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Category: Speculative

Speculative fiction is a supergenre that encompasses a number of different types of fiction, from science fiction to fantasy to dystopian. The stories take place in a world different from our own. Speculative fiction knows no boundaries; there are no limits to what exists beyond the real world. Learn more about speculative fiction in Margaret Atwood’s MasterClass.

Exciting News from Pages Alight (and S.M. Ulbrich!)

Hello, friends and fellow story-lovers!

I’m Shirley Ulbrich, writing under the pen names Pages Alight (for my more whimsical and visual storytelling projects) and S.M. Ulbrich (for my fantasy, sci-fi, and dystopian tales). Today I’m thrilled to share that we’re hard at work on a brand-new story book—a project that’s been dancing around in my imagination for quite some time. I can’t wait to tell you more as it takes shape!

In the meantime, my little collection of small notebooks (there are currently three available) continues to bring joy to folks who love to jot down thoughts, sketches, or daily reflections. They’re simple, charming, and perfect for tucking into a bag or keeping by your bedside.

And the big news I’ve been waiting for… my luxury adult coloring book is finally in review! After a couple of rejections (those picky full-bleed page requirements kept tripping us up), it looks like we might see it go live as soon as today or tomorrow. Fingers crossed—I’ll shout it from the rooftops the moment it’s approved and available!

To celebrate the creative energy flowing right now, here are a couple of illustrations I created that didn’t make it into the final story book or coloring pages. I thought you might enjoy them as a little sneak peek into my artistic process:

Sleepy Tales
Emma and the Whispering Unicorn

What do you think? Do any of these spark a story idea for you? I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments!

If you’d like to stay in the loop on the new story book, the coloring book launch, or any of my other creations (under any of my names), feel free to subscribe to the newsletter or follow along on social media. Your support means the world to this indie author and visual storyteller.

Thank you for being part of this creative journey with me. Here’s to more stories, more colors, and more pages alight!

Warmly,

Shirley Ulbrich

aka Pages Alight & S.M. Ulbrich

Don’t Know Where This Was Discussed, but Here’s My Thoughts

A man slaughters a big cow, starts the grill, and says to his daughter, “Daughter, go call our relatives, friends, and neighbors to join us… We’re having a celebration!”


The daughter goes out to the street and shouts, “Please help! My father’s house is on fire!”
After some time, only a few people come out to help, while many others act like they didn’t hear anything. The ones who came stay, eat, and enjoy the food until late.

The father, confused, looks around and says to his daughter, “I don’t know most of these people. Some I’ve never seen before. Where are our friends, family, and neighbors?”


The daughter calmly replies, “The people who came didn’t come for a party. They came because they thought we were in trouble. These are the people who care about us. These are the ones who deserve to celebrate with us.”

Lesson: The ones who don’t show up when you’re struggling don’t deserve to be with you when you succeed.

What do you think? I think it all depends on the intent of a person, really. Some people may WANT to help, but don’t know how. There are times in everyone’s lives when it’s just too hard to stretch and serve another, even though we want to help.

If someone came to our door right now, my husband would do everything he can, but he can’t give money or can’t be gone from the house very long, as people need him here. Those circumstances must be taken into consideration, and not punish those with good intent.

Created With Nightcafe

Below is my Creation Listing for 2025. As you can see, I haven’t been using this tool very long, but I’m certainly enjoying it. The entries in the piece shows some of my books and yet-to-be published books of this year.

You can see Misty, the mermaid of the Emerald Coast, from my 2 children’s books of the same name. She’s chatting with 6-year-old George Washington and his buddy, the brave eagle.

Under that section, you’ll find the book cover for my Washington’s Fantastical Crossing, where he’s being watched by merfolk – I really hadn’t planned to write so many stories about merfolk!

The one at the bottom middle is part of my America’s Great Perfect Storm. The leopard and night-watchers are suggestive of Obama’s dream — more on that later.

The bottom left is from my YA speculative fiction, “The Covenant Fire”, a story about a team asked to locate and activate an ancient artifact, while avoiding the evil cabal chasing them to recover the artifact to use for their purposes. This artifact is meant to bring about the 2nd Resurrection and gather the Lost Ten Tribes.

“Pages Alight” is my forthcoming podcast on YouTube! Coming very soon.

creator.nightcafe.studio/creation/9P7SXN5m9VIVEBZ8XgHJ/my-2025-wrap

Thanks for reading!

Check this out!

What do you think of my new favorite book cover for my upcoming book, “Washington’s Fantastical Crossing “? Please let me know what you think…

Thanks!

