Free Flash Fiction — Read Short Stories Online

Welcome to your home for free flash fiction — bite-sized stories that ignite your imagination in just a few paragraphs. Whether you love sci-fi sparks, poignant love stories, or unexpected twists, our collection of short fiction delivers a complete emotional journey in under five minutes.

#ssss Super Short Story Scenes

  • Don’t ever go down Potter’s Road after dark. During the day you can traipse about in the hollow as much as you like. Ride your bicycle. Take your lady friend for a walk. Fish in the stream. Do anything you please. But when the sun sinks behind the hills, stay away.

    Not all of Potter’s Road is haunted at night mind ya. You can walk safely from Vincent’s Bridge, all the way down into town. It’s getting past Robber’s Rock, to Vincent’s Bridge that gets you jiggered. Before Robber’s Rock, you’re as free as a bird, past it, and you’re doomed.

    It all began forty years ago. Back then Potter’s Road was safe to walk at any time of day. The whole length of it. Other than a tree root or an ill placed rock, there was nothing there that could harm you.

    One bright summer’s day a man walked into town. He had no horse and no bicycle, his only mode of transport was his own two feet. Now people say that this man had been lucky from birth. To all appearances he was one of the most vile looking beggars that ever walked into the town. He wore long robes that were old and full of bits of cloth that had been patched on, to keep the garment from falling apart. His face was dirty and his hair was prematurely grey, and wild. Even his shoes were full of holes; he himself seemed to have very little luck.

    But the man himself was very lucky.

    Lucky for others that is.

    If you helped this man out, your fortunes would change for the better.

  • “Hey, what’d you bring?” Brandon asked.

    “I swiped a beer from my dad and a couple of candy bars.”

    Brandon didn’t know about drinking the beer. It wasn’t as if he was some kind of prude, but he’d heard all about what it did to Billy’s dad and if that’s how someone acted when they were drunk he wanted no part of it. He’d seen the bruises on Billy in the past and figured his dad must have done it during one of his benders. He’d asked Billy about it, but his face darkened and his had simply said that he didn’t want to talk about it. Why would Billy even bring something like that in the first place?

    As they walked through the woods they came across an abandoned well. The weeds had grown over it, almost covering it up entirely, yet they could still see a bit of moss-covered stone.

    Billy stepped closer to it and leaned down.

    “Whoa, we could have fallen in that thing, Billy. What are you doing, be careful!”

    “I want to look inside.”

    As Billy pried on the wood covering the well, they both heard something inside. It sounded almost like a rustling noise with a slight roar to it.

    “Dude, what if it’s a huge bug? There can’t be anything in there that isn’t a snake or a bug or something.”

    Finally, one of the boards came off, knocking Billy onto his butt. Brandon laughed at him and then walked a little closer to see what was in there.

    The creature they saw looked somewhat like a lavender colored lizard, yet it had wings that were golden. It was making mewling noises and looked like a baby of some sort.

  • Brad said, “Dude, she’s not the ‘real deal.’ Nobody is the ‘real deal.’ It’s all about tricks and illusion. None of it even comes close to being real. And no matter what you might want to believe, your ‘Mistress of Black Magic’ is as phony balonie as any other sidewalk magician out there. But, I am curious to see if she’s as hot as you’ve claimed.”

    “She is, Brad; maybe hotter. She’s got a set of humongous mockatushkies that won’t quit. Look, up on the front of the theater; there’s a poster with a bunch of her pictures.”

    Brad approached the poster, expecting to see some cheap, less-than-attractive Elvira wannabe dressed like a vampiress with dyed black hair, dark eye makeup, and matching long black fingernails. But he was pleasantly surprised by what he saw. The poster displayed seven photos of a lovely blonde magician with blood red lipstick, who appeared to be close to six feet tall, performing various magic tricks. In each picture, she was dressed in the same stage costume. She wore shiny red thigh-high boots with four-inch elevated heels. Black fishnet stockings were held up by gold garters attached to a black and gold bustier with gold frills used to accent her abundant cleavage. She wore a red half-top with short sleeves, allowing plenty of the aforementioned cleavage to be seen. Gold and black armbands covered her elbows.

