Sid Aaron Hirji
Bio
Canadian born man who finds literature and science equally fascinating. Trauma bleeds through generations, words heal the hidden scars.
youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCS3WEyx5XeX-o8xRwG-cMlg
Achievements (1)
Stories (131/0)
The Save
If walls could talk, I would probably yell that the owner of this house needs to stop blowing on that trumpet. Does he honestly think that what he plays is music? If we walls had ears our ears would be bleeding. Our faces would be flushed and probably a plethora of expletives and insults would be yelled. That trumpet would be broken to pieces if we were people. However, everything serves a purpose. That trumpet served its purpose last week. As I am talking my sooty wall is being refurnished and repainted. This whole house has to undergo a remodel. It was because of the fire, a fire which saved a life.
By Sid Aaron Hirjiabout a year ago in Fiction
The Shadow
Professor Kass was the wealthiest most stubborn man in the city. He had never worked a day in his life. He had his teeth nicely cleaned monthly and visited the barber weekly. He was not actually a professor. He had a ton of books and played card games in his library. He had never so much read one of the books. He like many other arrogant men had inherited his fortune from his hard working father. Unlike his father he lived lavishly. Each week he would host a party. They would gamble and drink beer and fraternize with women. The reason why Professor Kass wouldn’t marry is he did not want to share his wealth. Tomorrow would begin his biggest adventure. He was going to go to Palau on a tropical getaway. Like always, he was going to fly first class.
By Sid Aaron Hirjiabout a year ago in Fiction
Failed Reset
Sarah was a robot programmed to serve. The Sauer family used her for all odd jobs. Pardon the pun but the Sauer’s lives were about to become sour from overusing the robot too much. Instead of doing chores the two children would get Sarah to do everything. As Sarah was a robot they felt she would always serve them. One time the toilet got plugged and Sarah plunged it, then cleaned up the horrible mess. Other times if the children broke something in the house they blamed the robot. For four months they had everything done for them. The parents, Ted and Suzanne decided the children would be okay to be home with Sarah alone. They went for their date night oblivious to the disaster that would come.
By Sid Aaron Hirjiabout a year ago in Fiction