Writer’s Prompt: A Man Who Always Got What He Wanted—Until Today

Warren Richmond believed wealth was immunity. Then a single envelope reminded him that everyone has an expiration date.

Writer’s Prompt

Warren Richmond had never waited for anything in his life—not toys, not women, not forgiveness. Born into a fortune built on headlines and influence, he learned early that patience was for people without leverage. At forty-five, seated behind a desk worth more than most homes, he was mentally editing his life again—third wife fading, fourth wife forming—when the knock came.

His secretary stood frozen, an envelope pinched between two fingers. No return address. No logo. Just his name, handwritten.

“You better read this,” she said.

Warren smirked. Threats were currency in his world. He slit the envelope open and read the single line inside.

Enjoy your final day on the planet.

He laughed—too loudly. Too quickly.

Then his phone rang.

Not his cell. Not the office line.

The private phone.

The one only three people knew existed.

The smile slipped. For the first time in his life, Warren Richmond felt something unfamiliar tighten in his chest.

Time.


✍️ Writer’s Question

Writer’s question:

When someone who has always controlled the world loses control—what does fear make them do first?

Writer’s Prompt: Twenty-Five Cents and a Phone Call That Changed Everything

Her bank balance didn’t just drop—it vanished. What Erica did next turned heartbreak into a countdown.


Erica Swanson stared at her phone as if it had just betrayed her. The screen glowed with a cheerful bank alert—Withdrawal: $4,000. She tapped the app, her pulse quickening. Her balance blinked back at her: $0.25.

“Dumb, dumb, dumb,” she shrieked to the empty apartment. Tyler. Of course. She’d dumped him last week—his lies finally outweighing his smile—but she’d forgotten one fatal detail. He still had access to her checking account. The same charm that once made waiters comp desserts had just erased her summer in Europe.

She paced, rage bubbling, replaying every red flag she’d ignored. An hour later, the anger cooled into something sharper. Erica stopped pacing. She smiled.

Maybe it’s not over.

She opened her contacts and scrolled to a name she hadn’t dialed in years.

Rick.

Her brother answered on the second ring. Former Navy SEAL. Quiet. Efficient. The kind of man who believed consequences were educational.

“Rick,” Erica said calmly, staring at the balance again. “How do you feel about Europe?”

There was a pause.

Then: “Who are we visiting?”


Writer’s Question

If you continued this story, what price would Tyler end up paying—and would Erica cross a line to collect it?

Writer’s Prompt: She Called It Tutoring

Justice didn’t knock politely—it kicked the door in wearing a trench coat and bad intentions.

Titiana Walker never raised her voice; she just let silence do the damage.

Titiana Walker had the three B’s going for her—Brash, Bold, and Blunt. A relic from the noir detective era, except she wasn’t fiction. She was as real as a toothache at two in the morning and twice as cruel if you deserved it. Business had been slow, the kind of slow that lets your thoughts wander into dangerous neighborhoods. That’s when she saw the headline. Hedge fund broker. Girlfriend’s nose broken. Clothes tossed into the street like trash. Two months of community service—paid for with a smile, a tie that cost more than most people’s rent, and lawyers who billed by the heartbeat. Something old and volcanic stirred in Titiana’s chest. She finished her coffee without tasting it, slipped her gun into its holster, and pulled on her coat. She didn’t believe in revenge; it was too emotional. What she believed in was tutoring—one-on-one, after hours, tailored to the student. The city hummed outside her office window, indifferent as ever. Somewhere across town, a man thought he’d gotten away clean. Titiana locked the door behind her and headed into the night, ready to correct a very expensive misunderstanding.


Writer’s Question

If you were Titiana, would you walk away—or make sure the lesson was unforgettable?

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