on a silk scarf, the acrid scent of scorched wool. These were the smells of memory, and memory was treason.
By Jamie F. Bell
The wind coming down off the Ogilvie Mountains had teeth. Jennifer felt it bite at the exposed skin of her neck as she leaned back on the scissor lift, squinting at the wall. The brick was old, unforgiving, its porous surface drinking the expensive paint and demanding a second coat she hadn't budgeted for. Below her, the single paved street of Altimack was a study in silence, a collection of boarded-up facades and the occasional plume of woodsmoke betraying the presence of the town's last dozen inhabitants.
By Jamie F. Bell
The city is a blur of grey concrete and brake lights. Benji weaves his bike through the gridlocked traffic, the strap of his messenger bag digging into his shoulder. Another package, another destination. But this package is humming.