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Crime Fiction Sad

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I taught her to lie before she could spell her name. Told her people were soft, stupid, and always looking for a story that made them feel good about parting with money. Back then, our narrative was the plain truth: an amputee raising his kid on his own. Before long, we noticed how different people responded to different aspects of our lives. Our narrative then developed into a collection of short stories we kept at the ready. I curated those tales, and she delivered them with big eyes and borrowed grief. We weren’t thieves; not in our minds. Just realists cashing in on a world that stopped caring about people like us long ago.


“Only a fool would put his hope in the compassion of strangers. It’s us or them, and it sure as hell ain’t gonna be us.”


Back then, she just nodded. Lately, she doesn’t wait for me to speak.


We’re in some town; I don’t even remember the name. We never stay long. Too many faces recognize you, too many stories get recycled. So we move on.


June picks the marks now, and I don’t stop her. Not because I agree with her choices, but because she makes them with precision, and pride. It used to be me. I’d scan the crowds the way I once scanned rooftops, looking for tells. Shaky hands, unfocused gaze, someone seemingly neglected. June was the hook. A girl with a welfare ruck three sizes too big for her; tremble in her voice. Maybe a fake bruise under the cheekbone, when we needed it.


“The guy with the cardigan. At the boardwalk,” she says, peeling an orange.


“Why him?”


“Thinks the world still owes him something.”


“What’s the story?”


She shrugs. “Something tragic. I’ll improvise.”


There was a time I polished the lies. Refined them; cleaned them up. Now, June writes her own scripts. Better than I ever did. She always admired me. Even if I couldn’t look at her without remembering the woman she took from me.


By now, she learned everything I taught her and started adding her own. It wasn’t a game to her. It was art; a show. Every victim, a new stage. But somewhere along the line, it stopped being for money. It was for me. June wanted me to be proud. And I was.


Her cons get sharper each time. One afternoon, she comes home from a run, smiling like she’s just won a medal.


“You should’ve seen him,” she says, tossing some bills on the counter like a trophy. “Tears down his face. Thought I was his niece from Pittsburgh.”


I hear her talking to herself at night, practicing voices. Some little-girl sweet, some hollow and broken. Something she figured out on her own along the way. One morning I hear her sing in a low, breathy voice:


“Nana, please remember my name. I still sleep holding your frame.”


It’s too good. Too cruel.


“You scare me sometimes.”


She grins like it’s a compliment. Another time we drive by a care home.


“Let me try something,” she says, grabbing my arm.


Says she’ll find someone lonely; someone slow. I stay in the car, engine idling, fingers tightening on the wheel. June walks in with her scarf tied like a schoolgirl’s bow. She finds a guy in a chair by the fish tank. Gray sweater; lost eyes. She kneels at his side.


I can see her mouthing Grandpa. His head lifts; confused, hopeful. She nods, her voice breaks. His hands tremble. She takes them. They talk. He weeps. Laughs. Takes off his ring and presses it into her hand. June kisses his forehead and walks out like she was born from the silence in that room. Back in the car, she rolls the ring across her palm.


“Solid gold,” she says, looking at it. “Can you believe it? Sometimes I feel like I could tell them anything and they’d buy it.” She laughs, low and self-satisfied.


And there it is. A strange mix of pride and rot in my chest. I want to be proud. And I used to be. Until now. She reminds me of all the young, hot-headed boots back in the day. They’d discard the leash by week two. Drunk on power and the silence of command. Barely dry and determined to go out wilding in the village. Eager to do something. Everything. Anything devoid of order, structure, and rules.


And then there were others. The ones who’d gone feral. Lacking any morals or remorse. Not looking at you, or even through you. Just profiling and scanning for weakness. Back then, I hated those types. The ones who stopped pretending they were human and wore it like a badge.


“You enjoyed it?” I ask. “The moment, I mean.”


“Yeah,” she says, turning her head. “Of course.”


That night I can’t sleep. I watch the ceiling and think of the way her face lit up. How natural it all looked. She didn’t just lie — she fed on it. Not just the money, but the ease of manipulation; the victory.


I tell her we’re leaving. No more cons for a while. June doesn’t protest. Thankfully, doesn’t even ask why. We drive west. Through small towns where most have little and those who do keep it close. We sleep in the car for three nights, and I don’t speak a word. The silence stretches between us like no-man's-land. Neither of us willing to cross it. On the fourth, she asks if we’re going somewhere in particular.


“No,” I say.


We end up in a town by the sea. Cheap motels, weather-beaten storefronts, off-season quiet. A place seemingly forgotten by the world. We check in under new names and I tell her we’ll find work. "Something honest this time." June just rolls her eyes.


I take a job helping around the dock and she disappears most days. I don’t ask. One night she comes back late, knuckles scabbed. June doesn’t say anything. I don’t push. Later, I find her sitting in the bathroom, the door half-open, staring at her reflection.


“You hate me now, don’t you?” she asks.


