Wordless Unblocked -
The notebook’s final mark—if a final mark can be named—was a thin, perfectly round shadow left by a pressed, dry lemon slice. It was both discreet and obvious, a small, citrus halo that smelled faintly of memory. Someone framed that page and hung it where regulars might see it: a reminder that sometimes the most interesting stories are the ones that never asked to be told.
Here’s a short, interesting story titled "Wordless, Unblocked."
III.
X.
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Outside, city noise braided into the hum inside: a bike bell, a dog’s faint bark, the distant slap of newspaper against a lamppost. Inside, the blank page absorbed these moments like a sponge—quiet, patient. The cafe’s regulars began to treat the page as if it were a shared city square: a place to leave folds of attention, not sentences.
Days passed. Weeks. The page grew dense with these small presences—no words, only traces: smudges, leaf imprints, a train ticket tucked in like a secret, a pressed bouquet of receipts. When someone frowned at the lack of text, another would point at a corner where two strangers’ marks overlapped—a conversation in pigment and crease. wordless unblocked
Morning light spilled through the cafe’s fogged windows, sketching gold across a notebook left open on the table. The page was blank—no words, no marks—yet people paused as if a magnet hummed beneath the paper.