Mystery
The Message I Received at 3:17 AM That Changed Everything. AI-Generated.
It was 3:17 AM when my phone buzzed. I wasn’t expecting any messages at this hour, and yet, there it was—a notification that made my heart skip a beat. The sender’s number was unfamiliar, a string of digits that didn’t seem to exist. At first, I thought it was a prank or a wrong number. But as I stared at the screen, a shiver ran down my spine. The night was silent except for the faint hum of my air conditioner. I had been reading on the couch, a cup of coffee growing cold beside me, when the message arrived. The glow from the phone screen illuminated my face in the otherwise dark room, and the words on it were simple, yet terrifying: “I know what you did.” My first reaction was disbelief. Who could know? And what exactly did they mean? I quickly checked my call log, my messages, even my social media—but nothing seemed out of place. My mind raced through every memory, every small secret I thought I had buried safely. Nothing made sense. I tried to brush it off. Maybe it was just a spam message, or someone trying to scare me. But deep down, I couldn’t shake the unease. Another buzz. Another message. “Check the drawer under your desk.” I froze. My desk. The one place I kept my old journals, letters, and random keepsakes. Hesitation gripped me, but curiosity got the better of fear. I walked over to the desk, my steps slow and deliberate, trying to avoid making a sound. The drawers were ordinary, the top one containing my stationery. But the second drawer… it was slightly open. I hadn’t left it that way. My hands trembled as I pulled it fully open. Inside was an envelope, yellowed with age, no name on it, no stamp. Just my initials written in hurried handwriting. I picked it up, my heart pounding so hard I thought it might burst from my chest. The envelope contained a single sheet of paper. The handwriting was familiar—it was my own. I had no memory of writing this letter, yet reading it sent chills through me. The message inside described events from a week ago, tiny choices I had made, conversations I had forgotten… and ended with a warning: “If you ignore this, everything will be revealed.” Panic set in. I checked the room again. Every light, every corner, every shadow seemed alive. The air felt heavier, as if something unseen was watching me. My phone buzzed again, this time with a single word: “Now.” I didn’t know what to do. Should I call the police? Should I delete everything? My instincts screamed to run, but I couldn’t leave the envelope behind. Something about it demanded attention, a silent command that I couldn’t ignore. Slowly, I unfolded the paper again. The words seemed to shift, almost as if the letter itself were alive. Memories I had blocked came rushing back—the lie I told my best friend, the small theft at a local store I thought no one noticed, the message I sent to someone I shouldn’t have. All of it documented here, perfectly detailed. How was this possible? How could anyone know so much? Suddenly, the room’s temperature dropped. My breath became visible in the faint light of the phone. I thought I saw a shadow move in the corner of my eye, but when I turned, nothing was there. My phone buzzed once more. Another message: “You can’t hide anymore.” Fear turned into a strange clarity. I realized that this was more than a threat—it was a reflection. The envelope, the messages, the unknown sender… it wasn’t about someone else. It was about me. About the parts of myself I had ignored, the secrets I thought I could bury, and the truth I had avoided facing. I spent the rest of the night going through everything I had ever hidden, every journal, every memory, every tiny choice that made me who I was. By morning, I felt exhausted but different. The fear hadn’t disappeared, but it had shifted into understanding. I couldn’t change the past, but I could face it—and maybe, just maybe, write a better future. To this day, I don’t know who sent the first message at 3:17 AM. Some nights, I still feel the chill when my phone buzzes, a reminder that the past never truly leaves us. But I also know this: sometimes, the scariest messages lead to the most important revelations. And every time I think I’ve escaped my past, I check my phone… just in case.
By Baseer Shaheen 6 days ago in Fiction
The Tarot Reader Who Predicted World War 3
The Tarot Reader Who Predicted World War 3 The night was quiet, the kind of quiet that makes every small sound feel important. In a dimly lit room a tarot reader sat at her wooden table, a single candle glowing beside a worn deck of cards. The flame moved gently whenever the wind brushed against the window. Her cat rested near the cards, watching the room with calm yellow eyes.
By George’s Girl 2026 6 days ago in Fiction
The Map of Remembering
The Road That Remembered Us A Mystical Adventure About the Journey Every Soul Is Walking No one remembers the moment the journey begins. Not really. We like to say it begins with birth. With the first breath. With the cry that tells the world we have arrived. But the old travelers say the journey begins much earlier. It begins the moment a soul agrees to forget.
By Flower InBloom6 days ago in Fiction
A Canary Down The Coal Pit
A Canary Down The Coal Pit Long ago, when coal mines were deep, dark places and safety equipment was very simple, miners took a small yellow canary down into the coal pit with them. To someone who had never worked underground, it might seem strange that a tiny bird would travel with tough men carrying picks and lamps. But the reason was deadly serious.
By George’s Girl 2026 6 days ago in Fiction
Out of the loop
I couldn't let my nerves win, This big opportunity just landed out my front door and I would not let it pass without a solid effort. I held onto my portfolio and stepped into the small dilapidated building that had "Tattoo Artist Wanted" crudely written across its windows in decorative holiday paint.
