
Folks, welcome to the newest recurring segment here at briansden69.com, Story Time Monday (or whenever day I post it). Now, you might be thinking this is where I’ll post a funny, unique, and enthralling story about my new life in New York City. Unfortunately, my life is far too boring for that. This is where I’ll post stories I completely made up, but are (hopefully) just as good. As I’ve said, I moved out here to try and become a screenwriter. What I don’t know if I’ve ever said on here is that I’m also trying to become an author. I wrote a book in college (yeah, I party), thought it was gonna be my golden ticket, then was blasted with the cold, hard reality that it was bad and no one wanted to publish it. I’m actually almost 100% sure I’ve said this before, but whatever, I’ll say it again- getting rejected 10 billion times kind of messed up my career “plans,” but I’m back up off the mat. The biggest barrier to getting published is actually, you know, getting published. Unpublished authors are like the untouchables in India. So, since no one wants a piece of me now, I figure why not just publish some of my work here? Sure, it’s not really the same and I still don’t get any money from it, but it’s still something. Before I go any further, no, this isn’t a sports or food post, so I’d forgive you if you bailed. But, if you want to get your imagination stimulated a little, keep reading.
Aside from my scripts, the project I’m focusing on now is a collection of short stories. Since they all involve the same characters, think of it as a bunch ofΒ Sherlock Holmes stories or something. That description actually fits the stories well, but I won’t give away any spoilers. Honestly, posting these is really just a way to get myself to actually write them, since even if only one person ends up liking this (Hi, Mom!), I wouldn’t want to deny them the content they crave. Now, a bit of a warning- these stories are pretty stupid and require you to suspend all the disbelief you’ve ever had. But they’re good, I swear. Now, without further ado, the first installment ofΒ The Life and Times of Shelby the Orca:
The Early Years
My name is Shelby, and Iβm an orca. Youβre probably thinking, βShelby doesnβt sound much like an orca name.β Itβs true; Shelby is traditionally a grey whale name. My friends all like to tell me Shelby is a girlβs name, too, but I donβt pay too much attention to that. My parents decided it was a good enough name for me, so thatβs all I need to know.
Iβm sure youβre wondering why youβre reading this. After all, the ramblings of an old orca typically arenβt especially thrilling. Well, a few months ago someone told me I should write down some of the crazy stuff that had happened in my life. I was a little hesitant at first; who would want to read about me? But when I really thought about it, I realized that Iβve actually lived a pretty exciting life. Not to brag, but I think at one point I was the most famous orca in the whole ocean. Thatβs what my agent told me, anyway. So I figured what the heck? Why not write some memoirs before my time was up?
I guess I should start with a little about my childhood. Iβm told thatβs how these things usually start. I was born in winter, but Iβm not sure the exact day. Honestly it felt like we celebrated it on a different day each year. Sometimes it can be tough to tell what day it is in the ocean, especially during red tide. One good thing about orcas is that we donβt have a mating season, so we have birthdays all throughout the year. It would have made it a little less special if my birthday was just part of a big communal party.
Growing up I lived with my family in a nice orca town full of other nice families. One of my friends said we lived in the Bear Sea or something, but I never really knew the official name for it. I just kind of knew where it was by instinct. The air was cold whenever I came up out of the water and there were lots of trees around, if that helps. A lot of times the rocks were covered in white stuff, too. My friend Russell said that humans liked to sniff it through their nose, but I always thought he was making that up.
My family was kind of the center of our neighborhood. My dad, Harris, was the local mailman, so he knew everyone. Everyone liked him, too, even though he had a bit of a temper. My mom, Koko, was easily the nicest orca in the ocean. She was always class mom when I was in school and kind of took care of all the kids in the neighborhood. My little sister, Janice, was born three years after I was. I of course love her now, but my younger self thought she was quite annoying. My parents always took her side, no matter what.
Unlike all the small fish, us orcas donβt need roofs or any kind of protection, so our houses are pretty much just plots of land with lawns, living rooms, kitchens, and bedrooms all kind of blending together. Some of our more Spartan neighbors didnβt even have lawns, just patches of sand outside their patches of sand. We didnβt have fences or anything, but everyone kind of knew where everyoneβs yard began and ended. If there were any disputes, the neighborhood constable was called. As it so happened, my dad was the constable, so I was well versed in orca property law from an early age.
We lived in Seahorse Circle, close to the center of town. Our yard was perfect. It wasnβt too big or too small, just the right size for our family. There was enough space for my dadβs barbeques and to play small games of seaball. Most of the time when my friends and I played Janice would have to play to make teams even. She got knocked around a lot during the games, but I like to think it toughened her up. She never said she didnβt like playing, at the very least.
We had a big patch of seaweed that my dad rigorously maintained. It was mostly beautiful green sea lettuce with some green rope mixed in. No kelp, though. My dad laughed at anyone who had kelp in their garden. βYou have to be truly naΓ―ve to think you can control kelp,β he would say. βItβs just a showoff move.β My mom started out with a small garden of sponges and anemones, and as Janice got older, she and Mom added more and more coral and pretty things. I didnβt really care what was in our yard, as long as it looked nice.
