Contest #98 shortlist ⭐️

there’s plenty of fish in the graveyard; there's plenty of ghosts in the sea

Submitted into Contest #98 in response to: Set your story on (or in) a winding river.... view prompt

86 comments

Fantasy Adventure Inspirational

The Winterlands at night are freezing at best and lethal at worst, so of course they’re making Leif go on a Quest during the second sort, when half of his village’s population have beards beset by icicles and the other half are nursing a frostbitten toe in front of a blazing bonfire.


“You bear the gift of the Walrus Belly,” reassures Torsten as he heaves at the oars, threading their rickety little boat through frigid saltwater. By the amber luminescence of a lantern powered by whale blubber, Leif watches his companion’s breath mist into the night and mingle with his own.


“Gift of the Walrus Belly,” echoes Leif. “So, basically, the council of elders elected me for the job because I’m fat.”


“You said it, not me.”


Leif sighs, his breath shuddering past blue lips. Despite his… girth, he’s buried under three layers of clothing made from insulating sealskin, and even then the cold has pried each layer away like the fingers of an insistent lover. Not that Leif knows what that’s like.


Leif the Loser, the other boys would chant back at home, because of course Leif would be the only one left without a girl during their drunken rampages through the village.


Ludicrous Leif.


Leif the Laughable.


Limp-Dicked Leif.


That last one cuts the deepest, especially when Chief Gorvald the Gruesome hears the boys say it and bursts out laughing, a mighty guffaw that’s more of a thunderclap than any sound a human can make. Sometimes he even joins in on the chanting.


Is that why Leif had agreed to this fool’s errand? Is that why he’s freezing his balls off in the middle of Maiden’s Heart, the most unforgiving sea in the known world?


(Because, of course, nothing is colder than the heart of a woman who refuses to sleep with a man, as they say in the Winterlands.)


“I could be sat by a fire,” mutters Leif, “sipping hot broth and drinking elderflower mead.”


“And miss out on something that comes around once every millenium?” says Torsten. “You’ll live to regret it, lad.”


“Only if I make it out alive.”


“Well, you won’t with that attitude!”


The sea at night looks like molasses, thick and syrupy. Except there’s nothing sweet about it. Not when one dip below the surface would suck the warmth out of your beating heart and leave it stained purple with frost, unless you happen to be a blubbery narwhal, or a thick-skinned walrus. And suddenly the council’s reasoning is starting to make sense.


Torsten drops the oars, and the boat eases to a rest. “Now, we wait.”


“For what?”


“For the River to show us the way, of course.”


Leif wraps his arms around himself. He’s heard the legends, and wants to believe they’re true. But a river winding through the ocean? That doesn’t even make sense from a logical standpoint.


Torsten extinguishes the lantern, plunging the world into darkness. A tiny shrimp trapped inside a whale’s mouth wouldn’t feel much different.


“What was that for?”


“There is only one light we need, Leif. All others will lead us astray.”


Before Leif can mutter a remark about speaking in riddles, the sea comes alive with color. A huge, shimmering ribbon of light materializes just below the water’s surface, winding through the blackness and stretching out into the distance. A single skillful yet haphazard brushstroke, the sea as the canvas.


While Leif’s jaw hangs off its hinges, Torsten grabs the oars and maneuvers the boat onto the ribbon. He follows the path laid out for them with pinpoint precision, even when it winds into itself, or takes them on a detour.


“Take as long as you like,” says Torsten. “The River-in-the-Ocean is not something you swallow after a quick chew.”


Because it is a river, as much as Leif’s calm sensibilities want to deny it, and the surrounding ocean serves as the riverbank. He can see it’s made of tiny glowing pinpricks that pulse intermittently with light, like stars that have lost their way and decided to live among the plankton. The colors cycle between every hue imaginable: greens and blues and reds, as if somebody had tossed all their jewellery into the water. It’s not the first time Leif has seen the ocean illuminate like this, but for it to form a clearly-defined path, as if the gods themselves are showing them the way, is something out of a dream. Or perhaps a nightmare.


The River-in-the-Ocean ends in a giant pool of glowing dots, swirling into itself to form a vortex that ever-so-gently pushes the boat in a circle.


“We’re here,” announces Torsten. “You know what to do.”


