Writer’s Prompt: Fatal Tea: Can Sara Escape Tom’s Deadly Secret?

When a sick day reveals a husband’s lethal history, Sara must decide: is she a victim of slow-acting poison, or a pawn in a deadly game of gaslighting?

The Slow Drip

The tea tasted like copper and wet earth. Sara watched Tom through the kitchen doorway; he was whistling, a cheerful, dissonant sound that set her teeth on edge. Every swallow felt like a betrayal.

“You look pale, honey,” Tom said, leaning against the frame. He didn’t come closer. He never did when she was like this. He just watched.

Sara’s hand trembled, the ceramic cup rattling against the saucer. Nicole’s voice was still a jagged glass shard in her mind: “Two hospitalizations. Total organ failure. The police called it ‘unexplained illness.’ He’s doing it again, Sara. It’s the slow drip. You won’t wake up tomorrow if you don’t end it tonight.”

Her stomach cramped—a hot, twisting reminder of the toxin supposedly blooming in her gut. She looked at the heavy marble rolling pin on the counter. Then, she looked at the small, brown vial she’d found hidden in the back of the medicine cabinet an hour ago. It was unlabeled.

“I made you some broth,” Tom said, stepping into the kitchen. He held a steaming bowl. His eyes were unreadable—was that concern, or was he measuring the distance to her grave?

“Nicole called,” Sara whispered.

Tom froze. The whistling stopped. The silence in the apartment became heavy, suffocating like a shroud. “Nicole has always been… imaginative,” he said softly. He set the bowl down and reached for a kitchen knife to slice a lemon. His back was turned.

Sara’s fingers closed around the cold marble of the rolling pin. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird in a cage. Was Nicole a savior, or a jealous arsonist trying to burn Sara’s life down?

Tom began to turn around, the blade glinting under the dim fluorescent light.

How does this end? Does Sara strike first, or is she dying for a lie? Finish the story.

Writer’s Prompt: The Matchbook Secret: A Gritty Noir Flash Fiction

One matchbook. Two paths. Tony Spaz just found the evidence that will either save his career or ruin his life.

Writer’s Prompt

The neon sign outside flickered like a dying heart, casting rhythmic, rhythmic bruises across the apartment. Tony Spaz stopped counting his laps around the room at twenty. Each step on the hardwood felt like a heavy toll paid to a past he couldn’t outrun.

There she was. Kim. The woman who traded his steady, grimy love for the “bright lights” of the city. Now, those lights were just cold reflections in the cooling pool of red spreading across the floor. It was a crime of passion—sloppy, frantic, and devastatingly personal.

Tony knelt, his knees cracking in the silence. His eyes, trained by a decade of looking at things people shouldn’t have to see, swept the floor one last time. There, tucked under the frayed velvet edge of the couch, was a small, rectangular shadow.

He fished it out with a gloved hand. A matchbook. From The Blue Note.

The breath hitched in his throat. It wasn’t just the name of the club; it was the handwriting inside. A jagged phone number and a name he’d seen in a thousand police reports—a name that belonged to the one man Tony had sworn to protect.

The weight of his service weapon suddenly felt like a lead anchor. In this city, justice was a slow-moving beast, often toothless and easily bribed. A trial meant months of lawyers tearing Kim’s life apart for the sport of it. But closure? Closure could happen in the next ten minutes.

Tony looked at the matchbook, then at Kim’s pale, still face. He stood up, the matchbook disappearing into his pocket as he headed for the door.


Finish the Story

Tony is standing at the threshold of a choice that will change his soul forever. Does he call it in and let the broken system take over, or does he head to The Blue Note to deliver his own brand of dark justice?

Writer’s Prompt: The Bitter Roast: A Dark Tale of Infidelity and Family Secrets

One cup of coffee. Two interlocking hands. Three lives ruined before the caffeine even hits.

The Bitter Roast

The bell above the door chimed—a cheerful, tinny sound that felt like a mockery. Darcy stepped into the warmth of The Roasted Bean, the scent of burnt espresso and cinnamon swirling around her. She reached for her wallet, her eyes scanning the room, and then she saw him.

Her father, David, sat in the corner booth, the one partially obscured by a dusty monstera plant. He wasn’t alone. He was leaning across the scarred wood table, his hand covering the hand of a woman who was decidedly not Darcy’s mother. The woman laughed, a low, melodic sound, and David leaned in closer, his thumb stroking her knuckles with a practiced, intimate familiarity.

Darcy’s breath hitched. This wasn’t a business meeting. This wasn’t “working late at the firm.” This was the slow-motion shattering of a twenty-two-year-old’s universe. The espresso machine hissed, sounding like a warning.

She thought of her mother at home, likely hum-singing while she tended to the garden, completely unaware that the foundation of her thirty-year marriage was dissolving in a coffee shop three blocks away.

Darcy felt a cold, oily slick of rage pool in her stomach. If she walked away, the lie would fester inside her like an infection. If she approached, the explosion would be immediate and irreversible. Her phone vibrated in her pocket—a text from her mom: Pick up some milk on your way home, honey? Love you.

Darcy looked back at the booth. Her father was kissing the woman’s palm. The coffee she had craved now tasted like ash in her throat. She took a step forward, her shadow stretching long and jagged across the linoleum floor.


How would you finish this story?

Would Darcy snap a photo for evidence, flip the table in a blind fury, or quietly follow them to see just how deep the betrayal goes?

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