July 6, 2026

A Collection Of Short Stories




Whimsical & Strange


The Clouds: The boy realized he could reshape the clouds just by thinking about them, right up until he accidentally thought about a giant, hungry monster.

The Toy: The teddy bear stood guard at the foot of the bed, successfully fighting off the nightmares with a plastic sword while the toddler slept peacefully.

The Coin: The coin landed perfectly on its edge, refusing to choose between heads or tails, causing time itself to pause and wait for it to tip over.

The Umbrella: He opened his umbrella indoors by mistake, and a sudden, localized rainstorm drenched his living room while leaving the rest of the house dry.

The Chef: The chef cooked with emotions instead of spices, which explained why the entire restaurant started crying during the soup course.

The Map: The old map showed a hidden island that didn't exist on any modern radar, because the island moved whenever someone tried to look for it.

The Moon: The moon decided it was tired of the night shift, so it stayed up all Tuesday morning just to watch the rush hour traffic.

The Shoes: She bought a pair of vintage red shoes that insisted on dancing every time they heard music, whether she wanted to join in or not.

The Pigeon: The pigeon stared at me with such deep, profound intelligence that I felt compelled to apologize for stepping on its sidewalk.

The Echo: I shouted into the deep canyon, but the echo that came back wasn't my voice; it was a polite voice asking me to please be quiet.

Ironies & Twists

The Wishbone: They both pulled the wishbone and it snapped perfectly in half, granting both of their conflicting wishes and tearing the universe apart at the seams.

The Secret: He spent his entire life guarding a deep, dark secret, only to find out at his retirement party that everyone already knew and just didn't care.

The Gold: The miner finally struck the biggest vein of pure gold in history, right as the cave-in trapped him with only twenty minutes of oxygen left.

The Fortune: The fortune cookie read, "You will read this sentence," which left me feeling incredibly insulted by its lack of ambition.

The Window: I looked out the airplane window at 30,000 feet and saw a man casually walking alongside the wing, checking his watch.

The Dog's Dream: The dog whimpered in his sleep, dreaming of chasing a squirrel, while the squirrel in the yard whimpered in its sleep, dreaming of a giant dog.

The Statue: The town plaza statue was built to honor a legendary war hero, but the pigeons only valued it for its excellent aerodynamic properties.

The Escape: The prisoner spent ten years digging a tunnel with a spoon, only to break through the wall and emerge directly inside the warden's office.

The Novel: The author wrote a brilliant thriller about a man being watched, unaware that his own stalker was currently proofreading the drafts over his shoulder.

The Final Piece: He finally finished the 10,000-piece puzzle after three years of hard work, only to realize the last piece belonged to a completely different box.

One Second Backwards And A Collection Of Short Stories.





An original collection of 50 micro-short stories, each capturing a complete narrative arc or concept in just one sentence.
Sci-Fi & Technology
The time machine worked, but only backwards by one second.
The stars began blinking out in a binary countdown.
He bought a map that showed tomorrow's weather only.
The computer virus began singing a beautiful lullaby.
The train never stopped; it just kept circling Earth.
He lost his car keys and found a parallel universe.
The static on the television spoke his birth name.
They discovered a massive steel zipper on the ocean floor.
He woke up as a background character in his own book.
The digital clock ticked backwards, slowly erasing his regrets.
Fantasy & Magic
Ghostly & Surreal
He stepped directly on his shadow, and it didn't move.
The last man on Earth sat alone; the door knocked.
The mirror smiled back, but exactly three seconds too late.
Her reflection walked away while she stood completely frozen there.
He woke up to find his shadow belonged to someone else.
The gentle ghost was terrified of the house's living inhabitants.
Every night, the moon crept closer to his bedroom window.
The oil painting caught a cold and started shedding paint.
The shadow puppet theater became real when the lights dimmed.
The stone statue blinked when the noisy tourists turned away.
Quirky & Unusual
She wore a heavy necklace made of frozen, unspent promises.
The library books quietly rewrote themselves when nobody was looking.
She spoke in vibrant colors, but everyone else was colorblind.
She could easily hear the internal monologues of stray cats.
He built a wooden door that opened directly into his childhood.
The vast ocean forgot how to wave and became flat.
She grew beautiful wings, but they were made of paper.
He woke up with a brand new, unearned memory.
The heavy rain fell upwards, returning safely to the clouds.
She sold her speaking voice to buy a silver flute.
Heartbreak & Mystery
He kissed her, and time stopped for three whole years.
The loyal dog brought back a stick from the future.
She found a working lighthouse in the middle of a desert.
He drank a potion that made him completely, utterly soundless.
The old elevator kept going up past the roof level.
He grew a third eye that only saw emotional energy.
The museum came alive, but the art stayed completely still.
The old streetlamp cast a shadow of a different person.
She spoke softly to the wind, and it whispered back.
He found an extra day trapped between Tuesday and Wednesday.



