Friday, 6 February 2026

The Stages of an Apocalypse "by Stephen Hafft , ccold IPAwas ever able to properly understand the disease, explain its progression or find a cure. It came too fast, took too many good people, and left nothing in its wake. Those first weeks were some of the most frightening days of Nick’s life. He could still remember the grief-stricken faces of his closest friends and family. He remembered them crying, pleading for his help as the virus ate them up from inside, caving out their organs and draining the soul from their eyes, leaving them howling from a pain he knew little how to treat. Though he saw their need, Nick had to focus on himself and his children. He remembered the anxiety-stricken nights spent staring at the ceiling, alone in his bed, wondering how he would avoid this disastrous plague while also providing for his family. He would fall asleep to the burnt orange glow of the fires blazing outside and could practically taste the acrid smoke of the smoldering world through the vents in his apartment. There were even days when Nick felt, if not hoped, the virus had infected him and would consume him faster than this ever-crippling fear had been. But unfortunately, he prevailed as everyone else around him decomposed. Eventually, the fires died, the screams faded and everyone else succumbed to the infection, becoming the lifeless piles of carbon they are today. When he reached the door to his apartment, he fumbled through his pocket for the keys. Though he hadn't spoken to a living soul in months, he still locked his door each time he left, and when he returned, was careful to click the padlock after he had closed it behind him. His electricity died last week, so going back to his apartment was equivalent to walking inside a musty cardboard box. The place reeked of a stale emptiness, which even for him was unsettling. The furniture hadn’t moved since the apocalypse hit, silently standing like an army blockade the morning before a battle. Maneuvering around the couches, he went to the fridge and opened the door, more to assess the smell than to find any food. He didn't notice any overpowering odor, so he closed the door tight, and moved through the kitchen to the bedroom. Sans electricity, his next few meals would need to be creative unless he found a way to get things moving again. The only contents of his apartment, besides the slowly dusting furniture, were memories. These memories were his only friends in this post-apocalyptic world. They floated around objects like ghosts, and even though he didn't believe in anything of the sort, sometimes in the silent darkness he swore he could see these dementors coming to finally claim him. His wife's clothes still hung in her closet opposite the bed, untouched and commemorating a woman taken too soon. Moving down the dusk-dim hallway, hThe Stages of an Apocalypse

 

The Stages of an Apocalypse

"One Day"

The words were softly etched into the dust covering the bar. The smooth epoxy protected a deep mahogany wood finish that still had a shine to it. Even in the fading light creeping through the broken windows, the bar had a stimulating allure. It woke Nick up, not enough to want to do anything of value, but enough to keep his eyes open. Sometimes in life, that is the most you could ask for.

Nick slowly ran his finger over the letters, careful not to disturb the sharp dusty contours. He picked up his beer, took a long swig, then slowly placed the bottle next to its empty friends. He grumbled to himself about the beverage's lukewarm temperature, his baritone voice rumbling into the silence.

While Nick had spent half an hour longer at the bar than his normal routine, it didn't matter all that much. Even though he came to this bar nearly every day, he didn't consider alcohol the problem, merely a space filler. In a world ravaged by the apocalypse, What else was there to do?

He picked up the beer and, by the weight of it, knew it was his last swig.  He put the last draught back, swirled the bottle around to make sure he had finished, and stood up from the stool. He looked at the bartender, his deteriorating body draped limply over the bar, his sunken eyes holding nothing but a bottomless void. Even though Nick didn’t see the purpose, he reflexively dropped some money down on the counter and headed out.

Weaving around the chairs filled with lifeless bodies, he noticed their mouths agape, as if giving an opera of last breaths. Nick could almost hear their unified B-flat note as he walked past them and out the front door.

