Rest in peace, Sympathy._Amon the Legend_A Day's Wage_Suffocating
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Rest in peace, Sympathy.
(R.I.P) Sympathy By Emerald Woods"Human nature is the same everywhere in the world.. including perfect ones. If anyone knows how true that statement is, it's our neighbors. Above us, Skyscrapers and shiny buildings hanged from the sky like icicles on a tree. That place was the sky city of Cesiah, where only humans lived. In contrast, our neighborhood, was a wasteland with small businesses, row houses and a vast field with tiny trees growing. Everyone who resided in the sky were a part of a utopia, while everyone in our neighborhood was a cyborg. Completely stripped of our humanity because of t...
Amon the Legend
It was raining that night. The smoggy gray sky thundered and bellowed with a fury, soaking all those unfortunate enough to find themselves void of shelter and alone. Filth had embedded itself in our clothing; remnants of blood were stained on our faces, yet as the skies continued on with its melancholic display, we laughed uncontrollably. You see, he always spoke of destiny—his personal legend. A calling that led him right to a miracle in the form of a seed. One that would grow to become the tree of life. I’d never www.onedoor.ccheard of such a story before, but it had led us to that glorious moment in the...
A Day's Wage
“Today is the day,” thinking, Raju jumped over a puddle outside his house, making sure the sack in his hands didn’t fall. The whole street was choked with water from last night’s rain. Although monsoon was still a month away, the shower was an early reminder to get prepared for this small village in Northern India. Raju was a farmer who grew vegetables on his small ancestral land. Like most farmers, he was dependent on the rain for water. It was a relief that he had picked the vegetables a few days ago. But the downpour had restricted him from going to the market and selling them. These veg...
Suffocating
Tayah looked out the train window, not really seeing the beautiful Pennsylvania landscape roll by. It was 4:00 in the afternoon and the 9:00 in the morning phone call that she received that morning did not feel like only seven hours ago. It felt like an eternity ago in another dimension. Everything changed in that moment. Her and her husband, Danny, were still laying in bed, awake but not ready to get up. They had stayed up late the night before watching movies. At 42, neither of them wanted to admit that it wasn’t as easy to recover from as it used to be. They had two kids, Eliza...