Guess I’ll throw the beginning of my WIP into the ring...
The water was colder this time, the current stronger where it sucked at his feet. Tugging him further down into deeper blue water while his eyes blurred from the shock, trying to keep sight of the frantic bubbles skittering to the surface that were growing ever further away. Hair, darker than he remembered, longer, tangling in front of his eyes. He raked his fingers through it to try and clear his sight, freezing in space with hands outstretched. Shadows around him. Something big is in the water with him. Walls made of dark stone loom in the darkness, carved in the likeness of a monster with eyes of shifting gems. A halo of celestial bodies centered around the head of an owl whose neck was just a little too long.
He could still feel it, the thing in the water. The image on the wall was covered by the night sky- dark and streaked with stars. He tried to find the source of the sudden darkness, twisting in the water that felt more like thick honey now, cloying and tugging at his clothes. The night sky around him had eyes, and they were bright in the darkness, iridescent. He’d seen them before, looming like the moon through a thick fog, but this time they were different, closer.
They blinked.
Minho woke, frozen, covered in a cold sweat while staring at the ceiling. His fingers refused to move, and every muscle felt pulled tight like a rubber band. His breath caught in a throat still ragged from gasping during the fourth nightmare of the week, this one with even more realism than any of the others in the past. It was some sort of recurring nightmare, one that had resulted in a fear of deep blue water from a young age.
The dreams had started a long time ago, just with the feeling of water pressure on all sides, bubbles and shifting shadows. The shapes evolved over time, always resulting in sleep paralysis when he finally woke up, research and even a therapist not quite helping with understanding the strange visions. Now in his mid-twenties, Seong Minho eventually found the strength to wriggle clammy fingers and toes, slowly working the pins and needles out until he could wedge himself into the corner of his room, eyes adjusting to the light filtered through his curtains. It was getting harder to move once he woke up now, the feeling of the water pressing him down into the bed like a real, physical force. Even the strange muffled sounds of being underwater lingered, his ears prickling with the sensation of bubbles floating upward.
There was a small notebook on the crowded bedside table beside a well-used candle and an empty glass of water, a pen tucked into the last page that had been hastily scribbled on the last night they had the dream. Minho had started writing the dreams down at the age of ten, when they became more than the sensation of water and a prickling feeling of danger. Several notebooks of different sizes and materials leaned against each other on a shelf above the bed, all describing the dream as it began to continue and become more detailed. Books weren’t as common anymore, technology evolving to have tablets used in place of pages, but the fondness for writing and looking back through the pages kept Minho buying small notebooks at the store whenever pages were running low.
There was another book, bigger, beneath the one that Minho was hastily recording the dream in. He was trying to get all the details down before they could be forgotten in the minutes after waking, knowing what would happen if he didn’t get to the pages in enough time. It had happened before, leaving Minho with the crushing anxiety that something truly important had been left unsaid and lost. That, and something about scribbling the image of the beast down onto something physical, the presence of graphite on paper that was stained with age and tea giving the beast more realism than using his tablet, where anything could be conjured. Something about looking through old drawings, growing fainter and more smudged as the years went by, made the dreams feel like they were more than just dreams. The carvings on the walls were harder to recover from his memories, almost like something prevented him from having more than a foggy recollection.
A blinking light in the corner of his eye caught his attention, now that the morning routine of scribbling everything down with a single-minded purpose had been fulfilled. His little brick of an alarm clock proudly presented the time in a deep blue, the one color that Minho had found annoyed him the least in the morning. It wasn’t the emerald litany of go go go or the ominous flashing of red lights that had nearly given him a heart attack the first time he had woken up from one of his worst nightmares, watching as the ceiling of his room warped with crimson that dripped and ran down the walls. Later that afternoon, his therapist had told him that sleep paralysis could include hallucinations.
The clock had only been red for one day.
