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The Last Reservoir - Chapter 1

Chapter 1 — The Last Drink The reservoir had died standing up. Its concrete walls still rose from the desert, immense and pale beneath the morning sun, holding back nothing. The spillways opened onto emptiness. Intake towers stood marooned in miles of hardened mud. Rusted ladders descended toward a waterline that had not existed for years. Ethan Cole crossed the exposed lakebed alone. The ground had broken into plates beneath his boots, each slab curled slightly at its edges like burned paper. His steps made small, dry sounds. There were no birds. There were no insects. Even the wind seemed reluctant to move across that place. A speedboat lay on its side thirty yards ahead, half buried in sediment. Its white hull had yellowed. The name painted across the stern—SECOND CHANCE—had cracked down the middle. Ethan did not look at it for long. He kept his head lowered and his scarf pulled over his nose. The air tasted of alkali and old metal. Each breath dried his mouth a little more. He carr...

JAWS : The Crayfish Terrors

Pebble Hollow forgot the minnows. Not completely, of course. There was still a plaque beside the pavilion, three commemorative benches, an annual Minnow Awareness Fun Run, and a gift-shop snow globe containing six plastic fish and one deeply inaccurate shark. Mayor Pam had turned the Great Minnow Incident into a municipal brand. The town slogan had changed from PEBBLE HOLLOW: A NICE PLACE NEAR A CREEK to PEBBLE HOLLOW: WE FACED THE FINS AND WON. There were T-shirts. There were mugs. There was, for reasons no one could explain, a Minnow Incident scented candle. It smelled like cucumber and fear. The creek itself had settled back into its usual five inches of majesty. Children splashed. Dragonflies patrolled. The old tire from 1987 remained half-buried beneath the willow, having now received historic landmark status and a tiny bronze sign reading: THE WRECK OF THE S.S. FIRESTONE DATE UNKNOWN PROBABLY IMPORTANT Everything seemed normal. Until the night something dragged Trevor Mills’s fli...

TOO FUNNY NOT TO SHARE

DON'T MESS WITH THE MARINES... AN ACTUAL CRAIG'S LIST PERSONAL AD To the Guy Who Tried to Mug Me in Downtown Savannah night before last. I was the guy wearing the black Burberry jacket that you demanded that I hand over, shortly after you pulled the knife on me and my girlfriend, threatening our lives. You also asked for my girlfriend's purse and earrings. I can only hope that you somehow come across this rather important message. First, I'd like to apologize for your embarrassment; I didn't expect you to actually crap in your pants when I drew my pistol after you took my jacket. The evening was not that cold, and I was wearing the jacket for a reason. My girlfriend was happy that I just returned safely from my 2nd tour as a Combat Marine in Afghanistan .. She had just bought me that Kimber Custom Model 1911 .45 ACP pistol for my birthday, and we had picked up a shoulder holster for it that very evening. Obviously, you agree that it is a very intimidating weapon whe...

New Story Idea - Apocalyptic Horror

Story Summary (≈300 words) Working Title: The Last Reservoir The world did not end with fire, plague, or nuclear war. It died of thirst. Decades of competition for artificial intelligence supremacy drove governments and technology giants to construct millions of increasingly powerful AI data centers across the globe. Each facility consumed staggering amounts of electricity and freshwater for cooling. Individually, their impact seemed manageable. Together, they quietly drained rivers, emptied aquifers, and accelerated drought beyond recovery. Scientists warned of the growing crisis, but profits, politics, and the promise of technological dominance drowned out every alarm. Now, nearly ninety-eight percent of humanity is dead. The novel opens more than three years after civilization has collapsed. Former data center systems engineer Ethan Cole travels across the desiccated American Southwest with sixteen-year-old Emma Ruiz, whose parents died during the famine. They belong to a small resi...

The Voter Index

Chapter 1 — Election Night By the time Pennsylvania began to turn, Elias Ward had been sitting in the same chair for nearly six hours, long enough for the muscles at the base of his neck to harden and for the room around him to lose the ordinary comfort of a room. The apartment still held the shapes of his life—the half-stocked kitchen, the narrow hallway, the shelves of books he had bought during a more hopeful decade, the framed photograph of his sister’s family turned slightly toward the wall after their last argument—but election night had reduced all of it to background. The only real light came from the three monitors on his desk and the television mounted over the cold fireplace, where a panel of exhausted commentators talked over one another beneath a banner that had changed three times in twenty minutes. Rain moved down the windows in wavering lines, bending the lights of lower Manhattan until the city looked less like a place than a system under stress. Elias had watched elec...

A Novel or Novella Premise Idea

The Voter Index Story Summary Elias Ward never trusted crowds, politicians, or movements. After twenty years as a senior data architect for a private intelligence contractor tied to federal election analytics, he understood something most Americans never did: privacy in the digital age was largely an illusion. Every purchase, every location ping, every social media interaction, every donation, every streaming preference, and every search query could be fused into predictive behavioral models with terrifying accuracy. Then President Jonah Reed won. Reed was charismatic, combative, and wildly popular. A political insurgent who shattered both parties, he swept the Electoral College and won the popular vote on promises to dismantle entrenched federal power, prosecute corruption, secure the border, and expose collusion between government agencies and corporate influence networks. Half the country celebrated him as a savior. The other half viewed him as a budding dictator. When Reed actually...

The Quiet Ledger - Another 50's Noir Gunny McKenna Short Story

 Chapter 1 The rain had started before dark and settled in with the patience of a debt collector. By seven it was riding the windows hard, flattening itself against the glass and sliding down in crooked silver lines that caught the streetlamps and broke them into pieces. Halsted below looked like a strip of black ribbon dragged through oil. Tires hissed. A streetcar clanged somewhere south. The bells from St. Brigid’s drifted over the rooftops and through the wet air, slow and deliberate, like somebody taking inventory of the dead. My office sat above a barber shop that smelled of talcum, bay rum, and old talk. The place below closed late and opened early, which suited me. Men who spend all day trimming sideburns hear more truth than priests and fewer lies than aldermen. The stairs to my door were narrow, with paint worn off the middle by years of feet going up worried and coming down disappointed. Rent stayed cheap because the pipes complained in winter and the floor tilted ha...