Short Fiction
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

Dust motes dance in the perpetual twilight of forgotten farmhouses, where the echoes of humanity cling to splintered wood and rusting machinery. Here, in the slow, deliberate unraveling of the American heartland, Simak’s stories breathe a melancholy, almost spectral existence. Each tale is a whispered confession from the edge of the world, a haunting glimpse into lives weathered by loneliness and the creeping silence of obsolescence. The air hangs heavy with the scent of damp earth and decaying memories. Characters drift through landscapes bleached by time, their concerns rooted in the mundane—a broken fence, a dwindling harvest—yet shadowed by a pervasive sense of loss. These are not tales of grand catastrophe, but of quiet disappearances, of things slipping away like smoke. A creeping dread settles upon the reader as the boundaries between reality and the ghostly residue of forgotten dreams blur. The prose itself is a dry, brittle thing, mirroring the parched fields and skeletal trees that populate these forgotten corners. It is a world where the horizon holds a vacant stare, and the shadows whisper of what once was, and what will inevitably become dust. The weight of the past isn’t merely felt—it *is* the landscape, pressing down on every fragile existence until only the faintest echo remains.
Copyright: Public Domain
This license allows anyone to use your story for any purpose, including printing, selling, or adapting it into a film freely.
Chapter List

50

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30 Part
Dust devils dance across a sun-bleached horizon, mirroring the spiraling desperation within Clara’s heart. The vast, ochre landscape of the Australian outback isn’t merely a backdrop, but a suffocating presence, mirroring the loneliness that claws at the edges of her forced union. Her husband, a man carved from the very granite of the land – stoic, taciturn, and haunted by a silence deeper than the endless plains – offers a marriage of duty, not affection. Each sunrise bleeds into another, marked only by the relentless heat and the slow, creeping dread of isolation. The homestead, a crumbling testament to forgotten dreams, breathes with the whispers of drought and the ghosts of failed promises. A relentless, sun-scorched melancholy permeates every timber and every shadow. Rumours cling to the fences like cobwebs – stories of restless spirits driven mad by the distance, of cattle rustlers swallowed by the red earth, and of a past that refuses to stay buried. Clara finds herself increasingly drawn to the stories, seeking solace in the darkness, as the land itself seems to conspire to unravel the fragile threads of her sanity. The very air hangs thick with the scent of decay, of lives withered and broken under the unforgiving gaze of the Southern Cross. It is a marriage not of love, but of endurance – a slow, agonizing descent into the heart of a desolate, unforgiving wilderness, where the only witness is the burning, indifferent sun.