βNever trust someone with a crappy lawn,β Dad would always say. It instilled a certain respect for landscaping that would only help me as I got older.

The first real memory I have is of my first day of school, which was also the day I met my two best friends, Carlo and Russell. It was about three weeks after my sister was born. When orcas are born, we canβt sleep for the first month or so weβre alive. As a result, the mom doesnβt sleep either since she needs to watch over the baby. So Mom and Janice literally hadnβt slept in weeks, and both were a little cranky.
Mom woke me up early. She knew I was pretty nervous and made me breakfast. It was salmon, which we had had three days in a row. I was sick of it, but I could tell Mom wouldnβt want to hear it. Dad was already up getting ready for work and watching TV, and I knew he felt the same way about the meal.
βSalmon again, huh champ?β he asked me under his breath. βI think this lack of sleep is making your mother forget that weβve eaten this a week straight.β
βWhat was that?β Mom asked as I laughed.
βOh, nothing sweetie,β Dad said. βTell you what, bud, I think itβs time to take you seal hunting this Christmas when we go to visit your Aunt. Youβre about the same age as I was when your grandpa took me for the first time. And unlike salmon, eating seal never gets old.β
βReally?β I asked excitedly. βThat would be awesome!β
At that point in my life, I had only heard stories of seal hunting. Dad and his buddies would go every winter. They would always come home after a few days, sometimes empty handed, sometimes with bags full of seal meat. Seal meat is a true orca delicacy, and itβs good pretty much no matter how you prepare it. Part of the reason it tastes so good is probably because itβs so hard to get. Letβs just say itβs very satisfying to eat seals.
βYou bet,β Dad said. βWell, Iβm off. Good luck, champ. First day of schoolβs a big day.β
He gave Mom a goodbye nuzzle, grabbed his mailbag in his mouth, and swam off to the post office. He left the TV on, either because he knew I was watching or because he forgot to turn it off. I think he probably just forgot.
The post office served our neighborhood and a couple of the surrounding orca neighborhoods in a fifty-mile radius. Luckily for Dad, we lived only a few miles away. The post office was in a hollowed-out rock formation in the middle of a big plain where delivery orcas took all the mail they picked up from the communal mailboxes. The octopi that worked there would then put each package in the right distribution box. Dad would check-in in the morning, get the load for his route, and go out and deliver. We canβt write letters or anything, so itβs mostly packages and word-of-mouth messages. Orca mailmen need great memories.
After Dad left, Mom took me to the end of our yard to wait for the bus. The orca bus is more of a train than anything, with a big adult leading a long line of young orcas through the neighborhood and off to school. It was important both for protection, since some parents couldnβt accompany their children all the way to school, and to make sure everyone goes to class. Truancy is actually a big problem for orcas.
βMom, Iβm scared,β I said. βWhat if the other kids donβt like me?β
βSweetheart, how could they not like you?β she answered consolingly. βYouβre just about the most perfect orca thatβs ever lived. I know youβre going to do great. Look, here comes Mafu.β
Our bus driver was a huge orca named Mafu. He was a mysterious character. He was from way down south and talked a lot different than anyone else. He had markings all over his body and some of his teeth had carvings on them. No one knew how or why he went from virtually the South Pole to our neighborhood. No one even really knew what he did when he wasnβt escorting kids to and from school. Anytime anyone asked him about his personal life, he would just change the subject.
Anyway, Mafu swam up to our yard, followed by about thirty little orcas. I remember that when he was about twenty feet away, Janice started crying pretty loudly.
βOh, god. Sorry, honey, I have to get her. Donβt be nervous, youβll be fine,β Mom gave me a kiss and swam back towards Janice. βI want you to tell me all about it when you get home.β
The few seconds waiting for Mafu felt like an eternity. Seeing all the young orcas made me even more nervous than I had been before. I didnβt really know how to make friends yet. I had met plenty of the other kids already, but only the ones that lived right around me. The bus had kids from the whole town. Some of them even came from Baleen Acres, where all the rich orcas lived.
When Mafu stopped, the train all stopped in unison behind him. Some of the kids in the back collided, but the ones in the front who had been with him from the start of the route stopped smoothly. Mafu was, and still remains, the biggest orca I have ever seen. Itβs no wonder he was the bus driver. No one messed with Mafu.
βGβday little man,β Mafu said with a smile. Despite his appearance, Mafu was very nice. βAll ready for your first day of school?β
βI guess,β I said bashfully.
βAww cheer up, sport,β Mafu said. βYouβll do aces, I just know it.β
I slowly started to swim forward. I could feel all the other kidsβ eyes on me. Believe me, it was a lot of pressure.