Check out: NightCafe Studio!

I’ve just discovered this wonderful place! The artists there are truly amazing. I’m going to learn a lot from this group…check it out!

creator.nightcafe.studio/creation/ATIQ6ojq5lhIhNULO1MJ/a-lone-samurai-warrior-stands-on-a-windswept-desolate-plain-silhouetted-against-a-sky-ablaze-with-a-

https://nightcafe.art/ru/SMU?refsrc=share

Thanks!

The Call: Secrets and Shadows

Below is a story I entered in a contest on the website Fanstory. Unfortunately, I didn’t read the instructions carefully enough, so I wrote it too long. There was a max word count and I went over by quite a lot. Lesson learned: don’t be in such a rush and omit reading all the instructions! I entered late and was near the entry deadline. Oh well! Now, this is for your enjoyment: my attempt at mystery/crime writing.

Union Station

The phone buzzed on the counter, a persistent vibration slicing through the quiet hum of Anna’s kitchen. She glanced at it absently, stirring her coffee, the steam rising in lazy curls like forgotten memories.

The number was unfamiliar — an area code from somewhere east, maybe Chicago. She let it ring out, assuming it was another spam call about extended warranties or debt consolidation. But then it buzzed again. Same number. Her stomach twisted with an inexplicable unease. She picked up.

“Hello?” Her voice came out sharper than intended, edged with caution.

“Marcus?” She gripped the counter, the cool granite anchoring her as the room seemed to tilt. “How… why the hell are you calling me now?”

“Anna?” The reply was gravelly, worn by time, but instantly recognizable. Her breath caught in her throat. Marcus. After twelve long years.

A low chuckle escaped him, bitter and laced with exhaustion. “Didn’t think you’d hear from me again, did you? Hey, I didn’t either. But I’m in trouble, Anna. The kind that’s got me looking over my shoulder every single minute.”

She hadn’t heard that voice since the night he’d walked out of their cramped Chicago apartment. They were twenty-five then, wild and inseparable, tangled in a love that felt invincible—until it wasn’t.

He’d left behind a half-empty bottle of bourbon on the kitchen table and a scribbled note: I’m sorry. I can’t. No explanation, no goodbye. Just gone. She’d searched for him at first, calling friends, scouring social media, even filing a missing persons report. But he vanished like smoke.

Over the years, she’d rebuilt her life in Seattle: a steady job as a graphic designer, a cozy apartment overlooking the Sound, casual dates that never went anywhere. She’d convinced herself he was dead, or worse, that he simply hadn’t cared enough to stay. Now, here he was, dredging up the past like a bad dream.

“What kind of trouble?” she asked, her voice steady despite the storm brewing inside her.

“The kind where people end up dead if I don’t fix it fast.” A heavy pause stretched across the line. “I need your help, Anna. You’re the only one I can trust.”

She laughed, a sharp, hollow sound that echoed off the tiled walls. “Trust? You disappear for over a decade, and now you need my help? You’ve got some nerve, Marcus.”

“I know. Anna, I know.” His voice softened, cracking at the edges. “I wouldn’t be calling if there was any other way. Please.”

She paced the kitchen, her bare feet cold against the floor. Outside, the Seattle rain pattered against the windows, blurring the city lights into a hazy glow.

Hanging up would be easy—should be easy. But there was something in his tone: raw desperation, mingled with a fear she’d never heard from him before. It hooked her, pulling at threads she’d long thought severed.

“What do you need?” she said finally, the words tasting like defeat.

“There’s a package in a locker at Union Station. Chicago. I need you to pick it up and bring it to me.”

“Chicago?” Her voice pitched higher. “You expect me to drop everything, fly across the country for you? After all this time?”

“I’ll cover the ticket. Everything. Anna, please… it’s bigger than me. Bigger than what happened between us.”

She sank into a chair at the table, her coffee growing cold. “What’s in the package, Marcus?”

“I can’t say. Not over the phone. Lines aren’t safe.”

“Of course,” she muttered, rolling her eyes. “Same old Marcus, always with the secrets and shadows.”

He didn’t rise to the bait. Instead, he rattled off a locker number and a four-digit code. “There’s a flight out tomorrow morning. I’ll text you the details. Anna… I’m sorry. For everything. I never stopped—”

The line went dead before he could finish, leaving her staring at the phone, her heart pounding.

Sleep evaded her that night. She tossed in bed, memories flooding back: lazy Sundays in bed, laughing over burnt pancakes; heated arguments that ended in passionate reconciliations; the way his eyes lit up when he talked about his dreams of adventure, far from their mundane life. And then, the emptiness after he left.

