Writer’s Prompt: Prescription for Purgatory: When Healers Turn to Vengeance

When the monster is at your mercy and the law is looking the other way, does the scalpel become a sword?

Writer’s Prompt

The neon sign outside the clinic flickered, casting a rhythmic, bruised purple light across the linoleum. It was 3:00 AM—the hour when the city’s sins came home to roost.

Dr. Traci Almwood stood over bed four, the antiseptic smell of the ward doing little to mask the stench of the man lying there. Arthur Vance. To the digital world, he was a ghost; to his victims, he was a predator who specialized in the “soft targets”—the elderly, the desperate, the ones the law tended to overlook. He’d bragged about it on encrypted forums, a digital trophy room of ruined lives.

Now, he was just a bag of bones and bad intentions, wheezing under a thin bleached sheet. A localized stroke had taken his speech, but his eyes were wide, darting, and filled with a frantic, unrepentant terror. He knew who she was. More importantly, he knew what she knew.

Traci felt the weight of the vial in her pocket. It was a cocktail of her own making—colorless, odorless, and utterly untraceable in a standard toxicology screen. A quiet exit for a loud monster. The monitor hissed, a steady, mechanical heartbeat that felt like a ticking clock.

She reached for the IV line. The law had failed, the system was rigged, and the vulnerable were still bleeding. In the harsh glare of the fluorescent lights, the line between healer and executioner didn’t just blur—it vanished. She leaned down, her voice a low, jagged rasp. “They can’t hear you screaming online anymore, Arthur.”

Her thumb hovered over the plunger.


How would you finish this story?

Writer’s Prompt: From Victim to Predator: Marta Timmons’ Dark Path to Safety

Marta Timmons was grateful her training saved her life, but as she walked away from her attacker, she realized that being a survivor wasn’t enough—it was time to become the nightmare.

Writer’s Prompt

The Night Belongs to Us: Marta’s Dark Transformation

The bruises on Marta’s ribs were a dull throb compared to the adrenaline still searing through her veins. The shortcut through St. Jude’s Park was supposed to save ten minutes; instead, it became a stage for a predator. He hadn’t expected the explosive power of a Capoeira master. When those “strong arms” locked around her, Marta didn’t scream—she became a whirlwind of precision and bone-snapping force.

Five minutes later, she walked away, leaving a crumpled shadow gasping in the dirt. She was a black belt, trained to defend, but as she wiped his blood off her knuckles, gratitude curdled into a cold, sharp rage. How many women didn’t have her years of discipline? How many were currently looking over their shoulders, hearts hammering against their ribs like trapped birds?

By the time she reached her apartment, the plan had taken root. It wasn’t about teaching self-defense classes in a brightly lit gym. That was too reactive. Marta realized that to make the night truly safe, she had to change the nature of the night itself.

She looked at her reflection—sweat-streaked and fierce. She would start a hunt, but not for sport. She would become the apex predator of the pavement. Her plan involved a silent network, a specialized set of “patrols” that didn’t wear uniforms, and a brand of justice that the police weren’t allowed to dispense. The park was just the beginning. Marta Timmons was going to ensure that from now on, it was the monsters who were afraid of the dark.


As you read this prompt, ask yourself: What happens to a hero when they decide that “protection” requires becoming more dangerous than the threat?

Writer’s Question: In your version of this story, does Marta’s quest for safety remain a noble pursuit, or does she eventually become the very thing people fear in the shadows? Let me know in the comments!

Writer’s Prompt: Mind Reading and Murder: A Noir-Inspired Writing Exercise

She can hear their deadliest secrets, but if she speaks, she’s the one who looks insane. What happens when a mind reader witnesses a murder before it begins?

The Silence of the Seer

The steam rising from Sheila’s latte was the only thing buffering her from the cold realization that death was sitting twelve feet away. Sheila Thurston had recognized her gift at sixteen—a sudden, violent transparency of the world around her. She learned quickly that the human mind is a messy, dark place, and silence was her only armor. She never told a soul.

But today, the silence felt like a noose.

Two tables over, the air seemed to thicken around two men who looked like they had stepped out of a grainy noir film. They wore heavy wool coats and shadows under their eyes that no amount of caffeine could lift. Sheila gripped her ceramic mug, focused her breathing, and concentrated.

The barrier broke.

The alley behind the treasury. 11:15 PM. Silencer. Don’t look at the girl.

