🏆 Contest #183 Winner!

Fantasy Fiction

A smattering of applause dappled the last notes of his song. He let it die out in the darkening tavern before rising, joints stiff from the long performance.


“Play the one about the Hero of Faron,” a voice slurred from a dim recess.


“Aye, that’s a good ‘un,” Harrow acknowledged agreeably, hoping to collect his dinner without a confrontation with yet another inebriated villager. Slinging his guitar over his shoulder, he called out, “mayhap tomorrow night.”


The drunk set up a complaint cut short by the innkeep harrumphing her way between them like a disgruntled walrus. Harrow sighed in relief. Once he would have favored a good fight, but those days were past.


The innkeep handed him a deep wooden bowl of stew with a small loaf of bread teetering on the rim. “Take a seat, harper. You earned your keep for the night.”


“Obliged, Margrie,” he murmured. Margrie never tried to cheat him of his pay in whatever form it came. Tonight’s was in board and lodging. Tomorrow, he’d move on, up towards Green Haven, where he might get paid in slightly used boots, or a good whetstone, or maybe even a new blanket. He played life by ear, did Harrow, taking what came his way, leaving what stood in it.


He shuffled across the rushes and settled into the only unoccupied table in the room, its wooden surface pitted from idiots playing the finger dance in their idleness and boredom. Digging in, he barely noticed when a small pale form slid onto the bench opposite him, and when he did, it was too late to deny the intruder a place at his table. She had already set down her bowl and loaf as well as two steaming mugs of tea, one of which she slid across the table to him.


Well, if she was buying, he’d not say no.


“Margrie says you care not for ale, so I hope tea is welcome,” she offered.


He lifted it, inhaling its fruity tang. “It’ll do. Now what do I owe you for this mug o tea?”


“A story,” she said simply.


“I’ve just been singing stories this past pair of hours. My word horde is empty.”


“Not stories of heroes,” she said. “I’ve heard them all. How they set out on their quest, conquer their fears, best their opponent, ride home victorious.” She flapped her fingers at her side as if to say, ‘it just never ends.’ 


“You are bored of the stories of heroes?”


Her fair hair shimmied as she nodded, the tips dipping into the broth. “Aye, full to my eyelids with such tales.”


“You are young to be so jaded.”


“Not so young. I’m 16 this past winter.”


“Ahh, 16 to my 60.”


“Huh.”


“Huh, what?”


“I had thought you older.” She gestured vaguely to his white beard.


He grinned. "I'll take the compliment. So what story is it you wish to buy with this fine mug o tea?”


She leaned toward him, announcing, “I’m on a quest.”


He nodded gravely. So many bright young faces had sat across from him at so many scarred tables and blurted out their aspirations, their eyes fixed blindly onto their futures. He sighed. Harrow saw his own future clearly enough, but only because it was so well lit by the lantern of his own long past.


Right now, his immediate future was looking like it might be eclipsed by this young hopeful and her head full of dreams. He assessed the threat to his quiet evening. He had skill at reading the clues his audiences wore, which would ensure he might better please them with his selections and better end the night with a full belly.


This young lass, for instance. She came from the mid-lands - obvious by her wide pants and red belt. From the merchant class – evident by the bright ribbon she was now threading in her hair to keep it out of her stew. Educated - revealed by the corners squaring the cloth bag at her side. Those could only be books, too many of them for a foot traveler, which meant she was well off enough to travel on horseback. He re-evaluated his estimate; she was from a wealthy household.


“Go home,” he said simply. Sometimes there is nothing else to say. This girl was a walking hazard to herself, a pothole in her own road, and likely bad luck to those she encountered on her way.


She blinked and the shadow of disappointment whispered over her features before being swept away by the optimism of youth. Instead, she countered, “You didn’t.”


That caught him off guard. She might be quicker of wit than anticipated, he considered. “True. I didn’t go home. But I learned that quests aren’t all they are cracked up to be in the songs.”


“Then why do you sing them?”