The tree grew delicate glass leaves that chimed in the wind.
She swallowed a stray spark and breathed out blue butterflies.
He planted a silver coin and grew a metallic beanstalk.
She collected antique glass jars filled with different cities' fog.
The calendar had an extra, hidden month called Neveruary.
She wore magic shoes that only walked toward her true love.
She trapped a wild lightning bolt inside a mason jar.
The keys played beautiful music without anyone touching the piano.
He found a secret glowing door in the back of his closet.
The final puzzle piece completed a map directly to heaven.


One Second Backwards 

The time machine worked, but only backwards by one second. Every time he pressed the button, a wave of nausea hit him as his mind snapped into his own body a single breath in the past. It was useless for stopping wars or predicting the stock market, but it was just enough time to catch a falling coffee mug. He spent his life in a blur of double-takes, a man forever correcting the tiniest flaws of the immediate present.
The stars began blinking out in a binary countdown. Astronomers initially blamed interstellar dust, but by the third week, the pattern was undeniable. The cosmos was broadcasting a massive, cosmic number that decreased by one every twenty-four hours. On the final night, humanity stood outside in absolute silence, watching the last cluster of light flicker like a dying lightbulb before darkness took the sky.
He bought a map that showed tomorrow's weather only. It was a blank piece of parchment until midnight struck, at which point watercolor blues and stormy greys would bleed across the paper to indicate rain. One evening, he opened the map to find it completely charred black, smelling faintly of sulfur and ozone. There were no clouds drawn, only a stark, handwritten note in the center that read: Seek shelter underground.
The computer virus began singing a beautiful lullaby through the office speakers. It didn't delete files or lock down databases; it simply harmonized across three hundred desktop towers in a haunting, metallic soprano. Within an hour, the chaotic trading floor fell entirely silent as programmers and executives leaned back in their chairs. By noon, the entire corporate headquarters was fast asleep, cradled by the rhythm of a sentimental code.
The train never stopped; it just kept circling Earth. The passengers had boarded decades ago as children, watching the continents blur past the double-paned glass in a continuous loop of seasons. Ticket collectors still walked the aisles, punching cards for journeys that had no destination. No one remembered why the tracks were laid, only that to step off the moving metal meant falling into a world that had forgotten how to move.
He lost his car keys and found a parallel universe. Reaching deep between the cushions of his worn velvet armchair, his fingers bypassed the familiar coins and lint, sinking into empty, freezing air. When he pulled his arm back out, his living room was gone, replaced by a quiet, snow-covered forest where a different version of himself was currently looking for a lost set of keys.
The static on the television spoke his birth name. He had left the old cathode-ray tube set on after the broadcast ended, letting the white noise fill his empty apartment. Then, amidst the crackle of dead frequencies, a gravelly voice clearly whispered the secret name his mother had given him before he was adopted. He froze, remote in hand, as the screen began to form the shape of a hand pressing against the glass from the inside.
They discovered a massive steel zipper on the ocean floor. The deep-sea submersible illuminated the colossal interlocking teeth, which stretched across the dark abyssal plain for thousands of miles. The automated research arm reached down and gripped the heavy pull-tab, tugging it back just an inch. A blinding, iridescent white light erupted from the crack, defying the crushing black pressure of the deep sea.
He woke up as a background character in his own book. He was no longer the brave detective solving the grand mystery, but merely the unnamed barista serving coffee to the main characters in chapter three. He watched his own fictional creation walk into the shop, vibrant and full of purpose, while he found himself physically unable to say anything other than, "That will be four dollars, sir."
The digital clock ticked backwards, slowly erasing his regrets. Every time the numbers reversed, a heavy memory lifted from his chest, leaving him lighter and more carefree. By the time the clock reached zero, he had forgotten the face of the woman he loved, the mistakes that defined his youth, and finally, his own name, leaving him a perfectly blank slate.
The tree grew delicate glass leaves that chimed in the wind. The orchard was completely silent in the winter, but spring brought a fragile, crystalline symphony that could be heard for miles down the valley. Local children were warned never to run through the grove, as a sudden gust of wind could shatter the music into a hazardous rain of sharp, musical shards.
She swallowed a stray spark and breathed out blue butterflies. It happened during a summer bonfire when a glowing ember leaped from the flames directly into her open mouth. Instead of coughing, she felt a strange, fluttering warmth settle deep within her chest. From that night on, whenever she laughed or tried to speak a secret, a cloud of sapphire wings would tumble past her lips.
He planted a silver coin and grew a metallic beanstalk. The stalk was cold to the touch and clinked like armor whenever the wind blew across the garden. It didn't bear fruit, but rather clockwork gears and intricate silver keys that fit into locks no one had ever seen. He spent his evenings climbing the rigid metal rungs, wondering what kind of mechanical sky lay above the clouds.
She collected antique glass jars filled with different cities' fog. Her shelves held the thick, coal-tinted mist of 1920s London, the salty vapor of San Francisco, and the heavy grey gloom of autumnal Paris. When she was lonely, she would unscrew a lid just a crack, letting the damp, historic air fill her bedroom until she could hear the distant echo of foreign streetcars.
