Weekly Unfinished Tales and Short Stories from our Dataset
Welcome to our daily collection of short stories, emergent narratives drawn directly from our ongoing creative arts and research program, “Unfinished Tales.” This interdisciplinary experiment in storytelling was undertaken primarily for fun, driven by a simple curiosity to explore the boundaries of narrative and to learn what we can do when creative practice meets new technological frontiers. Each piece represents a snapshot from our dataset, a glimpse into the diverse worlds and characters we are exploring.
These narrative fragments serve a dual purpose within our research framework. For our work in AI-Assisted Scriptwriting, they act as raw material for generating novel ideas, testing plot structures, and developing alternative story arcs in collaboration with generative models. Concurrently, they are instrumental in our Talent Development studies, allowing us to analyze the evolving skills needed for creative professionals to manage AI and immersive technologies, highlighting the importance of digital literacy and interdisciplinary collaboration in the future of storytelling.
Today’s Unfinished Tales and Short Stories

A Fine Line in Autumn’s Chill
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Medical Drama | Genre: Romance
The emergency room pulsed, a living organism of beeping monitors, hushed directives, and the pervasive scent of antiseptic. Outside, an incessant autumn rain lashed against the windows, a grey curtain mirroring the exhaustion in Dr. Robin Callaghan’s eyes. Another Friday night, another deluge of human fragility, and the city’s wet, cold breath seemed to seep through the hospital’s very walls.

The Cold Stone
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Fantasy | Genre: Crime Procedural
The first true bite of winter had arrived with a dusting of snow, settling like fine sugar over the city’s park. Streetlights, still hazy against the pre-dawn gloom, cast long, distorted shadows of skeletal trees across the crisp, untouched white. The air hung still, sharp with the scent of wet earth and impending frost, clinging to wool scarves and chilling fingertips even through gloved hands. A single, rickety wooden bench, half-hidden beneath a snow-laden hawthorn, offered a small, desolate stage for an unscheduled meeting. The quiet was profound, broken only by the distant, muffled sigh of a municipal plough on a main road, a sound that seemed to chew at the edges of the pervasive silence. Everything felt held, expectant, like a breath drawn and waiting to be released.

A Frost-Kissed Bargain
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Cyberpunk | Genre: Western
The city’s perpetual hum, a low thrum of processors and distant transit, felt oddly muffled under the first unexpected blanket of snow. It wasn’t much, just a dusting, but it clung to the skeletal branches of the plaza’s few surviving trees and whitened the worn concrete of the benches, making the usual grime feel momentarily pristine. Overhead, the holographic adverts for synth-protein and cyber-enhancements shimmered, casting their garish colours onto the pristine white, creating a kaleidoscope of fleeting, artificial brilliance. The air, thin and sharp, carried the faint, metallic tang of static electricity from the power conduits running beneath the walkways, mingling with the earthy scent of wet soil and cold asphalt.

A Blanket of Unscheduled Quiet
Author: Leaf Richards | Category: Whimsical / Playful | Genre: Dystopian
The city, usually a symphony of muted, rhythmic hums, found itself momentarily softened by a thin, unscripted layer of crystalline precipitation. It was a deviation, an aberration, from the meticulously catalogued weather patterns broadcasted daily. In the sprawling, geometric expanse of Centennial Park, where every tree and bench had its designated coordinates, the pristine white offered an unsettling, yet oddly beautiful, contrast to the rigid order. A cold, crisp air, sharp with the metallic scent of static electricity, hung heavy, stirring the skeletal branches of the ‘Approved Flora’ and hinting at a much deeper chill to come.

The Umber Unfurling
Author: Eva Suluk | Category: Psychological Thriller | Genre: Romance
The air, thick with the scent of damp earth and distant woodsmoke, hung heavy over the old community hall. Outside, autumn was dismantling the trees, leaving behind a rich carpet of amber and russet. Inside, the hushed murmur of the craft fair provided a strange counterpoint to the quiet intensity brewing between two strangers, a sense of something profound and slightly unnerving beginning to unfurl.
Design Notes and Applied Research
This daily collection explores the intersection of established genres and disparate subject matter, from Westerns infused with Cyberpunk elements to Crime Procedurals set within Fantasy worlds. This curated juxtaposition serves the project’s core goal of examining skills development by challenging creators to adapt traditional narrative structures. The process mirrors the digital transformation of storytelling, where familiar forms are constantly being remixed and re-contextualized for new platforms.
The resulting works stand as a record of a spirited and highly generative experiment in creative constraint. By blending tones from the playful to the psychological, these stories demonstrate the versatility and resilience of narrative archetypes. This collection effectively captures a dynamic moment of exploration within our program, highlighting the potential of structured experimentation in the artistic process.
About the Project
The Unfinished Tales and Short Stories collection was an interdisciplinary arts and narrative storytelling experiment in 2025. It was part of a creative arts and participatory research project by The Arts Incubator Winnipeg and the Art Borups Corners collectives. It focuses on two key areas: AI-Assisted Storytelling and Scriptwriting, exploring AI tools for generating ideas, plot structures, and story arcs; and Talent Development and Training, studying digital skills, literacy and training needs for creative professionals by experimenting with AI and immersive technologies to inform future projects. Funding and support were generously provided by the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects program and the Government of Ontario. We thank them for supporting the arts, digital transformation, and applied Artificial Intelligence (AI) research.
