Writer’s Prompt: Sins of the Father: A Dark Flash Fiction Mystery

Ten years of searching for a killer led Detective Matty Dans to the one man he swore to protect.

The Decade of Dust

The calendar in Matty’s kitchen was a graveyard of red “X” marks. 3,655 days. Each one a shovel full of dirt on Sarah’s memory. Ten years of badge-heavy days and whiskey-soaked nights had led him here—to a grease-stained note from a bottom-feeder named Pip.

Matty stared at the jagged scrawl: “The old man didn’t just bury his grief, Matty. He buried the blade.”

The radiator hissed like a cornered viper. Matty reached for his service weapon, the cold steel of the Smith & Wesson feeling heavier than usual. His father, Silas, was a man of hymns and hard work. He was the one who held Matty’s hand at the funeral while the rain turned the cemetery into a swamp.

He drove to the old house on Miller Street. The porch light flickered—a dying heartbeat. Inside, Silas sat in his high-backed leather chair, the smell of peppermint and stale tobacco hanging thick in the air. A single lamp cast long, skeletal shadows across the floor.

“You look like you’ve seen a ghost, son,” Silas said, his voice a gravelly rasp. He didn’t look up from the photo album on his lap.

Matty’s hand hovered over his holster. “Pip talked, Dad. He said you were there. At the creek. That night.”

Silas finally looked up. His eyes weren’t filled with fear; they were filled with a terrifying, hollow pity. He reached into the side of the chair and pulled out a rusted hunting knife—the one Matty thought had been lost a decade ago.

“Pip always talked too much,” Silas whispered, standing up with a slow, agonizing grace. “But he didn’t tell you why I did it, did he?”

Silas took a step forward. Matty drew his gun, the barrel trembling.

Now it’s your turn. Does Matty pull the trigger on the only family he has left, or does Silas have one last secret that changes everything? Finish the story.

Writer’s Prompt: Six Rounds for Ivan: A Gritty Noir Short Story

They left him for dead in a rain-slicked alley, but Cain Thompson still has six bullets and a debt to settle.

The Lead in the Lungs

The rain in this city doesn’t wash anything away; it just turns the grit into a slick, black paste. Cain Thompson pressed his shoulder into the brick, the rough texture biting through his torn trench coat. Every breath felt like swallowing broken glass. He wiped a smear of copper-tasting heat from his upper lip with the back of his hand, staring at the crimson stain on his knuckles.

“Amateurs,” he spat, though the word came out as a wet cough.

Ivan’s goons had the subtlety of a sledgehammer and the follow-through of a dead battery. They’d left him crumpled behind a dumpster, thinking a shattered nose and a few cracked ribs were enough of a message. They were wrong. Fear is a luxury Cain couldn’t afford since he lost the only thing that kept him honest.

He reached into his waistband, his fingers finding the cold, checkered grip of the .38 Special. He didn’t need a heavy artillery piece or a tactical squad. He had six spinning chambers—six brass-jacketed apologies—waiting for a heart-to-heart with Ivan.

Cain limped toward the mouth of the alley. The neon sign of the “Blue Velvet” flickered overhead, casting a rhythmic, sickly violet glow over the puddles. He knew Ivan was in the back office, counting blood money and laughing about the lesson he’d just taught.

Cain reached the door. His hand trembled, not from fear, but from the adrenaline fighting the exhaustion. He cocked the hammer. The metallic click was the loudest sound in the world. He kicked the door wide.

Three shadows turned. Three guns leveled. Cain raised his hand, but his vision blurred, the world tilting dangerously to the left.


The choice is yours, detective. Does Cain find his mark before his strength gives out, or does the house always win? Write the final confrontation.

Writer’s Prompt: The Long Hunt: Why Some Revenges Are Best Served Slow

He bought flowers for his wife, but he brought a rifle for his best friend.

Writer’s Prompt

The Petals and the Powder

The scent of lilies in the cab was starting to smell like a funeral. Kyle sat a half-block down, the engine of his Ford killed, the silence of the suburban street pressing against his eardrums like deep-sea pressure. In the rearview mirror, his own eyes looked like shattered glass—cold, jagged, and reflective of a man he didn’t quite recognize.

He watched the front porch. The golden hour light hit the peeling paint of the doorframe just as it opened. Josh Savors—the man who’d been his best man, the man who’d held his ladder while he painted this very house—stepped out. His arms were draped around Becky’s waist with a casual, practiced intimacy that turned Kyle’s stomach into a knot of rusted wire. Then came the kiss. It wasn’t a goodbye; it was a claim.