The calendar had an extra, hidden month called Neveruary. It only appeared on the leap years of centuries that ended in odd numbers, slipping quietly between the pages of winter. During those thirty secret days, time stopped for the rest of the world, allowing the few who noticed it to wander through a frozen, snow-dusted reality where nothing aged and no promises expired.
She wore magic shoes that only walked toward her true love. They were ordinary-looking leather loafers, but they possessed a stubborn, heavy gravity that resisted any direction they didn't approve of. She spent three years being dragged through strange neighborhoods, down muddy alleys, and up abandoned staircases, entirely at the mercy of her own footwear's romantic compass.
She trapped a wild lightning bolt inside a mason jar. It bounced violently against the glass, a jagged streak of frantic purple energy that lit up her dark bedroom like a continuous thunderstorm. She used it as a reading lamp for years, listening to the faint, trapped thunder rumbles that vibrated against her nightstand whenever she turned a page.
The keys played beautiful music without anyone touching the piano. The grand instrument sat in the center of the dusty ballroom, its ivory keys depressing themselves in a complex, melancholy waltz. The hotel staff tried to lock the lid, but the music simply grew louder, vibrating through the floorboards until the entire structure seemed to be dancing to an invisible pianist's whim.
He found a secret glowing door in the back of his closet. It was hidden behind a row of winter coats, casting a soft, golden light onto his old shoes. When he turned the brass handle, he didn't find Narnia or a fantasy kingdom, but rather the exact bedroom of his childhood, smelling of crayons and afternoon rain, precisely as he had left it twenty years ago.
The final puzzle piece completed a map directly to heaven. He had spent forty years assembling the massive, ten-thousand-piece jigsaw on his dining room table. As he slotted the final cardboard shape into the center, the entire table dissolved into a pillar of warm, golden light, lifting his house and his weary heart right off their earthly foundations.
He stepped directly on his shadow, and it didn't move. He walked forward, but the dark silhouette remained firmly pinned to the concrete, stretched out as if still basking in the afternoon sun. He turned around to look at it, realizing with a sudden spike of panic that while he was free to walk away, his shadow was now the one holding the leash.
The last man on Earth sat alone; the door knocked. He had spent three years cataloging the silence of the empty metropolis, convinced that he was the absolute end of the human race. He didn't move toward the handle immediately; instead, he sat in his armchair, listening to the rhythmic, patient thudding, wondering if he should let the universe's final mystery inside.
The mirror smiled back, but exactly three seconds too late. She had already turned away to pick up her hairbrush when she caught the movement out of the corner of her eye. Her reflection was still standing there, lips curved into a wide, knowing grin, watching her back with an intensity that did not belong to a mere optical illusion.
Her reflection walked away while she stood completely frozen there. She was washing her face when the woman in the glass simply dried her hands on an invisible towel, turned her back, and strolled out of the frame into the dark depths of the mirror's background. No matter how much she hammered on the glass, the bathroom remained empty on the other side.
He woke up to find his shadow belonged to someone else. It was much taller than him, wore a sharp, broad-brimmed hat he didn't own, and carried a cane that mimicked his every movement with a sinister grace. When he walked down the street, people didn't look at his face; they stared in terror at the dark, aristocratic figure trailing behind his heels.
The gentle ghost was terrified of the house's living inhabitants. He spent his afternoons hiding inside the drywall, trembling whenever the new family turned on the vacuum cleaner or played loud music in the living room. He only dared to come out at night, softly sweeping up the crumbs they left behind because he couldn't stand a messy kitchen.
Every night, the moon crept closer to his bedroom window. At first, it was just a bit brighter, but by Tuesday, the massive cratered surface filled his entire view, casting sharp, rocky shadows across his blanket. He could hear it humming now—a low, rhythmic vibration that sounded less like a celestial body and more like a massive, waiting engine.
The oil painting caught a cold and started shedding paint. The portrait of the nineteenth-century duke began to sneeze, scattering flecks of cerulean and burnt umber across the museum floor. The curator tried to apply a varnish stabilizer, but the painted nobleman merely sniffed, blew his nose on a painted handkerchief, and wiped away half of his own left ear.
The shadow puppet theater became real when the lights dimmed. The paper cutouts of dragons and knights cast their dark shapes onto the white sheet, but when the candle flickered out, the sound of roaring and clashing steel continued in the pitch black. When the director struck a match, the sheet was torn to shreds, and small, smoky claw marks covered the walls.
The stone statue blinked when the noisy tourists turned away. For three hundred years, the marble cherub had maintained its angelic gaze for the crowds of the piazza, enduring flashing cameras and pigeons. But in the quiet three-minute window between tour buses, it rubbed its heavy stone eyes, sighed deeply, and shifted its weight to the other foot.
She wore a heavy necklace made of frozen, unspent promises. Each bead was a glittering, icy orb containing a word she had meant to say but kept hidden instead. They melted slightly whenever she got close to the people she had let down, leaving damp, cold streaks on her collarbone that reminded her exactly of what she owed.
The library books quietly rewrote themselves when nobody was looking. A reader would close a classic romance at chapter ten, only to return the next morning and find the star-crossed lovers had decided to abandon the plot entirely and open a bakery in Spain. The librarians knew better than to interfere, simply cataloging the texts under a new genre called Liquid History.