“Look around you,” he answered. Through the haze of smoke, he gestured to the worn faces of farmers staring down into their ale, the woman knitting by the fire with her cracked hands, the aged couple with the bags at their feet as tattered as their hopes. “Harpers cannot trade in truth and expect to keep their bellies full. These people want stories to lift them out of the world they are in, if just for an evening.”


“So, telling them lies gives them hope?”


“No. But for a bit, that farmer there forgets his fields have been infested with blister beetles and he must find other pasture for his herd. That woman knitting, may for a small spell ease the pain of losing a child to the winter colic. The aged pair, for one slender moment might see a different future from the one so obviously lying at their feet. I don’t offer hope; I offer relief.”


She considered this, sharp eyes pinning him with her judgement. “In that case, I seek relief on my quest.”


He heard himself sighing into his mug and set it down. “And what quest is that?” She looked eager as a pup and energetic as one to boot. He dug into his stew with a bad feeling her enthusiasm would exhaust him before he could finish it.


She shook her head impatiently. “My quest is not what I wish to speak of. A hedge minstrel told me a story, it wasn’t even a song. He called it the Golden Gryphon, about a man…”


“I know what it’s about,” Harrow said grimly.


“You should. It’s your story.”


“I wrote it,” he agreed, “on the pages of the world with my body as my quill.”


The girl waved to Margrie for more stew, laying a copper on the table. Confidence flowed out of her, buffeting him with its spunky self-assurance. He felt himself pull away from it like a bad smell. They waited while Margrie ladled the thick broth into their bowls before turning her attention to a dour man playing a solitary finger dance, the tip of the knife thwacking rhythmically into the tabletop.


“I don’t want to hear about the heroes who succeeded. I want to hear about…” She paused searching in her stew for the right words.


“The ones that failed,” he finished for her.


“Went sideways,” she countered diplomatically.


He sighed. It was going to be a long night. “How did you know who I am?”


“The hedge minstrel said the hero of that tale never takes coin. Margrie told me you always barter for your songs. So...” She shrugged as if to say she too could read the clues people wear.


“Well, you’ve paid for your story,” he said, indicating his bowl. “So I’ll tell you. I was born to a poor family –”


“—Youngest son,” she interjected.


Another sigh gusted out. “Yes, of course. It is always the youngest son…” He paused to see if she would feel the need to jump in and hurry his tale along, but she was busy with her stew. “…Of poor farmers,” he continued. “My family struggled after my older brothers went to war and didn’t return. I wanted nothing more than to help.”


“So, you heard about the gryphon,” she prompted.


Harrow clenched his teeth. “So I heard about the gryphon. I grew up on the stories of heroes and the legendary beasts they defeated, the acclaim they won, the riches they gained. And I believed them. The gryphon's eggs are laced with gold, so I figured I could but try.”


“I don’t understand why a gryphon lays eggs. I mean, with the body of a lion.” She flicked her spoon in the air as if to emphasize her point, dripping broth onto the table.


Harrow wondered if the girl had lied about her age. This interactive approach to storytelling pointed to a younger mind. He counseled himself not to sigh again. “The back of the body is an eagle. Hence, eggs.”


“Golden eggs. And you believed that?” Was that a touch of scornful unbelief salting her voice?


“When people are desperate, they believe anything. Something perhaps you do not know much about, desperation.”


She had the decency to look slightly abashed.


“I tell you what,” Harrow offered, mindful his story would never end under the onslaught of interruptions it was experiencing, “I’ll skip the boring bits - the training, and fighting, and turning my ploughshare into a spear, and so on - and cut right to the climax.”


“Turning ploughshares into spears is good,” she conceded.


“Glad you approve, though I’ve since come to see it differently. Regardless, I wandered east, into the mountains, looking for the legendary gryphon.”


“Key word being ‘legendary’,” she inserted, apparently incapable of not participating in the story.