The thoughts weren’t voices; they were jagged impulses of cold intent. They weren’t just planning a heist; they were visualizing the recoil of a pistol and the specific way a body falls when it’s no longer a person. She saw the face of their target—a young woman with a red scarf—flicker in the older man’s mind like a death warrant.

Sheila’s heart hammered against her ribs. Who would believe a quiet woman in a suburban coffee shop could peer into the theater of a killer’s mind? If she called the police, she was a lunatic. If she stayed silent, she was an accomplice to a murder yet to happen. The weight of the “absurdity” she lived with was about to collide with a very real injustice.


As you read this prompt, ask yourself:

If you possessed a secret that could save a life but would cost you your sanity or your freedom to prove, would you speak up or let the shadows win?


Writer’s question: What is the first step Sheila takes to stop the murder without revealing her psychic abilities? Leave your plot twist in the comments!

Writer’s Prompt: The Silent Rival: Exploring Friendship, Jealousy, and Loss

Some friendships don’t end with a fight—only with a presence that changes everything.

Writer’s Prompt

They had been inseparable since childhood—the kind of friendship that grew quietly, like roots intertwining beneath the surface. They finished each other’s sentences, remembered the same summers differently but never argued about them, and knew when to leave the other alone without asking why. People often mistook them for sisters. They never corrected anyone.

Then she arrived.

At first, the third woman seemed harmless—charming, observant, generous with laughter. She admired their closeness, or so she said. She listened intently, repeating their private stories with uncanny precision, as if memorizing them. One friend noticed it first: the way conversations subtly shifted, how jokes landed differently, how silence stretched just a moment too long.

The other friend insisted nothing had changed.

But something had.

Small fractures appeared. A secret shared and then repeated—innocently, of course. A choice made without consultation. A look exchanged that no longer included both of them. The third woman never demanded loyalty. She simply stood close enough that loyalty became unclear.

Memories, once shared, began to feel disputed. Each friend remembered events the other swore never happened. The past itself seemed to tilt, as though rewritten by a quiet hand.

One night, standing apart at a gathering, the two women caught each other’s eyes across the room. Between them stood the third woman, smiling warmly, her hand resting on each of their arms.

Neither friend could say when the bond truly broke—only that it did so without a sound, like ice cracking beneath still water.

And neither could say which of them let it happen.


Writer’s Question

At what moment does loyalty become betrayal in your story—and who believes they are telling the truth?

Writer’s Prompt: The Letter in the Freezer

She expected to find the truth in his phone—she never imagined it would be waiting in the freezer.

Writer’s Prompt

She didn’t find the betrayal where novels promise it will be found.

Not on a phone glowing guiltily at midnight.

Not on a lipstick-stained collar.

She found it in the freezer.

A small envelope, wax-sealed, tucked behind the frozen peas. Her name written in his careful hand, the same hand that once steadied her during storms, surgeries, and sleepless nights. The letter inside was short. Apologetic. Precise. Practical—like a man finishing a task he had rehearsed.

I didn’t mean for you to discover it this way.

There was no name. No confession of love. Only a list of dates, amounts, places. Money siphoned. A second apartment. A child whose birthday she had unknowingly celebrated by baking a cake for her own husband that same evening.

She sat at the kitchen table as dawn slid through the blinds, counting the sounds of the house. The refrigerator hummed. The clock ticked. Upstairs, he slept—peaceful, unburdened, dreaming of a future that no longer included her consent.

By noon, she had scrubbed every surface clean, as if order could undo revelation. She cooked his favorite meal. Set the table. Lit a candle she had been saving for something special.

When he came home, she smiled.

The story does not end with shouting. Or tears. Or violence.

It ends with choice.

Does she confront him—or disappear quietly, leaving the letter where he will find it this time?

Does she protect the child she never knew existed—or expose everything?

Does betrayal make her smaller—or sharper?

Begin your story at the moment she decides what kind of woman betrayal has made her.


Writer’s question

When betrayal is discovered quietly, without witnesses, does that make the choice that follows more dangerous—or more powerful?

Writer’s Prompt: A Bag of Money and a Broken Man

One moment of chance can shatter despair—or expose who we truly are when no one is watching.

Writing Prompt

Joel Petri slept wherever the night allowed him to survive. Sometimes it was under bridges, sometimes in cardboard-lined alleyways, sometimes stretched stiffly across park benches. Where he slept depended on the weather—and how hungry he was.