“No.” Then, after a beat, almost without meaning to, I add: “You did nothing wrong.”


June doesn’t say a word. Just closes the door, and I stand there, stunned at the lie I’d said like I believed it. I don’t sleep. On the edge of the bed, I ponder how many times I reassured myself it was all for her. To feed her, clothe her. To keep her safe. But it was always for me. For my anger; my loss. And she took it all in. Let it fill her. Because she wanted me to see her. And I never did; never could. Not the child, nor the student. Not even the echo of the woman I lost.


Now, for the first time, I see not just the damage in her, but the void. A space I carved out, piece by piece, and filled with my bile. She isn’t me; she’s worse. I told myself I had reasons: grief, betrayal, bills, pain. But her reason? Me.


That night, I pack. I leave her money and the keys to the car. Considering a note, no words come to mind, so I just walk away. Not because I don’t love her. But because I finally do.

Posted May 23, 2025
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186 likes 115 comments

Rhaevyn Hart
02:24 May 31, 2025

You packed so much into such a short story. It's visceral and raw, aching with loss and the things we are willing to do to survive. Even at the risk of watching someone we love become the worst part of ourselves. Like others, that last line completes this story like a shiny bow on a dark present. Well done!

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Dan Thonberg
17:06 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you, Rhaevyn! I was actually afraid that it ended up too short. I had more scenes, which I cut. Being pressed for time, I had to make the best of what I left myself with.

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AnneMarie Miles
23:48 May 30, 2025

That ending line hits like a truck! Nice take on the prompt, too. Congrats!

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Dan Thonberg
17:07 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you, AnneMarie! The ending was actually the first idea I had for this story. Everything else just fell into place.

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17:48 May 30, 2025

Beautifully expressed.

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Dan Thonberg
18:10 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you!

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Matt Ballance
17:27 May 30, 2025

Man, well deserved. That was phenomenal!

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Dan Thonberg
18:11 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you!

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Mary Bendickson
16:12 May 30, 2025

Congrats on the 🥳win. Raw and emotional.

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Dan Thonberg
18:14 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you, Mary!

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Mary Bendickson
18:33 Jun 05, 2025

Thanks gor the follow.

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Elizabeth Rich
15:56 May 30, 2025

Love/hate/indifference/caring. It's all there. The black hole of June's soul. Nice. Cool style.

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Dan Thonberg
18:15 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you so much, Elizabeth!

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Aiden Mars
14:27 May 30, 2025

The emotional architecture of this—the quiet rot, the aching pride, the slow unraveling of what love turns into when it’s built on damage—it’s masterful. June haunted me. The ring scene. The fish tank. That final silent lie. I honestly sat there, just still, after finishing it. You didn’t just write a story—you built a tragedy that’s still echoing. Huge congratulations—this was unforgettable.

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Dan Thonberg
18:22 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you so much, Aiden! A couple of things I’ve been working on came together in this story; as it would seem. Over the past few months I have worked through the Emotional craft of fiction, and another book aimed at writing more compact, more concise scenes. It started with the last two sentences. I had a hunch for the narrator, and I just went with it. How it all worked out still leaves me speechless. I thought it was way too short, and that the ending was going to be regarded as a rather low-hanging fruit for the prompt.

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Aiden Mars
20:52 Jun 05, 2025

It’s always wild when a story takes on a shape of its own, and it’s clear that your work with emotional craft really paid off here. Funny how something that starts with a couple lines can unravel into something quietly devastating. The ending didn’t feel low-hanging at all to me—it felt earned, precise, and haunting in its restraint. Sometimes the shortest pieces cut the deepest, and this one absolutely did.

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Olive Silirus
13:01 May 30, 2025

Love that last line.

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Dan Thonberg
18:23 Jun 05, 2025

Thank you, Olive! That was actually the start of it all. I worked backwards from that line.

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11:50 May 30, 2025

Congratulations, Dan! I love the line about no-man’s-land and no one wanting to cross it. That one’s going to stick with me.

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Dan Thonberg
12:14 May 30, 2025

Thank you! It fit just perfectly with the narrator's military background.

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Rebecca Hurst
10:22 May 30, 2025

Huge congratulations on your win, Dan. This is a beautifully observed story. Well done!

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Dan Thonberg
12:14 May 30, 2025

Thank you!

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John Rutherford
09:26 May 30, 2025

Congratulations

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Dan Thonberg
12:12 May 30, 2025

Thank you!

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Linda Kaye
18:28 May 29, 2025

Haunting was the first word that came to mind reading this. A sad story with raw emotions coming through. Great job on the prompt!

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Dan Thonberg
12:11 May 30, 2025

Thank you! I'm currently working through the 'Emotional Craft of fiction', and I think it starts to pay off :)

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Dragan Boroja
17:56 May 28, 2025

Great story, while reading I would feel the disgust coming up. Beautifully expressed the topic

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Dan Thonberg
12:09 May 30, 2025

Thank you! I actually thought that the conclusion was 'low-hanging fruit'... happy it worked out

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