βHey, youβre nameβs Shelby, right?β Mafu asked. βBig Flounders fan, right?β
I nodded. The Flounders were the local professional seaball team. They stunk, but everyone around here loved them. Mafu was a big seaball fan, but he was never shy about how he thought Australian rules seaball and seacricket were superior games.
βWell do you think olβ Clam Stetson would be scared of his first day of school?β
Clam Stetson was the best player in the whole league. It spoke to how bad the rest of the team was that the Flounders could be so dismal while having a transcendent star.
βNo,β I said. I took a deep breath and went to the back of the bus. All the kids were lined up two by two, but the last kid was by himself. I swam next to him and completed the line. I could tell he was my age and just as nervous as I was.
βM-my nameβs Carlo,β he said meekly when we started swimming again. He was smaller than me and had bigger and rounder white marks around his eyes than most orcas.
βIβm Shelby.β
βI live on Urchin Street,β Carlo said. βThis is the farthest Iβve ever been from home.β
βOh, well I live here on Seahorse Circle,β I said.
βI can see that,β Carlo said. βI heard that thereβs a sixty three percent chance one of us gets eaten on the way to school.β
βWhat!?β I said, briefly panicking. βMy mom said it was safe!β
βItβs really not,β Carlo said. βWho knows what kind of sharks and other things are waiting for us on the way. You were the last one to get picked up, and since weβre in the back, Iβm almost sure weβre the ones who will get eaten. I just hope itβs over fast, I donβt want to suffer.β
βHey, scardey cat,β the orca in front of us said, turning around. βWhy do you think Mafuβs here? No oneβs gonna mess with us as long as heβs around.β
βBut weβre way in the back,β I said, fully believing that we were going to be devoured by any passing creature.
βThen Iβll just take them out,β he said. He sounded the same age as us, but he was bigger than both Carlo and me. βLucky for you two, Iβm the fastest orca in the ocean! Not to mention the toughest.β
βIβd feel safer with Mafu,β I said.
βSuit yourselves, losers,β he said, turning back around.
Somehow, we werenβt eaten on the way to school, though Carloβs gloomy demeanor had done nothing to calm my nerves. Our school was in the suburbs, so the bus route avoided the hustle and bustle of downtown. Lucky thing, too, since morning traffic was infamously slow. The gridlock wasnβt helped by the orcas, dolphins, and whales who would go to the surface to breathe then expect to retain their place in line. Tempers flared up more often than not.
The school was set around a rocky island. Because young orcas canβt hold their breath as long, most classes were almost entirely on the surface, with the islandβs multiple outcroppings serving as dividers between the different classes. Courses were mostly developing skills like hunting and swimming, but there were plenty of history and geography classes, as well. Our teachers always said it was important to be a true citizen of the ocean, not just our corner of it. The teachers were all orcas or dolphins, but there was a small custodial staff of pilot fish that cleaned up after everyone, particularly the younger grades.
That first day, I remember all the other kids getting there at the same time we did. There were about ten other buses, though none of the other leaders were quite as impressive as Mafu. Most of the student body was orcas, but there were a handful of dolphin students, too. I think they were from the poorer neighborhoods. Ours was a public school, so we got all types.
The older kids knew where they were going, so they broke away from their buses to join their classes. Eventually, us first timers were the only ones left, so it was easy to get us all together. Everyone gathered around our teacher, a nice lady named Mrs. Dall. She looked a lot like an orca, but she wasnβt. I think she was some kind of dolphin, but Iβm not sure.
Carlo and I ended up at the back of the class. There were about fifteen other students in our class, most of which were just as anxious as I was.
βHello everyone!β our teacher said sweetly. βWelcome to your first day of school. My name is Mrs. Dall, and Iβll be your teacher for the next year. I hope youβre all excited, because weβre going to have a lot of fun this year!β
Most of that day was a blur, lost to memory long ago. But one moment does stand out, for obvious reasons. We were playing an icebreaker game where we divided into pairs in an effort to make start making friends. I paired with Carlo, since he was both right next to me and the only one I actually knew. There was an uneven number in our class, so Mrs. Dall said there would be one group of three. When the dust had settled, the lone partner-less orca was the boy from the bus. He was much bigger than everyone else in class, so I guess they were afraid of him. As he was surveying the class to see which group to join, I made the mistake of making eye contact. He swam over with a grin on his face.
ββSup, losers?β he said. βLooks like Iβm with you guys.β
βOh, great,β Carlo said meekly.
βMy nameβs Russell,β he said. βIβll be in charge of the group. What are supposed to be doing again?β
βMrs. Dall says we have to say one interesting thing about ourselves,β I said.
βWell, I already told you guys about me,β the big orca said. βIβm the fastest swimmer in the ocean!β
βIs that the only interesting thing you have?β Carlo asked.
βItβs the only thing I need,β he answered confidently. βWhat about you?β
βWe have a pet sea turtle named Zeppo,β Carlo said.
βSea turtles are kind of lame,β Russell said. βThey donβt do anything.β
βWell, I like himβ¦β Carlo said dejectedly.
