Contest #118 winner 🏆

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Speculative Crime

He buried her in the forest before the leaves of the quaking aspen turned golden. No one noticed the tamped down soil, or the way the wild grasses died back all around her, or even the circle of whimsy brown mushrooms that erupted soon after.

And when autumn came, and the leaves changed, the trembling giant whose roots she fed turned scarlet instead.

“I am here,” she called. “Please find me!”

But, after the first frost, the leaves turned rusty, and were then indistinguishable from the rest.

No one noticed her, buried in the forest beneath the quaking aspen.




Snow falls, blanketing her in a cold white solitude with only her thoughts for company, and she wonders…

Does her family know she isn’t coming home?

Or do they maybe think she’s just run away from it all? Does anyone suspect foul play? Or has he once again convinced everyone of his harmless temper?

“We argued, but I loved her. I never would have done anything to hurt her.”

Then why did she (the other woman) drive her car—in neutral—into the lake?

She wonders what he’ll say about her.

“We argued, but I loved her. She said she would leave me a hundred times, and I guess she finally did.”

She wonders if anyone ever found the unused airplane tickets in the back of her underwear drawer, rolled up in a sock with the wad of twenties she’d been collecting for months? Did he find them? Is that why…?

Is that why she’s rotting away in the earth now?




Spring arrives and the bugs return, but she only has so much of herself left to give them. The grass grows back, greener than before, and the roots of the quaking aspen snake through her ribs.

He returns—and steps on her grave.

Just with one foot, at first. She thinks he’s testing the ground, or checking for bones sticking out of the soil; when he doesn’t fall through, he stands on her grave fully. The pressure on her chest is unbearable, but he already broke her heart once.

When he breaks her ribs, she feels nothing.

He steps off quickly, sheepishly, and reaches forward. He grabs a branch from the tree he buried her under and snaps it off with a quick tug.

Is that how she died? She remembers his hands on her neck and then nothing else.

It was so quick.

They argued. She told him she didn’t love who he was anymore, but she never got the chance to leave, like she’d planned to for months.

He walks away with his souvenir and she doesn’t see him again for a long time.




A million thoughts fill her up, and she wonders if she’ll ever have peace from them. They never ceased while she was alive, in her waking hours or otherwise, and now they continue even as her body returns to the earth. Restful oblivion does not come to her and she wonders… if not in death, then when?

Did Niki worry when she didn’t show up? Or did they just assume she never meant to arrive in the first place? Are they angry she broke her promise? What about her cat? Did they keep Mr. Jenkins? Is he healthy and happy with Niki?

And, more than anything, she worries no one knew her thoughts in those final months, because he stole her from her family and friends—stole her from herself, even.

She’d said so many awful things to so many people, and all they’d ever wanted was for her to be happy and safe. But she never listened—was too proud to admit she’d been wrong until it was too late.

She almost doesn’t recognize who she was in those final months anymore.

(Why does she even care? She’s not —— anymore.)




She begins growing out of her broken body the following year, and feels for the first time in a long time the gentle rays of sunlight beating down on her through the budding leaves of the surrounding quaking aspen trees.

However, almost before she can appreciate the new sensations that come with being a sprouting aspen tree, a browsing deer strips her of her leaves—and then a hare finishes her off.

But that’s fine. Her roots remain, and she continues pulling water and other nutrients from the ground for the giants she shares herself with.

They don’t speak, but she feels their sympathy as they wordlessly console her, and offer her their full support when spring arrives again.

She grows quickly with their tender support, and when the browsing deer returns, she has more than enough of herself to give.




When they see him again, they almost don’t recognize him.

He’s older, grayer. Feebler. He walks with a cane now and uses it to push around the mulchy layers of decaying leaves. The top layer of soil has grown sugary over the years and he has to hold on to branches as he steps up the incline, or risk slipping.

But he is himself still, and they could never forget his eyes. Warm like honey; hard like amber; and, sometimes, colder than moonlight. Wrinkles (and time) have softened his piercing gaze, but they still feel it as he looks about. There’s an unmistakable hint of sharpness—like raw edges on smooth river stones.

He does not recognize them.

They have grown up strong and tall since he saw them last, and the animal path he followed all those years ago has meandered ever so slightly off track. He is not lost, but neither can he find his destination.

He looks up, straining his neck, searching for the tree with the cracked-off branch—searching for the piece of them he broke. He turns around three full times, facing north after each spin.