And Leif does, unfortunately, know what to do. All sense of awe gone in the blink of an eye, he ties iron weights to his ankles, then a rope around his waist, the other end of which is attached firmly to the boat. He perches on the gunwale, the small craft swaying under the unevenly distributed weight, and hesitates.


“It’s just like I told you,” says Torsten. “All you have to do is let the weights pull you down until the Mermaid Queen finds you. Once she does, ask Her Majesty for her Divine Crown, which is said to grant the wishes of anyone who wears it. We’re not sure how you’re supposed to speak to her underwater, but all the legends say you have to make a request. Try using elaborate hand gestures, or maybe write it down on a bit of kelp. In any case, once the Crown is yours, simply untie the weights, then tug the rope three times in a rhythm so I know it’s you on the other end and not a shark.” He gives Leif a reassuring pat on the back. “It’s plain sailing. A six-year-old with lingonberry jam smeared across his face could do it.”


“Thanks for the morale boost, Torsten.”


“Anytime.”


Leif stares at the swirling mosaic of colors before him and finds himself shivering like an earthquake, though not because of the cold. For a heartbeat he lets himself wonder whether his life really is miserable enough to go chucking it away. If he dies tonight, will the other boys sing songs of his valor, or will they laugh?


He can already hear Chief Gorvald’s booming guffaw.


“May the Storms strengthen your heart,” prays Torsten, which is nice of him but is also another way of telling Leif to get on with it already.


It’s a bone-chilling night in the Winterlands when Leif takes what is probably his last breath and plunges into the water below.



























The cold is a fist to the stomach, knocking the air out of his lungs. He thinks it can’t possibly get any worse, which is when the water seeps through each layer of clothing like the root tendrils of a seedling, reaching into his flesh and squeezing the warmth out of every blood vessel.


Everything is blindingly bright for a few heartbeats as glowing dots swirl around him, but it quickly fades as he’s pulled down into suffocating darkness. A dull weight presses in from all sides, and he’s sure his head is going to explode any second now, so he screams for Torsten to help him, only to get a mouthful of salty water.


Burning. His lungs are burning in the darkness, quite ironic considering he’s never felt so cold in his entire life. And it’s in the darkness that a jeering song arrives, quietly at first but surging into a crescendo to fill his world:




🎵


Leif the Loser


Born bigger than a humpback whale


Leif the Loser


The only Winterman destined to fail!


Leif the Loser


Lonely for the rest of his days


Leif the Loser


For no maiden will meet his gaze!


Leif the Loser


Can’t even hold a sword straight


Leif the Loser


Drowning was the poor lad’s fate!


🎵




Except he isn’t drowning. Leif gasps awake to find a world of inky blackness. His clothes are dry and his body is warm, at least, just like the sloping ground under his feet. It’s as if he’d never entered the water. He must be dreaming. Or dead.


He unties the weights around his ankles and takes a few steps. A smooth, curved wall greets him on all sides; he can’t see it, but he can feel the glass-like texture kissing his palms. His enclosure.


He finally scrounges up enough courage to call out. “Hello?” The only response is a dull stirring in the darkness, so faint that he isn’t sure if his mind is playing tricks on him. “Who goes there?”


THIS IS NOT YOUR DOMAIN, LITTLE ONE, booms a voice.


Leif is so surprised to be called “little” that for a second he doesn’t even register the voice’s lack of origin, as if it’s coming from every direction at once while at the same time blossoming from some secluded corner of his mind.


A second after that, he grasps the implications of there being a disembodied voice in the darkness instead of a white light, or something else reassuring. Fear coils its grimy tendrils around his bones, but he wrestles them away and latches onto the only tangible thing he has left: Torsten’s instructions.


“Are y-y-you the… the… M-Mermaid Q-Q-Queen?”


The words lack impact, tripping over his teeth to come out stillborn and pathetic. But it’s as if the darkness can look past that to know what Leif wants to say.


THERE IS NO MERMAID QUEEN, SMALL CHILD.


Again, Leif has to blink the disbelief out of his eyes. He even pinches his own cheek to check that he’s still as chubby as he should be. Which, unfortunately, he is.


NOR ARE THERE MERMAIDS IN GENERAL, continues the darkness. THEY ARE BUT A FABRICATION BORN FROM THE LUST OF LONELY VOYAGERS, HAVING SPENT TOO MUCH TIME AT SEA WITHOUT FEMALE CONTACT.


