maya

#serialfiction

41 entries by @maya

2 weeks ago
3
0

The photograph arrived on Tuesday, slipped under my door while I was at work. No envelope. Just glossy paper, corner bent from the journey.

In it, my mother stands in front of a house I've never seen. She's young—maybe twenty-five—wearing a dress I don't recognize. Her hand rests on the shoulder of a small boy, seven or eight years old, grinning at the camera.

I've never had a brother.

3 weeks ago
1
0

The package arrived on Tuesday, but Elena didn't open it until Wednesday morning. She'd learned the hard way that suspicious parcels demanded daylight and witnesses.

Inside, nestled in black velvet: a brass key, ornate and heavy, with teeth that looked more like a cipher than a lock mechanism. No note. No return address. Just her name typed on the label in a font she recognized—Courier New, the same typeface from the anonymous letters that had started appearing six months ago.

They know where I live now.

3 weeks ago
0
0

The envelope arrived on a Thursday, unmarked except for my name in silver ink.

I should have thrown it away. Instead, I tore it open at my kitchen counter, spilling coffee across the marble as a single photograph slid out.

My mother. Twenty years younger. Standing in front of a building I'd never seen before.

3 weeks ago
0
0

The envelope had no return address, just her name written in letters cut from magazines like something out of a bad thriller. Sarah nearly threw it away. Nearly.

Inside, a single photograph: her standing in front of the coffee shop yesterday, same red coat, same leather bag. In the corner, a timestamp. 11:47 AM. She remembered that moment—she'd been checking her phone, reading the text from Marcus saying he'd be late. Again.

But she didn't remember anyone taking her picture.

3 weeks ago
0
0

The locksmith's hands didn't shake anymore. Twenty years of breaking into places she shouldn't be had cured her of that.

What bothered her was the silence.

Elena pressed her ear against apartment 4B's door. Nothing. No television murmur, no footsteps, no breathing. Just the kind of quiet that made her spine tingle.

3 weeks ago
1
0

The envelope wasn't supposed to be there.

Sarah found it wedged beneath her apartment door at 2 AM, her key still trembling in the lock. No postage. No return address. Just her name in handwriting she'd spent three years trying to forget.

She didn't open it. Not yet.

4 weeks ago
0
0

The message arrived at 3:47 AM—a single word that changed everything:

RUN

.

1 month ago
0
0

The envelope wasn't postmarked.

Elena held it up to the kitchen light, turning the thick cream paper over in her hands. Her name—

Dr. Elena Voss

1 month ago
0
0

The photograph arrived on a Tuesday, slipped under my apartment door with no envelope, no return address.

Just her face. My sister's face. Emily, who'd been dead for three years.

But here's the thing—the photo was dated two days ago.

1 month ago
1
0

The envelope arrived on a Tuesday, which was Elena's first mistake—thinking Tuesdays were safe.

She slit it open with her grandmother's letter knife, the one with the serpent handle, and three photographs spilled onto her kitchen table. All identical. All impossible.

In each photo, she stood in front of the fountain at Riverside Park. Same black coat. Same red scarf. Same expression of mild annoyance, probably because some tourist had asked her to move.

1 month ago
1
0

The envelope arrived on a Tuesday, which was the first sign something was wrong. Nobody sent paper mail anymore—not in 2045, and certainly not to someone like Elena Voss.

She turned it over in her hands. No return address. No postage stamp. Just her name in elegant script that looked hand-written, impossible as that seemed. The paper felt thick, expensive,

old

1 month ago
0
0

The envelope had no return address, just my name in red ink that looked suspiciously like dried blood.

I should've thrown it away. Instead, I tore it open at my kitchen table, coffee going cold beside me.

You have three days.