Still, he does not find what he’s looking for.

Forgiveness. Closure. Maybe the tree he buried them beneath, which no longer stands.

It blew over some years ago, when the summer storms came. The uprooted stump is just to his right, but he does not make the connection, because the thick trunk was hauled away for campfire fuel the same year it fell.

He leans against his cane, silently stewing over his dilemma. He’s never had much patience for anything, really.

The wind rattles through their bare branches and a chill creeps through him. He shivers, hunching his shoulders against the stiff wind, and lifts his cane. He turns right, shuffling through the frost laden leaves, and unknowingly walks over their grave.

He stumbles over the exposed roots still attached to the rotting stump and falls—hard.

He lays there for a long moment, winded from his rough landing. When he recovers enough to move, his shifting is accompanied by a low groan.

He does not stand up—cannot stand up—and rolls onto his stomach, searching for his cane in the leaves. He does not find it; it flew quite far when he fell.

A crow caws overhead and he curses while struggling to push himself up onto his knees. One hand sinks into the frosty leaves, and closes around something smooth and roughly the same diameter as his cane.

He pulls on it, yanking it out of the ground after a couple of firm tugs. He’s not as strong as he once was.

A brown stained bone comes up, and he stares at it before flinging it away from himself with a startled cry.

He finally calls for help, having accepted that he’s too injured to escape the forest of quaking aspen on his own.

“Help!” he screams. “Please, someone!”

But no one hears him and each shout is more desperate than the last, until he’s screaming himself hoarse, sobbing between breaths.




“If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?”

The answer has never been more obvious to them than it is now.




No one noticed him, fallen in the forest beneath the quaking aspen.

November 06, 2021 02:28

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199 comments

19:32 Dec 06, 2021

Wow, wow, wow. So beautifully written.

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Myia Melendy
02:22 Dec 07, 2021

Thanks!

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Annalee Grimsley
18:04 Dec 06, 2021

OMG!!!!! i loved how beautiful this was. Never,EVER stop writing!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Myia Melendy
02:22 Dec 07, 2021

Thanks! I'll do my best!

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Antonio Jimenez
01:25 Dec 05, 2021

Wow, this was amazing. Everything about it from the descriptions to the ending. The imagery, especially of the girl underneath the ground, was breathtaking. Well done. Just published my first story in a while and would love for you to check it out and leave some feedback. Thanks!

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Lady Nopeingham
18:19 Dec 03, 2021

Hi there Myia! I absolutely loved this story, and was wondering…would you allow me to narrate this story for my YouTube channel? You can check out my work here first, if you’d like https://youtu.be/64lUvB_ymNU I would of course credit you and include any links you may have in the video description. Please email me at ladynopeingham@gmail.com if you are interested. I very much look forward to hearing from you! Lady N

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Myia Melendy
21:26 Dec 03, 2021

Thanks for reading! If you want to read it for your channel, just be sure to include credit to Reedsy for the prompt and a link to my profile :)

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Lady Nopeingham
21:36 Mar 15, 2022

Hello! The narration of your story will be premiering on my channel tonight at 7:30 Mountain Time! I would love for you to be there, if you're able!! And thank you so much again for allowing me to share your story! <3 https://youtu.be/MjgdTAtNPZU

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07:16 Nov 28, 2021

The change in pro nouns is perfect and amazing. Definitely a deserved win.

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Myia Melendy
21:20 Nov 30, 2021

Thanks!

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Clair Whitmer
22:09 Nov 27, 2021

I love the image of the main character having new kinds of conscious thoughts as a corpse. I thought at first it was going to be be a whodunnit but you surprised me.

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Myia Melendy
05:02 Nov 28, 2021

Thanks for reading! :)

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Angela Govender
20:05 Nov 27, 2021

Your writing is on point! 👌This is mind blowing.

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Myia Melendy
21:18 Nov 27, 2021

Thanks!

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Howard Seeley
04:47 Nov 27, 2021

Great effort. Keep up the good work!

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Myia Melendy
18:02 Nov 27, 2021

Thanks, I will!

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Mary Fitzgerald
20:42 Nov 24, 2021

Loved this story. It has inspired me! Thank you for sharing your talent ! Can't wait to read more!

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Myia Melendy
21:27 Nov 24, 2021

Thanks for reading!

