-The best stories on the web-
Read or link to over 1000 stories listed under Stories to the left.
Submit your short stories for review as a Word document attached to an email to: Read@Short-Story.Me

Latest Stories

June 07, 2026
Romance Stories Linda Boroff

Charlotte's Law

Charlotte always arrived at work half an hour early. She left her apartment at 7:15 each morning, brown bag in hand, to wait beside a car rental agency for the 7:22 Wilshire Boulevard bus, a tall, broad-beamed secretary with plump knees in miniskirt and high…
June 07, 2026
Fantasy Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Aurora’s Blemish

A storm tests the strength of roots, not the beauty of leaves. Aloo Denish Obiero Once upon a time there was a king whose domains extended far and wide, making him the envy of his neighbors. All was well with him save for a lingering misfortune: the queen had…
June 07, 2026
Horror Stories Nicholas Kellogg

Playtime With Lolly Polly

Emily sat in her red Subaru afraid that when her wheels touched the curb it had torched their integrity. She looked down at her phone— that same background photo of her and mom posing at the bottom of some mountain they’d climbed long ago, looking back. Her…
June 07, 2026
General Stories Marvel Chukwudi Pephel

The Wondrous Life of Evelyn Sawyer

It is simply beautiful, like the sight of butterflies on yellow leaves, to have the gift of imagination. It is simply, even undoubtedly, a largely held notion – unless you were born on some other planet – that babies should cry when they come. But Evelyn…
June 07, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

The Wendigo’s Disciple

The wendigo exploded out of the underbrush in a rush that human eyes could barely follow. Seven year old Robert watched out the window of his cabin in horrified disbelief. The wendigo resembled a cross between some kind of bipedal dark demon and deer with…
June 07, 2026
General Stories Thomas Turner

Living Life On Life's Terms

Written by Thomas Turner. Dictated by Richard Turner. Advised by Curt Chown Sonny is talking to Curt and Tom about his family. Curt says ‘You can't undo the past. Look at your life now. You did a lot of great things. You have a wife, kids and friends. You…
May 18, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

Chupacabra Demon Hunt

“It’s the Chupacabra,” Andres declared while glancing warily around the grassy range under the pale moonlight. Dan frowned as he studied his dead goat. It was the fifth goat he’d found in the past weeks with two messy puncture wounds in the neck and very…
May 18, 2026
Fantasy Stories Charles E.J Moulton

Corners Of A Spiritual Room

When Juliet met Annabelle Lee, almost all they could talk about was the Mona Lisa. Was she really Francesco del Giocondo's wife, or was Mona actually Leonardo? His mother? Or someone completely different? “Well,” Juliet countered, “you know it was actually…
May 18, 2026
General Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Three Autumnal Tales

I. Changes Pass Eighty By the time you’re 80 years old you’ve learned everything. You only have to remember it. I often say that the life of a human is like an American football game. During the first quarter (ages 0 to 20) one grows, develops, matures,…
May 18, 2026
General Stories Matias Travieso-Diaz

Your Lease Will Soon Expire

There is nothing more certain in nature than that it is impossible for any body to be utterly annihilated. Sir Francis Bacon, Sylva Sylvarum As the ravages of cancer continued to destroy Roddy’s body, doctors prescribed morphine to alleviate his pain and…
May 18, 2026
Crime Stories Tom Kropp

Attacked On The Toilet

I was sitting on the toilet taking a dump when the ski-masked man burst into my bathroom and tried to knife my neck. There was no way to prepare for something like that. I mean, I was butt naked pooping on my own toilet at 2am with my wife in the next room…
April 25, 2026
Horror Stories Tom Kropp

Night Watch

“What do you mean they never caught him?’ Kay asked her boyfriend, named Scot, nervously. Scot tried to hide his smile in the moonlight. Kay was a beautiful, blond-haired, blue-eyed, athletic figure, eighteen-year-old college student that was new in the area.…

I come from a long line of optimistic liars. My grandfather was the best liar of all. He came west for free land and I guess you couldn’t blame him for being a liar because he was the first one to believe the lie himself.

Land available! Come and get it! The posters told Americans about their opportunity to claim land and farm it. In order to get 160 acres of one's own, all you had to be was an American citizen and 21 years of age. In order for the land to be yours all you had to do was pay a filing fee of $10 and reside on your new farm in the West for at least five years. And voila the land would be yours, free.

 

The lie of free land, oh he never paid a cent for it, that much was true. But it Cost him two wives and his first born son. His first wife died having her only baby too far from the hospital in the middle of a winter blizzard. That baby would be my Uncle Ebb; he tucked tail and ran as fast as he could, from what he calls hard work and misery, didn’t even finish high school. He just up and left one day, ‘”Why the combining ain’t half done,” my grandfather had said incredulous when he read Ebb’s note. His second wife, my grandma keeled over dead from heat stroke one day, stooking bales in the ‘glorious prairie sunshine,’ Even so my grandfather was forever an optimist, I’m guessing it came from years of believing his own lies. “Next year will be better he was in favour of saying.”

He said it when the bottom dropped out of the cattle industry. And we were left borrowing money to feed cattle that weren’t worth enough to sell, if we could even find someone to buy them.  Feed was high too, what with it being three years into the worst drought since the thirties. “Next year,” My Grandpa said, “Why next year we’ll have so much rain we’ll have to build us an Ark.” Besides being an optimist my grandfather thought himself to be a conversational humorist and I guess we couldn’t blame him for that because we always obliged him by laughing. “Cattle prices will be up too I reckon,” he added lying through his teeth.

Anyway I remember this onetime when I knew my Grandpa was telling the truth. We were sitting out on the front step my grandfather, my father and I, it was shortly after my mother had left. “I’m just plain sick of hard work and poverty.” she told my father through clenched teeth.

To me she said, “You can come with me if you like but I will not stay on this place another minute;” She left in the only truck on the place that ran half decent.

“She’ll be back,”my father told me, don’t you worry son, “she’ll be back.” But I knew the only way she’d be back was if the truck didn’t make it as far as she wanted to go. Part of me prayed that she’d make it as far as the city and part of me prayed she break down and have to come back.

Anyway we were sitting there on the front step and my grandpa said to me, “Look up at that sky son.” Them stars were about the size of pie plates and man were they twinkling, some of them were so close it seemed like you could just about reach up and touch them. “You will never see stars like that in the city son. Never!” and for emphasis he spat when he said it.

Never ... that much was true.

 

Bio

I am a keeper of sheep on the beautiful Alberta Prairie and am blessed to have all of my children and grandchildren within hugging distance. I have always loved stories from both sides of the ink.

0
0
0
s2sdefault

Donate a little?

Use PayPal to support our efforts:

Amount

Genre Poll

Your Favorite Genre?

Sign Up for info from Short-Story.Me!

Stories Tips And Advice