Love
Love Undeserved
Dim lighting in an abandoned barn house. Shattered glass and chipped walls invite an all too familiar eeriness into the room. As I hunch over on all fours underneath an uncomfortably low ceiling, my eyes stay fixed on the array of colorful spiders nestled in webs above my head.
By Jesenia De La Cruz5 years ago in Fiction
Technology and the Old World
Sam and Rachel waited out the rain in their special spot, the old barn. Sam was moving to Toronto for a few months. He'd worked with people in the construction industry while on Rumspringa. His carpentry skills quickly made him a sought-after expert in the hand-hewn wood trade. He was hired by the designers of the urban cabin lofts at Parliament and Wellesley.
By Mary Haynes5 years ago in Fiction
The Funeral
The old man was superbly dressed. Fit for his age and with eyes as piercingly blue as the day he'd been born, he wore a well cut black suit, with a black shirt and tie to match. While in his youth his hair was just as dark as his garments, now it was a tired faded gray, as was his close cropped beard. He stood at the back of the church with an unreadable face and thanked people for coming as they left the funeral service. When his wife's friends and family had all gone he thanked the preacher for kind words and for the comfort he had provided the old man's wife throughout her last days in the hospital. With that done he took the urn that contained his wife's ashes and left.
By Vicente Vasquez5 years ago in Fiction
Racing Thoughts
The rooster crows and the sunrise came over the old barn. The morning started out like any another normal day. Waking up at the same time as normal. Turning to see his face and noticing that he wasn’t there. There was something different today: silence. This felt unsettling as the farm never is like this. The house was lifeless and void. No footsteps walking around in the kitchen and no coffee brewing to engulf the house with its intoxicating aroma. The smell of his pillowcase made the urgency of finding him more real. Running down the stairs to see what was going on in a panic, and with every second going by grew more of urgency.
By bonnie smith5 years ago in Fiction