She spoke in vibrant colors, but everyone else was colorblind. When she said "hello," a soft wave of lavender drifted through the air, and her anger manifested as sharp streaks of crimson across the room. To her neighbors, however, she was just a woman who made a strange, rushing sound whenever she opened her mouth to speak.
She could easily hear the internal monologues of stray cats. It wasn't a gift of ancient wisdom, but rather a chaotic chorus of hyper-specific critiques regarding the quality of local dumpster fish and the poor structural integrity of neighborhood fences. They never thought about philosophy; they just spend all day mentally cursing the rain in a highly sophisticated vocabulary.
He built a wooden door that opened directly into his childhood. He used reclaimed pine from his old family barn, matching the dimensions exactly to his memory. When he stepped through, the scent of his grandmother's Sunday roast hit him instantly, but he quickly realized he couldn't stay; his adult boots were far too large for the linoleum floor.
The vast ocean forgot how to wave and became flat. The tide stopped pulling, the crests collapsed, and the entire Atlantic turned into a massive, seamless sheet of dark blue glass. Ships sat perfectly motionless in the stillness, their crews looking down into the mirror-like depths, terrified of a sea that had suddenly decided to hold its breath.
She grew beautiful wings, but they were made of paper. They fluttered with a lovely, origami precision whenever she leapt into the air, allowing her to coast just above the treetops. She had to stay grounded, however, during the stormy months of autumn, knowing that a single sudden downpour would dissolve her ability to fly into a soggy pulp.
He woke up with a brand new, unearned memory. He clearly remembered the layout of a house he had never visited, the smell of a perfume he had never bought, and the warmth of a hand he had never held. He spent the rest of his life wandering through foreign cities, looking for the door that matched the key inside his mind.
The heavy rain fell upwards, returning safely to the clouds. Puddles on the sidewalk detached themselves from the concrete, rising in perfectly spherical droplets that defied gravity. Pedestrians stood with their umbrellas held upside down, watching the entire storm reverse itself, leaving the city completely dry while the sky drank the water back down.
She sold her speaking voice to buy a silver flute. The bargain was struck with a quiet merchant at the edge of the market, who placed her voice into a velvet pouch. Now, she could only communicate through melody, turning her daily grocery lists into bright major scales and her deepest sorrows into haunting, low-register sonatas that made the checkout clerks cry.
He kissed her, and time stopped for three whole years. The rest of the world froze mid-stride—a falling leaf remained suspended in the air, and a passing car hung motionless on the avenue. They lived inside that single, extended second, exploring the quiet, frozen world together until their lips finally parted, and the universe violently rushed back to life.The loyal dog brought back a stick from the future. It wasn't made of wood, but rather a strange, lightweight glowing polymer that hummed when handled. Every time the man threw it across the yard, the dog would run into the brush and return a few seconds before the stick was even tossed, sitting patiently with the toy already in its mouth.She found a working lighthouse in the middle of a desert. The massive stone tower stood surrounded by shifting sand dunes, hundreds of miles from the nearest coastline. Yet, every evening at dusk, the great glass lens at the top began to rotate, casting a brilliant, sweeping beam of light across the cacti, guiding travelers who were hopelessly lost at sea in their own minds.He drank a potion that made him completely, utterly soundless. His footsteps left no noise on the creaking floorboards, his breathing was as quiet as the vacuum of space, and even his heartbeat could not be detected by a stethoscope. He became the perfect spy, though he eventually realized the terrifying cost: he could no longer hear his own voice when he cried.The old elevator kept going up past the roof level. The digital floor indicator skipped past thirty, then forty, then began displaying strange astronomical symbols instead of numbers. The passengers watched through the glass walls as the city lights shrank into a tiny grid, replaced by the silent, majestic expanse of the upper atmosphere.He grew a third eye that only saw emotional energy. Located squarely on his forehead, it remained tightly closed until he walked into a crowded hospital waiting room. When it opened, the world of physical shapes disappeared, replaced by a swirling vortex of bright green hope, heavy grey grief, and the brilliant, blinding gold of a newborn child's arrival.The museum came alive, but the art stayed completely still. The marble floors began to breathe, the iron railings flexed like muscles, and the grand columns groaned as they shifted their weight. The paintings of ancient battles and Renaissance portraits, however, remained rigidly trapped in their oil paint, watching the building's architectural awakening with envious, unblinking eyes.The old streetlamp cast a shadow of a different person. Anyone who stood beneath its yellow, flickering glow would look down to find their silhouette transformed into a tall man in a trench coat holding a briefcase. No matter how much they danced or waved their arms, the shadow remained perfectly still, checking an invisible watch.She spoke softly to the wind, and it whispered back. It wasn't a roar or a howl, but a distinct, breezy voice that carried the gossip of three continents and the scent of distant orange groves. It told her secrets about the mountains, warned her of incoming storms, and occasionally brought her the lost hats of people she used to know.He found an extra day trapped between Tuesday and Wednesday. The sky on that nameless day was an unusual, pearlescent shade of lavender, and the clocks in the city simply spun their hands in slow, meaningless circles. He used the quiet, unrecorded twenty-four hours to read the books he never had time for, entirely invisible to a world rushing toward midweek.

