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Echoes of Faith: The Daughter That Stepped In| Flash Fiction
Echoes of Faith: Closed Doors, Open Windows| Flash Fiction
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| Closed Doors, Open Windows |
When life closes one door, faith opens another. Closed Doors, Open Windows follows Khalil Streeter, a young lawyer whose career shatters overnight. But as pride gives way to purpose, an unexpected reminder—a dove on his Brooklyn windowsill—shows him that God’s plans are never delayed, only redirected. Let the story speak to your heart—scroll down to begin.
The day they let him go, they called him into a glass room like they were about to congratulate him.
That’s what hit him first.
The conference room looked out over downtown Brooklyn—the kind of view that made you feel expensive. Funny how even windows can feel like walls when you're being let go. Khalil had sat in that same chair a year earlier, grinning at his fiancée Meesha over FaceTime, whispering, “Baby, we’re really here. God did it.”
Now the blinds were half-closed, and HR already had a folder waiting. Never a good sign.
“Have a seat, Khalil,” said Mr. Danvers.
He stayed standing. Pride.
“You know we’ve been going through changes since the merger,” Danvers began.
“Restructuring,” the HR woman added gently.
Khalil nodded. He already knew. They always start with flattery before they take what feeds you.
“You’re talented,” Danvers said. “This isn’t about performance, but—”
“Last in, first out,” Khalil finished.
Danvers winced. “That’s not how I’d—”
“It’s exactly how you would.”
The HR rep slid the folder across the table. “Your severance—”
“I’m not worried about benefits,” Khalil said evenly. “I’m worried about rent.”
They offered sympathy. He took none of it. He shook their hands—because his father raised him to look a man in the eye—and walked out on steady legs.
He held it together through the elevator and the lobby—until the cold air hit his face outside.
Just like that, it was over.
First job out of college. Corporate track. Contracts, compliance, proof he hadn’t wasted all those years. Gone in one closed-door meeting.
He swallowed hard. “Nah,” he muttered. “It’s not ending like this.”
___He didn’t know how to tell Meesha.
He told himself it was to protect her. Truth was, he didn’t want her looking at him different.
He climbed the narrow stairs to his apartment, kicked off his shoes, and dropped his bag. The place wasn’t big—one bedroom—but it was his. Proof he was building something in Brooklyn.
He loosened his tie. “God,” he said into the quiet. “What am I supposed to do now?”
He stared at the window. “I can’t go home.”
His mama always said, If anything ever goes left, you just come home.
“Lord, please I don’t want to go home,” he whispered. Then, more bitterly, “How could you let this happen?”
That’s when he saw it—a white dove perched on the brick ledge outside his window.
“What are you doing here?” he murmured. The bird didn’t move. He laughed once. “God, if this is You, I need You.” The dove stayed—peace, parked.
___The next morning it was still there.
And the one after that.
A week later, he started greeting it like a roommate before opening his laptop to send résumés.
Each rejection came faster than the last. Several weeks later, his checking account looked smaller and his rent was due soon.
Then his parents called.
“Hey, baby,” his mama sang. “You sound tired.”
“I’m good,” he lied.
His father’s voice boomed through the speaker. “You eating?”
“Yeah, Daddy.”
His mother asked in a gentle voice. “How’s work?”
“It’s… shifting,” he said. “Company merged.”
“I see,” she murmured—the prayer already in her tone.
“You can always come home till it settles,” his dad threw in.
He glanced at the dove on the ledge. “I’m alright. It’s temporary. I’ll find something soon.”
“We believe that,” his mama said. “You ain’t by yourself.”
Then her voice softened. “Sometimes, a closed door means there’s a window about to open.”
“Alright, Mama. I hear you.”
After they hung up, he stared at the dove again. It shifted, calm as ever.
___He almost skipped the next interview.
It wasn’t much—just another online posting that promised dynamic opportunities. He wasn’t sure what it meant. He went anyway. Sitting home watching the dove all day felt worse.
An hour later, he stepped back into the street, hollow. He was overqualified for the security job.