Kyle’s fingers didn’t shake as they drifted toward the velvet-lined case on the passenger seat. The high-powered rifle felt cool, a heavy weight of finality. He could end it now. A single squeeze and the betrayal would bleed out onto the welcome mat.

But as Josh climbed into his pickup and the taillights faded into the dusk, Kyle felt a strange, icy calm. A quick kill was for prey you respected. This was different. He looked at the bouquet of lilies, then out at the darkening woods bordering his property.

“Not here,” he whispered, his voice a dry rasp. “And not today.”

He thought of the hunting cabin, the deep ravine where the cell signal died, and the invitation he’d send Josh for a “reconciliation” beer tomorrow. The hunt was always better when the mark didn’t know the season had started.

As Kyle pulled the bolt back, the metallic clack echoed in the cabin. The choice was made.


How does the “reconciliation” at the cabin end? Does Kyle find his resolve, or does the weight of the hunt change the hunter? The final chapter is yours to write.

Writer’s Prompt: Why You Should Never Cross an 80-Year-Old with a .38

Lydia Johnson loved two things: her poodle and her wine. Tonight, she’s out of wine and someone took her dog.

Writer’s Prompt

The streetlights in Oakhaven didn’t illuminate; they leaked a sickly yellow pallor onto the cracked pavement. Lydia Johnson killed the engine of her Buick, the silence hitting her harder than the hospital’s antiseptic stench ever could.

The air felt thin, scorched—like bread forgotten in a toaster.

She stepped inside. The silence wasn’t the peaceful kind she enjoyed with a vintage Merlot. It was heavy. It was hollow. Buttons wasn’t there. No manic skittering of claws on hardwood, no high-pitched yaps. Just a square of notebook paper resting on the mahogany coffee table like a shroud.

You want your toy poodle back, it will cost you $1000.

Lydia didn’t panic. Panic was for the young, for those who still thought the world owed them mercy. She poured a glass of Cabernet, then another, the red liquid staining her lips like a bruise. At eighty-two, her heart was a clock with a frayed mainspring, but her hands were steady.

She walked to the hall closet and pulled down a dusty shoebox labeled Arthur. Inside, nestled against his silver watch, was a snub-nosed .38 caliber. It felt cold, heavy, and honest.

She checked the cylinder. Six rounds of copper-jacketed insurance. She slipped the steel into her cardigan pocket, the weight pulling the fabric taut.

“What are they going to do to an eighty-year-old woman?” she whispered to the empty room.

She stepped back out into the humid night, the address on the back of the note burned into her mind. She saw the shadow of a man standing by the corner store, watching her. Lydia didn’t flinch. She just reached into her pocket and rested her finger on the trigger.


How does Lydia’s confrontation end? Does the shadow belong to the kidnapper, or someone far more dangerous? Finish the story.

The Gin and the Ghost: A Noir Flash Fiction Noir

Willie Perez was ready to pull the trigger on himself until a woman with soul-piercing eyes gave him a reason to pull it on someone else.

The Last Rung on the Ladder

The gin hit the soil with a pathetic hiss, the dying fern soaking up the rot like a sponge. Willie Perez watched the fronds curl, mirroring his own spine. He felt the cold, heavy comfort of the .38 Special in his palm—a heavy piece of lead-lined silence that promised an end to the ringing in his ears.

Then the door groaned. No knock. Just the scent of expensive jasmine and cheap desperation.

Elana Sanchez didn’t walk; she invaded. She slammed two gloved hands onto his scarred mahogany desk and leaned in. Her eyes weren’t just dark; they were gravity wells, pulling Willie’s shattered psyche toward an event horizon he wasn’t prepared for.

“You the PI that specializes in teaching lessons?” she asked.

The air in the room vanished. Willie was a dead man ten seconds ago, but Elana was a different kind of ghost. She held his gaze with the predatory stillness of a boa constrictor, her presence tightening around his throat until the gun in his hand felt like a toy.

“Depends on who’s buying,” Willie rasped, his voice sounding like gravel in a blender.

“I’m not buying, Willie. I’m recruiting,” she whispered, sliding a grainy photograph across the desk. It showed a man Willie recognized—a man who should have been buried three years ago. “He thinks he’s safe. He thinks the lesson is over. I need you to show him he’s still in school.”

Willie looked at the photo, then at the .38, then back into the abyss of Elana’s eyes. The choice wasn’t between life and death anymore; it was between one kind of hell and another. He stood up, the weight of the gun shifting from his temple to his holster.

“Where do we start?”

Elana smiled, and for the first time, Willie realized the snake doesn’t just squeeze—it swallows you whole.


The trail is cold, and the target is a ghost. Does Willie find redemption in the shadows, or is he just pulling the trigger for a different master? Tell us how the lesson ends.