He turned right at the street corner and walked the two blocks straight to his apartment. The day was overcast, a grey light bleeding into every corner of the quiet street. He maneuvered around kicked-over trash cans and more cold bodies littering the sidewalk. He walked over a scattered newspaper that had tumbled its way down the street, the pages crunching like dead leaves under his boots. The deafening hum of the dead city once again struck a bass tone that Nick had long filtered out. He put his head down and walked back in silence.

Nick remembered how this block looked before the virus hit. The streets of this Brooklyn suburb used to have a quiet buzz with an eclectic mix of new and old. New chic coffee shops squeezed between grandfathered bagel shops that time would never let die. Geriatric neighbors leaned out of windows to watch new transplants hurriedly pace to work, shop or eat. He remembered a developing tension building between the new and old guard that occupied many a sidewalk conversation. In retrospect, those concerns were laughable.

He remembered the terrifying turn this neighborhood, his lifelong home, had taken when the virus hit. It was a destructive disease unlike anything anyone had experienced. No scientist, doctor or specialist was ever able to properly understand the disease, explain its progression or find a cure. It came too fast, took too many good people, and left nothing in its wake. Those first weeks were some of the most frightening days of Nick’s life. He could still remember the grief-stricken faces of his closest friends and family. He remembered them crying, pleading for his help as the virus ate them up from inside, caving out their organs and draining the soul from their eyes, leaving them howling from a pain he knew little how to treat.

Though he saw their need, Nick had to focus on himself and his children. He remembered the anxiety-stricken nights spent staring at the ceiling, alone in his bed, wondering how he would avoid this disastrous plague while also providing for his family. He would fall asleep to the burnt orange glow of the fires blazing outside and could practically taste the acrid smoke of the smoldering world through the vents in his apartment.

There were even days when Nick felt, if not hoped, the virus had infected him and would consume him faster than this ever-crippling fear had been. But unfortunately, he prevailed as everyone else around him decomposed. Eventually, the fires died, the screams faded and everyone else succumbed to the infection, becoming the lifeless piles of carbon they are today.

When he reached the door to his apartment, he fumbled through his pocket for the keys. Though he hadn't spoken to a living soul in months, he still locked his door each time he left, and when he returned, was careful to click the padlock after he had closed it behind him.

His electricity died last week, so going back to his apartment was equivalent to walking inside a musty cardboard box. The place reeked of a stale emptiness, which even for him was unsettling. The furniture hadn’t moved since the apocalypse hit, silently standing like an army blockade the morning before a battle. Maneuvering around the couches, he went to the fridge and opened the door, more to assess the smell than to find any food. He didn't notice any overpowering odor, so he closed the door tight, and moved through the kitchen to the bedroom. Sans electricity, his next few meals would need to be creative unless he found a way to get things moving again.

The only contents of his apartment, besides the slowly dusting furniture, were memories. These memories were his only friends in this post-apocalyptic world. They floated around objects like ghosts, and even though he didn't believe in anything of the sort, sometimes in the silent darkness he swore he could see these dementors coming to finally claim him. His wife's clothes still hung in her closet opposite the bed, untouched and commemorating a woman taken too soon. Moving down the dusk-dim hallway, he could watch the memories of his children play out in the room next door. Sometimes Nick would sit at the edge of the door, watching their memories whisp around the room like an 8 mm reel playing on the faded white wall opposite the door. Whether he watched them playing with Legos or exclaiming that they’d been accepted to college, it would likely be the only time he smiled that day.

The grey light outside was fading fast and the hallway had little natural lighting, so his walk to the bedroom was almost pitch black. The piercing silence coalesced with the depravity of incoming light to form an all-natural sensory deprivation chamber. It was discomforting, but not debilitating. Maybe someday he would try to find a way to get electricity to the apartment. For right now though, he’d cope.

"One Day"

The words were softly etched into the dust covering the bar. The smooth epoxy protected a deep mahogany wood finish that still had a shine to it. Even in the fading light creeping through the broken windows, the bar had a stimulating allure. It woke Nick up, not enough to want to do anything of value, but enough to keep his eyes open. Sometimes in life, that is the most you could ask for.

