Showing posts with label Inspirational Christian fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspirational Christian fiction. Show all posts

Echoes of Faith: Lucy at the Steps| Flash Fiction

 

 

Lucy at the Steps

Monty, a grieving widower whose Sunday routine is interrupted by an unexpected visitor: a quiet dog with one flopped ear and a patient heart. Through her steady presence, Monty begins to see that God’s grace doesn’t always knock—it sometimes waits. Scroll down to begin.


In Miami, the sun rose with a practiced brightness, warm even in October. Monty stood at the kitchen sink, letting the water run longer than necessary, just to hear something. His phone buzzed on the counter—CJ, right on schedule.

He dried his hands, answered.

“You headed to church today, Dad?”

“Yeah,” Monty said. “I’m getting ready now.”

CJ’s voice softened. “Okay. Text me after, all right?”

“I will.”

He didn’t mention that he'd nearly stayed in bed this time. That for ten months, he had gone mostly out of habit—since Vivian’s funeral, since the casseroles and the pitying looks and the awkward silences at fellowship hour. Sunday mornings had become the most hollow part of the week. But he kept showing up. It’s what Vivian would have wanted. She’d always believed healing happened in the going, even when you didn’t feel like it.

He pulled on the gray suit she used to press, though the crease had long since faded. Outside, the Miami air was thick with late-season humidity, and the jacaranda trees along his street rustled faintly in the breeze.

He parked in his usual spot at the small brick church, engine ticking as it cooled. And that’s when he saw her.

A dog—medium-sized, maybe a lab or hound mix, fur the color of worn leather—curled at the base of the church steps.. One ear flopped, the other alert. Not a puppy, not frail. Just… waiting. Her eyes lifted to meet his, soft brown and steady. She didn’t move. Didn’t bark. Just watched, like she was waiting to see if he recognized her.

He paused, hand on the door. Some part of him wanted to speak. Instead, he went inside, where the sanctuary still smelled of lemon oil and old hymnals. And grief.

-

After the benediction, he hesitated near the back pew, pretending to study his bulletin while the sanctuary emptied around him. He hadn’t heard most of the sermon. Something about Jacob wrestling the angel—about not letting go until the blessing came. But Monty had stopped wrestling months ago. These days, he just sat still and waited for the ache to pass.

When he finally stepped outside, the sun had shifted behind a bank of clouds, and a breeze had crept in off the bay. The steps were empty. The dog was gone.

For a reason he didn’t understand, he felt that absence more than he expected. He stood there a while, longer than made sense, scanning the sidewalk, the edge of the churchyard. Nothing. Just a scrap of paper blowing across the lot and the sound of children laughing two blocks over.

He went home, texted CJ—Home. Love you.—and made himself a tuna sandwich he didn’t want. When he washed the dishes, he caught himself setting out a second cup.

Vivian’s.

He left it where it was.

-

The next Sunday, Monty arrived ten minutes early. He didn’t admit—not even to himself—that he hoped to see the dog again. He told himself it was about traffic. The weather. Habit.

But she was there. Same spot. Same stillness.

This time, she sat upright, tail tucked neatly around her paws like a question mark. Her ears perked when she saw him, one still flopped like it had missed the cue. He slowed on the walkway.

"Morning," he said quietly, almost embarrassed.

She didn’t move—just blinked at him. Calm. Watchful. Unbothered.

A young couple walked past with a toddler in tow. The little boy pointed and chirped, “Doggy!” before his father nudged him gently along. Monty stayed for another beat, then climbed the steps and opened the doors.

As he moved down the aisle toward his usual seat near the back, Pastor Elaine caught his eye. She crossed the room with her usual no-nonsense stride, her robe swaying slightly around her ankles.

“Monty,” Pastor Elaine said, “I’m glad you’re here.”

“Habit, mostly.”

She smiled. “Sometimes the body walks before the heart catches up.”

Then she moved toward the pulpit as the choir began to tune up.

During the sermon, Monty found himself glancing at the stained-glass window on the south wall. It was the Good Shepherd window—Jesus with the lamb across His shoulders. Vivian had always loved that one. Said it reminded her that being carried wasn’t failure—it was mercy.

-

After service, he exited slowly. Some parishioners smiled politely. A few touched his elbow or said they were still praying for him. He thanked them, meant it, and felt the gap between sincerity and connection.

The dog was still there. Waiting.

Someone had left a bowl of water, and a child—maybe the same one as before—was crouched nearby, whispering to her.

“She doesn’t have a name,” the boy whispered.

“Maybe she does,” Monty said, surprised to hear himself speak. “Maybe she’s just waiting for someone to ask.”

The child grinned and ran off as his mother called.

Monty stood a moment longer. Then his phone buzzed in his jacket pocket.

It was CJ.

CJ:

How was church? You doing okay today?

Monty:

Better than last week.
There’s a dog that keeps showing up here.

CJ:

Like a stray?

Monty:

No collar.  Just waiting on the steps.

CJ:

Then it needs a home. Love you, Dad.

