Showing posts with label faith-based flash fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faith-based flash fiction. Show all posts

Echoes of Faith: The Last Door| Flash Fiction

 

The Last Door


Zora didn’t expect much from the wooden Advent calendar left at her door—but each tiny message led her to rediscover hope, joy, and the quiet possibility of love. A tender Christmas story about saying yes to small moments and letting faith open the last door.


Zora Matthews discovered the Advent calendar on December first, propped against her apartment door as if it had spent the whole morning patiently waiting for her return.

Zora nearly stepped over it, coffee in hand, her mind already on deadlines and unanswered emails. Packages were rare these days. Most of her friends were married, paired off, or busy raising families, and December had a way of magnifying that quiet shift—how life rearranged itself without asking permission.

The calendar was wooden and beautifully crafted, with twenty-five tiny doors painted in soft winter scenes: snow-covered rooftops, candlelit windows, a town square glowing beneath strings of lights.

A note was tied to the handle with twine.

Zora,
You once said December felt lonelier after everyone paired off.
I think this might help.
—Megan

Zora’s lips curved into a smile despite her exhaustion. Typical Megan —still remembering the smallest details even with a husband and a life two states away. The calendar was exactly what Zora hadn't known she needed.

Inside, Zora placed the calendar on the kitchen counter. It was beautiful. Old-fashioned. Peaceful.

She set it aside and returned to her usual rhythm of deadlines and obligations.

The next morning, she opened the first door.  Something shifted. Inside was a tiny paper scroll that read: “Prepare to be interrupted.

Zora raised an eyebrow. Her mornings were sacred: coffee, silence, email. Controlled. Quiet. She slipped the scroll into her coat pocket and headed to the café near her office, the message still lingering in her mind.

And that’s when she saw him.

“Zora?”

She turned, blinking. "Ethan?"

He looked just as she remembered—maybe a little more distinguished. They’d dated once, briefly. It had ended not badly, but gradually. Slipped away like time often does when both people are busy and unsure.

They spoke easily—updates, small smiles, and shared memories. 

"She'll have the peppermint mocha," he told the barista, then caught her surprised look.

Zora smiled. “Two years later and you still remember my order?”

"Some things stick," Ethan shrugged.

When their fingers brushed over the warm cup, Zora felt something flutter beneath her ribs—a sensation she'd packed away with her memories of him.

That night, as she turned off her bedside lamp, Zora thought about the way Ethan had remembered her favorite drink. It wasn’t just the coffee. It was being seen. Without effort, without asking. She couldn’t remember the last time she’d felt that.

 She began to look at the calendar with new eyes.

Day 3 said: "Write down something you miss."

Zora stared at the slip of paper longer than she expected. She tried to think of something light—Sunday brunches, old TV shows—but the truth came quicker than she'd like to admit.

She picked up a pen and wrote slowly: Being chosen.

Not as someone’s fallback plan or temporary comfort. Chosen like her presence mattered, like someone saw her and stayed anyway. It wasn’t just about romance. It was about belonging.

She folded the paper and tucked it back into the door. Saying it didn’t change anything.

But it felt like naming a wound before it could begin to heal.

Day 5 said: "Say yes to something you usually avoid."

She almost skipped it. Crowds weren’t her thing, and neither were cold December nights. But something about the challenge stuck with her all day. By sunset, she pulled on a scarf and walked to the Christmas market at the park.

Lights glowed between wooden stalls. Children ran past, laughing. Music drifted from a nearby speaker. The scent of cinnamon and roasting nuts hung in the air.

She wandered slowly, hands tucked in her coat pockets, unsure what she was looking for.

But under the twinkle lights and winter sky, she felt something stir—like maybe joy wasn’t as far away as it had seemed.

Day 7 said: "Bake something you used to love."

Zora hadn’t baked in years, but she tried her mother’s sugar cookie recipe. The cookies were imperfect… yet when she brought them to work the next day, laughter filled the break room.

Her mind drifted to Ethan.

Zora packed the cookies into a tin, stared at her phone, and typed before she could overthink it.

Zora: I baked too many cookies. Want to help me get rid of them?

The reply came quicker than she expected.

Ethan: I was hoping you’d say that.

They sat on her couch that evening, knees brushing, powdered sugar on their fingers. When he laughed, something loosened inside her — the sense that joy didn’t need permission.

Day 9 said: "Do something you haven’t done since childhood."

She stared at it, unsure. Then she remembered the skating rink that opened each December downtown. Just thinking about it made her knees ache.

Still, she texted Ethan.

Zora: Ever go ice skating anymore?