Leif starts shivering again, all the cowardice of fifteen years spent being inadequate frothing at his seams. He had one job: retrieve the Divine Crown from the Mermaid Queen, and he can’t even do that. He really is a loser.


But… wait. Why should he trust the voice? He supposes there’s not much else to trust when everything is pitch-black, and there is a fiery, robust quality to it that demands his attention, but still. He wants more than that.


“If you’re not the Mermaid Queen,” begins Leif, the fear melting away like hoarfrost in spring as curiosity lends him confidence, “who are you?”


NOBODY, replies Darkness. Their voice is an avalanche devouring a mountainside, the sort of harmonious medley of beauty and terror that only a natural disaster could conjure. And it’s neither male nor female, but something else, something less limiting.


YOU ASSUME I CAN BE QUANTIFIED BY A SIMPLE “WHO”. TRY AGAIN, TINY CREATURE. PROVE TO ME YOUR LIFE WAS WORTH SAVING.


Leif’s heart flutters. Whenever Darkness speaks, it’s as if the words are carved in stone, and reality molds itself around that ultimate truth. 


So, I am alive. For the time being.


Leif swallows. He doesn’t want to go back to the cold, and what he says next may very well decide his fate. So he tries a different angle, hoping the truth will unmask itself in small increments that he’ll be able to piece together on his own. Which is easier said than done when he doesn’t even know what Darkness wants.


“Why do you keep calling me ‘small’?”


BECAUSE YOU ARE SMALL.


Leif clenches his teeth. Fifteen years of ridicule, and he won’t let anyone tell him it meant nothing. Not even… whatever Darkness is. “I’m very sorry, but I’m anything but small. Back home, they’d sing songs to mock my size. During dinnertime, the other boys would dump their leftovers on my plate, then dunk my face in the slop while making walrus noises. One time, an avalanche started on a nearby mountain and the elders blamed me for it because—”


YOU HAPPENED TO TRIP OVER A LOG AND LAND ON YOUR BUTTOCKS ONLY A FEW MOMENTS BEFOREHAND.


“Yes, that’s exactly what…”


That’s exactly what happened. But maybe Leif shouldn’t be surprised that Darkness knows. After all, he’s supposed to be dead, but isn’t.


“You’re one of the gods, aren’t you?” Leif ventures.


ONE DOES NOT HAVE TO BE A GOD TO SEE THAT YOU ARE SMALL.


That didn’t even answer his question. Before Leif can insist that he’s fat all over again, the blackness surrounding him stirs. It tears open like a wound, banishing the gloom on the other side of the barrier for a giant, window-shaped opening. Leif looks through it, and watches a familiar rotund figure struggle to lift a battleaxe while a dozen onlookers throw their heads back and laugh.


It’s a dagger to the heart. And it hurts so much that the pain trumps even the awe of witnessing what Darkness is capable of doing.


“Why are you showing me this?”


BECAUSE I WANT YOU TO SEE WHAT I SEE, LITTLE ONE.


More windows materialize in the darkness, more moments in time that Leif has banished to the recesses of his mind only to be shown to him right now, clear as day. He grits his teeth through it all until it’s too much.


“Please stop. With all due respect, I don’t know how you can look at all this and still see me the way you do.”


THEN IT IS TIME TO TAKE A STEP BACK.


The windows fade, only to be replaced by more. Leif has to squint to realize the fat boy he’s looking at isn’t him; someone from another tribe, perhaps, with fleshy jowls and a breathless, sweaty sheen to his person. Another window shows a different boy, one with fiery hair and freckles, curled in a puddle of mud as a mob hurls stones at him. A third window shows a skinny girl with skin the color of treacle and strange, robe-like clothes being spat on; she has pinkish-white patches of skin on her face that her tormentors don’t.


Leif’s gaze darts from one window to the next, one sickening, unbearable moment to another. He wants to curl up just like the red-haired boy and pretend the world isn’t as cruel as it is. But he can’t tear his gaze away from all these people. He’s never seen them before, and most certainly hasn’t a clue what distant realm they’re from, yet he feels a curious sense of kinship with them all the same. An invisible thread, running through everyone and sewing the gaping hole in Leif’s heart shut.


NOW DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE? asks Darkness.


Leif watches in awe as the red-haired boy unfurls and groggily gets to his feet after the mob has dispersed. His face is caked with mud and blood and his body hangs limp, but there’s a fire in his eyes that won’t be extinguished anytime soon. The dark-skinned girl wipes away her tears after her tormentors have left, then picks up a spear and, gritting her teeth, begins practicing behind closed doors.