“Yo! Khalil? That you?” a voice called.
He turned. The man crossing toward him grinned wide.
“Ciroc?”
“It is you!” Ciroc Hamilton pulled him into a back-slap hug. “Frat, you out here in Brooklyn ow?”
They laughed, the sound shaking off several weeks of heaviness.
“You look tired,” Ciroc said.
“I’m straight.”
“That the answer we going with or is it the truth?”
Khalil hesitated. Just be honest.
He sighed. “They let me go. Merger. I’ve been on Indeed like it’s church. Everybody wants five years’ experience for an entry job.” He shook his head. “I just got turned down for a security job.”
Ciroc nodded. “Yeah. I heard it’s tough out here.”
Khalil added quickly, “I’m lining stuff up—”
Ciroc said, “You don’t have to sell me a version.”
Khalil’s shoulders dropped for the first time in a long time.
“Look, I’m at a nonprofit over on Fulton,” Ciroc said. “Community Legal Resource Center. We help folks about to lose housing—people who need someone who can read contracts and explain it plain.”
“That’s what I did for corporate,” Khalil said slowly.
“Exactly.”
Khalil chuckled. “You’re hiring?”
“Need somebody like yesterday. The pay’s not like corporate, but it matters. You’d be good at it.”
Khalil hesitated.
“Stop thinking about pride and think about purpose,” Ciroc said. “It’s a new window for you.”
His mama’s words rang in his head. A closed door... a new window.
He nodded. “Alright. I’ll come through.”
Ciroc reached in his jacket pocket and handed him a card. “Give me a call, Frat.”
___
When he got home, Meesha was waiting on his couch. He could tell by the look on her face, she knew the truth.
His stomach dropped. “Who told you?”
“Your mom,” she said softly. “She was worried.”
He laughed weakly. “Nothing to be worried about.”
She crossed her arms across her chest. “The question is, why didn’t you tell me?”
“I was gonna tell you,” he said. “I just needed something else lined up first. Didn’t want you thinking—”
“Thinking what?” she asked.
She touched his hand, her tone gentle now. “That you failed?”
He looked down.
“You went out every day like you were going to work,” she said.
“I was looking for a job—”
She stepped closer, lifting his chin until he met her eyes. “How’s the search really going?”
His throat tightened.
He blinked fast. “I might have something,” he said. “I just ran into Ciroc—Howard brother. He works at a nonprofit. Civil rights, housing. He wants me to give him a call. I believe it’s a solid lead.”
Her smile widened.
“It doesn’t pay like corporate,” he warned.
“Nonprofit. I’m picturing you walking in your purpose,” she said. “If this is the window, we’ll walk through it together.”
He exhaled, relief breaking through.
“You can’t keep things like this from me. We’re a team. I fell in love with you,” she said, “not your paycheck.”
He pulled her into his arms. “What would I do without you?”
“I’m not going to let you find out.”
Then she pointed toward the window. “Also, baby… why didn’t you tell me about the bird?”
“The what?”
“That dove been sitting there like it pays rent.”
He turned. The dove was there—only now, there were two.
Something in him broke open. He smiled. “You see this?”
“I do,” she whispered.
He stared. All week that bird had stayed—through fear, pride, and silent prayers too small to say out loud. Now there were two. Calm. Settled.
“You know what my mama said?”
"She told me too,” Meesha smiled. “Sometimes a closed door means there’s a window about to open. She said it twice."
Khalil nodded slowly. “She was right.”
They stood shoulder to shoulder, watching as one dove lifted, wings catching the Brooklyn light. The other followed.
Khalil exhaled a long, steady breath. “Alright,” he whispered. “I see You.”
Meesha slipped her hand into his.
“What are you thinking?” she asked.
“I’m thinking I’m going to call Ciroc,” he said. “I’m not scared. I’m just gonna walk in there and be who I am."
She smiled. “That sounds like faith to me.”
He nodded, the knot inside finally gone.
The door had closed—but the window was wide open.
