Young Adult
Brass Ring Chapter 15: Lunch Between Brothers
Oliver and Cass entered the Les Enfants Bistro. The maître d' saw them, grabbed two menus, and asked them if they had a seating preference. Oliver held up his hand. “We’re looking for a guy sitting alone with circuitry on his face.” The maître d’ nodded and motioned for them to follow him. They were led to a corner table, partially in the dark. They were sat and Oliver ordered to cokes. The maître d’ disappeared.
By Jamais Jochima day ago in Chapters
Brass Ring Chapter 14: When Bad Things Happen to Good People
Captain Sandoval walked into the room. In this room were ten of the best of his precinct, men who had proven themselves again and again. They had access to the best training, the best equipment, and the best weapons. Each had been assigned a suit of armor capable of handling an anti-tank weapon, a rifle that could switch between a sonic blaster, a grenade launcher, and a slug-thrower capable of eliminating a marble statue. They were ready to deal with most super-powered crime.
By Jamais Jochima day ago in Chapters
Sparrow on a Plank Chapter 17: When Villains Do Their Research
The crew was more interested in what was behind them than in front of them. Although Sal and Hajime were doing their level best to hide the fact that they had stolen a book from Set’s temple and that temple may have been protected by someone representing the Bubastan government, Captain Taylor knew what was gointsg on; it had been part of the contract (after all, they needed him ready to go if something had gone wrong, and his ignorance would have slowed the ship’s reaction time, causing a number of unintended deaths and destruction of the ship). Rick had also been told out of necessity for the same reason. They had also been given a certain time; if Sal and Hajime took longer than two hours, the ship was to sail. Period. Staying any longer would have endangered the crew and the boat. Rick was happy that that condition had not been used.
By Jamais Jochim3 days ago in Chapters
Sparrow on a Plank Chapter 18: Of Wild Parties and Annoyed Predators
The trip home was blessedly uneventful. There were sharks, whales, and the occasional seagull, but nothing attacked them or even appeared to follow them. Hajime and the other mages did a thorough search of the ship, looking for anything that didn't belong. They couldn't find anything, but that didn't mean that there wasn't anything there; it just meant that it was hidden rather well. Although they were sure that there was something hidden, they lacked the immediate means to deal with it.
By Jamais Jochim3 days ago in Chapters
Everyone Is Acting Normally
The first sign was the sky. It wasn’t blue. It wasn’t gray. It wasn’t anything at all. When I looked up from my bedroom window, I didn’t see clouds or sunlight. I saw a smooth, blank surface stretching endlessly above the town—like someone had erased the world’s ceiling and replaced it with paper. It should have terrified me. Instead, my phone buzzed. “Good morning! ☀️ Don’t forget your math test today.” —Ammi. There was no sun. But she had sent a sun emoji. I opened the window. No wind. No birds. No sound of traffic. Still, my neighbor Mr. Collins was outside watering his lawn, humming the theme song from Friends. “Morning!” he called cheerfully. “Beautiful day!” I stared at the blank sky. “Yes,” I replied slowly. “Beautiful.” And he smiled like nothing was wrong. 2. The Bus That Never Stops The school bus arrived exactly at 7:42 a.m. It always arrived at 7:42 a.m. The driver, Mrs. Patel, waved as usual. “Hop in, Sam!” The bus engine wasn’t running. There was no sound. No vibration. The wheels didn’t move. But when I stepped inside, we were already driving. Outside the windows, the streets passed by in perfect silence. No pedestrians. No dogs. No cars. Just empty roads and houses with lights on. A boy behind me whispered, “Do you see it too?” I turned. It was Ayaan—the quiet kid who always drew planets in his notebook. “See what?” I asked. He looked confused. “The sky,” I said carefully. He blinked. “Oh. Yeah. Weird color today.” Then he put on his headphones and started nodding along to music. I glanced at his screen. The song title read: “Here Comes the Sun” – The Beatles There was no sun. 3. Morning Assembly The school building looked slightly… bent. Not physically bent, but