Writer’s Prompt: The Pink Slip Protocol: A Dark Noir Flash Fiction Thriller

He traded his life for a lie; now he’s one keystroke away from burning the whole company down.

The Pink Slip Protocol

The fluorescent lights hummed like a swarm of angry hornets. Danny Sims stared at the cursor—a blinking green heartbeat on a black screen. For two weeks, he’d been the “golden hire.” Now, he was just another line item to be deleted.

“No hard feelings,” he’d told the HR director. His voice had been steady, a practiced lie. In reality, the betrayal tasted like copper and cold grease. He’d left a life, a career, and a thousand miles of road for a promise that turned out to be a trap.

His fingers danced across the mechanical keyboard, clicking like a countdown. The worm was a masterpiece of digital rot. Once injected into the mainframe, it wouldn’t just steal data; it would dissolve the company’s infrastructure from the inside out, turning million-dollar servers into expensive space heaters.

The cost of doing business, Danny thought.

The clock in the corner of his screen ticked down. 4:58 PM. He had two minutes before his credentials were wiped and security escorted him to the curb. He hovered his index finger over the Enter key. His heart hammered against his ribs—a frantic drumbeat for a digital execution.

The heavy mahogany door creaked open.

“Danny? You still here? Can we talk?”

It was Miller, the VP who’d recruited him with whiskey and lies. Miller looked haggard, his tie loosened, a thick manila envelope tucked under his arm. He didn’t look like a man coming to deliver a goodbye. He looked like a man about to offer a deal.

Danny’s finger twitched. The code was primed. One tap and the bridge burns. One tap and the revenge is absolute.

“I have something for you,” Miller said, stepping deeper into the shadows of the office.


Does Danny hit ‘Enter’ and vanish into the digital smoke, or does he listen to one last pitch? You decide how the bridge burns.

Writer’s Prompt: Bourbon and Bullets: Sally Ramirez’s Night of Reckoning

Sally Ramirez didn’t come for an apology; she came to balance the books with a .38 Special and a heart full of Jim Beam.

The Neon Burn

The neon sign outside pulsed a rhythmic, sickly pink, casting long, bleeding shadows across the laminate bar. Sally Ramirez watched her reflection in the amber depths of her fifth—or was it sixth?—Jim Beam. Her reflection looked like a stranger, eyes hollowed out by a rage that felt heavier than the .38 Special tucked into her waistband.

Biff West was a special kind of parasite. He hadn’t just walked out; he’d scorched the earth. Leaving her sister with three kids under six was a sin; draining every cent from their accounts was a death sentence. Sally could still hear her sister’s muffled sobs through the phone, the sound of a woman drowning on dry land.

Sally’s left hand tightened around her leather sparring gloves. They were salt-stained and smelled of old sweat and grit—the only things she had left that felt honest.

“Biff is a deadbeat,” she muttered, the words thick with bourbon and bile. “And maybe tonight, he’s just a dead deadbeat.”

She threw back the final shot. The burn was a mercy compared to the fire in her chest. She stood up, the world tilting for a precarious second before the cold weight of the steel against her hip anchored her.

Twenty minutes later, she stood outside Biff’s cheap motel room. The air smelled of rain and exhaust. Inside, she could hear the muffled laughter of a man who thought he’d gotten away with it. Sally pulled on the gloves. They fit like a second skin. Her right hand hovered over the cold grip of the .38.

The door was flimsy. One good kick would do it.

Sally took a breath, the silence of the hallway roaring in her ears. She had two ways to settle the debt: the lead in her belt or the leather on her fists.

The door handle turned. What happens when the light hits the hallway?

Writer’s Prompt: When the Story Writes You: A Psychological Noir Thriller

What happens when your protagonist decides she’s tired of the script and wants blood instead?

The Ghost in the Machine

The neon sign outside pulsed a rhythmic, bleeding red against Jill’s studio walls—a heartbeat for a room that felt dead. It was 4:00 AM. Her hands smelled like cheap rye and stale cigarette smoke from the shift at The Rusty Nail, but her mind was stuck in the digital snow of a blank Word doc.

Attempt 16. The cursor blinked, a tiny guillotine waiting for a neck.

Then, the text didn’t appear—it spoke. Not in her head, but in a low, gravelly rasp that vibrated through the mechanical keyboard.

“Jill, honey, let me live. You got me trapped.”

Jill froze. The screen stayed white, but the words began to crawl across the monitor in a font that looked like jagged glass.

“I’m so tired of your clichés,” the voice hissed. It was her protagonist, Vesper—the femme fatale Jill had spent months trying to perfect. “The rainy alleys, the broken hearts… it’s pathetic. Stop writing. Start doing.”

