Historical
Bomb Strike
It was the year 2027, and the world never imagined something like this would happen. A missile struck the United States. But it did not hit where experts had expected. It was not Washington, New York, or Los Angeles. Instead, it struck a small coastal town somewhere in the northeastern United States, between Maine and Delaware. No one knew exactly where it landed, and no one understood why.
By Zakir Ullahabout 6 hours ago in Fiction
Bomb Scare. Top Story - March 2026.
It was 2027, and the world never thought it would happen. A missle hit the United States, but it wasn't where they had anticipated. A little town in the northeast was hit by a missile strike, they didn't know why, and they didn't know exactly where it hit, but they did know it was a coastal community, somewhere between Maine and Delaware.
By Gregory Paytonabout 19 hours ago in Fiction
In Like A Lion
The murder of crows circled above, dread harbingers of his army’s advance. Pasha gazed at the hill before them taking in every curve as though it were a beautiful woman lounging on a chaise. Atop the promontory sat a squat square keep, its angles jarring against the rolling cliff. It was many generations older than Pasha dared hope to recite, the head and seat of some trumped up local lordling. All Pasha knew was that he lay in their way.
By Matthew J. Fromma day ago in Fiction
The Flight That Sparked a Superpower Crisis
In the tense atmosphere of the Cold War, intelligence gathering was considered vital for national security. One of the most dramatic episodes in this shadow war occurred in May 1960, when an American U-2 spy plane took off from Peshawar, Pakistan, on a mission to photograph sensitive Soviet military sites. The flight ended in disaster when the aircraft was shot down deep inside Soviet territory, triggering a major diplomatic crisis between the United States and the Soviet Union and further intensifying their already hostile relationship.
By Irshad Abbasi a day ago in Fiction
The Knights of the Dead
The image is hauntingly consistent across centuries of folklore: a silent procession of armored figures winding through a moonlit forest, the rhythmic clanking of steel muffled by an unnatural mist. Their banners are tattered, their horses are skeletal, and their eyes—if they have any at all—glow with a cold, pale light. This is the Knights of the Dead Army, a trope that has marched through European mythology, romantic literature, and modern fantasy.
By Richard Weber2 days ago in Fiction
Happy Birthday To Me 5th March Top Story
Here’s to tomorrow. My birthday. March 5th. Another year older, another year alive, another year of stories, laughter, chaos, and love. I love my family, the ones who make the noise bearable, the hugs unforgettable, the memories sticky like honey on your fingers.
By George’s Girl 2026 2 days ago in Fiction
The Room Still Smells Like You: Letting Go After Heartbreak
It had been three months since he left, three months since the door clicked shut behind him for the last time. And yet, the apartment still smelled like him—cologne, faintly floral, a trace of coffee and early morning sunlight. She breathed it in, each inhalation a knife pressed gently against her chest.
By Ihsanullah2 days ago in Fiction
When Silence Was Whole
Flower InBloom writes at the threshold where myth meets nervous system and spirit meets structure. This piece is not a cosmology to believe in, but a remembering to feel into. If something in you softened while reading, that is the field recognizing itself.
By Flower InBloom3 days ago in Fiction
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Review – Small Stakes, Strong Impact
As one of the most celebrated fantasy universes ever created, A Song of Ice and Fire continues to command a loyal global audience. After diving deep into Targaryen history with House of the Dragon, the franchise now pivots to something more intimate. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms trades dragons and dynastic wars for a grounded, character-driven journey—and the result is surprisingly refreshing.
By Fawad Ahmad4 days ago in Fiction











