Writer’s Prompt: Shorty’s Last Gamble: A Gritty Crime Thriller

Shorty Metz was tired of being the joke; tonight, he was going to turn the punchline into a payday—if the safe didn’t become his coffin first.

The Long Shadow of a Short Man

The neon sign of the Blue Velvet Lounge flickered outside, casting rhythmic bruises of light across Zeke Albatti’s office. Inside, the air tasted of stale cigars and expensive greed. Shorty Metz stood in the corner, a six-foot-five tower of resentment, watching Zeke’s sausage-thick fingers dance across the dial of the wall safe.

Left to 42. Right to 18. Left to 09.

Zeke tossed a banded brick of hundreds onto the pile. “Be a pal, Shorty,” Zeke wheezed, his back turned. “Grab the scotch. Being this rich is thirsty work.”

Shorty didn’t move for the bottle. He watched the heavy steel door swing shut, the click of the tumblers sounding like a gavel. For twenty years, he’d been “Shorty”—the big man with the empty pockets, the punchline to every joke in the underworld. He was tired of the crumbs. He was tired of the neck-ache from looking down at men who looked down on him.

He had the numbers. He had the heavy glass ashtray within reach. He had a stolen sedan idling three blocks over. It was a foolproof plan: one clean strike, the safe’s contents in a duffel, and a one-way ticket to a life where nobody knew his name or his debt.

Shorty’s hand closed around the cool marble of the ashtray. Zeke turned around, a smug grin spreading across his face as he reached into his breast pocket—not for a cigar, but for a small, silver whistle.

“You think I don’t see you counting, Shorty?” Zeke purred. “You think I don’t know why you’re still standing there?”

Shorty lunged.


Does Shorty finally catch his break, or is he about to learn why Zeke stayed at the top? You decide the final blow.

Writer’s Prompt: Blood Money and Floorboards: A 300-Word Noir Thriller

One million dollars, two dead guards, and a door that just swung open. Roger Kingman is out of time.

The Half-Measured Grave

The floorboards groaned, a dry, splintering sound that felt like thunder in the hollowed-out silence of The Rusty Anchor. Roger Kingman stared into the rectangular throat of the crawlspace. There it was: one million dollars in weathered non-sequential bills, the ghost of a five-year-old heist that had painted an armored truck crimson.

Roger’s heart hammered against his ribs like a trapped bird. He wasn’t the trigger man that night, but the law didn’t care for nuances. To the precinct, he was a murderer in waiting.

“Don’t be a pig, Rog,” he whispered, his own voice sounding like sandpaper. “Take half. Half is plenty for a new life. Half doesn’t look like a sell-out.”

He reached for a stack, his fingers brushing the cold, damp paper, when the front door chime cut through the dark. Chink-clack. The lock turned. The heavy oak door creaked open, admitting a slice of streetlamp yellow and the smell of rain.

Roger killed his flashlight, the darkness swallowing him whole. He crouched behind the bar, the smell of stale beer and old sins filling his nostrils. His hand found the cold, checkered grip of his .38. He didn’t just feel the weight of the steel; he felt the weight of the five years he’d spent looking over his shoulder.

The footsteps were heavy, rhythmic—a man who owned the floor he walked on. They stopped just feet away, on the other side of the mahogany bar.

“I know you’re in here, Roger,” a gravelly voice vibrated through the wood. “And I know you found the floorboard. The question is, did you bring a big enough bag, or a big enough gun?”

Roger thumbed the hammer back. Click.


The shadows are closing in, and the barrel is cold. Does Roger pull the trigger, or is he staring at the man who actually pulled it five years ago? You decide how the lead flies.

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