βMy dad says heβll take me seal hunting this Christmas,β I said. I was sure Russell wouldnβt have anything to say about that.
He stared in silence, thinking of a way to come out on top.
βMy mom would never let me go seal hunting,β Carlo lamented. βBut every Christmas we always get to eat seven fish.β
βSeven fish?β Russell said, re-energized. βWhy limit yourself to only seven? I can eat more than that easily.β
βYeah,β I said, βI donβt know if seven fish would be enough.β
βItβs good fish though,β Carlo said. βItβs enough for me.β
βWhat are your guys names, again?β Russell asked suddenly.
βMy nameβs Carlo.β
βShelby,β I said.
βShelby?β Russell asked. βThatβs a girlβs name!β
βWell, I didnβt know Russell was a jerkβs name,β Carlo squeaked. I can still remember the look on his face. It was like he was surprised he said it himself.
Russell looked at Carlo for a few seconds before he started to laugh.
βThatβs pretty good,β Russell said. βI like you, Carl.β
Itβs funny to look back at the small moments in life and realize just how big they turned out to be. That one shocking insult from Carlo was all it took to turn the three of us into best friends. We became inseparable. We had every class together, we spent every weekend together, and, during summer vacation, rarely went more than twelve hours without seeing each other.
About a month into the school year, we had the big First Year Scavenger Hunt. Itβs a way to get the new kids familiar not only with the school, but with the surrounding area. The teachers always say itβs supposed to get ingratiate the first yearβs with the older kids, too, but that never happened. No one wants to help a little kid find something, especially if your friends are watching. Coolness is a valuable currency in Orca school.
The First Year Scavenger Hunt is the first time I thought I might have some real talent, and if you know anything about the rest of my life, you can probably imagine why. I can still remember the list today: a jeweled crab, a metal fish, a live penguin, The Six Rings of Power, a piece of taupe coral, and a wooden orca. Whoever found the most won. We divided into groups, so, naturally, I was with Carlo and Russell.
The jeweled crab was easy to find. It was in our classroom! I canβt believe no one else saw it. I mean it was just sitting there in the sand. It was a crab figurine covered in jewels. I know we were all really young, but kind of embarrassing no one else saw it. Carlo and Russell didnβt even see it. It caught my eye the second Mrs. Dall said the words βjeweled crab.β I shouldnβt complain too much, though.
The metal fish was a little trickier. I had correctly assumed the crab was the only thing in the classroom, so I led Carlo and Russell to the front of the school. I think it was probably cheating, but after Mafu dropped us off that morning, I noticed him make a beeline for the garden and spit something up. I figured it might be important. Upon inspection, though, the only fish we found was a red, angry looking one who had a big Mohawk fin on his head, dark circles around his eyes, and a blue upside-down star on his side.
βDonβt think this is what we want,β Russell said.
βHey, I know what that is,β Carlo said. βThatβs a handfish! But theyβre not supposed to live up hereβ¦β
βI saw Mafu put it here,β I said. βMaybe itβs from his home.β
βI think itβs dead,β Russell said. It wasnβt moving, so I poked it. It was, in fact, dead.
βWhyβd Mafu bring this all the way up here then throw it in this seaweed?β Carlo asked.
βMaybe itβs a riddle!β I exclaimed. I had only just learned what riddles were, and I was eager to apply my new knowledge to real life situations. βWhat if the fish weβre looking for isnβt made of metal, but it just looks metal!β
βThis thing is pretty punk rock,β Russell said. βCanβt hurt to bring it to Mrs. Dall.β
βAs long as someone else carries it,β Carlo said, backing away from the corpse.
Mrs. Dall was shocked any first year was able to solve the wordplay. We had found two items, which, based on the competition, was surely enough to win, but what was the point of sitting there waiting?
We decided to leave the live penguin alone, since none of us, not even Russell, had ever actually hunted anything yet. Trying to bring a live penguin back to our classroom would have ended poorly for everyone involved.
I had heard of The Six Rings of Power of course, but I had assumed they were just legend. A fable my mother told me to keep me on my best behavior. Russell, predictably, agreed.
βIs she serious with this Six Rings of Power nonsense? How are we supposed to find something that doesnβt exist? Is this another one of those things? Whatβs it called? A ritt?β
βA riddle? I doubt it,β I said. βMaybe thereβs a replica or something around here. The stories say theyβre supposed to be near the surface.β
βAnd protected by a fierce guardian!β Carlo squeaked.
βItβd be nothing I couldnβt handle,β Russell boasted.
βIf it exists,β I said.
βItβd be a real shame if it didnβt,β Carlo said, trying to mask his fear. It didnβt work.