Nick slowly ran his finger over the letters, careful not to disturb the sharp dusty contours. He picked up his beer, took a long swig, then slowly placed the bottle next to its empty friends. He grumbled to himself about the beverage's lukewarm temperature, his baritone voice rumbling into the silence.

While Nick had spent half an hour longer at the bar than his normal routine, it didn't matter all that much. Even though he came to this bar nearly every day, he didn't consider alcohol the problem, merely a space filler. In a world ravaged by the apocalypse, What else was there to do?

He picked up the beer and, by the weight of it, knew it was his last swig.  He put the last draught back, swirled the bottle around to make sure he had finished, and stood up from the stool. He looked at the bartender, his deteriorating body draped limply over the bar, his sunken eyes holding nothing but a bottomless void. Even though Nick didn’t see the purpose, he reflexively dropped some money down on the counter and headed out.

Weaving around the chairs filled with lifeless bodies, he noticed their mouths agape, as if giving an opera of last breaths. Nick could almost hear their unified B-flat note as he walked past them and out the front door.

He turned right at the street corner and walked the two blocks straight to his apartment. The day was overcast, a grey light bleeding into every corner of the quiet street. He maneuvered around kicked-over trash cans and more cold bodies littering the sidewalk. He walked over a scattered newspaper that had tumbled its way down the street, the pages crunching like dead leaves under his boots. The deafening hum of the dead city once again struck a bass tone that Nick had long filtered out. He put his head down and walked back in silence.

Nick remembered how this block looked before the virus hit. The streets of this Brooklyn suburb used to have a quiet buzz with an eclectic mix of new and old. New chic coffee shops squeezed between grandfathered bagel shops that time would never let die. Geriatric neighbors leaned out of windows to watch new transplants hurriedly pace to work, shop or eat. He remembered a developing tension building between the new and old guard that occupied many a sidewalk conversation. In retrospect, those concerns were laughable.

He remembered the terrifying turn this neighborhood, his lifelong home, had taken when the virus hit. It was a destructive disease unlike anything anyone had experienced. No scientist, doctor or specialist was ever able to properly understand the disease, explain its progression or find a cure. It came too fast, took too many good people, and left nothing in its wake. Those first weeks were some of the most frightening days of Nick’s life. He could still remember the grief-stricken faces of his closest friends and family. He remembered them crying, pleading for his help as the virus ate them up from inside, caving out their organs and draining the soul from their eyes, leaving them howling from a pain he knew little how to treat.

Though he saw their need, Nick had to focus on himself and his children. He remembered the anxiety-stricken nights spent staring at the ceiling, alone in his bed, wondering how he would avoid this disastrous plague while also providing for his family. He would fall asleep to the burnt orange glow of the fires blazing outside and could practically taste the acrid smoke of the smoldering world through the vents in his apartment.

There were even days when Nick felt, if not hoped, the virus had infected him and would consume him faster than this ever-crippling fear had been. But unfortunately, he prevailed as everyone else around him decomposed. Eventually, the fires died, the screams faded and everyone else succumbed to the infection, becoming the lifeless piles of carbon they are today.

When he reached the door to his apartment, he fumbled through his pocket for the keys. Though he hadn't spoken to a living soul in months, he still locked his door each time he left, and when he returned, was careful to click the padlock after he had closed it behind him.

His electricity died last week, so going back to his apartment was equivalent to walking inside a musty cardboard box. The place reeked of a stale emptiness, which even for him was unsettling. The furniture hadn’t moved since the apocalypse hit, silently standing like an army blockade the morning before a battle. Maneuvering around the couches, he went to the fridge and opened the door, more to assess the smell than to find any food. He didn't notice any overpowering odor, so he closed the door tight, and moved through the kitchen to the bedroom. Sans electricity, his next few meals would need to be creative unless he found a way to get things moving again.