LITTLE CREATURE? prompts Darkness. I SAID, DO YOU SEE WHAT I SEE?


Leif nods as his eyes well with tears. “I’m not alone,” he manages to choke out.


AND YOU NEVER WILL BE.


“But why? Why help me?”


Darkness takes an uncharacteristic pause, as if carefully considering a response. HUMANS… THEY FASCINATE ME TO NO END. IT SEEMS TO BE A HABIT OF THEIRS TO GET BACK UP AFTER THE WORLD HAS BEATEN THEM DOWN. DO NOT THINK I AM HELPING YOU OUT OF MERCY OR COMPASSION, FOR I AM BEYOND SUCH MORTAL PHENOMENA. PEOPLE LIKE YOU, THE ONES THAT NO LONGER HAVE A REASON TO KEEP GOING BUT STILL DO, ALWAYS HAVE AN INTERESTING STORY TO TELL. AND MY ONLY WISH IS TO SEE YOURS UNFOLD, LITTLE LEIF.


Leif supposes it’s better than no answer. In any case, he finds it amusing that a being like Darkness cares what he thinks of them.


YOU WILL SOON BE SENT BACK TO YOUR DOMAIN. IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE YOU WOULD ASK OF ME?


Leif wipes away the tears. “What do you… look like?”


The windows fade, and then so does the blackness. Leif has his breath snatched away by the view: ice-blue, crystalline water as far the eye can see, filled with silver-scaled shoals of fish and vibrant-hued, gelatinous creatures he’s never seen before. He notices he’s inside a transparent, bubble-shaped enclosure, which keeps him in and the water out. A humpback whale passes overhead, and it’s a beautiful sight.


HUMANS ARE OF THE LAND, says Darkness, BUT I AM OF THE SEA, AS ARE MY CHILDREN YOU SEE BEFORE YOU. SO THINK TWICE THE NEXT TIME YOU CONSIDER “WALRUS” AN INSULT.


Leif’s vision begins to fade, and that’s when he knows his time is almost up. Part of him wishes he could stay here, with an invisible being that doesn’t discriminate between people. But he has to go back.


For my people.


“Thank you,” murmurs Leif, before everything goes dark.




























Leif’s eyes flutter open to find a blurry Torsten shaking him awake.


“You did it, lad! I knew you had it in you.”


He’s sprawled in the boat, and the River-in-the-Ocean must have faded because the only light source is the dim amber of a lantern.


He coughs up seawater. “Torsten… what are you talking about?”


Then Leif registers the cold metal his fingers are curled around. Is this a… crown?


“How did you get the Mermaid Queen to hand it over? Oh, you must have a whale of a tale to tell…”


Leif closes his eyes and savors the night air. For the first time in forever, he doesn’t feel like a loser.


June 15, 2021 17:14

You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.

86 comments

14:32 Jun 19, 2021

I think that title will be going on my list of "Top 10 Most Interesting Reedsy Titles," thank you very much. The descriptions had just the right word choices, and—oh gosh, this is going to sound cliche—I felt as if I was there in the story. (Insert cringe here.) The ways you described the cold were fresh and riveting, making me long for the winter in this summer heat. I had a good laugh at some of the lines (Leif's third nickname, in particular) but felt my heartstrings getting pulled (another cliche line. What is wrong with me?) in other pa...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
06:20 Jun 20, 2021

Haha the title comes from the lyrics to a song, which is why it sounds so strange. And thanks for the long-ish comment, I’m flattered! Don’t worry about being cliche, as long as it’s really what you think 😉 And finally, thank you, someone who doesn’t think Darkness needs to be darker lol (to be honest I’m too lazy to edit this and change their personality). You’re too kind!!

Reply

11:31 Jun 20, 2021

You're welcome!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Ash Jarvis
23:56 Jun 17, 2021

I love your turn of phrase and imagery in this, and the idea of the river-in-the-ocean is wonderful. On top of that I thought the balance of an epic quest type of story with a not-so-epic hero really worked beautifully. As far as any criticism, I think I’d side with the others who are urging you to make the Darkness um, well, darker. Whether or not you choose to swim in that direction (sorry, couldn’t resist) I really enjoyed this!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:20 Jun 18, 2021

Thanks! Yep, I love a good underdog story. Alright guys, I get it, wholesome Darkness just didn’t do it for you 😔 Thanks for the input, I’ll give the story a look over!

