The Fire Tower
By Leaf Richards
Simon and Betty sit atop a sun-baked rock cut overlooking a vast network of lakes in Northwestern Ontario, engaging in a high-stakes conversation about their futures.
Experience heartwarming and passionate love stories, following characters as they navigate relationships, overcome obstacles, and find their happily ever after. Feel the magic of true connection.
By Leaf Richards
Simon and Betty sit atop a sun-baked rock cut overlooking a vast network of lakes in Northwestern Ontario, engaging in a high-stakes conversation about their futures.
By Tony Eetak
On a crumbling steampunk clock tower in a perpetually smoggy industrial city, a young mechanic struggles to fix a crucial valve. He is unexpectedly joined by a sharp-witted rival, and their forced collaboration unfolds against a backdrop of family pressures, cynical thoughts about Christmas, and a sudden, ominous urban catastrophe.
By Eva Suluk
The Grand Glacial Grotto, a hyper-commercialised winter spectacle, hums with the manufactured cheer of artificial fog and synthesised music. Beneath the glittering facade of a colossal ice sculpture, a subtle tremor begins, a prelude to a slow, almost dignified collapse that will unveil a secret far more intriguing than mere structural ineptitude.
By Tony Eetak
The morning had started, as most spring mornings did, with a deceptive promise of renewal. The air, though crisp with the lingering chill of winter's grudges, carried the scent of wet earth and burgeoning hyacinths. A robin chirped, annoyingly optimistic, from a branch heavy with pink magnolia blossoms. But this was not to be a morning of quiet contemplation for Evelyn 'Evy' Holloway, nor for Andy Finch. Instead, the sky above their neighbourhood of tidy brick duplexes and meticulously tended window boxes, a sky usually reserved for the mundane flight paths of pigeons and the occasional jet contrail, was violently interrupted by a contraption of municipal folly.
By Eva Suluk
The air in the Harmonious Future Collective's North Wing was thick with the scent of synthetic lemon and the faint, persistent hum of the 'Wellness Optimisation Grid'. Outside, the summer night pressed in, a humid, heavy blanket over the meticulously manicured lawns. Inside, the corridors gleamed under an unnervingly consistent artificial light, designed, the brochures claimed, to promote 'optimal mood regulation'. Maggie, however, found it merely oppressive, a constant reminder of the omnipresent surveillance. She was supposed to be in her 'Personal Reflection Chamber' by now, completing her 'Daily Affective Recalibration', but a strange flicker on her wrist-comm had drawn her here, to this quiet, rarely used stretch of hallway, where the 'optimal mood regulation' seemed to be malfunctioning, casting long, wavering shadows.
By Tony Eetak
The 'Zenith Blossom Summer Equinox Gathering' had promised enlightenment and inner peace. What it delivered, instead, was an overpowering scent of burnt sage and desperation, trapped within a geodesic dome that vibrated with the low thrum of a 'Chakra Harmonizer.' Dorothy, already on her third internal sigh of the morning, felt a distinct unease, like an ill-fitting shoe she couldn't quite kick off. The air, thick with the humid summer heat and the earnest, if misguided, efforts of fellow attendees, pressed in on her, making her silk scarf cling unpleasantly to her neck.
By Eva Suluk
The spring air carried the scent of damp earth and the sweet, cloying perfume of budding lilacs. Mud, a stubborn, tenacious kind, clung to everything, especially the edges of Peggy’s wellington boots. The municipal park, usually a cheerful riot of colour, felt strangely hushed in the early afternoon, the kind of quiet that meant adults were either busy elsewhere or plotting something important, like the precise placement of annual bedding plants. Peggy knelt near a weathered bench, her gaze fixed on a cluster of green that, to her, held monumental significance.
By Eva Suluk
The world had decided, quite abruptly, to reconfigure itself. One moment, I was contemplating a new biography on Churchill, the next, the very fabric of existence seemed to unravel into a cacophony of groans and splintering. Now, a fine, acrid dust hung in the air, tasting of old plaster and forgotten hopes, mingling with the faint, persistent scent of spring rain trying to seep through the newly formed gaps in the world. The only light was a fractured sort of pale grey, struggling through the newly formed apertures above, illuminating swirling motes that danced a macabre jig. My head throbbed, a dull, insistent rhythm against the frantic beat of my heart, and the pervasive gloom was occasionally punctuated by the creak of unseen stresses, a constant, unsettling reminder that our current predicament was far from stable.
By Tony Eetak
The world had become a jagged, broken thing. A sudden, violent tremor had torn through the city, twisting steel and pulverizing concrete into a choking dust. Emmond, pinned by an impossible weight, tasted grit and wet dust, the metallic tang of something burning on his tongue. The air, thick with the smell of wet asphalt, ruptured gas lines, and the sharp, clean scent of static electricity, vibrated with distant, terrified screams. Above him, a sliver of grey spring sky peered through a chaotic jigsaw of fractured buildings, threatening to collapse entirely. Time had ceased to be linear, stretching and snapping like a frayed rope, leaving only the visceral, insistent beat of his own heart.
By Leaf Richards
The city, once a vibrant organism of steel and glass, lay frozen, its arteries choked with ice and a silence more profound than any graveyard. What remained of the pavement was a treacherous mosaic of black ice and crumbled concrete, dusted with fine, powdery snow that settled into every crevice like powdered bone. The air itself seemed to crackle, sharp and metallic, tasting of cold sweat and something vaguely akin to burning copper, the ghost of a thousand shorted circuits.
By Eva Suluk
The city's breath, once a low, distant hum, had been ripped away, replaced by a terrible, grinding silence, punctuated by the groans of tortured steel. Dust, thick and caustic, hung heavy in the air, transforming the vibrant spring afternoon into a sepia-toned nightmare. Sunlight, once a warm caress, now struggled to pierce the particulate haze, casting a sickly, alien glow upon a world irrevocably altered. A pervasive sense of dread, cold and sharp, had settled deep within my chest, a physical weight pressing against my ribs.
By Leaf Richards
The old cabin groaned under the weight of the endless winter, a timber shell against the vast, indifferent expanse of Northwestern Ontario. Inside, the air hummed with an unspoken tension, thick as the woodsmoke. A child, small and observant, lay on a worn rug, his world narrowed to the flickering shadows and the silent war unfolding between the two adults he called his parents.