The only contents of his apartment, besides the slowly dusting furniture, were memories. These memories were his only friends in this post-apocalyptic world. They floated around objects like ghosts, and even though he didn't believe in anything of the sort, sometimes in the silent darkness he swore he could see these dementors coming to finally claim him. His wife's clothes still hung in her closet opposite the bed, untouched and commemorating a woman taken too soon. Moving down the dusk-dim hallway, he could watch the memories of his children play out in the room next door. Sometimes Nick would sit at the edge of the door, watching their memories whisp around the room like an 8 mm reel playing on the faded white wall opposite the door. Whether he watched them playing with Legos or exclaiming that they’d been accepted to college, it would likely be the only time he smiled that day. 

aBOU TTH aUTHOR 

The grey light outside was fading fast and the hallway had little natural lighting, so his walk to the bedroom was almost pitch black. The piercing silence coalesced with the depravity of incoming light to form an all-natural sensory deprivation chamber. It was discomforting, but not debilitating. Maybe someday he would try to find a way to get electricity to the apartment. For right now though, he’d Stephen works in the medical field but has always desired to explore a more creative endeavor. In his free time outside of the hospital, he enjoys developing his talents as a fiction writer. cope.

Thursday, 5 February 2026

Three Valentines by Ken Whitson, americano with a dash of cinnamon

The box of Mom’s things has been sitting accusingly in my apartment for months—her death another uncomfortable truth I’ve been trying to avoid. If I open it now, I tell myself, I’ll dredge up feelings I’m still not ready for. But I know that’s a lie. One of many I’ve been telling myself lately. So, I trace my rough, blue-collar fingers across the smooth folded flap…

The soft thud of a bone-white envelope meeting hardwood at my feet pulls me back. How long has Mom’s box been open, her faded photo album in my hands? I retrieve the envelope, study the stamp adorning its upper corner—three cents, purple eagle’s wings spread in a ‘V’ for victory. Unstruck. This eagle never got to fly. Never got to deliver its message. The return address is for the family’s old Beacon Hill estate. A yellowed obituary, dated 8 January 1944, is paper-clipped to its back:

Thomas O’Malley, 22, killed in action. Memorial Mass to be held at St. Joseph’s, Cardinal O’Connell Way, Thursday, 13 January, 10:00 AM.

But it’s the envelope’s contents that mist my eyes. My grandmother’s handwriting, still crisp after all these years: 

Happy Valentine’s Day, my dearest Thomas. I’ve waited too long to tell you what I should have said before you left. I love you—have since our first dance at Ellen’s party. I laughed when you stepped on my toes. Remember? You turned so red I thought you might faint. Come home to me, my love. Come home.

 She’d written it. Sealed it. Then hidden it behind Brahmin walls she dared not breach. Wiping a tear, I set it aside and lift a photo from the box.

I’ve never seen it before. Mom, maybe twenty. Pale and freckled as ever and wearing a bright yellow sundress. She’s with someone. He’s dark-skinned and strikingly handsome in his Marine Mess. They’re laughing. They’re shoving cotton candy at each other in front of Sleeping Beauty’s pink-tinged castle. Valentine’s Day at the happiest place on earth, and it showed in their faces. There’s a heart candy attached to the front with wax. It captures the whole scene in its faded one-word message: LOVE. Just that. One word. And so much more.

My phone buzzes. Another message from David asking me to dinner tonight. He’s been patient. Respecting… my walls. Walls that I kept up with Gran and Mom’s support. And so, we meet at cafes where nobody knows us. Take walks in parks without holding hands. I keep saying I’m just being cautious, but he knows the truth. That I’m still that boy who learned the hard way what happens when people find out. 

I look at Gran’s letter, at Mom’s photo, and mourn the price they paid for brick and mortar. Be careful, I hear them say. Wall your heart high against those who would hurt. But what I want them to say is, some walls really should crumble. And sometimes ‘careful’ is the worst lie of all.

