📝 What Do You Remember—And What Do You Leave Out?
Flash fiction has a way of getting under your skin.
In just a few pages, a story can tilt your perspective, ask a question you weren’t prepared for, and leave you wondering long after the last line. That’s exactly what I set out to do with my latest short story, Memory.
It begins as a simple witness account of a crime—but things don’t quite add up.
The narrator seems honest enough at first. But memory can be slippery. So can guilt.
Memory is about:
- A story told in fragments, where truth and performance blur
- A narrator you might trust—until you don’t
- The subtle unraveling of someone who may be remembering… too much
It’s a quick read with a slow-burn tension, perfect for those who enjoy unreliable narrators, eerie atmosphere, and the unsettling feeling that something important is just out of view.
If that sounds like your kind of story, you can find Memory on Amazon. No pressure—just an invitation to step into the story and see what rises to the surface.
Thanks, as always, for supporting indie fiction and short, strange tales that linger. 🖤
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