Writer’s Prompt: Mean Girls Die Hard: A Woman’s Revenge Decades in the Making


What happens when the bullied grow up—and decide the past should bleed?

Marla didn’t blink when she saw the third obituary. Just a slow exhale, like someone checking another task off a list. “Three down,” she whispered. The fourth name pulsed behind her eyelids like a migraine that never left—Heather Bloom. The ringleader. The girl who’d taped Marla’s gym shorts to the flagpole. Who’d made her cry in front of the whole cafeteria. Who laughed when Marla’s dog died and wrote “dog killer” in red marker on her locker. The others had fallen like tragic accidents—an overdose, a drunk-driving crash, a freak hiking fall. But Heather? Marla had been saving her. Heather deserved something…special.

Across town, Detective Lena Cruz stared at her murder board, heart hammering. The patterns weren’t obvious—on paper, these were isolated tragedies. But Lena knew better. Her gut was a drumbeat whispering, something’s wrong. The connection was out there. And someone was running out of time—either to kill again…or be stopped.


❓ Three Questions to Dive Deeper:

  1. Can childhood cruelty truly justify lifelong revenge—or is Marla becoming worse than her bullies?
  2. What emotional wounds drive people to meticulously plan vengeance over decades?
  3. Will Detective Cruz stop the cycle of violence—or be the next casualty in Marla’s mind?

Writer’s Prompt: Buried Fallout: A Cold Case Detective’s Deadly Discovery


What begins as a routine review of a twenty-year-old murder spirals into an international chase for truth—and survival. One detective, one dead scientist, and secrets meant to stay buried.

Opening Paragraph:

Detective Claire Rivas had seen her share of dead ends. Cold cases were her specialty—not because she loved unsolvable puzzles, but because she hated loose ends. The file she opened that rainy Monday morning was yellowed at the edges and smelled faintly of mildew and resignation. Dr. Eugene Roth, an atomic scientist once celebrated in classified corridors, was found shot execution-style in his D.C. townhouse two decades earlier. No leads, no suspects, no fingerprints. Just a trail of erased files and a missing laptop. As Claire sifted through the case, something didn’t sit right. Roth’s research had been on non-proliferation—what possible motive could there be for silencing a peacemaker? A decrypted email hidden deep in an archived drive revealed a name she’d never heard but instantly knew spelled danger. Within forty-eight hours, Claire would find herself on a transatlantic flight, her badge tucked in her boot, and a burner phone buzzing with warnings. What she was chasing wasn’t justice anymore—it was survival.


Questions to Dive Deeper:

  1. What moral compromises should a detective make when national security is at stake?
  2. How do personal motivations and past traumas shape Claire’s pursuit of justice?
  3. Could Dr. Roth’s murder have been prevented, or was he always expendable in the eyes of power?

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