It’ll be a madhouse, of course. It’s Valentine’s Day after all. I text David back: ‘Yes.’

About the author

Ken is a retired civil servant still figuring out what retirement means. When not consulting or advising startups (in exchange for questionable stock options or even more questionable coffee), he coaxes stories from his keyboard well into the night. His work often drifts between genres—often tangling along the way.

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Wednesday, 4 February 2026

The Bear at the Door, by Lynne Curry, a strong cup of coffee

The road turned mean under an early September snowstorm. Icy switchbacks knifed along a drop so steep the birch clung to the slope out of stubbornness. The Glenn Highway vanished behind our truck in sheets of white as we climbed toward Chickaloon, mountains folding inward, dark and close. Wind pressed against the truck like it wanted inside.


Jack drove as though the switchbacks already lived in his palms. Tires slid, caught, slid again. He didn’t flinch, his easy confidence pulling at me. 


Before we loaded up, Jack pulled me into a quick hug, jacket cold and smelling of coffee and wool. “You ready, babe?”


I nodded and reached for the passenger door, but Crystal slipped in first, planting her boots on the dash, so I climbed into the back.


She leaned into Jack. “Remember that storm at Sheep Mountain. The one that buried the trail in an hour?” She kept a steady conversation flow, her voice braiding with his.


Another sound rose inside me, quieter. Three nights earlier, Jack filled my kitchen doorway. He rocked once on his heels. “My parents’ place sits near Sheep Mountain. I’d really like you to come with me for the weekend. It’s beautiful this time of year with new snow.”

I rinsed my mug. “Who else will be there?”

“My other favorite person. My younger sister. She’s heard a lot about you and normally doesn’t like the women I date.” His eyes held mine, open and unguarded. “Vangie, it’s important to me she like you.”

“And if she doesn’t?”

“How could she not?”

That memory stayed warm for half a mile. Then Crystal launched another story and the present folded over it. Snow erased the sky. Birch blurred past the window.


Just after Chickaloon, we pulled into a narrow turnout where the highway curved toward Sheep Mountain. An unmarked trail vanished into trees sagging with white.

Crystal snapped her pack straps and reached up to tug Jack’s hood straight. “You always forget this part.”

Jack grinned. I didn’t step into that space, sensing Crystal claimed him the way an army claims ground. I fell in behind them.

The trail climbed through white spruce and bent birch. Branches cracked under the wet weight of snow. Wind dragged groans from the trunks like old men leaning into themselves.

Crystal stayed glued to Jack, her stories stitched with the same quiet hook. We, we, we. 

“Remember the ridge where the wind tried to throw us?” She bumped his shoulder. “You saved me that day.” Then she glanced back at me. “Some people don’t last out here.” Her mouth tilted.  

Snow thickened. The trail softened. Our footprints filled in behind us as if the mountain regretted letting us pass.

Crystal leaned closer to Jack. “If something goes wrong, you’ll take care of me, right?”

Jack squeezed her hand. “Always.”

Her eyes flicked toward me. “Not everyone handles fear the same way.”

Powder swallowed my boot. My ankle turned on a rock underneath and fire streaked up my leg. The pain bit hard and clean, like a warning. I bit down on breath and kept moving.


Thirty minutes later, the cabin crouched among the trees near Sheep Mountain, half buried already. Relief loosened my knees so fast they nearly folded.

Jack shoved the door. It groaned, then gave. We spilled inside like one exhausted animal.

The cabin smelled of damp wood and old smoke. Frost bloomed thick along the windows. Outside, the forest churned gray and feral.

I set my pack near the door and shook ice off my gloves. One fell. Crystal edged my pack  aside with her boot without looking, and when I reached for the glove, it lay half under her tread. She met my eyes.

I decided to let it go. I let it go. “I’ve got jerky, cheese and crackers in my pack. I can lay them out.” 