He tapped the back of her hand with a gnarled finger in warning. “But you see, I did find the gryphon. In the high ridges between the kingdoms, at the top of our world. It was nesting on a spear of rock buffeted by winds so fierce I could not stand. I approached her nest from downwind. It was half the size of this room, all tree branches and bracken. She was many times larger than I and exactly as the historians have told us. Body of a lion, head, wings, and back end of an eagle. Let me tell you, when she turned and fixed her eyes upon me, I couldn’t move. Bigger than this bowl were those eyes, with slits of gold that seemed the very gates to the underworld. Had I been able to move, I would have fled, but it was as if she pinned me to the rock with her gaze.”


“Like a snake,” the girl volunteered. Her eyes were glowing. This was the kind of thing she wanted to hear, the hazards people wanted painted lavishly onto the canvas of their minds where they could be safely enjoyed.


“I killed it,” he finished anti-climactically. 


She frowned. “No, you can’t just say “I killed it!”! What kind of storyteller are you?”


“One who thinks the stories of his own quest are not all they are cracked up to be.”


“Well, how did you kill it?”


“I crawled beneath the nest.” He pointed his spoon below the lip of the now empty bowl. “The gryphon screamed, a sound like a high gale in the mountain passes, and her beak came down again and again, vicious stabs that splintered the rock. But I was safe under the nest as she could not disturb her own eggs. I crawled up through it, through the decay and shit and bones and feathers. The smell was acid in my lungs. Coughing, my eyes streaming and barely able to see, I came out of that shit pile with my spear and drove it through her heart. And there I stood, smeared with filth and reeking, watching her body tumble from the rocky outcrop. An inglorious hero who had just killed a mother protecting her eggs.”


“But the eggs were there, right?”


He sighed again. If I keep heaving breath like this, I won’t last the night, he thought. “Oh yes. Two orbs, the size of your head, webbed with pure gold. Already the eggs were rocking. I thought if I waited for the chicks to hatch, then I could take the shells.”


“But the chicks would starve without their mother!”


“What would you have done?”


She blinked and the self-assurance she wore like a flag drooped just a little. After a beat, she confessed, “I do not know.”


“An utterly pointless waste. A meaningless stupid quest.” He shook his head, trying to keep the tremor out of his voice.


“But you got the gold! You didn’t fail!”


“I got the gold. I left the chicks to die and travelled home with a burden far heavier than those shells. But without my hands to help on the farm, my father had lost the crops and then lost the farm. If I had stayed, I would have been able to give them my labor, far more valuable to a farmer than a handful of gold stolen from a dying species. And they did not want that gold.”


He waited to let her absorb the ugly turn of his tale. “So, tell me, did I fail?”


She studied her empty bowl. “No.” It was just a feather of sound. “You did what you set out to do.”


“At what cost? All the cost borne by others, the gryphon, my parents. None to myself! How can I sing that song?” He didn’t answer and the silence was filled only by the knife thrower who had resumed his solo game. “Is that the same story of the Golden Gryphon you were told?”


“No. The hedge minstrel only said you slayed the beast and came away a wealthy man and then gave it all away. Why did you give it all away?”


“After what I had done, my desire for gold shriveled into a loathing. Now, I ply my trade only for barter. I will not again take what another cannot give.”


For a span, he listened to the fire crackling and the occasional laughter from the farmers. The girl seemed to be studying a landscape within her mind, a journey that looked as if it might take some time. “As I warned you,” Harrow finally said, “quests aren’t always what they are cracked up to be. Even when you succeed. Go home.”


“I thank you for your tale, harper. I know you think me young and even childish.” Hah! Harrow thought, everyone in the tavern perceives that. But he didn’t say it. No need to strip the confidence from the young.


She firmed her face with determination. “My father is dying. My quest is to find the unicorn whose horn will heal him. I cannot turn back, nor can I fail.”


Harrow drew breath, thinking, Yes, you can. You can fail in so many ways they could not be counted, just as the finger dancer at the table yonder would eventually plunge the knife into his flesh and wonder how that came to pass.


But you do not tell the young they will fail. Instead, he mused, “A unicorn,” wondering at the irony of her having called his gryphon “legendary.” If anything was legendary, surely it was the unicorn. But he didn’t say that either. Instead, he said, “In taking the unicorn, you would be killing it. Is that a price the unicorn should pay? Go home and care for your father in his last days.”