The Dragon

The Dragon(Based on Fantasy & Magic, Story )Is another short story by the blogger ibikunle Abraham.


The great dragon Ignis sat atop a mountain of gold, but he couldn't care less about the coins. To him, the gold was just a comfortable, malleable mattress that kept the dampness of the cave floor from ruining his lower back. His real treasure was lined up neatly against the cavern walls: thousands of leather-bound volumes, scrolls of ancient poetry, and historical codices he had spent three millennia collecting.The tragedy of Ignis's life was his claws. They were massive, razor-sharp, and coated in a faint, destructive heat. Every time he tried to turn a page of a delicate poetry manuscript, he ended up slicing it in half or accidentally singing the parchment into ash.For centuries, he had lived in a state of profound literary frustration. He knew the histories of the first age by heart, but he desperately wanted to know how the contemporary trilogy he had stolen from a traveling merchant ended.A sharp clang echoed from the mouth of the cave.Ignis sighed, a plume of thick black smoke curling from his nostrils. "Another one," he rumbled to himself.A young knight in gleaming, over-polished silver armor stepped into the cavern light. He held a broadsword that shook slightly in his grip, his shield raised high. "Foul beast!" the knight yelled, his voice cracking slightly. "I am Sir Galahad of the Western Vales! I have come to slay you and reclaim the stolen gold of—""Yes, yes, the gold of King Aldous," Ignis interrupted, his voice a deep, resonant baritone that shook the stalactites. "Look, Galahad, can we skip the posturing? I have a proposition for you."The knight blinked, lowering his shield an inch. "A... a proposition? You wish to beg for your life?""Hardly," Ignis said, carefully shifting his massive bulk so he wouldn't crush a stack of encyclopedias. He reached out with one giant, scaly talon and gently nudged a thick, red leather book toward the knight. "I want you to read to me."Galahad stared at the book, then at the dragon, utterly bewildered. "You want me to... what?""Read. Chapter four, specifically," Ignis explained, settling his massive chin onto his front paws. "The protagonist was just captured by the dark sorcerer, and I've been dying to know how she escapes. If you read three chapters a day, you can take a sack of gold whenever you leave. No fighting required."Galahad looked at the massive pile of wealth, then down at the book. His fingers tightened on his sword. "This is a demon's trick! A illusion to lower my guard!"With a battle cry, the young knight charged, raising his sword to strike at the dragon's vulnerable neck.Ignis didn't even blink. He simply swiped his massive tail, swatting the knight sideways into the cavern wall. Galahad hit the stone with a heavy clatter, his sword clanging away into a dark crevice. He lay there, bruised and breathless, staring up in terror as the dragon loomed over him."You see?" Ignis sighed, his voice heavy with a profound, ancient loneliness. "Every single time. You boys are so eager to die for a song that you never stop to ask if someone could just sing it to you."The dragon gently blew a small gust of warm air to dry the knight's damp armor, then pushed the red book back toward him with a single, massive claw."Now," Ignis said softly. "Pick up the book, Galahad. And please, use a clear voice. My ears aren't what they used to be."