The legend of The Six Rings of Power is a very old and famous tale in the ocean. Essentially, it says that there are six ancient and mysterious rings that have been combined together to create an all-powerful artifact that gives anyone who possesses it god-like power and knowledge of all the secrets lost to time. This knowledge is so shocking and all consuming, that, according to the legend, it drives the wielder mad and eventually causes their death. Because of this, a powerful guardian is said to accompany the forbidden Rings everywhere as it drifts through the sea in an algae oasis, both to warn anyone who might stumble upon it and to deter anyone who might be looking to use the Rings for ill-gain. The only way to bypass the guardian and gain access to the full power of the Rings without the side effects is to have a pure heart and the desire to use the Rings for good. Or just kill the guardian.
We took turns swimming to the surface to try and find a floating algae patch. When we invariably didnβt see anything, we would swim a little ways further from the school and try again. I forget how far the Hunt grounds were supposed to go, but Iβm pretty sure we were right at the edge of them when we considered giving up. I went to the surface one last time.
On the whole, the surface is a pretty boring place. If youβre not close to land (which, at that point, we no longer were) itβs just a whole lot of nothing. Blue as far as the eye can see. Sometimes some seagulls flew by. So when I say a tiny patch of green on the horizon stood out, it really stood out. I hurried back to my friends.
βGuys!β I yelled, βthereβs some algae over there!β
βThat could be anything,β Carlo said. βAlgae isnβt uncommon or anything.β
βWhat, you scared, Carlo?β Russell sneered. βI say we check it out and kill that guardian.β
It was decided. We began swimming in the direction of the algae, and noticed a change almost immediately. For starters, the ground gave out beneath us. In the blink of an eye, we were in the middle of a bottomless trench. It was like it was swallowing all the light and sound. And it was cold. I was used to cold water, but it felt like if I stopped swimming for one second Iβd freeze to death. The random currents didnβt help. It was eerie, to say the least.
βAnyone else freaking out right now?β Carlo asked.
βHell, noβ Russell said without much confidence.
βKind of, yeah,β I said. βWhenβs the last time anyone saw a fish or anything?β
βThe guardian probably ate all of them,β Russell said.
βWe shouldnβt be here!β Carlo yelped. For a split second, I agreed.
It took a while to battle the currents, but we were directly underneath the patch of algae, which was creating an ethereal glow. In the center of the algae were six clear rings, held together as one. A small turtle was inside one of the rings. Most ocean creatures went their entire lives thinking what we were looking at was a myth.

βThatβs the guardian?β Russell said. βThat thingβs tiny!β
βAnd deadly!β Carlo yelled.
βWe have to try and get the Rings,β I said.
βDo we?β Carlo asked. βWeβre probably going to win already.β
βBut who will believe us if we donβt have proof?β I asked. βThese are The Six Rings of Power! Canβt you feel it?β
βNot really,β Russell said.
βWell, Iβm gonna go talk to the guardian.β
I slowly swam up to the Rings, trying my best to seem sure of myself. The guardian hadnβt noticed me, even when I was mere inches away.
βUmm, excuse me, guardian?β I asked. βUmm, I donβt want to use these for evil or anything, I just want to win a scavenger hunt. So, can I take them?β
The guardian still wouldnβt look at me. It just slowly swayed with the tide. I decided no answer meant yes, so I gently hooked one of the Rings on my tooth and pulled. The guardian slipped out, still just floating there.
I couldnβt believe it. I held The Six Rings of Power! I didnβt feel smarter or anything, but Iβm just assuming thatβs because I told the guardian I didnβt want to use their power.
βYou actually got them?β Russell asked, dumbfounded. βYou beat the guardian?β
βIt was pretty easy, honestly,β I said. I could tell that made Russell a little salty. βWe should get out of here before it changes its mind, though.β
βDo you feel the power?β Carlo asked. βDo you feel like a god?β
βIβm not sure, yet.β
βImagine the look on Prestonβs face when he sees that!β Russell said.
Preston was one of the rich kids that lived in Baleen Acres. No one liked him.
There was a patch of taupe coral just beside the school, so we grabbed a piece on our way back to give Mrs. Dall the Rings. I think they put it on the list to let everyone find something, but somehow some kids didnβt get any.
βWow, you boys areβ¦onβ¦a- you actually found The Six Rings?β Mrs. Dall asked when we got back to the classroom. βI didnβt- I just put them on the list as a joke.β
βWe donβt joke about scavenger hunts, Mrs. D,β Russell boasted. βYou should have seen how easily I beat the guardian.β
βYou saw the guardian and lived to tell the tale?β
βIt was a little turtle,β I said. βHe didnβt even try to stop us.β
βWell, this is-well Iβm just shocked is all. Most teams wonβt even find one thing on the list, and you boys have four. If you can bring me a live penguin or the wooden orca I think youβll be the new record holders!β
This is a little embarrassing to say, but I didnβt know what wood was at that time. According to Russell, his dad says he has wood when he wakes up in the morning, but that didnβt really help me, especially since I had given away the Rings and no longer had the omniscience that comes with them. Carlo said he thought he knew was it was, but couldnβt describe it.
βThere might be some by the coast,β Carlo posited. βBut weβre not supposed to go there.β
North of the school was a rocky coastline and a lot of shallows, which the younger orcas were strongly discouraged from visiting due to the difficult terrain.