He watched indecision fighting in the girl’s eye. She had heard his tale and felt the truth of it. But would it change her path?


Should it change her path? He paused to consider. His own path, driven by confidence and need, and redirected by regret, had only been visible to him once he’d walked it. The same would be true for her. Her dazzling confidence was her key to succeeding on her quest, though it might also be her undoing. She would have to walk that road in the dark, the choices hers alone, before she would understand it.


Rising, he fished deep into his pocket for the token he’d carried for long enough, a reminder of his regret that, small though it was, had always felt too heavy. He pinched it out of the seams and set it before her, a small gold bead, no bigger than a teardrop, claimed from a legendary beast. “Payment,” he said, “for listening to the real story of this hero. Go in peace.”


He left her alone in the dark room and climbed to the upper chamber to sleep among the other snorting and snoring travelers, who scratched and itched, tossed and mumbled, and lay dreaming or wakeful on their shared voyage of humanity.




Posted Feb 01, 2023
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159 likes 143 comments

Graham Kinross
11:20 Mar 21, 2023

I like the honesty of this, that he doesn’t glorify killing the animal and warns her not to do the same. No summary of this would do justice to how compelling it was reading about two people talking in a bar. Well done.

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Laurel Hanson
16:55 Mar 21, 2023

Thank-you so much. That means a lot coming from a writer such as yourself.

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Ken Cartisano
06:33 Mar 16, 2023

This is a major piece of literary craftsmanship, it’s tough to produce a good, polished, intriguing short story in seven days.

What you’ve written is the kind of story that people want to read right now. And you do it well. In this piece alone you’ve introduced beer, knives, blood, music, magic, mythology, the Midwest, (correction: A Midwest), poverty, destitution, soup, a gryphon and a unicorn. (Among other things.) That’s marvelous storytelling.

There is beautiful and effective writing in every paragraph.

It’s nuanced, intriguing, fantastical, mildly humorous and sobering all at once. And the whole thing takes place at a table in a village inn. Location: Unknown. Incredible. I can see why this was a winner. It’s an excellent story, and wonderfully well-written. (Except for those few extra words.) It’s a story I talked about with other people, using it to demonstrate what a good story must have, do, or be.

I hope I don’t sound like I’m backpedaling from my previous comment. (That’s exactly what it sounds like, doesn’t it.) I’m fawning, not backpedaling. Big difference.

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Laurel Hanson
12:59 Mar 16, 2023

Well, I do appreciate the good words and will look forward to your critiques in the future partially because they are so constructive and also because you even write your comments in a fun and engaging manner. Good to meet you.

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Ken Cartisano
16:31 Mar 13, 2023

The accents you created, or lilt of the tongue, are amazingly authentic and yet generic. Real 'villagers' (up inna Appalachians) are, in fact, unintelligible to everyone but their neighbors. That's what's great about an invented 'olde tongue.' We can understand it.

I found a few of the other comments enlightening. (That's where I learn a lot of things. Other critiques and observations.) Like 'Writer's speak.' I didn't notice it very much while reading the story, but once it was pointed out, I feel more apt to spot it and eradicate it. (I like to do, and read, period pieces. And language is an amazing tool for shaping a story. As we all know, but may not think about.)

I agreed with Jack's comment that the tale could be told through the character of the innkeeper. Anyone but Harrow, unless you convince me that he's not reluctant to talk of his own exploits. It's perfectly acceptable to have a strong character who talks too much, but singing one's own praises is in poor taste.

I found a few phrases that were junk. They added nothing to the story. This is one.
"Confidence flowed out of her, buffeting him with its spunky self-assurance."

It's a lovely story, with great mood in the setting and wonderful depth to the characters, but I felt that the story was a bit too wordy in a few select places, where the narrative felt like a stubborn horse that kept stopping to chew on appealing clumps of grass on the way to our destination. But for these minor nuisances, very good writing and a very fine story all around. Congratulations on the win, as well.