The Ghost

Apparently here is another story by the blogger ibikunle Abraham is Based on Comedy & Whimsical, Story

Arthur Pendelton had been dead since 1924, and he took great pride in his work. For nearly a century, he had successfully terrified every single tenant who dared to rent his Victorian manor. He had a routine: a low, mournful moan at 2:00 AM, a dramatic rattling of the pipes at 3:15 AM, and a classic, bone-chilling cold spot in the master bedroom right before dawn.Then, the Millers bought the house.The Millers were a young, intensely optimistic couple from California who viewed every historic flaw in the house as "vintage charm."On their first night, Arthur waited until the clock struck midnight. He manifested in the hallway, letting out a guttural, tragic wail that had once sent a rugged lumberjack running into the night screaming. He floated through the bedroom door, waiting for the screams.Chloe Miller blinked open her eyes, looked directly at Arthur’s glowing, translucent form, and nudged her husband. "Babe, look at the architectural character of this place. The drafts are so bad they’re actually creating luminous mist. We definitely need to check the insulation in the attic."Tom Miller groaned, pulling the duvet over his head. "I told you we should have gotten a home inspection, hon. Let’s look at it in the morning."Arthur stood at the foot of the bed, his jaw dropping. Luminous mist? Drafts? He was a terrifying specter of the damned, not a structural deficiency!The next night, Arthur decided to go all out. He entered the living room while they were watching television, focused all his spiritual energy, and lowered the room's temperature by thirty degrees in a matter of seconds. Frost began to form on the edges of the coffee table. He hovered over them, baring his ghostly fangs."Oh, wow," Chloe said, shivering slightly and reaching for a remote. "The HVAC system in these old Victorians is so inefficient. Tom, did the Amazon delivery arrive yet?""Yeah, just brought it in," Tom said, walking over to a box in the hallway. He pulled out a sleek, modern, white cylinder. "It's an electric space heater with a simulated flame effect. 1500 watts."Tom plugged the device into the wall. Instantly, a wave of intense, fan-forced heat blasted across the living room.Arthur screamed as the warm air hit his ectoplasmic form. The artificial heat completely disrupted his spiritual frequency. It was like trying to maintain a solid shape inside a giant hair dryer. His terrifying cold spot was neutralized in seconds, leaving him feeling warm, cozy, and utterly humiliated."Oh, that's much better," Chloe cooed, snuggling into the couch. "Look, the draft went away entirely!"Arthur retreated through the wall into the dark sanctuary of the pantry, sitting cross-legged on a shelf next to a jar of organic peanut butter. He looked at his translucent hands, utterly defeated. If he couldn't terrify them, and he couldn't even give them a mild chill, what was his purpose?He spent the rest of the week trying to rattle the kitchen cabinets, but Tom just greased the hinges with WD-40. He tried to hide their keys, but Chloe just congratulated Tom on finally finding a "designated spot" for them on the counter.Yesterday, Arthur officially gave up. He now spends his evenings sitting on top of the space heater, enjoying the warmth, and quietly watching reality TV over the Millers' shoulders. It wasn't the afterlife he planned, but at least the reception was good.

