Showing posts with label DivineEncounters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DivineEncounters. Show all posts

Echoes of Faith: Closed Doors, Open Windows| Flash Fiction

 

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.

🕊️ An Echoes of Faith Story
Sometimes a closed door is just God guiding you to an open window.

Echoes of Faith| He Walks With You|Based on Luke 24:16| Flash Fiction

 Prefer to listen? 🎧 He Walks With You is now available as an audio store on YouTube — click here to listen for FREE!


He Walks With You


After his sister’s funeral, Caleb begins a quiet drive home—until a mysterious traveler joins him. What follows is a sacred encounter that echoes Luke 24:16, revealing the comfort of a presence we often overlook in grief. Ready to be inspired? Keep reading below.


Caleb Beaumont buried his sister two days ago. The weight of grief hung heavy in the air, suffocating him with every breath. The loss felt like a gaping wound in his chest, raw and festering. He had stayed a few extra days at the family farm outside Greenville, doing chores to help his parents, trying to keep his hands busy. But the emptiness followed him everywhere—a shadow that refused to be shaken off. Now, with the funeral behind them and the goodbyes said, Caleb was headed back to the city—back to Atlanta, to work, to routine, to the life that no longer made sense without her in it.

Marcus Falls, his childhood friend and the kind of guy who never gave up on people, started the car and glanced at him. “You good?”

Caleb didn’t answer. His gaze was fixed on the horizon, where gray skies melted into gray land. “I’m here,” he said.

They pulled out of the lot and onto the highway. The car was quiet except for the low hum of tires against the road.

“Leah really believed, you know,” Caleb said after a while. “Said Jesus would meet her in the end. Said she saw angels a few nights before she passed. Like it meant something.”

“It did,” Marcus said softly.

Caleb shook his head. “I prayed. Hard. I fasted. I begged God. She still died.”

“I know,” Marcus replied. “But that doesn’t mean your prayers didn’t matter.”

Caleb looked away, jaw tight. “Feels like they got lost in the ceiling.”

An hour passed before they spotted a rest stop. Marcus pulled off without asking.

As they slowed to turn in, a man stood near the entrance with a hand-lettered cardboard sign that read: “Headed East.”

He looked about mid-fifties, beard graying, coat a little too thin for the weather. But there was something about him—steady, like the kind of person who wasn’t in a hurry to get anywhere but always arrived on time.

Marcus looked at Caleb. “Should we…?”

Caleb sighed. “Sure. Why not?”

They pulled up, and the man leaned down to the window. “Afternoon, fellas.”

“You heading east?” Marcus asked.

“I am,” he said with a smile.

“Hop in.”

He climbed in the back. “Name’s Eli.”

“Marcus,” Marcus replied. “This is Caleb.”

“Pleasure,” Eli said, settling in.

For a while, no one talked. Caleb stared out the window, eyes tracing raindrops as they raced each other across the glass. But then Eli spoke.

“You both coming from something heavy.”

It wasn’t a question.

Caleb turned, surprised. “How’d you know?”

“I can always tell when someone’s spirit is walking slower than their body.”

Marcus chuckled. “We just left a funeral.”

Caleb added, “My sister. Leah. Thirty-four. Cancer. She was a fighter.”

“I’m sorry,” Eli said. “That kind of pain runs deep.”

“She believed God would heal her,” Caleb said. “Right up until the end. Me? I’m not sure what I believe anymore.”

“Loss has a way of shaking the ground,” Eli replied. “Even the firmest faith can feel like it’s slipping.”

“You sound like you’ve been there.”

Eli nodded. “I have.”

At the next rest stop, Marcus hopped out to grab coffee. Caleb stayed behind. Eli opened the door.

“Feel like stretching your legs?”

Caleb hesitated, then nodded. They walked to a wooden bench under a bare-limbed tree. The air smelled like damp earth and diesel fuel. It was quiet except for a few cars rolling in and out.

Eli sat. “I lost someone, too,” he said. “My wife. She had a quiet strength. Believed God would walk with her through anything.”

“What happened?” Caleb asked.

“She passed,” Eli said simply. “But her faith didn’t.”

Caleb ran a hand down his face. “It just hurts. Leah was my only sister. The only person who really saw me.”

“She still does.”

Caleb looked up, startled.

Eli smiled gently. “Faith like hers doesn’t disappear. It echoes.”

For a while, neither of them said anything.

Then Eli spoke again. “There were two men, once. Long ago. Walking the road home after losing everything they believed in. Grieving. Questioning.”

Caleb tilted his head. “Sounds familiar.”

“They were joined by a stranger,” Eli continued. “He didn’t give them answers. He just walked with them. Listened. Then reminded them of promises they had forgotten. In the end, they realized… they had been walking with the risen Savior the whole time.”

Caleb's eyes searched his. “You talking about the road to Emmaus?”

“I’m saying,” Eli said, “that resurrection isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s quiet. Like footsteps beside you when you thought you were alone.”

Marcus returned, holding two steaming cups. “Got your usual, man.”

Caleb stood slowly, eyes still on Eli.

They returned to the car. Eli got in without a word, quietly settling back into his seat. His eyes were closed, resting, as the road stretched ahead.

Caleb turned forward, his thoughts a whirlwind of grief, questions, and something else—something unexplainable but oddly calming.

Ten minutes passed.

Caleb turned to speak.

“Hey, Eli—”

He froze.

The backseat was empty.

No door had opened. The car hadn’t stopped. Eli was just... gone.

Caleb’s heart pounded. “Marcus… stop the car.”

Marcus looked over. “What?”

“Stop the car!” Caleb said again.

Marcus pulled over to the shoulder. “What’s wrong?”

Caleb whipped around in his seat.

No one.

No trace.

No coat. No bag. Just a folded slip of paper lying on the seat where Eli had been.

Hands trembling, Caleb reached for it and unfolded it slowly.

He walks with you—even when you don’t recognize Him.” – Luke 24:16

His throat tightened.

The ache in his chest cracked, not from grief this time, but from wonder.

He stared out the windshield, eyes glistening. The road ahead still looked the same.

But now he knew… he wasn’t walking it alone.

He opened his backpack, pulled out Leah’s Bible—still marked with her underlines and prayers—and slid the note inside. Right between pages already highlighted in yellow. 

Luke 24:16.

He closed the Bible gently, feeling a sense of peace wash over him. The weight that had been pressing down on his shoulders seemed to lift, if only slightly. The words on the note felt like a warm embrace, a reminder that he was not alone in his pain.

Marcus glanced at him, concern etched in his features. "Caleb, what happened? Who was that guy? People don’t just disappear.”

Caleb shook his head slowly, still processing what had just occurred. “I... I don’t know.”

Marcus frowned. “How else can you explain it?”

Caleb looked back at the seat, then at the note still in his hand. “He said... he walks with you—even when you don't recognize Him.”

Marcus fell silent, letting the message sink in. After a moment, he started the car again and merged back onto the highway. “If I believed in angels, I’d call Eli one. But since I don’t, I’m not sure what to think or believe.”

Caleb leaned back in his seat, the note still clutched in his hand. The road stretched out endlessly before them, the rhythm of the highway soft beneath the wheels.

“I don’t either,” Caleb said quietly, the words catching in his throat. “But I think Leah… she sent him to remind me I’m not walking through this alone.”

Outside the window, a break in the clouds let a shaft of sunlight cut across the road ahead. Caleb didn’t say anything. He just held the Bible tighter and closed his eyes—letting the warmth remind him of the presence he could no longer deny.

He didn’t need answers. Just the reminder that he wasn’t alone.