Two years earlier, his wife had left him for a man she’d been seeing in secret. Joel never recovered. The betrayal drained his will to work, to plan, to care. He lost his job. The bank closed his loan. The repo truck hauled away his car. Eventually, Joel drifted onto the streets with a shopping cart full of things that once mattered.

This night was warm. Joel sat half-awake on a park bench, eyes locked on a trash can about thirty meters away. Hunger sharpened his focus. He hoped—prayed—that someone might toss a half-eaten hamburger into it.

Luck came wearing a different disguise.

A man walked by carrying a paper sack and dropped it into the trash can. Joel waited until the man disappeared into the darkness, then hurried forward before one of the others noticed. His heart pounded as he lifted the bag.

Too heavy.

Joel peeked inside.

Money.

Fives. Tens. Twenties. Hundreds. A thick, impossible stack.

He looked around. No one. He shoved the bag under his shirt, hustled to his cart, and pushed it away fast, pulse racing louder than his thoughts.

For the first time in two years, Joel imagined a future. A room with a door that locked. Clean clothes. A hot meal eaten slowly.

Then came the fear.

Someone would be looking for this money. Someone desperate. Someone dangerous. The thought crawled up his spine and froze him.

Joel stopped walking.

The bag felt heavier now—not with cash, but with consequence.

That’s where your story begins.


Writer’s Question

What choice does Joel make—and what does that choice cost him in the end?

Writer’s Prompt: A Future He Never Asked to See

Writing Prompt

Neil Bonner woke with a weight in his head, the kind that made thoughts feel bruised. He sat on the edge of his bed, elbows on knees, palms pressed into his temples, searching for the missing pieces of the night before. Thursday. Pizza. Two beers. Laughter. Home by eleven. The same harmless ritual he’d followed for years.

Nothing unusual. Except this feeling.

He moved through the morning on autopilot—toothbrush, razor, shower—each action precise and empty. Coffee hissed into the pot. Toast popped. He sat at the kitchen table, staring at nothing, when it happened.

The day unfolded in front of him.

Not imagined. Not dreamed.

It played like a video—clear, merciless. A coworker returning from lunch. A bag set down. A pause too long. Then chaos. Soundless, but unmistakable. Neil gasped, knocking his mug over as the vision vanished.

“Get it together,” he muttered.

Then it replayed.

Same details. Same ending.

This wasn’t anxiety. This wasn’t imagination. It felt delivered—like a message sent without instructions. Neil understood one thing with terrifying clarity: this was going to happen, and somehow, impossibly, he had been shown in advance.

But who was he?

An accountant. Invisible. Unremarkable. If he warned anyone, they’d laugh—or worse, call HR, or a doctor, or the police. He pictured the looks: concern hardening into suspicion. The label snapping into place.

Unstable.

The clock on the microwave blinked 7:12.

Time was moving. The future was closing in.

Neil stood, heart pounding, knowing that doing nothing meant accepting what he’d seen—but acting meant risking everything he was.

And somewhere between fear and responsibility, he had to decide which reality he could live with.


Writer’s Question

If you knew a terrible future event was coming—but no one would believe you—what would your character risk to stop it?

Writer’s Prompt: The Calm That Hunts: When Patience Becomes Power

Writer’s Prompt

Terri Lambeau learned early that strength wasn’t about noise. It was about balance, discipline, and knowing when not to strike.

Her father made sure of that.

He put her in Kung Fu when she was eight—before she could properly braid her hair or tell the difference between fear and excitement. He sat on hard wooden benches during endless practices, clapped the loudest at belt ceremonies, and never missed a match. When Terri won nationals at seventeen, he wept openly. He said it was the proudest day of his life.

Now she stood silently as his casket was lowered into the earth.

Her father hadn’t died in a dojo or behind locked doors. He had been shot while delivering donated clothes and canned goods to families in a neglected part of town. Wrong place. Wrong moment. No suspects. No urgency. Just another headline that faded within days.

Justice, she realized, moved far too slowly when it mattered most.

Back at the dojo, the master teacher’s voice echoed in her memory. He often quoted Lao Tzu, especially one line Terri had once dismissed as philosophical fluff: “At the center of your being you have the answer; you know who you are and you know what you want.”

Now she understood it.

Terri didn’t want chaos. She didn’t want rage. She didn’t want to make the same mistake as the man who pulled the trigger.

