Submitted to: Contest #54

Where the Water Meets the Sand

Written in response to: "Write a story about someone looking to make amends for a mistake."

🏆 Contest #54 Winner!

Fantasy Drama Romance

My mother almost drowned me once.

My pudgy fingers were wrapped around a sapphire, a blue glass jewel caressed to smoothness by a century of waves. I had spied it resting on a dimple in the sand. I wondered at the shard’s origin; perhaps a pirate’s goblet or the perfume bottle of an exotic, sunken princess.

The slap rang in my ear before I felt the heat spread. I raised my hand to my face, too late to shield my stinging cheek. She snatched my treasure from the sand where it had dropped and hurled it in a high arc back into the waves.

My mother grasped my shoulders. “We never take gifts from the Ocean,” she hissed. 

I wriggled from her hold and ran towards the Ocean that had swallowed my prize. My mother’s arm looped around my waist and lifted me before I reached the line where the water meets the sand. I struggled against her iron grip, wailing as she hauled me across the beach to our cabin. She dragged me to the claw footed bathtub abandoned in the garden, full of rain and fallen leaves. My reflection kissed me as she pushed my head under.

I thrashed and choked down a mouthful of dirty water. My small fists beat the side of the tub. My lungs were scorching. Black specks multiplied in my vision. Right as the dots began to merge into a single darkness, my mother pulled me up by my hair.

Her fingers bit crescent moons into my shoulders. “This is the Ocean’s gift, Annabeth. We never take gifts from the Ocean. Do you understand me?”

She shook me until my head wobbled in affirmation. We never take gifts from the Ocean.

My mother’s grip loosened. She brushed my limp hair from my face. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry.” My soaking frock dampened hers as she pulled me into an embrace. “Annabeth,” she sighed. “I’m sorry.”

Our sliver of sand was littered with beautiful offerings from the Ocean. Twice a day, the waves crept closer to my mother’s home and when they bashfully retreated, there would be blush pink shells, and spires of bleached driftwood, and a carpet of sea glass beads transforming the beach into a stained glass mural. The locals whispered that my mother must be a sea witch or a mermaid to have enticed the Ocean to leave her so many presents. She ignored the gossip and the gifts. Every dawn, she would walk to the water’s edge and tip out the jar she used to collect her tears. “Someday I will replace the entirety of the Ocean,” she told me.

I asked once why she stayed here on the Ocean’s edge.

“For love,” was her only reply.

The ritual continued. The Ocean left a violin draped in seaweed, a marble coffin filled with pearls and snails, a golden sea turtle. When the sun awoke, my mother stepped past these marvels and poured out her jar of tears.

So with his gifts ignored, when I was eleven, the Ocean came to our door to ask for forgiveness.

His skin was nearly translucent and flashed rainbows in the glinting sun. He was dressed in a brown suit he had borrowed from a corpse. I had to crane my neck to see his gray eyes. He was so beautiful I nearly swallowed my tongue.

He extended a hand to me. It was elegant but his skin trembled as if his flesh was less than solid. His fingers gently brushed mine and I had the impression that, were I to grip them and pull, his skin would slough off and he would spill to the floor.

“Hello,” he glimmered in the doorway.

I was mesmerized into immobility. Droplets of water beaded on my skin where he had touched me.

He slid past me and poured himself into a kitchen chair.

I was unsure of the etiquette for when the Ocean has made himself a guest in your home. I scrambled for a polite gesture.

“Would you like a drink?” I asked.

His eyebrow floated up. He nodded slowly. I filled a glass halfway from the water pump and placed it in front of him. He peered at it and began to chuckle. I giggled alongside him but my cheeks blushed with shame.

The Ocean took at long drink of water. He held the glass to his lips and his throat rolled with his gulps. He replaced the glass on the table, brandishing it with a grin. The glass was overflowing with water now, rivulets spilling down the sides. I looked at the glass and then at the Ocean. He waggled his eyebrows. This time my laugh was genuine.

"Thank you for my drink." His teeth were a collection of pearls in varied hues. The effect was oddly pleasing, his smile being like a garden made more beautiful by the diversity of its blooms. "I should offer you something in return."

I shook my head.

"What about... a Sea Horse, a great black steed to ride through the waves? No? A little one, then."

I bit my lip and looked at the floor.

"Come now, every little girl wants a pony."

"Mama says we don't take gifts from the Ocean," I said to my dirty toes.

"Did she now..."

“Annabeth.” My mother threw my name like a harpoon when she entered the room. She yanked me back, nearly throwing me to the floor.

“Eugenia,” the Ocean exhaled.

“Get out.”

"I was just having a lovely chat with-"

"Leave."

“Oh, Genie, look how gaunt you are making me with your tears. You’re wearing me away,” he grinned, indicating to the hollows of his cheeks. “I’ve brought you a gift, my love.”

“I am not yours.”