Ethan: Not in years. But for you? I’ll risk a sprained ankle.

They met that afternoon. The rink sparkled beneath string lights, and laughter echoed in the crisp air. She was terrible at first, clinging to the railing.

Ethan offered his hand. "Trust me."

"That’s asking a lot," she teased.

But she took it.

They circled the rink, slowly, clumsily. She laughed until her cheeks hurt. The cold didn’t matter. For the first time in a long time, she felt light.

Day 12  said "You’re allowed to hope."

She stared at it for a long time.

Not for love exactly, but for something more than what she’d been settling for—endless work, shallow interactions, a full calendar that still felt empty.

By the 20th, she was looking forward to opening each door—not for what was inside, but for what it reminded her to notice.

Lights strung across balconies.


The neighbor who always shoveled everyone’s steps.


The barista who knew her order by heart.

These weren’t miracles. But they were kindness. Proof that the world could still surprise her.

On Christmas Eve, the second-to-last door held a small gold star ornament. Just like the ones from her childhood tree. Tied to it was a message: "Joy grows when you let yourself be seen."

Her eyes stung unexpectedly. She hadn’t realized how much she’d been hiding. Behind busy days, polite smiles, deflective humor.

That evening, Ethan texted:

Ethan: There’s a Christmas Eve service at my church tonight. Any chance you’d want to come?

She almost said no.

But the star was still in her hand.

Zora: I’d like that.

The sanctuary glowed with candlelight and quiet music. Zora hadn’t been to a service in years. Not since her father passed. The grief had hardened into habit—holidays spent alone, prayers left unsaid.

But that night, she listened. To the carols. To the Scripture. To the silence between words.

"The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it."

It wasn’t magic.

But it felt like something opening.

Something inside her cracked as the congregation rose to sing ‘Silent Night.’ She didn’t cry—but she wanted to. The ache in her chest wasn’t just sadness. It was longing. And maybe, finally, hope.

Christmas morning dawned clear and cold.

Zora sat at her kitchen table, a mug of peppermint tea warming her hands. She opened the final door.

It was empty.

No note. No message. Just the small square of space where something might have been.

For a moment, she felt disappointed.

Then she looked around.

Her apartment was still quiet—but it didn’t feel empty.

There was the gold star on the tree.

A plate of cookies cooling on the counter.

Her phone buzzed.

Ethan: Merry Christmas, Zora. Any chance you saved me one of those cookies?

She smiled and typed before she could second-guess it.

Zora: I did. Come over. I’ll make coffee.

She hit send, heart pounding.
It felt small—but also like everything.
There was a pause—then the reply.

Ethan: Be there in fifteen.

Zora looked at the empty door once more.

Maybe it wasn’t empty after all.

Maybe it was space.

Space for what was still unfolding.

For joy that grows.

For that someone special to walk back through.

🕊️ An Echoes of Faith Story

The door stood open. The Prayer already had

Echoes of Faith: The Weight of The Past| Flash Fiction

Prefer to listen? 🎧 The Weight of the Past is now available as an audio on YouTube — click here to listen for FREE!

 
The Weight of The Past

He’s been sober for nearly two years, but the silence from his daughter still haunts him. When forgiveness feels out of reach, can grace still find a way? This story explores redemption, regret, and the quiet power of a second chance. Read his journey below and discover what can happen when science meets the unseen.

It had been nearly two years since Darren last had a drink.

There were still moments when the urge would creep in—after a lengthy day at work, after enduring a heavy silence, or after she crossed his mind. Yet each time, he recalled the vow he had taken: to God, to himself, and to the daughter who hadn't talked to him since she was sixteen.

He sat on the edge of his bed, phone in hand, staring at the last text he’d sent her four months ago.

“Just wanted to say I’m proud of you. No pressure to reply. I’m here when you’re ready. –Dad”

The message had been delivered. Seen. No response.

Darren released a shaky breath as he browsed her public Instagram profile. He wasn't obsessing like he used to; he just wanted to make sure she was doing alright. She was in college these days, focusing on psychology. Occasionally, she shared photos of coffee mugs, sunsets, and friends unfamiliar to him. One picture from last week showed her laughing in a bookstore, and he found himself gazing at it longer than he intended.

He recalled bringing her to the library when she was eight years old. While she was inside, he dozed off in the car. Upon waking, he realized she was missing. The police eventually discovered her sobbing behind the building. She had waited and waited, then wandered away, believing he had abandoned her.

That was the first time she said, “I don’t trust you.”

She had every right.