She’d thrown herself into work, traveled solo to places they’d once planned to see together, even dated a few guys who reminded her a little too much of him. But none of it filled the void.

By dawn, she was at the airport, boarding a red-eye flight with a carry-on bag and a knot of doubt in her gut. Why was she doing this? Closure? Curiosity? Or something more stupid, like hope?

The flight was turbulent, mirroring her thoughts. She landed in O’Hare under a slate-gray sky, the wind whipping her hair as she hailed a cab to Union Station.

Union Station

The station was a bustling hive of echoes and hurried footsteps, commuters weaving through the grand hall like threads in a tapestry. She found the lockers in a dimly lit corner, the air thick with the scent of stale coffee and exhaust. Her fingers trembled as she punched in the code.

The door clicked open with a metallic groan. Inside sat a small metal case, no larger than a hardcover book, secured with a combination lock. It was heavier than it looked, as if weighted with secrets. She zipped it into her backpack, scanning the crowd for any watchful eyes. Paranoia, she told herself. But her skin prickled nonetheless.

Marcus had texted an address: a derelict warehouse on the city’s industrial outskirts. The cab driver raised an eyebrow but said nothing, dropping her off amid crumbling concrete and overgrown weeds.

The building loomed like a forgotten relic, its windows boarded up, graffiti scrawled across the rusted walls like urban hieroglyphs. She knocked tentatively, the sound swallowed by the wind.

The door creaked open, and there he was. Marcus. Older, with threads of gray weaving through his dark hair, deep lines etched around his eyes and mouth.

But those eyes — restless, piercing —were the same. They still held that spark, like he was always one breath away from bolting.

“You came,” he said, his voice a mix of relief and disbelief. He stepped aside, ushering her in.

“You didn’t leave me much choice.” She held up the backpack. “This what you wanted?”

He nodded, closing the door behind them with a soft click. The warehouse interior was cavernous, dimly lit by a single flickering bulb dangling from a chain.

Stacks of crates lined the walls, casting long shadows. A rickety table in the center held a clutter of yellowed papers, a laptop, and an empty takeout container. He took the case from her, his hands steady but reverent, as if handling something fragile and dangerous.

“What’s going on, Marcus?” she demanded, crossing her arms. “You owe me an explanation. A real one.”

He set the case on the table and flipped open the latches. Inside nestled a glass vial filled with an amber liquid that seemed to pulse faintly under the light, like a living thing. “This,” he said quietly, “is why I left all those years ago.”

She stared at it, then at him. “A vial? You left me over a vial?”

He sighed, rubbing his temples. “It’s not just any vial. I got mixed up with some bad people back then. Scientists, black-market types, government spooks—I still don’t know the full picture. They were developing something revolutionary. A serum. It could cure diseases, extend life… or weaponize it to control populations. I was their courier, their errand boy. Young and dumb, thinking I was part of something big.”

“And this?” She gestured at the vial, her voice laced with skepticism.

“The last viable sample. The project went south — betrayals, leaks. Everyone involved started disappearing. I took this and ran. That’s why I left you. To keep you safe. If they’d known about you…”

She processed his words, the pieces clicking into place like a puzzle she’d never wanted to solve. “So you’ve been hiding all this time? Running from shadows?”

“Not shadows. Real people. Ruthless ones.” His eyes darted to the door. “They’ve been closing in. That’s why I needed you — no connections, no trail.”

Before she could respond, a low rumble echoed outside: tires crunching on gravel, deliberate and ominous. Marcus’s face drained of color. “Great. They’re here.”

Adrenaline surged through her. “Who? Your ghosts?”

He grabbed her arm, yanking her toward a shadowed back exit. “No time. Run. Don’t look back.”

She wrenched free, her pulse thundering. “I’m not leaving you again, Marcus. Not like this.”

His gaze met hers, raw and conflicted; regret, fear, and something warmer flickering there. “Okay. Together, then.”

They burst out the back door into the pouring rain, the vial secure in her backpack. The downpour soaked them instantly, turning the ground to mud. Footsteps pounded behind, sharp voices slicing through the storm like knives. “There! Don’t let them get away!”

An alley stretched ahead, flanked by chain-link fences and abandoned lots. They sprinted, breaths ragged, splashing through puddles that reflected the city’s muted lights. A black SUV screeched around the corner, headlights piercing the gloom like predatory eyes, pinning them in place.