The Deep Sea

The Deep Sea is another Short story by the blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan 

(Based on Cosmic Horror & Alien Realities) 
The submarine Nautilus II was built to withstand pressures that would instantly turn a human being into a red paste. Inside the cramped, titanium-reinforced sphere, Dr. Elena Vance and her pilot, Marcus, watched the digital depth gauge tick upward.9,800 meters. 10,200 meters. 10,900 meters.They were at the absolute bottom of the Mariana Trench, a place where light had never existed since the dawn of the planet. Outside the tiny, thick quartz viewport, the ocean was a crushing, black void."Deploying the external floodlights," Marcus announced, his voice tense. He flipped a series of heavy switches.Ultra-bright LED arrays flared to life, cutting through the abyssal water. The light revealed the trench floor: a barren, eerie desert of pale silt and strange, ethereal sea cucumbers that drifted like ghosts."Wait," Elena said, leaning closer to the viewport. "Marcus, look at the topography ahead. That’s not a natural rock formation."The seafloor didn't slope upward; it flattened out into a perfectly level, smooth plane. As the Nautilus II drifted forward, the powerful lights reflected off the surface below them. It wasn't stone or mud. It was dark, flawless, polished glass."What is that? An obsidian shelf?" Marcus asked, maneuvering the thrusters to hover just three feet above the surface."No," Elena whispered, her heart hammering against her ribs. "Look at the reflections. Obsidian isn't this perfectly refractive. It's... it's a window."She cleared her throat, tapping the glass of the viewport. The exterior cameras confirmed it. The submarine was sitting on a massive, seamless pane of glass that stretched out in every direction as far as the floodlights could reach. It was an architectural barrier, separating the ocean floor from whatever lay beneath the crust of the Earth."Elena," Marcus said, his voice dropping to a terrified whisper. "The sonar. It’s not bouncing back from the seafloor anymore. It’s passing right through."Elena didn't look at the monitor. She couldn't take her eyes off the viewport.Deep beneath the glass pane, miles below the trench, a light was turning on. It wasn't the harsh, artificial light of the submarine, but a faint, bioluminescent violet glow that pulsed like a heartbeat. The light grew larger, rising up from the impossible depths toward the glass barrier.As the glow neared the surface, the structural shape of the entity became clear. It was an eye.The iris alone was larger than a football stadium, a swirling vortex of deep purple and gold. It floated up through the subterranean void until it was pressed flush against the bottom of the glass pane, staring directly up at the tiny, insignificant metal cylinder of the submarine.The Nautilus II began to vibrate, a low, sub-audible hum rattling the instrument panels."Marcus," Elena breathed, her eyes reflecting the giant, alien pupil below. "Turn off the lights.""I... I can't," Marcus stammered, his fingers frozen on the control panel as he stared out the window. "Elena, it's not looking at us. It's looking past us. It's looking up at the surface.

A Collection Of Short Stories

Here is another collection of short stories by the blogger ibikunle Abraham 

Dark Ironies

The Cure: The scientist finally discovered the cure for human aging, right before the meteor strike made the discovery completely irrelevant.The Alibi: He spent months planning the perfect, airtight alibi, completely forgetting that he was supposed to be the one who survived the crash.

The Safe: The survivalist spent millions building a nuclear-proof underground bunker, but locked himself out on the day the sirens finally wailed.

The Ghostwriter: The famous author's ghostwriter was an actual ghost, who was currently threatening to go to the press unless he got a haunting bonus.

The Lottery: She won the jackpot and immediately quit her job via a massive, insulting email, only to realize she had misread the winning numbers.

The Superpower: He gained the ability to read minds, but quickly realized that 90% of what people thought about was just the lyrics to catchy commercials.

The Tattoo: The magic tattoo promised to show the name of his true love, but as the ink settled, it spelled out his own name twice.

The Bridge: The architect designed a bridge that would last for a thousand years, but it collapsed on opening day because he forgot to account for the weight of the ribbon.

The Lie Detector: The machine didn't buzz when the politician spoke, not because he was telling the truth, but because the machine had given up.

The Inheritance: He inherited a vast kingdom from his estranged father, only to find out the entire population consisted of highly aggressive geese.

Melancholy & Quiet Moments

The Letter: The letter was buried in the backyard for fifty years, its ink fading but the apology still perfectly readable to the empty house.

The Train: The midnight train pulled into the station, carrying only the dreams that people had forgotten during their afternoon naps.

The Lighthouse: The lighthouse keeper kept the flame burning for forty years, unaware that the ocean dried up during his first week on the job.

The Photo: She kept a photo of her childhood dog in her wallet, and every few years, the dog in the picture looked a little bit older.

The Bench: The park bench had a plaque that read, "For those who sit here waiting," but nobody ever stayed long enough to find out for what.