Darren traced his thumb along the phone's edge, puzzled about why she had unblocked his number. Perhaps she wanted to check if he was still alive, felt sorry for him, or maybe it was an act of divine intervention—though Darren doubted that God would be involved in such matters.

He opened a new text. Typed. Erased. Typed again.

“You don’t have to forgive me. I just want you to know I’m still trying. Still sober. Still praying for you.”

He stared at it.

Then hit send.

The message went through instantly.

He laid the phone face down on the nightstand and leaned back against the wall, gazing up at the ceiling. His mind drifted to the cross his pastor had gifted him after receiving his one-year chip. It still hung by the door, sometimes feeling like an achievement, other times like a burden.

“God,” he whispered, “what if I’ve been forgiven by You… but not by her?”

There was no thunder or voice, only the hum of the fridge in the kitchen and the distant noise of cars driving by outside.

Still, he stayed there, eyes closed. Waiting.

The following morning, Darren found himself seated alone in the last row of a modest storefront church he had begun visiting every Tuesday night. It wasn't anything extravagant—just some rows of chairs, walls with chipped paint, and a table with lukewarm coffee by the entrance. Yet, it was the only space where he felt free from the shadows of his past.

This week’s devotional was led by a woman named Denise, someone from the recovery group who had a voice that was always gentler than Darren thought he deserved. She stood at the front with her Bible open, reading from Luke 15.

“While he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion for him; he ran to his son, threw his arms around him and kissed him…”

Her voice caught slightly on the word compassion, and she took a breath before closing the book.

“I used to think this story was only about the son,” she said. “But lately I’ve been thinking about the father. The waiting. The pain. The wondering if he’d ever get a second chance to love his child.”

Darren shifted in his seat, the breath catching in his throat.

“He didn’t wait until his son apologized,” Denise continued. “He didn’t demand explanations. He ran. He wrapped him in grace before a word was spoken. That’s how God loves us. And maybe that’s how we’re called to love too—even when the person we’re waiting on… doesn’t come back.”

Her gaze swept across the room without settling on anyone specific. However, Darren was convinced she glanced at him.

He dropped his head into his hands. His eyes burned.

That night, he didn’t text his daughter.

He didn’t check Instagram.

He sat at the kitchen table with an open Bible and a yellow legal pad, writing down the names of everyone he’d hurt—starting with her.

When he reached her name, he stopped.

Not because it hurt the most.

But because something in him said: This is where healing begins.

With a trembling hand, Darren circled her name on the legal pad, as if marking a boundary between the past and the future. He traced the letters of her name, feeling the weight of each stroke. It was a name that had once been spoken with tenderness, now carrying a heavy burden of regret and distance.

As he sat there in the quiet of his kitchen, he felt the weight of his actions settle around him like a shroud. The memories of missed birthdays, broken promises, and drunken arguments flooded back to him with a painful clarity. He thought about all the times he had chosen the bottle over his daughter, all the moments he had let her down.

But there was something different stirring within him now. A flicker of hope, a whisper of redemption. The words Denise had spoken at the church echoed in his mind, challenging him to love without conditions, to offer grace without expecting anything in return.

The sudden ringing of his cell phone jolted him from his deep contemplation

Darren didn’t recognize the number at first. Thought about ignoring it—like he did with most unknowns. But something in him stirred. He picked up.

"Hello?" Darren answered, his voice tentative.

There was a moment of silence on the other end, and Darren's heart began to race. Could it be her? The daughter he had been yearning to hear from for so long?

"Dad?”

The word pierced through the phone, sending a wave of emotions crashing over Darren. It was her. It was his daughter.

Tears welled up in his eyes as he struggled to compose himself. "Yes, sweetheart, it's me," he managed to say, his voice thick with emotion.

"I... I got your message," she said softly, her voice trembling with an emotion Darren couldn't quite place.

Darren's grip on the phone tightened. This was it. This was the moment he had been waiting for, hoping for. "I've missed you so much," he whispered, the words carrying a lifetime of longing.

There was a pause on the line before she spoke again. "I've missed you too, Dad,” her voice cracked, and Darren felt his heart shatter and mend all at once. They spoke for hours that night, dancing around the painful memories and tiptoeing into the future they both longed to be a part of. She told him about her classes, her friends, her dreams. He listened in awe, hanging on to every word as if it were a lifeline.

When the call finally ended, Darren sat in the dimly lit kitchen, the weight of regret replaced by something softer.

Hope.

He looked at the legal pad in front of him—the names, the past, the pain.

And he circled hers again.

This time, not in grief.

But in grace.

And for the first time in a long time, he believed that maybe...

this was just the beginning.