  • Just another night in The City. Two million people, and it seems like half of them must be awake, despite the hour. It’s the kind of night where the cold settles into your bones like a disease, eating at you, and you can’t get rid of it no matter how much whiskey you drink or how many suspects you chase down dark alleyways, hoping that this time isn’t the last time, hoping this night isn’t the night you catch a knife in the dark.

    I’m seated at the counter at Mickey’s, nursing a glass of rye and going over the details of my latest case. A string of murders, each one more grisly than the last. All the victims are girls working the streets in the poorest quarter of The City. A regular Jack The Ripper this guy is, I figure. A copycat of the worst kind.

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    But all of that goes out the window when this dame walks in and sits on the stool next to mine.

    The smoke in Mickey’s is so thick you could cut it with a knife. This dame, she moves through it all like a divine wind, and when she turns her eyes on me, it’s everything I can do not to drop my shriveled cigarette right there on top of my notes.

    “Detective William Gray?” She asks, and I can hardly think straight enough to remember my name or agree with her that must be the one I’m supposed to have. This dame, she’s a tall drink of crimson sin, all legs, red dress, ruby lips and a figure that could put a man on his knees quicker than any bullet could. “I need your help, Will.”

  • “Asgard and Vanaheim,” Prospero scanned the map. “By Mitra, I had almost believed those countries to have been fabulous.”

    Conan grinned savagely, involuntarily touching the scars on his dark face. “You had known otherwise, had you spent your youth on the northern frontiers of Cimmeria! Asgard lies to the north, and Vanaheim to the northwest of Cimmeria, and there is continual war along the borders.”

    “What manner of men are these northern folk?” asked Prospero.

    “Tall and fair and blue-eyed. Their god is Ymir, the frost-giant, and each tribe has its own king. They are wayward and fierce. They fight all day and drink ale and roar their wild songs all night.”

    “Then I think you are like them,” laughed Prospero. “You laugh greatly, drink deep and bellow good songs; though I never saw another Cimmerian who drank aught but water, or who ever laughed, or ever sang save to chant dismal dirges.”

    “Perhaps it’s the land they live in,” answered the king. “A gloomier land never was—all of hills, darkly wooded, under skies nearly always gray, with winds moaning drearily down the valleys.”

    “Little wonder men grow moody there,” quoth Prospero with a shrug of his shoulders, thinking of the smiling sun-washed plains and blue lazy rivers of Poitain, Aquilonia’s southernmost province.

    “They have no hope here or hereafter,” answered Conan. “Their gods are Crom and his dark race, who rule over a sunless place of everlasting mist, which is the world of the dead. Mitra! The ways of the Aesir were more to my liking.”

  • Their transport ship was hit. Grievously. An explosion ruptured it, then a second. It happened so fast, all Corporal Hutchins saw was bright white, then darkness…

    When he came to, he was prostrate on the deck, facing a blue sky the hue of McLean’s Lake on a summer morning. Cotton ball clouds hung irregularly, and he was struck at how peaceful the scene appeared, how serene. He knew something was wrong, but wondered why he didn’t feel any pain.

    As a child, when he’d smashed his toe on a rock, the knowledge it would hurt unfolded in his brain before the actual pain flowed up the nervous system to prove that intuition true. Perhaps this pain was like that, the awareness coming before the actual feeling. And, perhaps, the greater the magnitude of the expected agony, the longer the nerves would take to relay that information, sort of like putting off telling a buddy’s wife he’d been shot to hell by the Japanese and there wasn’t enough left of him to ship back stateside.

    A buzzing like angry wasps zipped past, its droning first distant, then near, then distant again. That memory of McLean’s Lake wasn’t so peaceful anymore. The decking beneath him pitched. As he went sliding, sliding down, he remembered how .20 mm cannon fire caused that insectoid noise as the bullets flew past.

    Time sped up, and the pain he’d been waiting for reached his brain full-throttle. Hutchins screamed, and the blue sky turned black, and merciful unconsciousness washed over it all.

When a Story Fits in a Breath

Ever wanted a story that hits harder than a novel — but takes only a minute to read?
Welcome to our collection of ultra-short stories, where every word matters.

Here you’ll find microfiction and super short stories that capture entire worlds in a blink. Perfect for readers on the go — and writers who believe in the art of brevity.

Date Created: 10-20-2025
Date Modified: 10-21-2025