Monty stared at the screen. His thumb hovered. Then he typed:

Love you, too.

He slipped the phone back into his pocket and looked down the steps.

The dog stared back with quiet, expectant eyes.

He didn’t have anything to offer her. Not yet.

But he gave her a nod.

For the first time, she wagged her tail—slow and deliberate, like the start of a sentence worth finishing.

_

The next morning, Monty sat at the kitchen table, CJ’s words still glowing on his phone screen:

Then it needs a home.

He read it twice more before setting the phone down. The words weren’t just about the dog. They echoed louder than that—into corners of the house that had been quiet too long.

He looked at the cup still sitting on the shelf—Vivian’s. He’d left it untouched for eight months. A kind of monument. A kind of pause.

He stood. Took it down.

His hand trembled slightly as he washed it. Dried it. Set it gently in the cabinet beside the good china. The sound of porcelain meeting porcelain felt like a door quietly closing without slamming shut.

Then he grabbed the dog food and bowl—still in the bag from the grocery store—and headed out.

-

She was there again.

Same step. Same stillness.

Lucy—he’d started calling her that—rose when she saw him. Not bounding. Just steady, tail moving in that cautious, hopeful way that still felt like a question.

He poured a small mound of kibble into the bowl and set it near the steps. She approached slowly, politely, as if aware this was sacred ground. When she ate, it was with measured gratitude, each crunch deliberate.

“You keep waiting,” he murmured. “Even when I don’t have much to give.”

She ate slowly, glancing up at him between bites. When she finished, she didn’t wander off. She stayed close.

He rested his hand on her back. The fur was coarse in some places, soft in others. Familiar now.

“You know,” he said, voice catching, “Vivian would’ve loved you.”

For a while, they just sat there. The world moved around them—cars passing, leaves shifting—but it felt like a still point in time.

He looked at the church door, then at Lucy.

“I think you’ve waited long enough.”

She tilted her head, and he stood. Opened the passenger door of his car.

“Come on, girl.”

Lucy hesitated for half a breath, then climbed in, circling once before curling into the seat like she’d always belonged there.

As he closed the door behind her, Monty whispered, “Thank You”—not to the dog, but to the quiet.

Grace didn’t knock. She waited. And now, she was going home with him.

🕊️ An Echoes of Faith Story

Where is God quietly present in your life—waiting to be noticed, trusted, or let in?

Echoes of Faith| Twenty-Four Hours|Flash Fiction

Prefer to listen? ðŸŽ§ Twenty-Four Hours  is now available as an audio on YouTube — click here to listen for FREE!

Twenty-Four Hours

He was out of time—faith worn thin, hope nearly gone. But in the stillness around midnight, a presence intervened. Sometimes, all Heaven needs is twenty-four hours. Let the story speak to your heart — scroll down to begin.

Warm amber light filled the sanctuary as the hymn faded. Priscilla Dobbins clutched her Bible and offered a quiet 'Amen’. Her husband Paul’s hand rested beside hers. Every Wednesday evening, they came as a family—front row, three children nestled between them, voices lifted in worship.

But even as the final prayer was spoken, Paul’s thoughts drifted. The unpaid mortgage. The bank account hovering near zero. The fourth rejection email that afternoon.

Thirteen years at the Rosemont accounting firm, and he’d been let go without warning after the merger. Severance gone. Savings drained. Interviews drying up.

Headed toward the vehicle, he barely heard Priscilla say, “We needed that word tonight.”

“Yeah,” he mumbled, opening the car door for her.

She looked at him, sensing the hollowness in his response. “We’ll keep praying, Paul. God hasn’t forgotten us.”

He nodded, but deep down, doubt was growing louder than faith.

That night, while the house slept, Paul sat in the living room, the blue light of his laptop casting shadows across the walls. A spreadsheet glared back at him—debts, bills, late fees. No income coming in.

He’d spent the last week calculating something he never thought he’d consider. He still had a keycard to Rosemont. He knew the alarm code, the layout, the location of the safe and archived client checks. It wasn’t a fortune—but it was enough to cover the mortgage and buy time.

He rubbed his face, exhausted.

“I’m doing this for them,” he whispered to himself, glancing at the family photo on the shelf. “Just until things turn around.”

The next night around midnight as the city slept, Paul’s footsteps echoed softly in the stairwell of the office building. His gloves were on. His breath was shallow. Every step forward chipped away at what he used to believe about himself.

He reached the archive office door and swiped his keycard. The lock clicked. He stepped inside.

Then—

"So... this is where your lack of faith has taken you?"

The voice wasn’t loud, but it pierced like thunder.

Stunned, Paul spun around.

A man stood in the shadows, calm and steady, his eyes lit with something that made Paul freeze.

“Who are you?” Paul asked, voice shaking.

The man stepped forward. He wore a blue janitor’s uniform. He appeared to be in his late thirties or early forties, with dark curly hair. His name tag read the name “Alex” and the sleeve bore the words “Caldwell Services”

“I’m someone who’s seen what faith can do,” he said softly. “And what happens when it’s abandoned.”