The Mist - South / jennipasaneart
They only come once every 150 years, following closely behind the comet that I had seen once when I was young, cradled in my mother's arms. My eyes hadn't been strong yet, neither was my memory, but that night had somehow stuck. The sight of the comet had been the greatest memory that I held on to, one of the greatest times of peace I had ever known with my mother.
That night, my mother had told me about them. Every other time that the comet comes, they follow like a rolling tidal wave as the sun rises in the wake of the comet's trail. She had never seen them, but her grandmother had, and spoke of their arrival like she had seen a God coast through the skies. Many didn't know where to go to see them, many forgot, most barely cared. Those who remembered their last coming had passed away like my great-grandmother, and I can hear the hushed whispers of their grandchildren in the tall grass around me.
We had arrived in the soft lavender tones of midnight, our own children sleepy in our arms, our laps. My daughter is winding the buds of soft white flowers into a crown near my feet. I had told her that she was lucky, that this year she would see something that so many others would never see in their lifetimes. Her fingers are small, stained green from plucking the thin stems, but they are steady for her age as she knots them with an utmost focus that I envy. She had been awed by the comet. I could see the reflection of it in her eyes even now, hours after it faded over the peaks of the mountains around us. Still, I said, we had to wait. They would come at dawn, and they would be quiet until they touched the sun.
The crown in her hands was nearly complete, full of every small flower she could find. They are all white in this valley, coating the thick grass in what looks like fresh frost despite the warmth in the air. It takes me a moment to realize that I can see her more clearly. My eyes had gotten used to the darkness of night, but now I can pick out the freckle on her cheek, the one that she shares with me, the one that I share with my mother. The others around me realize this too, the voices that were already so soft now growing silent as we listen. The children notice this, my daughter pauses in her crown to cock her head like a small bird. It takes minutes, but it feels like hours for us to hear them. My daughter looks at me, the comet’s shine sparkling from her eyes in anticipation.
They only come once every 150 years, rising like the tide with the morning sun over the mountain peaks that surround us. They flow North, coming from the warm South sea that sits just beyond those snow-capped mountains where they boil and flow into strange shapes over time, using the pull of the moon in the water as a heartbeat. I can see what my mother had told me, what her grandmother had told her. There’s mist beginning to flow between the rugged peaks, tinted a shimmering gold in the sunlight while the sections in the shadow of dawn are still moving in waves of silver starlight. Everyone is hushed now, the children pointing silently at the slow-motion cascade.
Somewhere in her pocket is a small shell, pearlescent when the sun hits it just right, and I hope that it will help her remember what she sees today. A small piece of glass sits in my pocket, one that she had found in the sand and then presented to me like it was a trophy. I will treasure it more than anything else, I will string it to a chain and wear it to my deathbed, knowing that my daughter and I will share the memory of this dawn, and I will hope that she shares the awe of this night with her children, so that their children may get to show the same thing to their own.
I can feel my daughter buzzing with excitement at the low, mournful echo from the sea. It’s heart-wrenching, and I clutch at my chest before I can think about it. There’s tears in my eyes as the sound multiplies over the ocean. The sound laps at the rock wall between us like the water they come from, the ocean that my daughter had danced in the day before. The sound is more beautiful than anything else I have ever heard, more profound than the greatest symphony. I have heard the sounds of whales before, their cries caught by cameras in the ocean, but this is greater than that. It is louder, rarer, and it grows closer with every echo.
The hair on my arms is raised when I see the first one rise above the line of mountains, a slow crest of aural mist that falls behind the peak. The cry that follows is bright, pitched high, and I can feel the tears running down my cheeks knowing that these beasts also bring their children to the same spot we all have. A convergence of generations that will never forget what they experience. For us, the sight of something rare and genuine and raw, and for them it is the first warmth of the sun in their ethereal bodies, the exhilaration of breaching over the land for the first and last time of their lives. My mother had told me the oldest of them come to this valley to die in the sun, to breathe the freshness of the flowers that litter the tall grass and to see their own magnificence on display in our faces. The young will stay low in the mist, they will become rain and return to the sea to begin their lives again, knowing that they someday will come to do this again.
