Historical Fiction
A Ship Was Gaining
1782, CHARLES TOWN, SOUTH CAROLINA Mary Read. Calico Jack. Anne Bonny. Our names were known to many upon the seas and outside of them. We were wanted, dead or alive. Although if we were to be brought back alive, we would just end up dead. Really, the saying should be dead or deader; you can’t win either way.
By Luna Jordan8 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
June 16, 1930 — Dharasana The sun was already high when I stepped out of the modest hut, my dhoti clinging damply to my legs. The air shimmered with heat rising from the parched ground. Though I had not marched at Dharasana myself — the viceroy’s order had seen to that — I could not remain still. I had come not as a leader, but as a witness. Dharasana had become the crucible in which the spirit of our movement was tested.
By Alain SUPPINI8 months ago in Chapters
Mary Read
1782, CHARLES TOWN, SOUTH CAROLINA The day we met Mary Read, we were anchored down at another dock, to resupply and celebrate our newest spoils. Our usual method of celebration was enjoying the pleasures of the local tavern, drinking our fill and flirting with anything that had legs.
By Luna Jordan8 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
Near Bhimrad, June 14, 1930 We arrived in Bhimrad just after the sun had begun its descent, the hour when the heat loosens its grip on the land but the dust still clings to the skin. The village seemed carved from the dry earth itself — low mud huts with thatched roofs, sparse trees holding out against the sky, and narrow footpaths where goats nosed for shade. There was no fanfare, no procession. Only silence and the keen gaze of villagers who had waited.
By Alain SUPPINI9 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
Sabarmati, June 5, 1930 Today, the sun rose heavy with unease. The wind carried a quiet tension, a stillness charged with questions. We had returned from our march, from our arrests, from the trials that sought to stifle our breath. Yet the air felt thick, as if the movement itself was listening, waiting for something unseen to begin again.
By Alain SUPPINI9 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
May 22, 1930 – Yerwada Jail, Pune Letters Through Stone The wall speaks. Not in words, but in tiny scratches — the slow script of silence. I found them this morning, behind my cot, where the damp meets the mortar: initials, dates, nameless prayers etched with nails or fragments of metal. Some are just lines, some letters faded into shadow. One reads “M.K. 1923.” I do not remember carving it, but I believe it was mine. Another says simply: “Truth.” One is shaped like a river, looping, as if it refuses to flow straight under any authority.
By Alain SUPPINI9 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
May 19, 1930 – Yerwada Jail, Pune Charkha in the Dark Today, they brought my spinning wheel. It arrived without ceremony, tied with a coarse rope and bearing the dust of some forgotten storeroom. Yet when I touched it, I felt a pulse — not of wood, but of memory. This charkha has turned in my hands through seasons of both freedom and captivity. Now, it waits again to sing.
By Alain SUPPINI9 months ago in Chapters
Journal of Mohandas K. Gandhi
May 10, 1930 – Yerwada Jail, Pune Rain on the Ashes Today, the monsoon arrived. From the narrow window of my cell, I watched the first fat drops fall on the scorched courtyard, turning dust to paste, softening the world. There is a smell that only comes with the first rain—wet stone, broken soil, and something like release. The rains do not ask who is free and who is captive — they fall upon us all. And as they fall, I remember once again: nature itself is never colonized.
By Alain SUPPINI9 months ago in Chapters
Her County: Finale
PART 1 PART 2 PART 3 PART 4 The mouth of the wooden cathedral gaped as the thick, dark oak doors parted, pulled aside of their own accord as I stood upon the threshold. I looked from the hollow, dark depths of the entrance hall, swallowing what little moonlight was cast upon my back, to the heights of the edifice, bulging and buckling under its own mighty weight, with three large and open circular shutters. Unsure, I turned around to Meabh and the others, still by the fire, watching me. Their unblinking eyes stirred a twinge of unease in my chest, but they didn't appear apprehensive, nor glowering. It was more out of fascination, as though I was about to do something extraordinary. I returned to the opening, reminding myself what was at stake, and stepped into the shallow, dim island of light.
By Conor Matthews9 months ago in Chapters