Marcus shoved her behind a rusted dumpster, his body shielding hers. “They’ll kill for that vial,” he whispered urgently, rain streaming down his face. “It’s not just a cure. It’s power. Whoever controls it decides who lives, who dies. Governments, corporations — they all want it.”

A shadow detached from the alley’s mouth: a figure in black, rain-slicked coat billowing, a silenced pistol glinting in the dim light. Anna’s heart hammered against her ribs, terror clawing at her throat. She clutched the backpack, the case’s weight a grim reminder of the chaos she’d stepped into.

“Marcus,” she hissed, “what now?”

He peeked around the edge, his jaw set. “We fight. Or we run smarter.”

The figure advanced, boots squelching in the mud, scanning the shadows. Lightning cracked overhead, illuminating the scene in stark white. The pursuer’s face was masked, eyes cold and methodical.

“Give it up, Hale!” the man shouted, voice muffled by the storm. “No more running!”

Marcus tensed, then whispered, “On three. We bolt left, toward the tracks.”

One. Two. Three.

They exploded from cover, zigzagging through the alley. A shot whizzed past, embedding in the fence with a metallic ping. Anna’s legs burned, fear fueling her speed. Another crack, louder, closer. Marcus stumbled, clutching his side, blood blooming through his shirt.

“Marcus!” she screamed, grabbing his arm.

“Keep going!” he gasped, pushing her ahead.

But the shadows multiplied —more figures emerging from the rain, closing the net. The vial thrummed against her back like a heartbeat. Ahead, train tracks gleamed under distant lights, a possible escape. Behind, the hunters drew nearer, their pursuit relentless.

As another shot rang out, splitting the night, Anna realized this call had pulled her into a web she might never escape. The rain washed away her tears, but not the dread: was this reunion, or the end?

Narrative Nook Monday #3: Echoes of the Forgotten Shore

Narrative Nook Monday: Echoes of the Forgotten Shore

Welcome back to Narrative Nook Monday, dear readers—a cozy corner of Family Circle 14 and S.M.Ulbrich Blog where stories unfold like whispers from the bayou, blending our Acadian and Cajun roots with threads of wonder and heart. Today, let’s dive into a tale inspired by the resilient spirits of the Gulf Coast, where the sea holds secrets and second chances. I call this one “The Lantern’s Promise”, a short story of loss, light, and the unbreakable pull of home. Pull up a chair, brew some chicory coffee, and let the words carry you away.


In the salt-kissed hamlet of Petit Rivière, where the Mississippi’s lazy fingers tangled with the Gulf’s restless waves, lived an old fisherman named Étienne. His days blurred into a rhythm of nets and knots, his nights into the hush of a widow’s solitude. Twenty years had passed since the great storm of ‘05 stole his Marie—not her body, mind you, but her spark—leaving him adrift in a world that felt as empty as the bay after a nor’easter.

Étienne’s boat, L’Étoile Filante (Shooting Star, though it hadn’t shot anywhere in a decade), bobbed forgotten at the rickety dock. He mended nets by lantern light now, not for the sea, but for the ghosts that gathered in the gloaming. Folks in town said he talked to shadows, but Étienne knew better: they were echoes. Marie’s laugh in the wind, her callused hands braiding his hair with tales of her Acadian grandmère, who fled the British expulsion in 1755, carrying only a locket and a song.

One fog-shrouded dawn, as the herons cried their mournful reveille, a stranger washed up on the shore. Not a man, exactly, but a silhouette stitched from mist and memory—a figure cloaked in seaweed, eyes like polished abalone shells. “Étienne LeBlanc,” it rasped, voice like gravel under keel, “you’ve kept my light too long.”

He froze, net half-mended in his lap. The lantern at his feet flickered, its flame dancing defiant against the damp. “Who are you to claim what’s mine?” he growled, though his heart hammered like a gator’s tail on tin.

The figure knelt, close enough for him to smell the brine and something sweeter—jasmine from Marie’s garden. “I am the Keeper of Lost Promises. Your Marie made one the night the storm came: to light your way home, no matter how far the tide pulls.” It extended a hand, palm up, revealing a tiny glass orb etched with Acadian fleur-de-lis. Inside swirled a miniature tempest, frozen mid-roar.

Étienne’s breath caught. That night replayed in his mind’s eye: Marie pressing the orb into his fist as winds howled, her lips fierce against his. “Keep this, mon cœur. It’ll guide you when I’m gone. Promise me you’ll live, not just survive.” He’d nodded, numb, and tucked it away. But grief is a sly thief; it had hoarded the promise like a miser with coins.

“Why now?” he whispered, the words cracking like driftwood.