“That’d be great, babe.”

We huddled near the stove and ate crushed crackers, jerky, cheese. Wind shrilled against the roof shingles. The cabin creaked and shuddered, every gust making the walls complain.

Something struck the wall.

Not wind, a testing blow. Deliberate.

Another thump. Closer.

The stove popped. The cabin locked into stillness.

Jack wiped frost from the window with his sleeve. A dark shape shifted beyond the glass. Fur dusted with ice. A head lifted. 

A bear.

A low huff pushed through the storm.

Jack slid the bolt home. “Nobody goes out.”

Another blow rattled the wall. Snow sifted from the rafters.


Crystal’s eyes cut to me. “You left the food bag outside.”


I fixed on the door. “I didn’t have the bag.”


“I handed it to you. You said you’d bring it in.”


“No.” 

“It’s your fault.” Crystal’s mouth twisted. 

Jack pulled his rifle. The door jumped inward. A crack opened. Cold poured through. The smell of animal rolled in, hot and rotten.

I drove my shoulder into the wood. Pain lit my collarbone. My boots skidded, then caught.

“Jack,” Crystal cried, folding into him. “She brought it here.”


The bear shoved again. Hinges screamed. My palms burned. My breath tore out in white shards.

Jack wrapped his arm around Crystal’s shoulders. “It’s okay. If it gets in, I’ll shoot it.”

The bear leaned once more. Then its weight shifted away. Footsteps sank into snow. Breath faded.

Silence rushed in.

Crystal sobbed into Jack’s jacket.

I stayed pressed to the door long after the danger left, my heart still hammering, and listened to her turn fear into a story about me. I tried to catch his eyes. “I didn’t have the bag, Jack.”

He just shook his head. 

None of us got much sleep.


Morning arrived pale and bruised. We packed without speaking.


The food bag lay ripped open beside the truck, its contents scattered like proof.

Crystal pointed. “See! You said you’d bring it in. You left it here.”

Jack slid an arm around her. “Let’s stay calm.”

He didn’t look at me.

Crystal climbed into the passenger seat and rested her head on Jack’s shoulder like she’d earned it.

Jack drove with the same easy confidence.

Easy meant Crystal not crying. Easy meant letting her decide what happened. Something sealed inside my chest. Quiet. Done.  

The mountains pressed in. Sheep Mountain rose white and sharp. The road unwound toward the Parks Highway and home.

Three miles from Willow, a turnout opened where birch bent under snow and the forest opened its dark mouth.

“Jack, pull over.”

He glanced at me for the first time. “Why? There’s nothing here.”

“There’s enough.” I knew this place. I’d walked it in better weather when my thoughts needed room to move. In three miles, I’d be home.

He eased onto the shoulder. I rested my hand on the handle. Jack turned. “Vangie, come on. We’re almost home.”

Crystal smiled. He didn’t see it. I did.

“All is good, Jack. You take care.” I closed the door gently so it wouldn’t sound like drama.

Wind hit my face like fire. Breath burst and vanished. Trees groaned with bent spines. 

The truck idled a second. Crystal’s profile stayed still, already shaping this into my failure.

Jack’s hands tightened on the wheel. Then the truck rolled away, taillights dissolving into the storm.

The wind filled the space they left.

I stood alone with my breath clouding, my heart steady, the mountain watching without opinion.

The storm swept through the tire tracks. It left mine intact. 


About the author


Alaska/Washington author Lynne Curry—nominated for the 2025 Best of the Net Anthology, the 2024 Pushcart Prize and Best Microfiction—founded “Real-life Writing,” https://bit.ly/45lNbVo and publishes a monthly “Writing from the Cabin” blog. Curry has published twenty-five short stories; seven poems; two articles on writing craft, and six books.

Did you enjoy the story? Would you like to shout us a coffee? Half of what you pay goes to the writers and half towards supporting the project (web site maintenance, preparing the next Best of book etc.)