What she wanted was justice—earned patiently, deliberately.

She began training differently. Slower. Sharper. She studied patterns instead of opponents. She listened more than she spoke. Like the tide rolling in, her movements were subtle, almost invisible, yet unstoppable.

Somewhere in the city, someone believed they had gotten away with something.

Terri smiled for the first time since the funeral.

The water was still muddy.

But it was settling.


Writer’s Question

How will Terri’s patience shape the kind of justice she delivers—and what moral line might she refuse to cross?

Writer’s Prompt: Ten Dollars, Five Tickets, and a Promise That Wouldn’t Let Go

Writer’s Prompt

Albert Torres stood in the harsh fluorescent glow of the convenience store, the hum of the refrigerator units sounding like tired breath. He reached into his pocket and pulled out everything he owned in the world: one ten-dollar bill, wrinkled and soft from being folded too many times. His fridge at home was empty. His rent was a month overdue. None of it mattered, not tonight.

He’d dreamed he won the lottery.

Albert slapped the bill on the counter. “Give me five two-dollar tickets,” he said, lowering his voice as if luck might be listening. “And make sure one of them’s the winner.”

The clerk looked up. Her name tag read Mary Ramirez. She raised an eyebrow. “Random numbers?”

Albert shrugged. “Why not? The numbers I’ve played every week haven’t done me any favors.”

Mary held the ten-dollars, hesitated. “I don’t play the lottery,” she said. “But I do have lucky numbers. Want to use them on a ticket?”

Albert studied her for a moment—her tired smile, the way she leaned forward as if she needed this conversation as much as he did. He rested his hand against his jaw, thinking, then said, “If I win with your numbers, will you marry me?”

Mary laughed, loud and surprised, the sound echoing off the chip racks. “I accept,” she said. “What’s your name?”

“Albert.”

He didn’t win. None of the tickets even came close. The next morning, the sun rose the same way it always did. Bills still waited. The fridge stayed empty.

But Albert couldn’t stop thinking about Mary Ramirez. About the way she laughed. About how easily she’d said yes.

Later that week, he found himself walking back into the store—not for tickets this time, but for something harder to buy.

Hope doesn’t always come with winning numbers. Sometimes it shows up as a question you weren’t brave enough to ask until you had nothing left to lose.


Writer’s Question

What happens next—and does Albert return for love, luck, or something he didn’t expect?

Writer’s Prompt: She Opened the File That Was Never Meant to Be Seen

Writer’s Prompt

Tonya West had always lived two lives.

By day, she was the flawless executive secretary—punctual, discreet, invisible in the way powerful men preferred. By night, curled up with a paperback thriller, she became someone else entirely: a shadowy investigator, a quiet whistleblower, a woman whose ordinary job placed her at the center of extraordinary danger.

On this particular Wednesday morning, Tonya arrived earlier than usual. The office was silent, the kind of silence that hummed. She slipped into Martin Benson’s office to prepare his coffee and tidy his desk. Benson had worked late—too late—and the evidence lay scattered in manila folders stamped CONFIDENTIAL.

Tonya told herself she was only straightening the papers.

But curiosity has a gravity of its own.

She opened one file. Then another.

What she read froze her breath mid-inhale.

Shell companies. Wire transfers. Legal loopholes threaded together like a spider’s web. Names she recognized from headlines—Russian oligarchs quietly bypassing U.S. sanctions with Benson’s careful guidance. This wasn’t speculation. It was documented. Signed. Dated.

Her hands shook as she photographed every page, angling her phone just so, careful not to disturb the order. When she finished, she reconstructed the desk with obsessive precision. No fingerprints. No suspicion.

Back at her own desk, her pulse thundered in her ears.

The CIA? The FBI? The New York Times?

Every option felt both heroic and suicidal.

At exactly 9:02 a.m., Martin Benson walked in, loosened tie, tired eyes. Tonya stood, smiled, and spoke with the same calm professionalism she had perfected over years.

“Good morning, Mr. Benson. Your coffee is waiting for you.”

He nodded, unaware.

As he passed her desk, Tonya’s thoughts sharpened into something steady and dangerous.

You don’t know what lies ahead for you.

And for the first time, Tonya realized this wasn’t a fantasy anymore.

It was a decision.


Writer’s Question

If you were Tonya, who would you contact first—and what would stop you from doing it?

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