Something quivered under his pale skin and dove beneath the surface, dragging his smile with it. He pouted juicily. “My beautiful Eugenia. Look at your face. A cliff face. Do you truly hate me so?”

“Leave my home now. Never come back.”

“Don’t you wish to hear what I have brought you?”

“Get. Out.”

His gray eyes perused my plain face and scrawny frame. “Such a beautiful daughter you have.”

I flushed crimson. My mother’s hands tightened on my shoulders, nails fitting into crescent groove scars. “Don’t,” she whispered.

“Ah, a crack in the stone.” The Ocean gleamed. “Genie. I’ve come to atone.”

My mother leaned heavily on my shoulders.

“Annabeth,” the Ocean whispered conspiratorially. “Go to the window.”

I hesitated. Gently, I extracted myself from under my mother’s weight. Though I feared she might, she did not fall.

I moved towards the window. Outside, there was a desert. The silver fish and jellies and albino dolphins flopped pathetically on the exposed sandy floor. On the edge, where the water once met the sand, there was a pile nearly as tall as me.

"Bones," I gasped. Long bones, bleached bones, skulls with small teeth. A string of seaweed dripped from an eye socket like an inky trail of tears.

“Your gift, Genie.”

“You stole them away because you were jealous.”

The Ocean shook his head remorsefully. “No, Eugenia. They wanted to come. It is not my fault they didn’t have the strength to come home.” He advanced towards my mother languidly. His stormy eyes were tortuous ecstasy. “Genie, Genie, I miss your skin. Slipping, sliding. Genie, you are my moon. You draw me near, push me away. I am endlessly under your control.”

The fish gasped, gaped. “They’re dying!” I cried.

The Ocean traced the air around my mother’s jaw. “A cliff face. Created by the endless flow of water.” He leaned his face close to hers. “I am your king and you are my goddess.” Her shallow breaths created ripples that radiated across his skin. “Eugenia,” he sighed into her. “I brought them home. I've brought our children home.”

The cascading crash broke them apart. The glass had hit the wall satisfactorily hard.

I indicated to the flailing sea life. “They’re dying,” I chastised.

The Ocean narrowed his gray eyes at me.

“Annabeth,” said my mother like a prayer.

The Ocean turned to her. He was weeping. Leaking. Water dripped from his eyes, his ears, his nostrils. It oozed from his skin.

“Take my gift,” he pleaded. “Forgive me. Come back to me.”

My mother was shaking. I slipped my fingers into hers.

“Genie,” trembled the Ocean. “Don’t you remember? It’s like flying.”

“I will never forgive you.”

“I could take her,” he spat. “I could send a wave and drag her out.”

My mother’s hand tightened around mine. “But you won’t.”

“Why?” The Ocean was quaking, vibrating with swirling, disobedient water.

My mother let go of my hand. She stepped closer to the Ocean and rested her fingers delicately on his cheek. His love was reflected back to him in her eyes. I understood. She stayed on the shore for love. Love of the Ocean kept her near. Love for her daughter kept her far. When she mixed her tears with the Ocean, she stood on the border where the water meets the sand and the waves kissed the tips of her toes in the lovers’ hateful equilibrium. I was not the first gift she took from the Ocean, but I was the first she would not allow him to take back.

You will leave now,” said my mother to the Ocean, “Because I am your moon and I am telling you to go.”

“Eugenia,” sighed the Ocean as the roaring flood cracked his jaw. The endless wave ripped open his skin and out he cascaded. The riptide swirled at my feet. My mother’s embrace held me steady as I buried my face in her shoulder. The cabin shuddered; the beams were breaking, crashing. Things wriggled, wound around my calves and gummed at my skin. We were caught in a whirlpool, drowning, suffocating, I opened my mouth to scream-

“Annabeth.”

I opened my eyes. The house was still standing. We were dry. The Ocean was where it belonged and the bones were gone.

“Annabeth,” said my mother. “Once you have flown in the Ocean...” She clutched my arms suddenly, her eyes wild. “The Ocean is deceptive. It is so much deeper than you could ever fathom.”

I brushed her hair from her cheek. “We never take gifts from the Ocean.” Because the Ocean demands gifts in return.

She pressed her hand against mine and nodded. She turned away from the Ocean, from me. Her face was once again stone.

When I turned eighteen, I left that cabin by the water and moved inland, as far inland as I could to where the seas are made of grass. My mother remained on the shore. She pours her tears into the Ocean, an act of mutilation, an act of devotion. The hateful lovers’ endless dance, the Ocean and his moon.

I often think of those weeping skulls, my brothers and sisters, grinning with elation as they fly through the bottomless Ocean. My mother held my head underwater once. I learned my lesson. I never take gifts from the Ocean. This was my mother’s gift to me.

Posted Aug 09, 2020
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632 likes 196 comments

LILY DAWN
14:26 Aug 21, 2020

This is amazing. I love it. Keep writing!