Echoes of Faith: From Darkness To Light| Mya's Journey To Redemption (Flash Fiction)
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| From Darkness To Light |
Follow Elizabeth’s journey from rebellion to redemption in this powerful story of faith, forgiveness, and resilience. A moving reminder that no one is beyond the reach of love and grace. Read the full story below »
Mya's mother, a resilient woman named Sharice, clung to her faith in the midst of the chaos that enveloped her daughter. The tearful prayers she whispered each night were like desperate messages sent to the heavens, hoping for a miracle that could save Mya from herself.
Then came another shoplifting incident; Sharice confronted Mya, grounding her in an attempt to steer her away from trouble.
"Mya, you can't keep going down this path. I'm praying for you, sweetheart. You need to turn your life around," Sharice implored, her eyes a mix of worry and disappointment.
"Whatever, Sharice. I can take care of myself," Mya retorted, storming past her mother and locking herself in her bedroom.
Several days later, Mya snuck out of the house through the bedroom window, and her rebellion took a dark turn. A reckless decision, fueled by a desire for liberation, ended with the flashing lights of police cars casting an ominous glow on the faces of the teenagers who had thought they were invincible. Arrested for her involvement in a tragic carjacking, a gunshot took a woman’s life, forever altering the course of their lives.
The legal system treated Mya as an adult, and consequences loomed over her trial. She was sentenced to 25 years for her part in the tragedy.
Sharice, torn between anguish and faith, continued to pray for her daughter.
Mya found herself confined in the cold, unforgiving walls of a prison cell. The echo of slamming doors replaced the once-thrilling soundtrack of her rebellious adventures. The neon lights outside were replaced by the harsh, artificial glow of flickering fluorescent lights.
In the stark reality of her cell, Mya faced a truth she had long avoided – the consequences of her choices. The vibrant spirit that once defied authority now wrestled with the chains of her own making. The cold metal bars were a stark reminder that freedom, once taken for granted, was a precious commodity.
As days turned into nights, Mya's rebellious exterior began to crack. The facade she had meticulously built to shield herself from the world started to crumble. In the solitude of her cell, the echoes of her mother's prayers, once dismissed as mere background noise, found a way to pierce through.
A prison chaplain named Father James became an unexpected source of solace for Mya. In the quiet moments of their conversations, Mya allowed herself to confront the pain and confusion that had led her down this tumultuous path. Father James, a beacon of compassion, encouraged her to embrace the journey of self-discovery that awaited her within those prison walls.
One day, as Mya stared out of the small window, she saw a bird soaring high above, unburdened by the constraints of the world below. In that fleeting moment, something shifted within her. The realization that she, too, could rise from the ashes of her mistakes ignited a spark of hope.
Determined to rewrite the narrative of her life, Mya embraced the opportunities for self-improvement within the prison. She attended classes, earned her GED, and discovered a passion for writing. The prison library became her sanctuary, a realm where her imagination could roam free even as her body remained confined.
As Mya's transformation unfolded, so did the letters she wrote to her mother. Each word penned on the pages was a testament to the metamorphosis occurring within her. Through the letters, she apologized for the pain she had caused and expressed a newfound understanding of the love and sacrifices her mother had made.
Sharice, receiving the letters with a mix of skepticism and hope, allowed herself to believe that her daughter could indeed change. The prayers she had whispered in the darkness began to take on a new fervor, a prayer for redemption and a reunion that seemed like a distant dream.
The prison walls, once suffocating, became the cocoon from which Mya would emerge transformed. After 15 years, Mya was released on good behavior, bringing with it a mixture of trepidation and anticipation. As she stepped out into the world, the neon lights now seemed less ominous. The city that once felt like a battleground now held the promise of a new beginning.
In the arms of her tearful mother, Mya felt the weight of forgiveness and the warmth of unconditional love. The phoenix had risen from the ashes of her rebellious past, and together, mother and daughter embraced the journey that lay ahead.
Mya's story became a testament to the power of transformation, a beacon of hope for those who had lost their way. The rebellious teenager had found herself in the confines of a prison cell, but it was there that she discovered the keys to unlock a future filled with promise and redemption.