The calf leaps again, and the gasp that rips through us is one breath. We can feel their presence in the air, the salt of the sea in our lungs and the sweetness of the sun rippling over their backs like biting into the freshest of fruits. My daughter is shaking in my lap, her hands tight on my arms. She smells of the flowers she has spent the early hours weaving into a gift, and I wonder if those great spirits will breathe us in the way we do them. Will they breathe the flower petals on my daughter’s hands? Will they feel her speak their story over time like the softest of strokes over their heads?
They are beautiful as they begin to rise, emerging from the falls of mist to gather it under their fins, the movement sweeping the air into shapes like lace beneath their bodies. They are made of that shimmering silk, it flows around and amongst them and changes their forms like ghosts. Their voices are a joyful choir now, no longer the sadness of meeting the wall of mountains, now it carries that sweet freedom of the sun. They can taste the sunlight and the grass and breathe in the warmth of the dawn.
They move in the open air like dancers, the same grace that they carry as they move through the water now being multiplied in the early morning light. They’re slow, their movements stalled by their size, but it adds to the magic of seeing them. They cry, the sounds echoing in the cup of the valley we sit in, but their movements have no sound. It’s like being underwater somehow, and I have to remind myself to breathe in and out. A gentle shake to my daughter, and I can hear her exhale hard. I was told their play would be short, that this would be something that one could miss, but the slow motion of their movements helps in prolonging their beauty.
Already I can see the biggest of them, nearly the size of the mountain it flows over, fading in the light of the sun. Little ones sweep above and under and between it’s many fins, playing in the mist that cascades down from the elder’s body to the valley floor. Already the clouds gather in what was a clear sky, some of the smallest of them crooning as they follow their mothers into the sunlight, becoming rain. The oldest of them cruise downward into the flowing fog, sinking into the cool pillow-soft clouds that move across the valley floor. The little flowers my daughter had gathered are moving in time with the beasts, the soft sound of them the only other noise aside from the soft singing.
I don’t tell my daughter that some will die today. I don’t have the heart to tell her about how the nature of death touches even such magic as this. But I know she will ask me someday, why the largest and most graceful of them breach in reverse to create soft waves that roll toward us. The young, and those who still have time roam upward, sweeping up in multitudes toward the light and the clouds that sit in the sky. Their songs are fading now, and I can feel tears again as they run down my face. My mother hadn’t told me how sad it would be to see them go. I knew it would be quick, but it feels like we have been in this valley for years, watching a lifetime pass by as they made their way from the South sea to the North, drifting into the sky.
My daughter is the one who notices the rain. It’s soft, the faintest kiss of water that follows the last of them that drifts upward. It’s a goodbye so soft that it turns the golden air to lavender, softening the already gentle atmosphere. Later, when my daughter slips under the blankets with me in my bed, she will pull out the little shell she had picked up from the beach. What was once before just another simple memento of the power of the ocean is greater now, something more precious, and I know she will dream of those beasts for the rest of her life. I will die knowing that I was one of the few who had known their story, and one of the fewer who had seen the young play in the dawn light before becoming the sweet rain that had washed my tears away.
Someday I’ll tell her what we saw as I left. A delicate crown of flowers, crafted with utmost care, laying in the long grass beside an indent in the shape of a small child. She made it as a gift, from the little flowers that smelled so sweet bloomed with the arrival of something so rare. My daughter had left it, forgetting she had made it in the wake of her awe, since she made flower crowns every time she could with every flower she could grasp.
I saw mist drift toward it, running along the soft petals with a godly reverence. I saw it dissipate into the long grass, becoming a sweet scent in the gentle rain. I saw the first offering that had ever been taken by them, made from something they cherished, made by the hands of my daughter with the reflection of a comet in her eyes.