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Kamila Hajinski
08:05 Nov 23, 2021

i loved it. I fell in love with how over the years her being intertwines with other aspens and how she molds into the nature rather than sustaining a human conscience. Most eloquent and gentle story I have read on Reedsy so far.

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Myia Melendy
10:21 Nov 23, 2021

Thanks for reading! Even though her death was violent (and his was anything but peaceful), her worries melt away as the years pass. Ultimately, they are at peace with her death.

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Brianna Wilkins
06:04 Nov 23, 2021

Wow, wow, wow. This is amazing. I didn't want to stop reading - I will read anything you write - thank you so much for sharing your incredible talent :)

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Myia Melendy
07:09 Nov 23, 2021

Thanks for reading! I will continue doing my best :)

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Sarah Simpson
03:45 Nov 20, 2021

I love this story. It’s chilling, and haunting, and beautiful. I truly enjoyed it from start to finish. The ending couldn’t have been more perfect. I’m going to be thinking about this one for a long time. Great work!

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Myia Melendy
04:57 Nov 20, 2021

Thanks for reading! Glad you enjoyed the end :)

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Sylvan Gibbs
21:29 Nov 19, 2021

That intro was the Perfect bait and then the unique point of view would not let me stop reading till the last word. I appreciate the fact that there was both no hurried ending or slow start but consistent till the end. Can not wait for your next work!!

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Myia Melendy
23:10 Nov 19, 2021

Thanks for reading! Glad you enjoyed the pacing :)

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Rebecca Wonsang
17:09 Nov 19, 2021

So beautiful and poignant to my own story, only I was the one who got away. Tears in my eyes, but good tears. Thank you

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Myia Melendy
19:57 Nov 19, 2021

Thank you for reading. Getting away must have taken a lot of strength and courage. I'm glad you did.

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Michael Harrison
01:39 Nov 19, 2021

Hi Myia - great story. The theme is clear but isn't overplayed. I particularly appreciated the full circle/justice is serve type closing.

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Myia Melendy
03:24 Nov 19, 2021

Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the ending :)

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Sarah Kreiger
17:47 Nov 18, 2021

Wonderful story! A well deserved win :D

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Myia Melendy
19:35 Nov 18, 2021

Thank you!

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Aeden Kniaz
14:39 Nov 18, 2021

This is SO good. I'm in class right now and I want to read it over and over....

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Myia Melendy
19:35 Nov 18, 2021

Thanks for reading! Glad you enjoyed it!

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Shea West
19:04 Nov 17, 2021

I have an appreciation for how the crime scene got vengeance on the killer. This read like Alice Sebold's "The Lovely Bones." The way the killer dies in the end of that book was poetic justice in the same way this scumbag dies. I love how you allowed the dead to visualize and describe the changes she has no choice but to embrace. It was such a precise touch of changing the pronoun of she to they when it was clear no one would find her. That she was now one with the forest, the soil, the trees. Very clever, and subtle if you're not paying...

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Myia Melendy
03:05 Nov 18, 2021

There was a passerby that almost discovered her! The tree she was buried under fell over, and her killer wasn't able to find the place he buried her because the tree was gone, with only a stump remaining. Someone hauled the fallen log away for firewood, but never discovered her body. I read "The Lovely Bones" when I was in high school! I can't say I remember much about it, as required school reading was my absolute least favorite thing ever XD I should probably go back and read it again. I might enjoy it more now! Thanks for reading!

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Shea West
04:56 Nov 18, 2021

Oh goodness, I'm sorry...you're totally right. I started your story and then got up to do something mid read, so that detail might not have held in my squirrel brain. IGNORE ME LOL

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Myia Melendy
05:58 Nov 18, 2021

No worries XD it was just a small detail slipped in on the sly!

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Kayla Fry
20:09 Nov 16, 2021

Oh My Lord, that story was absolutely amazing, and so well written. The adjectives the verbs, the nouns all the wording and actions are written together to form a perfect story. I can't wait to read your next story! You have a new follower :)

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Myia Melendy
22:15 Nov 16, 2021

Thanks for reading! I'll do my best on my next story :)

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Delia Tomkus
12:09 Nov 16, 2021

Wow this is amazing! I am a sucker for beautiful description, and this was definitely it.

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Delia Tomkus
12:10 Nov 16, 2021

Oh oops I commented twice, it's just that good

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Myia Melendy
22:16 Nov 16, 2021

XD I'm glad you enjoyed it enough to comment twice!

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