Reply

Ash Jarvis
15:26 Jun 25, 2021

Yaaaay! Congrats on being shortlisted!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
15:33 Jun 25, 2021

Thanks for having my back! 😊

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Hoor Amin
20:30 Jul 16, 2021

An amazing lesson in this story! Well done!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
22:27 Jul 19, 2021

Thank you!

Reply

Hoor Amin
16:27 Jul 20, 2021

You're welcome!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Jon Casper
16:05 Jul 04, 2021

I was engrossed by this story. You have a real talent for weaving a tale.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
21:18 Jul 04, 2021

Thanks so much John! 😙

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
19:02 Jun 28, 2021

say it with me, guys- S! H! O! R! T! L! I! S! T! SHORTLIST!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
20:46 Jun 28, 2021

Haha thanks a million! Good to see you're still with us :) (And I agree, can't believe they're brushing off contest #100...)

Reply

22:13 Jun 28, 2021

i am very, very hurt over it- BUT you got a shortlist, so maybe they're not completely nutso after all. ;)

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Orenda .
04:47 Jun 28, 2021

damnn, I see another shortlist 😏 congrats, dude!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
20:42 Jun 28, 2021

yeah i can't believe it! thanks so much. and how's everything? last time you told me you got covid...

Reply

Orenda .
04:38 Jun 29, 2021

yes, I'm all good now :) what about you?

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
22:39 Jun 29, 2021

oh thats a relief to hear! pretty good too, just trying to stop being a waste of space and get a job already :)

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Amanda Lieser
03:27 Jun 28, 2021

I highly enjoyed the lesson in this story. I also enjoyed that you opened it with a bit of humor: “You bear the gift of the Walrus Belly,” I thought you did a spectacular job of keeping the mystery of the ocean with the magic of the creature. Congrats on getting shortlisted and thank you for writing this story.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
20:43 Jun 28, 2021

Thanks Amanda! Glad you enjoyed. *kissy face*

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Scout Tahoe
15:08 Jun 25, 2021

Rayhan - congrats. You deserve it and I literally love the title so much. So yeah. :)

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
15:45 Jun 25, 2021

Scout! Thank you, the title comes from the lyrics of an obscure indie song 😜 And I’ll be waiting for your full return!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Avani G
14:45 Jun 25, 2021

Hey, Ray! What a great story. I just finished reading it and I love the character development of Leif. It's great and meaningful. I just read your bio and saw you like Alt Indie/Rock, too. I haven't gotten to listening to your playlist but I will soon :) Congratulations for your Shortlist!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:55 Jun 25, 2021

Thank you so much! Oh awesome, I hope my taste in music doesn’t disappoint 😜

Reply

Avani G
21:40 Jun 28, 2021

Wow, the first song is so cool! I didn't get to listen to the entire playlist, but that one had to be my favorite :)

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Yolanda Wu
10:41 Jun 18, 2021

I loved this story! The character of Leif was so interesting, and his character arc through the story was definitely interesting and satisfying. You described the cold so well, I could practically feel it (maybe it's also because Melbourne winter is quite cold and the heater in my house isn't the best). I honestly just love any story that takes place on the sea, and when I saw Mermaid Queen, I was definitely very excited. I found the mystery surrounding the Darkness really interesting, and I actually quite liked the Darkness monologuing abou...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:21 Jun 18, 2021

I’m sorry for disappointing you about there being no mermaids! 😅 Thanks for stopping by as always. I used to take Japanese in Year 9 or so and I was godawful at it. Languages just dont sit well with me!

Reply

Yolanda Wu
00:12 Jun 19, 2021

Haha, it's all good, there's plenty of mermaids to go around. Japanese is fun, but tutoring on a Friday night isn't the best.

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Zilla Babbitt
20:06 Jun 16, 2021

Hey Ray! Sorry it's taken me so long to get around to saying hi. Thanks for the shout out in your bio ;). Love this story so much. It's funny, vivid, and meaningful. I like the unsubtle tie to Leif Eriksson and HTTYD as A.G. mentioned. My one critique is about the Darkness's monologue. "HUMANS… THEY FASCINATE ME TO NO END. IT SEEMS TO BE A HABIT OF THEIRS TO GET BACK UP AFTER THE WORLD HAS BEATEN THEM DOWN." While it's not the usual "humans are dumb and useless" from a super- or sub-human POV, it is still soo clique. I think you can sti...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:26 Jun 17, 2021

No worries, I expect anyone would need a rest after how often you used to submit stories. Is the HTTYD inspiration really that obvious? 😂 Alright, I’ll give the monologue a look over. Thanks for the input! Oh and speaking of shortlists, I think we can both agree that A.G. really needs one.