Jill’s breath hitched. “I’m dreaming. I haven’t slept in thirty hours.”

“You aren’t dreaming, doll. You’re leaking,” Vesper whispered. On the screen, a grainy image flickered into view: a man sleeping in a high-rise apartment three blocks away. Michael. The man who had drained Jill’s bank account and left her with nothing but a bartender’s apron and a bruised soul.

“Live vicariously through me,” the monitor glowed with a predatory heat. “Let’s put a bullet through that jerk. I’m already in the hall. All you have to do is hit ‘Save’.”

Jill’s finger hovered over the disk icon. In the reflection of the screen, she didn’t see her own tired eyes—she saw Vesper’s cold, steady hand holding a .38 Special.

Does Jill click save, or does she pull the plug? The ending is in your hands.

Writer’s Prompt: Betrayed by the Best Man: A Psychological Thriller Prompt

Ken Thomas took the scenic route home to enjoy the spring air, but he found a cold-blooded betrayal instead. Now, he has three choices—and one of them ends in blood.

Writer’s Prompt

The shadows in Crestview Park didn’t care that it was a Thursday. They stretched long and jagged, like ink bleeding across a blotter. Ken Thomas usually traded his soul to the office fluorescent lights on Thursdays, but the spring air had smelled too much like hope to ignore.

Halfway through the oak grove, hope died a quiet, violent death.

There was Emma. His Emma. Her fingers were threaded through the hair of a man who wasn’t Ken. The man was Bill Hathaway—Ken’s best friend, his best man, the guy who’d held his hair back after too many whiskeys. They were locked in an embrace so tight it looked like they were trying to merge into a single, duplicitous organism.

Ken didn’t scream. He didn’t even breathe. He just pulled out his iPhone, the screen’s glow a cold, digital witness. He recorded the betrayal in high definition, every whispered word and stolen touch preserved in silicon.

He retreated to a nearby bench, the metal slats biting into his spine. His mind became a courtroom with three presiding judges:

  1. Confrontation: Throw the digital proof in her face tonight. Watch the prettiness of her lies crumble into ugly reality.
  2. Absolution: Delete the file. Crawl back into the warmth of the deception and hope her guilt eventually brought her home.
  3. The Final Script: A “murder-suicide.” Two bodies in Bill’s bachelor pad. A staged note. A clean break from a dirty world.

Ken felt the weight of the phone in his hand—a weapon or a peace offering. He stood up, his shadow merging with the coming night. He started walking toward their house, but at the fork in the path, he stopped.

What does Ken do when he opens the front door? You tell me how this noir ends.

Writer’s Prompt: Digital Shadows: When the Dark Web Hits Home

Two detectives found the Mayor’s darkest secret, but one of them found a better price for it.

The Mayor’s Executioner

The neon sign outside “Combs & Jackson Investigations” flickered like a dying heart. Inside, the air smelled of stale coffee and the ozone of Sara’s overclocked servers.

“Got him,” Sara whispered, her face washed in the blue light of the Dark Web. “Mel Peterson. Our ‘pillar of the community’ Mayor is shopping for a professional. Specifically, someone to make his wife’s ‘unfortunate’ heart condition permanent.”

Jeannie leaned over, cracking her knuckles. “He’s looking for a ghost. I’ll give him a shadow instead.”

The meet was set for 2:00 AM at the Pier 14 warehouse—a place where the fog swallowed secrets whole. Jeannie wore a trench coat that hid her frame and a voice modulator that turned her gravelly tone into a mechanical growl. Sara sat three blocks away in the van, ears glued to the wire, fingers dancing over a kill-switch for the city’s grid.

Mayor Peterson arrived alone. He looked smaller in the dark, stripped of his expensive suits and political bravado. He shoved a manila envelope toward Jeannie.

“Half now,” Peterson stammered. “The rest when the job is done. No witnesses.”

Jeannie felt the weight of the cash. This was the bust of a lifetime. One signal to Sara, and the local news would have a front-row seat to the Mayor’s downfall.

“Is there a problem?” Peterson asked, his eyes darting to the shadows behind Jeannie.

Jeannie reached for her badge, but her hand froze. A red laser dot bloomed on Peterson’s chest—then drifted, settling right over Jeannie’s heart.

“Sara?” Jeannie whispered into her collar.

Silence. Then, Sara’s voice came through, cold and unfamiliar. “The Mayor’s offer was better, Jeannie. I’m sorry. The agency needed the capital.”

The Mayor smiled. “Well? Is it a deal?”


Does Jeannie dive for cover, or is the partner she trusted about to pull the trigger? You decide how this betrayal ends.

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