βWe just got The Six Rings of Power and youβre worried about getting in trouble for swimming to close to the shallows? Really?β
I agreed with Russell. After hearing we were one away from setting the record for most items ever found in the First Year Scavenger Hunt, I wasnβt about to let some possible light discipline deter us from going to the place we were most likely to find a wooden orca.
In my opinion, the young orcas werenβt the ones who should be discouraged from hanging around the shallows, itβs the ones going through puberty that should. As long as the kids know the dangers of getting beached, they can avoid it. The ones going through puberty have virtually no control over their bodies. At least I didnβt. One second youβre swimming along thinking youβre good, the next youβre stuck on some sand and youβre hoping everyone stops making fun of you and helps before the tide goes out. Not that that ever happened to me, or anything.
Anyway, the wooden orca. While we were swimming along the edge of the shallows, I noticed something odd: an overturned water-skimmer. I learned about them on a TV show about humans, but, at the time, I had no idea what it was.
βHey, whatβs that?β I asked.
βOh, I think thatβs wood!β Carlo exclaimed.
It was a small water-skimmer, I think the kind that one or two humans sit in and propel manually. It was in pretty bad shape- rotted and broken. Not what we were looking for, but there was something on the ground next to it.
βIs this wood, too?β I asked.
βI need to ask my dad if this is what he meant by wood,β Russell said.
βYeah, this is wood,β Carlo said after poking it.
It was a long pole that had broken into pieces. It was covered in a bunch of weird carvings that none of us could even come close to identifying and painted in crazy colors.
βWho made this?β I asked.
βI think humans,β Carlo said. βI have no idea how it got here, though.β
βIs this what we need?β Russell was nudging a middle portion of the pole. In theory, it was an orca. It had the dorsal fin, it was black and white, and it had some teeth. It was close enough to bring to Mrs. Dall.
βShelby, help us carry this,β Russell said. But my attention was diverted.
When Russell had started to move the orca, it exposed a small, shiny rectangle. I had never seen anything like it, but there was an orca on it, front and center. There were words underneath, but, of course, I couldnβt read them. I canβt explain why, but something about that rectangle entranced me. It was like I could feel how special this thing would be very soonβ¦
βShelby!β
But not quite yet. Somehow, three first years managed to drag the wooden orca back to the school. Mrs. Dall and the other teachers couldnβt believe it.
βI donβt even know what to say!β she said. βYou boys have gone above and beyond!β
The rest of the class, who had given up hours ago, gave us a lukewarm reception.
βI canβt believe you managed to get the wooden orca here,β Mr. Tlingit, the gym teacher, said. βTook me a three hours to lug that whole thing out there.β
Mr. Orcinus, the principal, came over with a smile on his face.
βBoys, youβve really shown us all something special,β he said. βCongratulations on winning the First Year Scavenger Hunt in record-breaking fashion!β
All we got was some shrimp.
On the whole, that first year of school went pretty well for me. While first year orca classes arenβt noted for their level of difficulty, my grades were excellent. Throughout my life I was a decent student: never the best, never the worst. I probably peaked academically my first year, and Iβm fine with that. Carlo was the scholar of our group.
The week before Christmas that year my family was preparing for our annual trip to my Aunt Trudyβs. She lived up north, where there was even more white on the surface than where we lived. It was also much colder, so Mom had been making us eat a lot leading up to the trip to build up our blubber. Dad always loved going north for that precise reason. Mom would always make him watch his diet throughout the year, so in the winter Dad said he was finally able to eat like a male orca should. I tended to agree.
Christmas season also signaled one of my favorite traditions: decorating the lawn. Mom would weave some glowing seaweed into our impressive seaweed patch, and then we would hang some glowing fish from our coral. Some orcas would go overboard and pack their lawn to the brim with tons of luminescence and tacky ornaments, but, as with most things lawn related, my dad preached quality over quantity. And our decorations were certainly were much higher quality than those of our neighbors. Most orcas got their Christmas dΓ©cor from the dollar store in town, but Dad never said where he got all of this. He would just leave one day and come back the next, decorations in tow. Something tells me it might not have been strictly legal.
The morning we left for Aunt Trudyβs that year, Carlo and Russell were still at our house. It was the first day of Christmas vacation at school, so they had spent the night to celebrate. The closer we got to departure time, the less their presence was welcome. Add in the fact that we had been up all night making noise, and tension was high.
βCarlo, sweetie, what time did you say your mom was coming?β Mom asked.
βShe said sheβll be here soon,β Carlo said, groggy from lack of sleep.
βRussell, are you going home with Carlo?β Mom asked.
βNo, I can go home by myself,β Russell boasted. βMy parents say Iβm old enough to swim solo.β
βThen maybe you should, you know, go?β Dad asked. He had just finished yelling at Janice to hurry up and get ready. She had just started sleeping a few weeks prior and had already developed a talent for being late.