Reply

Maya W.
17:48 Aug 20, 2020

Woah, so beautiful! I just loved how you hook the reader with even just the concept of the story. It's just so beautifully written. Also, just a wild guess, but it sounds like you're a Percy Jackson fan. I am, too! Would you mind checking out some of my stories, as well? Thanks!

Reply

Mollie Rodgers
04:04 Aug 21, 2020

Thank you so much! I do like Percy Jackson :) I haven't read the series in a while and I've been on a YA kick recently so you've inspired me to reread it.
I will head over to your page now!

Reply

Maya W.
14:46 Aug 21, 2020

Thanks! I saw you read City of Light! Would you ind checking out some of my other stories, too? Percy Jackson is amazing, lol.

Reply

Jessica C
22:54 Aug 18, 2020

I am astounded that you don't have more comments on this story. This is breathtakingly beautiful. Well done.

Reply

Mollie Rodgers
05:06 Aug 19, 2020

Oh gosh, thank you! That's so nice of you. Thank you for taking the time to read it :)

Reply

Shahzad Ahmad
09:43 Jul 19, 2024

The story starts on a cryptic note but dramatically resolves at the end. The skulls and bones drive the message home to the protagonist and her mother's repetitive advice is eventually understood. A great story!

Reply

Robert Kimbel
18:48 Jan 09, 2022

Please, don't bite my head off, but I am not sure that I understand this story. Did the mother have a child with the god of the ocean and now the Ocean wants his child back? Why is the Ocean leaving gifts for the Annabeth and Eugenia? Is it to make them walk into the ocean and drown? The man that emerges from the Ocean, he's described as beautiful and honestly the way Annabeth describes him terrifies me. He seems more like a watery corpse than a God or deity of the ocean. While I admit that the prose of this story is beautiful and extremely well-written, I'm not sure I can fully comprehend the overall plot that this story hopes to convey. Anyone have any thoughts?

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19:56 Nov 23, 2021

Its just too addictive
The beginning is cold, but not in the way that it might scare the reader off
I was engaged, I needed to know why we mustn't take gifts from the ocean
Very well threaded together

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SYDNEY LIU
23:49 Nov 17, 2021

This story was amazing even though I didn't understand much of it, but just the word choices moved me, and the way you described everything was beautiful!

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Nancy Davison
16:42 Nov 01, 2021

Mollie, I loved your word choices when personifying the Ocean. The way that you used verbs related to water and its movements created a good link between the character Ocean and the ocean itself. Superb work.

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Xandbf Kdbbf
18:07 Sep 27, 2021

This is brilliant! The hook at the beginning is amazing and the story gave me literal goosebumps, so well written and thought out. Great job

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Chloe Johnson
15:32 Jul 11, 2021

I absolutely adored reading this :)

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Menesis Castro
16:06 May 17, 2021

Really creative and beautiful story! I did find at times it was a bit difficult to follow along or understand exactly what was happening, but in a way I think it added to charm and mystery of the ocean.

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Crazy Videoholic
12:32 May 06, 2021

Can I narrate and put this story on my youtube channel? I'll keep your name as a credit for the story.

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Nevie Barbeau
17:28 Apr 30, 2021

I thought this story was amazing. I had twists and turns, and it was so creative. The way you personified the ocean as someone handsome but malevolent was intelligent. It was a great villain for your story. Although this is fantasy it really makes you think of lessons in the real world and how certain things seem nice but really may not be. It also shows that people may be tough on you not because they hate you but because they love you. I think if you would have described what she sees out the window a little it would have to help me invasion it better. This story reminded me that even if my parents do something I do not like, it is probably for my own good. Again I love this story. It was fantastic. Congratulations on the win.

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17:56 Apr 29, 2021

I have no words. This story was breathtaking. Captivating me so much so that I crave for more of this story. How did Eugenia and the Ocean meet? What's their story? Did the ocean try to take Annabeth again? The story had me constantly asking these sorts of questions wanting more. The story was truly magnificent and there weren't any flaws I could see. It seemed like a siren from the ocean was drawing me into this story like she calls sailors out to sea. An amazing work of art indeed

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Thalia Umbay
15:19 Apr 16, 2021

...beautiful.

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Sara Mellring
22:28 Mar 29, 2021

What is the theme of this short story?

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Sara Mellring
15:18 Mar 29, 2021

What is the theme of this story?

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Emma Harris
04:09 Mar 29, 2021

Somebody needs to make this a movie now!! I would love to see it! It was amazingly written and so well thought out! I loved it!

Reply

Jamie Suzio
14:41 Mar 23, 2021

the story is amazing I do not know how to explain it. the way it is worded and the effort and imagination put into this is so lovely. :)

Reply

Jamie Wilson
22:25 Mar 19, 2021

I love the way she has foreshadowed the ending and repeated a key line throughout this really helped me with someone and just like to say keep doing this you’re really good and don’t let anyone get you down

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