Paul backed away slightly. “You don’t understand. I’ve done everything right. Church, tithes, prayer. I’m a good man. But nothing’s changing. We’re drowning.”

The man’s gaze didn’t waver. “And now you’re willing to sink further—by stealing what isn’t yours?”

“I’m not stealing,” Paul snapped. “I gave them thirteen years , working day and night. They tossed me aside like worn-out shoes.”

His eyes welled. “I’m doing it for my family. I don’t see another way.”

“There is another way,” the man said gently. “Wait twenty-four hours. That’s all you have to do.”

Paul looked bewildered. “Twenty-four hours? What are you talking about?”

“I’m talking about one day. If you have even a small amount of faith, step aside and trust God to handle what happens next.”

Paul’s voice cracked. “Why didn’t you call the police?”

The man gave a slight smile. “I can tell you don’t truly want to do this. I’m just here to remind you. Go home, Paul.”

The room fell silent.

Silence. Paul blinked; he was gone. He picked up the duffel bag and walked out."

An hour later, he was sitting in the dimly lit living room, the encounter's impact still palpable. His thoughts whirled—questions, uncertainties, and a flicker of long-absent hope.

As the clock ticked away the minutes, Paul's gaze drifted to the family photo on the shelf. His children beamed back at him, their innocent eyes filled with trust and love. How close he had come to tarnishing that trust.

The words of the mysterious janitor echoed in his mind, a gentle yet firm reminder of what truly mattered. Could he find it within himself to let go of his desperation and place his faith in something beyond his understanding?

Priscilla entered the room, rubbing the sleep from her eyes. She stopped when she noticed him.

“Paul?” she asked gently, kneeling beside him. “What’s wrong?”

He opened his mouth, but no words came.

She placed her hand gently on his. "Did you have a nightmare?”

He shook his head slowly. “No… I was awake.”

She waited.

"I was on the verge of doing something tonight," he murmured softly, "something from which I could never return.”

Priscilla’s breath caught, but she didn’t let go.

“And then someone stopped me,” he said. “He just… appeared. He knew everything. My thoughts. My fear. Told me to wait. Just twenty-four hours.”

Paul looked at her, eyes wide, vulnerable.

“I think… I think I saw an angel.”

Silence settled between them, reverent and raw.

Priscilla didn’t question him. Instead, she drew his hand to her heart.

“Then we wait,” she said softly. “And we trust.”

All he could do was nod.

That night, Paul hardly got any sleep. He lay next to Priscilla, staring at the ceiling with his mind racing and heart filled with questions.

What if it had all been in his head?

What if he’d walked away from the only chance he had to keep them afloat?

But beneath the fear… a flicker of hope had been reignited. A fragile thread of faith, too stubborn to break.

The morning sunlight slowly moved over the hardwood floor while Paul sat at the kitchen table, sipping on a cup of coffee that had grown cold. His gaze repeatedly flicked to the clock. 7:48… 8:02… 8:17…

At 9:13, the phone rang.

Paul jumped and grabbed it. “Hello?”

"Good morning, am I speaking with Mr. Paul Daniels?" a woman asked in a calm tone.

“Yes.”

"This is Christine Boatright from Mitchell & Bright Attorneys. I'm reaching out regarding your uncle, Tristan Beaumont. I regret to inform you that he has recently passed away.”

Paul swallowed hard. “I didn’t know.”

“He left you a small inheritance—just under fifty thousand dollars.”

Paul’s voice cracked. What? Are you sure?”

"We're certain. You can expect the official documents later this week. We'll reach out to you soon.”

He hung up, stunned.

Just as he was about to comprehend the call, his laptop chimed with a notification. It was an email from Mark Jennings, a friend from college he hadn't spoken to in years.

“Heard you're between jobs. I’ve got some clients looking for a freelance accountant. Flexible hours. Good pay. You interested?”

Paul blinked, heart pounding.

Priscilla stepped into the kitchen, rubbing sleep from her eyes.

Paul turned, barely breathing. “You’re not going to believe this.”

She met his eyes with quiet strength. “Try me.”

Six months later, Paul Daniels Accounting opened its doors. It was modest, featuring a compact office, a recycled desk, and a homemade sign crafted by his daughter. Yet, it was entirely his own, founded on faith rather than fear.

One evening, Paul made his way back to the Rosemont office building and headed to the front desk.

"Hi, I'm looking for an employee of Caldwell Janitorial. He’s Caucasian, probably in his late thirties or early forties, about six feet tall, slender, with dark curly hair. His name is Alex.”

The receptionist looked puzzled. "We do work with Caldwell, but we've never had anyone call Alex."

Paul stared. “Are you sure?”

“Positive. I handle the staff rosters.”

He walked out, feeling the warmth of the setting sun on his face.

So… this is where your lack of faith has taken you?

Paul shook his head, tears stinging. The stranger’s statement still seared in his mind.

“Not anymore,” he whispered.

And walked back to his office.

🕊️ An Echoes of Faith Story

Sometimes, all Heaven needs is twenty-four hours.