Twenty years of running ends tonight. Jimmy Buttons is back, and he isn’t looking for an apology—he’s looking for a heartbeat to stop.

Writer’s Prompt
The neon sign outside flickered in a rhythmic stutter, casting a bruised purple glow over the radiator of Jimmy’s dive apartment. Jimmy “Buttons” Rossi didn’t mind the dark; he’d been living in the shadows since he was fourteen, the night he traded a broken rib for a bus ticket and a life of silence.
He sat at the scarred kitchen table, the cold weight of the .38 Special feeling more honest than any conversation he’d had in twenty years. On the wall, the calendar was marked with a heavy, ink-bled circle around today’s date. It wasn’t an anniversary. It was an expiration date.
His old man was still out there, probably nursing a lukewarm scotch in that same wood-paneled den where the belt used to snap like a gunshot. Jimmy could still hear his mother’s muffled sobs through the drywall—a sound that had become the soundtrack of his dreams.
He stood up, his coat heavy with the leaden promise of justice. He reached the house at midnight. The front door was unlocked, a final insult to a world that should have devoured his father years ago. Jimmy stepped into the hallway, the floorboards groaning under his thirty-five years of resentment.
There he was. The old man was slumped in the armchair, back turned, the crown of his thinning hair visible over the leather. Jimmy raised the barrel, lining it up with the spot where a heart should be. His finger tightened on the trigger.
Then, the old man spoke, his voice a dry rattle. “I’ve been leaving the door open for a week, Jimmy. You’re late.”
Jimmy froze. The shadows in the room seemed to lean in, waiting for the thunder.
How does the story end?
Does Jimmy pull the trigger and become the monster he hated, or does he find that the man in the chair is already a ghost? The final move is yours.
Discover more from Optimistic Beacon
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.