βRight away,β Russell said. βBut I wouldnβt want to leave Carlo alone. You never know whatβs swimming around the corner.β
Dad turned away in frustration. The trip up to my Aunt Trudyβs took almost half a day, and we were already delayed.
Mom made me take Carlo and Russell to the street corner to help accelerate their departure. Seahorse Circle was a big cul-de-sac that housed ten other families. Our house was at the top of the circle, so to get to the main road we had to swim through the whole neighborhood. Our street had a very nice collection of Christmas lawns. No one dared try anything too gaudy, lest they face the wrath of my father.
Carloβs mom came and collected her son and Russell, who, despite living in the opposite direction, decided to follow them. Luckily, I was already ready to go to Aunt Trudyβs, so when I got back home, we left right away. I think Dad would have lost it if something else happened before we even left.
Swimming long distances can get boring pretty fast, so itβs good to play some games to pass the time. Some of my favorites are I Spy, Whatβs That Taste Like?, and, of course, Whatβs in My Mouth? If you get lucky you pass under some scenic algae fields, and if you get really lucky you get to listen to humpback whale music. The year before Janice was born, Dad says we swam next to Humphrey Hammond for over 50 miles. I have no memory of it, so I kind of think he made it up. I mean Humphrey Hammond went platinum fourteen times, youβd think hearing him live would have been something that stuck with me, even at three years old.
The first hour or so of our journey was quiet and still a little tense, but once everyone relaxed we got a nice game of I Spy going. Janice was still too young to play anything more advanced. I remember I got everyone pretty good when they couldnβt find the fish I saw that was hiding in a kelp forest. That set Dad off on a pretty funny anti-kelp rant that I was still way too young to hear.
But I digress. My agent told me to keep this thing short since no one likes reading, so Iβm sorry if Iβm rambling a bit. I feel like I set it up for something crazy to happen on the way to Aunt Trudyβs house, but it was pretty uneventful. The only tricky part about going to Aunt Trudyβs is passing through a big line of islands, but Mom and Dad were experienced enough to get us through it no problem. Iβll be better about sticking to the big stuff from now on. My life doesnβt get really good for a few years, anyway.
So, weβre at Aunt Trudyβs. The first night we had a big dinner with Trudy and my Uncle Simon. They hadnβt seen Janice yet, so the whole meal they were just fussing over her. That was fine with me, since it freed me up to take some extra helpings of penguin. Aunt Trudy wasnβt a very good cook, but I was hungry from the long journey. Truth be told, I didnβt like going to Aunt Trudyβs very much. It was too cold and smelled weird. But she was Dadβs sister, and he said we had to go.
We were there for three days after that, with the big seal trip coming on the second day. That meant a full day at Aunt Trudyβs with nothing to do. Mom and Aunt Trudy spent most of the day talking about Janice and how Aunt Trudy was ready to have kids and she just wished Uncle Simon would hurry up and realize it, but luckily for me Dad and Uncle Simon spent most of the day debating seaball, which was much more my speed.
βSimon, how can you possibly hold any of the Floundersβ failures against Clam Stetson?β Dad said. βHave you seen the rest of the roster? Do you have any idea how inept the front office is?β
βI donβt know,β Uncle Simon said. He said βI donβt knowβ a lot. He was kind of a pushover. βIβm just saying if he was all that theyβd win more games.β
βDonβt be an idiot, Simon.β
That night I could barely sleep. I was too excited. Dad woke me up before the sun had even come up, but I was ready to go. Typically, Dad met his friends when he went seal hunting, but this year they had to cancel. That meant it was just going to be Dad, Uncle Simon, and me, which I was fine with. Dadβs friends can be a little much.
The seals lived on a series of rocky islands and icebergs just north of Aunt Trudyβs house. We went really early in the morning to get the jump on them, not that it really matters. No matter what time of day it is, the seals just sit there doing nothing and getting fatter. If I didnβt hate them so much Iβd envy the lifestyle.
Having such a small hunting party was ideal for my first time. The more orcas around, the livelier the seals and surrounding wildlife becomes, and the more chaos ensues.
βAlright, weβre here,β Dad said when the islands were in sight. βItβs time to put all the little lessons Iβve taught you together. Find a small one by themselves close to the water, slowly, slowly swim up, jump up, grab hold of their tail, and drag them underwater. Watch your Uncle Simon and me a few times if youβre nervous. Remember: donβt be afraid to call for backup, donβt try and take on more than one seal at a time, and, whatever you do, donβt listen to anything they say. They can get under your skin if youβre not careful.β
The last piece of advice was the most crucial of all. Dad could tell I was too jacked up to go right away, so he told Uncle Simon to get a seal so we could watch. We popped out heads out of the water as his dorsal fin drifted towards the rocky shore. Even from my vantage point, I could see quite a few isolated seals. Again, itβs hard to tell with seals, but it didnβt look like any were awake yet.