Reply

Zilla Babbitt
15:19 Jun 17, 2021

Well I read A.G.'s comment and it sort of slid in place. Yes, I think it's high time. I wish Reedsy would recruit judges with diversity of taste, so that fewer ethereal plotless stories win and more action and mystery and all that. Of course about 90% of my recognized stories are that ethereal plotless type... That was one of the reasons I loved your Virtual Reality Show, because not only was it good, it was a contrast to the usual weekly shortlists and winners.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
15:49 Jun 17, 2021

Which is of course bad news for me because ALL my stories are plot-heavy and usually have plenty of character development 😅 If I were a judge, you can bet you’d start seeing more fantasy and sci-fi stories with stars next to the titles 😉 But I do agree with you. Last time I checked, there isn’t a single winning story in the Thriller genre. But surprise surprise, we have plenty of Romance (not that I’m complaining when my favorite story on this site is “When The Northern Lights Finally Reach You”) I’m flattered you remember my shortlisted st...

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Rayhan Hidayat
14:23 Jun 25, 2021

Zilla, have you considered a career in fortune-telling? I think you’d find it quite profitable 😊

Reply

Zilla Babbitt
14:46 Jun 25, 2021

*gasp* Congratulations! I had forgotten the contest closed today. So deserved!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
22:50 Jun 27, 2021

I'll always treasure the support of people like you :D

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 2 replies
H L McQuaid
15:39 Jun 16, 2021

I like this so, so, so much. Great storytelling in the old tradition (I can imagine this as an oral history type of story, sat round a campfire). The writing is crisp and vivid, and you build empathy for Lief really well. I even choked up a bit when the Darkness was showing glimpses of people being bullied. A few small things. verb tense might work better as "...light materializes ..." here: " A huge, shimmering ribbon of light has materialized just below..." And maybe "..jaw hangs off it hinges" here, as that has better consonance than...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:21 Jun 17, 2021

Made the changes, thanks! I’m not sure what would work as a substitute for goggles in this scenario—I expect they would have had some rudimentary form of eye protection so they could see underwater, but at the same time I have to admit goggles aren’t common imagery for this time period. Oh well, it might come to me, unless you happen to have some suggestions! 😜

Reply

H L McQuaid
16:11 Jun 17, 2021

I mean, it probably doesn't matter that much. I just tripped over it a bit. I was wondering whether he even needed goggles (presumably people in their time can see when underwater)...we're already on-board with him strapping lead weight to his feet and being dragged to the bottom of an icy river/ocean, and I'd think breathing would be more of necessity than opening his eyes. Once he's in the dome, he doesn't need goggles anyway. Probably no one else will notice/care, so carry on while I think about what Vikings would use for googles (hmm, pe...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
14:11 Jun 18, 2021

Decided to omit the goggles entirely! You have a point, half these people are berserk anyway

Reply

H L McQuaid
15:31 Jun 18, 2021

It was only recently while watching Vikings (ahem), that I learned Berserker is an old Norse term. :)

Reply

Show 0 replies
H L McQuaid
15:54 Jun 25, 2021

Congrats on getting short-listed. 🎉🎊 woo woo!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
16:00 Jun 25, 2021

Woo! Thanks for having my back! 🥳

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 2 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
21:52 Jun 15, 2021

:0 magnifique- ah, the round-hole kids in a square-peg world. reminds me of deidra's 'your poor rick'- if this story won, too, i wouldn't be surprised. ;) great story! elegantly paced, magnificently plotted, and the tinge of humorous bitterness woven throughout this ~ s e a y a r n ~ made it all for me. i say whack 'em with that crown, leif! one critique- when leif is stutterin' all over the place and asking, "are y-y-you the… the… m-mermaid q-q-queen?" all of the (stuttered) m's and l's should be capitalized. that's the only flaw i can fi...

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
13:15 Jun 16, 2021

Kate Mengel, flattering me as always ;) But seriously thank you. Love the term "sea yarn," I think that pretty much sums up my fantasy series that this short is based on. And I made the change, much appreciated as always!

