Emauni332
Broken Constellations is a literary Christian fiction short story of approximately 6,000 words, set on a late-night Texas patio where two old friends sit beneath a sky one of them refuses to look at.
Marcus Hale hasn't prayed in eleven years. A lawyer by training and a skeptic by choice, he has spent the better part of a decade arguing truth into corners until it stopped moving - a skill that cost him his faith, his relationships, and an unfinished astrophysics thesis that proved, mathematically, what he no longer wanted to believe. When his college friend Daniel refuses to leave him alone with a bottle of whiskey and a paralegal on her way over, what begins as a quiet night unravels into a reckoning neither of them planned for.
Told entirely through dialogue, sensory detail, and accumulating memory, the story follows Marcus across a single night as the stars he once loved - and has spent years avoiding - refuse to stay silent.
Genre: Literary Christian fiction short story, sitting at the intersection of spiritual realism, character study, and Southern literary fiction. Faith is treated as psychologically real rather than didactically presented - earned through image and symbol rather than sermon. The Texas setting carries the humid moral pressure characteristic of Southern literary tradition. Comparable authors include Flannery O'Connor, Marilynne Robinson, and Ron Hansen. The tone is closer to literary fiction than inspirational fiction, and will resonate with readers who appreciate quiet, character-driven stories about doubt, grief, and the things we abandon when we're afraid they might be true.