By Mollie Harrison7 days ago in Fiction
Hoodoo You Think You Are?
Victor Janssen was a man to be reckoned with. He was tall and commanding in his presentation. He was wealthy. He was a natural leader, the head of a company that employed so many employees he wouldn’t even recognize one were he to bump into any of them. He was childless and single, devoting all of his time to his vocation.
By Gerard DiLeo7 days ago in Fiction
The Man in Seat 23. AI-Generated.
The man in Seat 23 boarded the plane after everyone else. I noticed him immediately. Not because he looked unusual—he didn’t. In fact, he looked completely ordinary. Dark jacket, small travel bag, calm expression. But something about the way he walked down the aisle felt… wrong. Almost like he already knew everyone on the plane. It was a late-night flight from Chicago to Boston, the kind where most passengers try to sleep through the journey. The cabin lights were dim, and the quiet hum of the engines filled the silence. I was seated in 22A, by the window. Seat 23A, directly behind me, had been empty when boarding started. I remember clearly because I had leaned my seat back slightly, enjoying the extra space. But now the man was there. And he was watching me. I could feel it. You know that strange feeling when someone’s eyes are fixed on you? That uncomfortable awareness crawling across your skin. I tried to ignore it. The plane began taxiing down the runway, the engines growing louder as we prepared for takeoff. Outside the window, the runway lights streaked across the darkness like glowing lines. Then my phone buzzed. I glanced down. One new message. Unknown number. The text read: “Don’t look back.” A chill ran down my spine. Slowly, I turned my phone over and locked the screen. I told myself it was nothing. Probably a spam message. But then my phone buzzed again. Another message. “He’s sitting right behind you.” My heart began pounding. I forced myself not to turn around. The plane lifted into the air, pressing me back into my seat as the city lights shrank below us. Another buzz. I hesitated before opening the message. “Seat 23.” My throat went dry. I finally turned slightly, pretending to stretch. The man behind me was staring directly at me. His eyes didn’t move. Not even when I caught him watching. I quickly faced forward again. This was ridiculous. Just a coincidence. Maybe someone on the plane was messing with me. But another message appeared. “He knows what you did.” My stomach twisted. What did that mean? The cabin lights dimmed further as the flight attendants began preparing for the overnight portion of the flight. Passengers settled into their seats. Someone a few rows ahead started snoring. Everything felt strangely normal. Except for the man behind me. And the messages. My phone buzzed again. “Do you remember Boston?” A memory flashed through my mind. Three years ago. A rainy night. A narrow street. Headlights. And a moment I had spent years trying to forget. My breathing became shallow. I typed a reply before I could stop myself. “Who is this?” For a moment, nothing happened. Then the reply came. “Turn around.” I slowly turned. The man in Seat 23 was still staring at me. But now he was smiling. Not a friendly smile. A knowing one. He leaned forward slightly. “You remember me now, don’t you?” he said quietly. His voice was calm. Too calm. “I think you have the wrong person,” I said quickly. The man tilted his head. “No,” he replied. “I don’t.” My phone buzzed again. But this time, the message wasn’t from the unknown number. It was from my airline app. Seat Change Notification. Confused, I opened it. My seat had been changed. From 22A to 23A. I frowned. That didn’t make sense. I looked back at the man. “You’re in my seat,” I said. He smiled again. “No,” he said softly. “You are.” Suddenly the cabin lights flickered. Just for a moment. But when they came back on… Seat 23 was empty. The man was gone. I looked around quickly. No one seemed to notice anything strange. Passengers were sleeping. Reading. Watching movies. My heart raced as I stood up. “Excuse me,” I said to the flight attendant nearby. “The man sitting behind me—where did he go?” She looked confused. “What man?” “The passenger in seat 23.” She checked her tablet. Then frowned. “There’s no passenger assigned to seat 23,” she said. “That’s impossible,” I said quickly. “He was just there.” She shook her head. “You’re the only person assigned to row 22 and 23.” My chest tightened. “What?” She turned the screen toward me. Seat 22A — Me Seat 23A — Me “That must be a system error,” she said casually. “But there was someone sitting there,” I insisted. The flight attendant looked slightly concerned now. “Sir… you boarded last,” she said. “You were the only passenger in this section.” My mind spun. That wasn’t possible. I had seen him. Spoken to him. Then my phone buzzed again. A final message from the unknown number. I opened it slowly. The text read: “You can’t run from yourself.” And suddenly… I remembered. Boston. Three years ago. The rain. The street. The man I hit with my car. The man I left behind. I never told anyone. Never reported it. I told myself it had been too dark. Too fast. Too late. But now I understood. Seat 23 was never another passenger. It was me. The part of me that had been sitting behind my conscience for three years. Watching. Waiting. And reminding me that some passengers… Never leave the flight.
By Baseer Shaheen 7 days ago in Fiction