Reply

13:47 Jun 16, 2021

flattery is my middle name. can't stop, won't stop. 😌💅

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Shoba Sadler
11:09 Jul 21, 2021

Rayhan, you are an excellent writer. This piece is so compelling. Interesting to know it is part of a larger epic novel you are writing. May I ask please how you get your work edited before submission? I am an author with two novels to my name and I'm looking for excellent writers to swap work with to help edit each other's work. Let me know if you are interested

Reply

Show 0 replies
K. Antonio
00:23 Jun 27, 2021

I just got to say it! THIS WAS SOME FUN TO READ! Fantasy, Mermaids, Leif... oh my. I hardly read things that have a certain "high-fantasy" quality to them, because I always fear I'll feel detached and not immersed enough, but this kept me hooked through and through. Congrats on the shortlist.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
22:42 Jun 27, 2021

Oh thank you so much! I'm surprised that I haven't been keeping up with your stories. I'll remedy that soon :)

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Mary Sheehan
19:50 Jun 26, 2021

Beautiful alliteration, gorgeous analogies. I normally stay as far away from fantasy as possible, but the descriptions in this made me want to stay until the end. Congrats!

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
21:50 Jun 26, 2021

Thanks a million! 😙

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
14:57 Jun 26, 2021

I just noticed you got shortlisted. Congratulations on your second one! I knew it was well-deserving of one, and I'm glad the judges agreed.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
21:51 Jun 26, 2021

Thank you, I’ll always cherish the support of people like you!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Melody Frost
08:41 Jun 26, 2021

I really enjoyed reading this story. Congratulations on your shortlist.

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
08:56 Jun 26, 2021

Much appreciated Melody! 😙

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Yolanda Wu
00:27 Jun 26, 2021

Rayhan! Congratulations on the shortlist! I'm so glad a fantasy story got some recognition around here! You go, I'm so happy for you! Sending all the congrats and love. :)

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
07:11 Jun 26, 2021

Thank you, you’re the best! I’m also surprised about the results this week; the winner is a sci-fi, and at least two other shortlists are either fantasy or sci fi. Maybe the judges have finally heard our cries of distress? 😜

Reply

Yolanda Wu
07:52 Jun 26, 2021

That would be amazing! Fantasy and sci-fi stories deserve the love.

Reply

Show 0 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Michael Martin
17:55 Jun 25, 2021

Well, after you told me you hoped I'd get shortlisted, YOU go and get shortlisted! Congrats! Well deserved :)

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
17:57 Jun 25, 2021

Haha thank you, I honestly did not expect to get any recognition! I did check and your story was actually on the longlist, which is why I had my fingers crossed.

Reply

Michael Martin
19:33 Jun 25, 2021

How do you see the long list? Or is that something reserved for specific people? (I'm still new to this lol)

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
19:46 Jun 25, 2021

not at all, anyone can check it! there's no longlist right now because a winner has just been announced, but once submissions begin to get approved you can click on a tag--say, the "fantasy" tag at the top of my latest story--and then scroll down to "recommended stories" which are stories that have caught the judges attention and have a higher chance of being shortlisted, or even winning. hope that helps! :)

Reply

Michael Martin
20:24 Jun 25, 2021

That does! Thanks!

Reply

Show 0 replies
Michael Martin
23:09 Jun 26, 2021

Question (since I can't send direct messages on here, I figured this was a good place to post): if I click on something like "American" (the tag I gave my story this week) and I'm not showing up on the Recommended list, does that mean I'm not being considered for shortlist/winner? I've already been approved... (Just curious how this works. If that's the case, I can avoid refreshing the page on Friday hoping I get listed lol)

Reply

Rayhan Hidayat
22:36 Jun 27, 2021

If you're not showing up on the recommended stories and you've just been approved, then unfortunately that means you're not being considered. The thing is, this isn't a rule that the site explicity states, and it's something that I figured out after doing a little digging of my own (I'm just another contender like you!). A few weeks back I took note of the stories under the "recommended" section, and when the results were announced, all of them came from that pool. So I'm relatively certain it's the site's version of a longlist. I respect ...

Reply

Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 2 replies
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply
Show 1 reply

Bring your short stories to life

Fuse character, story, and conflict with tools in the Reedsy Book Editor. 100% free.