wrong. The angles weren’t straight. The front doors seemed taller than usual. The windows stretched too high. Inside, the hallways curved gently upward like we were walking inside a bowl. No one mentioned it. Lockers were slightly melted at the edges. Students chatted about homework. “Did you study for physics?” Maria asked. I nodded, staring at the ceiling. The ceiling was too low. No—too high. No—it was both at the same time. During morning assembly, the principal stood at the podium smiling. “Students, we’re proud to announce our annual Science Fair next week!” Behind him, the school logo was upside down. Nobody reacted. Ayaan leaned toward me again. “Do you feel… lighter?” he asked quietly. I hadn’t noticed until then. My feet weren’t fully touching the floor. I was hovering. Just a few centimeters. I looked around. Everyone else was too. But they stood perfectly balanced, hands by their sides, as if floating was part of the uniform. The principal cleared his throat. “And remember, gravity is very important!” The students clapped politely. 4. The Classroom with No Walls When I entered my math classroom, there were no walls. I could see into every other classroom. History class. Chemistry lab. The cafeteria. All at once. But the desks were still arranged in neat rows. “Take your seats,” said Mr. Harrison. His chair wasn’t touching the ground. He sat mid-air, perfectly comfortable. On the board, instead of equations, there was a single sentence written in large letters: DO NOT PANIC Nobody asked why. Mr. Harrison turned to us. “Today’s lesson is about limits,” he said. “Understanding what happens as something approaches… nothing.” The room flickered. For a split second, I saw something beyond the school. A massive grid. Like we were inside a giant screen. Then it disappeared. “Sam?” Mr. Harrison called. “What is the limit of 1 over x as x approaches zero?” My mouth felt dry. “It becomes… undefined.” He smiled widely. “Correct. Undefined. But still completely normal.” The class wrote it down. 5. Lunch Without Food At lunch, the cafeteria trays were empty. But everyone was chewing. Forks moved from plate to mouth. Students talked with full cheeks. “This pasta is amazing,” Maria said. I looked at her tray. There was nothing there. No plate. No food. Just the shape of a meal. I swallowed. “What are we eating?” I asked. She looked confused. “Chicken curry. Like every Thursday.” I glanced at the menu board. It was blank. But beneath the blank surface, I could faintly see code. Lines of symbols flickering like a computer program. Ayaan dropped his fork. “You see it too, don’t you?” he whispered. I nodded. The lights above us flickered in a pattern: On. Off. On. Off. Like blinking. Watching. 6. The Announcement Suddenly, the speakers crackled. The principal’s voice echoed. “Attention students. There is absolutely no reason for concern. Everything is functioning within normal parameters.” The cafeteria froze. Everyone paused mid-chew. Then resumed. Ayaan stood up. “That’s not true!” he shouted. No one reacted. “It’s not normal!” he repeated. Maria continued sipping invisible juice. Mr. Harrison walked in calmly. “Ayaan, please sit down.” “Don’t you see? The sky is gone! The food isn’t real! We’re floating!” Mr. Harrison adjusted his tie. “That is simply your perspective.” Ayaan turned to me. “Tell them!” All eyes shifted toward me. For a moment, I saw it clearly. The walls shimmered. The sky flickered like a broken screen. The people around me lagged—like characters in a low-quality video game. We weren’t in a town. We were in something else. A simulation? A test? I opened my mouth. And said: “Everything is fine.” Ayaan stared at me. The lights stopped flickering. The ceiling solidified. Gravity returned gently. He sat down slowly. And began eating nothing again. 7. After School When I stepped outside, the sky had color again. Blue. Soft clouds. Birds chirping. Cars driving. Mr. Collins waved from his lawn. “Beautiful day!” he said. I hesitated. Then I smiled. “Yes. Beautiful.” As I walked home, my phone buzzed. A notification from an unknown sender. SYSTEM UPDATE COMPLETE ANOMALY CORRECTED I stopped walking. Ayaan stood across the street. He looked at his phone. Then at me. His expression was blank. He waved politely. Like a stranger. He didn’t remember. None of them did.
By AFTAB KHAN7 days ago in Chapters