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Laurel Hanson
16:42 Mar 13, 2023

Thanks for the feedback. I have been working on my Writer's Speak which I feel is a real weakness in my stories across the board. That takes the reader out of the moment for sure and results in the wordiness you point out. Writing the stories in a week leaves us very open to that well-deserved criticism and I have been glad to edit that story in particular more extensively since then. Now I am kind of embarrassed that I can't edit it on the site.

The only comment I am unclear on is the impression given that Harrow was singing his own songs. He was singing the songs of other heroes and only told the girl grudgingly when she asked him one on one. Obviously, singing one's own songs is in bad taste. I'll go back and revisit what gives that impression.

Thanks for your feedback.

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Ken Cartisano
04:26 Mar 14, 2023

Laurel, I believe I have given you the wrong impression, caused by my reference to someone else’s comment. I thought the narrative in your story was very clear. As is the nature of your main character, Harrow. He sings the praises of other people’s quests, but never his own. And yet the young girl manages to work that tale out of him anyway. I think that one of the other readers was pointing out, that if Harrow’s own quest was so tragic and deplorable, it seems unlikely that he would divulge any ‘significant’ details to a young, (albeit very clever) stranger quite as easily as he does. Therefore, to tell his story while allowing the characters to remain true to themselves, someone else would have to provide the details of his regrettable quest. The other reader suggested that the innkeeper could have filled that position nicely.

I agree with that idea, but it surely isn’t necessary. I believe that what’s important is the lesson here. For me, anyway. A third character can be indispensable in a short story. And we often have them standing around doing very little anyway, we’re just not using them to their full effect.

Margrie’s right there, Laurel, serving up the suds. She knows Harrow better than YOU. Give her the damned floor for a minute, willya? Jesus. Where’s my chicken-pot-pie?

Sorry. I became one of your characters for a minute. In the village. You know who it was. Come on, we’ll say it together. ‘The idiot.’

But seriously, as writers, we should use literary devices whenever we can. I think. To good purpose.

The story has a lot of subtle humor in the most unexpected places. And I think that the young woman pushes against the fourth wall, without actually breaking it. This is a good trick if that’s what’s happening. This flirtation with the fourth wall is what may sound like ‘writers language.’ I never heard the term ‘writers language’ before yesterday, haven’t googled it, and I think what the commenter meant was, when writing in first person, all of the words become those of the character who is providing the narration, even the exposition now belongs to the character, (or should.) With a special setting, dialect, or historical backdrop, every word must match the dialogue.

I suspect that most of the phrases in question were neither ‘writer language’ nor ‘assaults on the fourth wall.’ They are just phrases uttered by the young girl, because you have created, in her, an entirely unique character. She sounds different. Younger, optimistic, more sophisticated. In fact, it’s hard to decide who in this story is the real main character, her, or the harper, Harrow.

You have some wonderful and lengthy passages describing his observations, conclusions and even some considerations. You have the girl, who wants to know all about him, ‘Harrow’, while Harrow silently delivers (to us) everything we’ll ever know about the girl. I got the impression, well before the end, that she, wanted to be like him. And that he, and perhaps other readers, were the last ones to figure this out.

I did catch one critical error, something that was nagging at me and I didn’t catch it until a second read. There’s an interesting comparison between what is legendary, the Gryphon, and what is mythical, the Unicorn. You didn’t get them backwards did you?

BTW, I’m new here Laurel, and your response to my criticism is very gracious. I see that you have posted more than a dozen stories AND you have two Winning stories prominently posted on the thread. (That’s how these stories came to my attention.) The point is, I’m well aware of whose horn I’ve managed to get stuck in my belt loop. (Like the old Spanish matadors, it is critical at this point, for me to show no fear.)