The Radio: The old static-filled radio in the attic only played music from the summer she fell in love, even when it wasn't plugged in.

The Snow: The snow fell softly on the empty playground, covering the tracks of the children who had grown up and moved away decades ago.

The Clockmaker: The clockmaker spent his final days building a watch that ticked backwards, hoping to buy himself just a little more time.

The Echo: I whispered your name into the canyon, and the echo came back sounding older, tired, and entirely unfamiliar.

The End: The last page of the diary was blank, except for a single, neat drop of water that had dried into a wrinkled circle.

A Collection Of Short Stories

Here are 50 more micro-short stories,by the blogger ibikunle Abraham each written to deliver a complete narrative in just one or two sentences.

Cosmic Horror & Alien Realities

The Signal: SETI scientists finally translated the alien signal, only to realize it wasn't a message, but a universal property damage warning for our solar system.

The Constellation: Astronomy text books were updated overnight because a brand-new constellation appeared, explicitly spelling out the date of next Tuesday.

The Deep Sea: The deep-sea submarine reached the absolute bottom of the Mariana Trench, its headlights reflecting off a massive glass window with something looking inside.

The Astronaut: The astronaut tether snapped, and as he drifted hopelessly into the black void, he felt a giant, warm hand gently catch him.

The Eclipse: During the total solar eclipse, the moon didn't move away after three minutes; instead, it stayed black and began to slowly descend.

The Horizon: If you stare at the ocean horizon long enough at sunset, you can see the giant zipper where the sky meets the water.

The Voyager: Voyager 1 finally crossed the edge of the universe, only to bump solidly into a smooth, painted wall that sounded hollow.

The Sun: The sun rose three hours early today, and it wasn't yellow, but a deep, pulsing shade of violet that made the grass scream.

The Star: He made a wish on a falling star, unaware that the streak of light was actually an incoming kinetic warhead aimed directly at his coordinates.

The Atmosphere: The weather report warned of a high-pressure system, but forgot to mention that the air pressure would become heavy enough to flatten buildings.

Paranormal & The Creepy

The Voicemail: I listened to a saved voicemail from my late grandfather, but this time, he stopped mid-sentence to complain about the temperature down there.

The Hotel: The hotel room mirror had a small sign reading "No Peeking," but there was no glass—just an empty frame looking into an identical, dark room.

The Staircase: I counted fourteen steps going down to the basement, but on my way back up, I counted thirty-two and the door was gone.

The Clock: The grandfather clock stopped ticking, but the pendulum kept moving, carving deep, rhythmic gouges into the wooden floorboards.

The Portrait: The subject in the oil painting finally grew tired of sitting, stepped out of the frame, and asked if she could borrow my jacket.

The Shadow: I turned off the flashlight, but my shadow remained cast against the wall, stretching its arms toward my throat.

The Crawlspace: The plumber crawled under the old house and found a perfectly set dinner table, complete with steaming hot food and three empty chairs.

The Doll: The porcelain doll's music box began to play on its own, its tiny metal gears grinding out a song that wasn't invented until next year.

The Ringtone: My phone rang with a ringtone I had never heard before, broadcasting the sound of my own frantic breathing.

The Window: I live on the 42nd floor, so the tapping on my bedroom window was terrifying enough even before I saw the web.


Quirky & Surreal

The Gravity: For exactly four seconds, gravity reversed globally, leaving everyone to spend the rest of the day cleaning soup off their ceilings.

The Accountant: The accountant was so efficient because he didn't use math; he just bargained with the numbers until they agreed to match the budget.

The Library: The books in the library were arranged by how long they had left to live, and the classic literature section was starting to look very pale.

The Shadow Market: He bought a jar of yesterday afternoon at the flea market, but when he opened it, it just smelled like rain and regret.

The Tree: The ancient oak tree in the park finally spoke, but it only wanted to complain about how much it hated the local birds.

The Puddle: The puddle was only two inches deep, but when the boy stepped into it, he kept falling through a blue sky until he hit the grass.

The Origami: The paper crane she folded fluttered its wings, took a deep breath of real air, and flew out the open kitchen window.

The Sneeze: He sneezed so hard that his soul popped out for a second, forcing him to awkwardly chase it around the living room with a butterfly net.

The Reflection: My reflection stepped out of the mirror to grab a glass of water, promising to be right back before the sun went down.

The Keyhole: I looked through the keyhole of the old locked closet and saw an endless desert stretching out under two blazing suns.