The Keeper’s eyes softened, reflecting the lantern’s glow. “Because the shore forgets no one, but it tires of waiting. Sail out at dusk, Étienne. Follow the light to where her echo lingers.”

Dusk painted the sky in bruised purples and golds. Against the mutters of neighbors (“Old Étienne’s finally lost it”), he shoved off in L’Étoile Filante, the boat groaning like an old friend roused from slumber. The orb nestled in the lantern, its inner storm now a steady pulse of blue fire. He steered into the gathering dark, the Gulf a vast inkwell swallowing stars.

Hours bled into the velvet night. Waves slapped the hull like impatient lovers, and doubt gnawed at him—had grief conjured this madness? Then, a glimmer: not from the orb, but ahead, where sea met sky in a hazy seam. A chorus of lights bobbed there, faint as fireflies, weaving patterns that tugged at his soul. He leaned into the tiller, heart thundering.

As L’Étoile cut through the swell, the lights resolved into lanterns—dozens, hundreds—drifting on a hidden atoll, a crescent of sand veiled by perpetual mist. Figures moved among them, translucent as moonlit lace: souls unmoored by storms past, Acadian exiles and Cajun kin, waiting for their lights to be claimed. And at the heart, Marie—her hair wild as the waves that took her, her smile a beacon.

“Étienne,” she called, voice clear as a fiddle’s reel. She stepped forward, solidifying in the lantern’s warmth, her hand cool but real against his weathered cheek. “You kept your promise. Now let me keep mine.”

They talked till the stars wheeled overhead— of lost years, of the boys they’d never had, of the songs her grandmère sang to summon courage. The other lanterns brightened with each word, promises reignited, pulling their keepers home across the water. Dawn crept in, gilding the mist, and Marie pressed the orb back into his palm. “This isn’t goodbye, mon amour. It’s the light we carry together. Go build that garden again. Plant jasmine for me.”

He sailed back as the sun crested, the Gulf now a mirror of gold. L’Étoile Filante kissed the dock with a sigh of relief. The town stirred, eyes wide at the old man grinning like a fool, his nets abandoned for a shovel and seeds. That night, as jasmine bloomed improbably under his window, Étienne lit his lantern—not for ghosts, but for the living promise within.

And on fogged dawns thereafter, when strangers washed ashore, he’d share the tale: “The sea don’t steal; it lends. Just follow the light.”

What do you think, friends? Does The Lantern’s Promise stir echoes in your own heart—memories of loved ones, or the quiet strength of heritage that lights our way? Share in the comments below, or drop a line on Goodreads or Amazon. If this nook warmed you, curl up with one of my Zion Chronicles for more tales of trials turned triumphs, or revisit Discovering Misty for seaside magic that lingers. Until next Monday, may your own lanterns burn bright. Au revoir!

*~ S. M. Ulbrich*

(Word count: ~750. Inspired by Gulf Coast folklore and the enduring love in stories like Love You Forever.)

Saturday Snippet #1: A W-I-P The Covenant Fire

From my manuscript, The Covenant Fire, a Christian/LDS YA Apocalyptic Novel with loads of exciting adventure. To be published soon!

Chapter 1, paragraph 4.

The ground heaved, a beast awakening. Hymnbooks crashed, a child’s scream pierced the air. Sarah’s training snapped in—she gripped the pew, eyes locking on exits. “Stay calm!” she barked, voice slicing through gasps. A young man nearby, Ethan Caldwell, 28, dropped his leather journal, ink smearing as the quake roared. Beams splintered, stained glass exploded in a rain of crimson shards. The Tabernacle groaned, its 164-year-old frame buckling.

Salt Lake LDS Temple

“Down!” Sarah yelled, sprinting down the aisle. A light fixture swung, nearly clipping her. She scooped up a wailing boy, dodging falling plaster, her shoulder slamming a pew. Pain seared, but she shielded him, scanning for safety. “To the exit!” she shouted, clutching the kid tight.

Ethan pushed through the chaos, waving people toward a side door. Their eyes met briefly—his hazel gaze intense, almost knowing. She handed the boy to his sobbing mother, panting. “Good move,” he said, voice steady. “Military?”

“Ex-Army,” she snapped, as the ground lurched again. They ducked under a pew, the air thick with dust. Outside, the Salt Lake Temple’s spire swayed, the Angel Moroni teetering, skyscrapers collapsing in glittering bursts. A gas main erupted, fire licking the horizon, screams blending with sirens.

(Fully written, but not yet published. To Be Continued)

Shirley