Hope you don’t mind if I follow you and read some more of your stories, Laurel. You are clearly an entertaining and talented writer. (Even with all your flaws. Lol)

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Laurel Hanson
12:15 Mar 14, 2023

Thanks for this lengthy response to my response. I genuinely appreciate people who write critiques that are not just gushing praise, as, though that is supportive in a way, it is not helpful for improving writing. Consequently, I respect that you offered actual critique; please don't feel I took offense. I was genuinely worried about an interpretation that Harrow sang his own praises, and totally understand your explanation here regarding the use of other characters. Since the prompt was about the meeting of two opposites, I was crafting it around that focus, but would definitely opt to do as you and the other poster suggest were this a longer story.

I deeply appreciate your very insightful analysis and discussion, particularly the thoughts about the interior voice of the MC and the differing voice of the young girl. I am working on this world in a larger collection and your observations are spot on for my intentions.

Finally, my hope is that someone noticed that both characters believe the other characters' quest beast to be fantastical in some way. The elder believes the younger's quest to be fantastical and the younger doesn't quite believe in the legends of old. This seemed to reflect the way each generation regards the ambitions of the other. You are the first to voice that. You see it as an error and by pointing that out, I think I can see a way to sharpen that, so again, I appreciate the note.

Please do not labor under the impression that you shouldn't criticize. I can't speak for others on this site, as there is rather a great deal of praise in general, but I respect and appreciate genuine feedback. Thank-you.

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Ren Sabo
19:46 Mar 06, 2023

Really great use of language here. I am a big fan of fantasy so I was really excited to see this story won. Your title drew me in immediately and your great writing kept me reading on.

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Laurel Hanson
20:26 Mar 06, 2023

Thank-you so much!

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Yeisha Lee
21:50 Feb 28, 2023

LOVED THIS!

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Laurel Hanson
10:58 Mar 01, 2023

Many thanks!

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Brad Heald
20:51 Feb 25, 2023

"Bigger than this bowl were those eyes, with slits of gold that seemed the very gates to the underworld." I'm respectful and appreciative of this excellent imagery and just one example contained in your superbly written story. Congratulations on the win. Well deserved.

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Laurel Hanson
22:31 Feb 25, 2023

Thank-you so much!

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AJ Ullah
10:10 Feb 24, 2023

Wonderful story - well written - had to read the beginning bit a couple of times to get my head round the language - once I did thoroughly enjoyed it.

The contrast between the two characters is really good - one is full of hope and youthful optimism the other weathered by life and time. The harper was the young girl once a upon time.

Congrats on the win

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Laurel Hanson
12:21 Feb 24, 2023

Thanks for sticking with it and ultimately enjoying it! Archaic language can be a challenge and I hoping to just suggest it so as not to be overly confusing to modern readers. Thank-you for the feedack.

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Aeris Walker
21:39 Feb 20, 2023

Late to the party here, but congratulations on your win! This was a great read—so immersive and well written. The setting reminded me of something out of the Witcher.
Loved these lines:

“Her dazzling confidence was her key to succeeding on her quest, though it might also be her undoing. She would have to walk that road in the dark, the choices hers alone, before she would understand it.“

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Laurel Hanson
22:57 Feb 20, 2023

Thank-you! I have seen a couple of Witcher episodes so I can see what you mean. I think it is pretty standard fantasy setting. Glad you enjoyed it.

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Ted Collier
10:08 Feb 19, 2023

Interesting catch-22. You may win, or you may fail. But both are true of either path.

This was a neat story.

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Laurel Hanson
10:40 Feb 19, 2023

Thanks!

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Philip Ebuluofor
12:40 Feb 18, 2023

Once again, congrats.

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Laurel Hanson
14:20 Feb 18, 2023

Thank-you!

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Philip Ebuluofor
17:56 Feb 18, 2023

Welcome.

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Amanda Lieser
16:35 Feb 17, 2023

Hey Laurel!
Congratulations on the win! This was a fantastic story! I’m always a sucker for when we tell a tale through dialogue. I found myself utterly enchanted by this cast of characters and bewitched by the dialect they used to speak. I also really enjoyed the setting and found myself imaging me, pulling up a chair, and a glass of ale to enjoy. My favorite line was right towards the beginning: So many bright young faces had sat across from him at so many scarred tables and blurted out their aspirations, their eyes fixed blindly onto their futures. It resonated with me as I grow older and see naïveté in others younger than me, and reflecting on my own. Nice work!

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Laurel Hanson
17:03 Feb 17, 2023

Thank-you so much!

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08:14 Feb 17, 2023

Love this story! I think the young lady wiil seek for a unicorn, having heard how hero Harrow defeated Gryphon.

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Laurel Hanson
13:00 Feb 17, 2023

Yep, I think that is the pattern established between youth and experience.

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ANDERS BECKMAN
21:05 Feb 16, 2023

I loved how you portrayed both characters and their interaction. The final scene was absolutely wonderful and I feel like you did a great job tying off the story! Congrats on the win!

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Laurel Hanson
21:57 Feb 16, 2023

Thank you so much!

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Shirley Medhurst
15:06 Feb 16, 2023

The 2nd of your stories I have read (and loved). A well deserved win.
Both of them could easily be made into something much longer, and I see you have the skill to manage it…

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Laurel Hanson
18:32 Feb 16, 2023

Again, thank you for the supporting words!

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Beth Jackson
08:14 Feb 12, 2023

Congratulations, Laurel, this was a well deserved win for sure! This is an outstanding piece and what a truth there is in your story. I know it will sit with me for some time to come. Congratulations again and thank you for sharing. :-)

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Laurel Hanson
12:41 Feb 12, 2023

Thank-you.

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Valerie Shand
21:26 Feb 10, 2023

You've written a nice story about the moral dilemmas we encounter every day and how achieving ones quest isn't always all it's cracked up to be. The young are unusually full of piss and vinegar and determination; it's only as we age that we feel the aches and pains and weaknesses that our bodies offer us.

As we age, sometimes we've achieved our quests only to then wish we hadn't. I suspect no matter how much truth Harrow offers this young hopeful, she won't be discouraged from trying to find -- and kill -- the unicorn she seeks. What will she then find? A cure for her father or the outcome of destroying a legend?

I encourage you to read your stories out loud because you will be more likely to catch mistakes and to hear how your readers will hear your words.

I liked the descriptions of your characters and the tavern in which they are sipping their tea. Well drawn.

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Laurel Hanson
21:40 Feb 10, 2023

Thank-you.

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Janice Dewar
17:50 Feb 10, 2023

A beautiful reflection on age and experience vs youth and dreams.

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Laurel Hanson
19:38 Feb 10, 2023

Very nicely put. Thank-you.

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Kathy Trevelyan
17:36 Feb 10, 2023

Hi Laurel, I really enjoyed reading this. You have created a really believable world and a fascinating narrative. The magical setting feels very real and the characters do to. Congratulations on a worthy win.

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Laurel Hanson
19:37 Feb 10, 2023

I appreciate this. Thank-you.

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Marty B
17:31 Feb 10, 2023

Congrats!
Great story about the passion of youth who don't know enough to be scared of the risks, versus the wisdom of the lived experience.

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Laurel Hanson
19:37 Feb 10, 2023

Much appreciated!

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Wendy Kaminski
14:44 Feb 03, 2023

This story was magical, Laurel. So many great lines, and the moral of the tale was so well-laid-out in alignment with the entirety of it. His memoirs broke my heart for that gryphon and her chicks. :(

- “Harpers cannot trade in truth and expect to keep their bellies full.

- “I wrote it,” he agreed, “on the pages of the world with my body as my quill.”

I particularly enjoyed the "reading" they did of one another, the clue exchange if you will. I loved that being a part of the story, and it added another level of enchantment. Your stories are so good, I'm just going to have to leave it with "I loved it!" :).

Reply

Laurel Hanson
18:23 Feb 03, 2023

Much obliged :)

Reply

Wendy Kaminski
16:18 Feb 10, 2023

Way to go, Laurel - congrats on the win!

Reply

Laurel Hanson
19:36 Feb 10, 2023

Thank-you!

Reply

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