Uncle Simon crept up on a pup as slowly as he possibly could, measuring up his prey. When he was inches away, he reared back and launched himself through the water, jaws wide open. And he missed. Either the seal moved at the last second or he misjudged his jump, but he came up empty, and made a lot of noise doing so.
βAww, shit,β Dad muttered.
βIs that Simon?β someone yelled.
βIt is!β
βFuck you, Simon! Pussy!β
I couldnβt believe it. The seals, still just sitting there, had started talking trash.
βDonβt tell your mother anything youβre about to hear,β Dad said.
βHey, Simon,β one of the seals yelled, βremember when your first wife left you?β
βGod, Simon,β a seal woman chimed in, βgood thing youβre impotent so you donβt have to provide for any children. Theyβd starve in a day!β
βMan, theyβre brutal today,β Dad said.
βWhat do we do?β I asked. βIs Uncle Simon gonna be okay?β

Uncle Simon was just taking it. He wasnβt the most confident orca youβll ever meet, and I could feel him shrinking with each subsequent jab.
βSimon, you still work at that hardware store? I bet thatβs a really satisfying and fulfilling career path to be on.β
βUmm, hey S-Simon,β now a pup was getting in on the act. βY-you missed me, umm, uhh, you pussy!β
This was met with roars of approval from the adult seals.
βHey, Simon!β When this seal spoke, the others all quieted down. He was their alpha. βIs Trudy still sore from last weekend? I know you were out of town, so I tended to her needs. Sexually, I mean.β
βAlright, thatβs enough,β Dad said. βStay here.β
Dad swam towards Simon as fast as he could, kicking up a big swell. The seals lazily looked in his direction, nonplussed. That is, they were nonplussed until he exploded onto the iceberg, grabbed a particularly fat seal, and yanked him underwater.
βOh, shit, itβs Harris!β
The seals got a little less rowdy, after that.
Over the next few hours, Dad and Uncle Simon took down a few more seals. Well, for the most part Dad took the seals and Uncle Simon held the bodies, but still. I remember being so in awe of finally seeing a real life seal hunt that I didnβt move an inch. Iβm lucky a predator didnβt come by. I would have been toast!
By the early afternoon, Dad and Uncle Simon were satisfied with their catch. I think they forgot about me, but I donβt blame them. Hunting seals is exhilarating. Both of them came swimming over with big smiles on their faces.
βLook at this, Shelb,β Uncle Simon said. βWeβll be eating well tonight!β
βSo what do you think?β Dad asked. βYou ready to give it a go?β
βIβm not sure,β I said. βDo you think I can?β
βOf course I do! Here, Iβll come with you.β
We pulled up about a hundred yards from the seals.
βYou see that?β
βYeah!β There was a small pup all by himself. Seals arenβt very protective parents.
βYou got this. Just remember what I taught you.β
I held my breath as I swam, trying my best to be stealthy. I was getting really close, and somehow the pup hadnβt seen me. Out of nowhere, my fin hit a rock in the shallows, and a big burst of air came out of my blowhole. The element of surprise was gone.
βWhat the hell is this?β one of the seals that saw me said. βA fuckinβ Make A Wish kid?β
βThis your son, Harris? Looks like a bitch.β
βHey, kid, you tell your dad youβre gay yet?β
I was trying my best not to cry as their insults continued to rain down on me. It was one thing when they were going after Uncle Simon, but another thing entirely when theyβre directing it at you. I turned back to Dad, who simply nodded encouragingly.
I think the thing I remember the most about that trip was when I looked into the pupβs eyes. I donβt know if youβve ever seen a seal, but they have these big, saucer eyes and soft, sad faces. The look he was giving me was so pathetic and so heartbreaking that I was a second from becoming a pacifist on the spot. Until he opened his mouth.
βYour mom is ugly,β he said.
Enraged, I leapt out of the water. I scraped my belly on the ice, but somehow, someway, I grabbed his tail. He was probably the runt of the group, so he went down easy. After a few seconds of thrashing, he was dead. I couldnβt believe it. Years of dreaming about going seal hunting with Dad culminating in my first kill. I could have died right then and there and been happy. Seeing the look of pride on Dadβs face remains one of the greatest moments of my entire life.
To be continued. Let me know what you think. Was it good? Bad? Did anyone actually read all of this? Should I just accept the fact that I have no skills and should just work at Five Guys or something? Give me your thoughts. Or don’t, it’s really up to you.
OMG! You even do the drawings? This is adorable! Sorry, this is maybe not what you want to read. May I suggest that you post shorter excerpts. I have to admit that when I saw the length of the post, I started to read diagonally. Sorry, sorry. I like the story and I could get into it. I was mostly interested by the beginning and the facts. I like that you moved to NY to become a scriptwriter. I am sure you will be great. I definitely see the faster rythm in your writing. Why not change this into a cartoon? Since you already have some of the storyboard?
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Ya this is a pretty big chunk of text. Iβve thought about making it a comic or cartoon but I donβt think Iβm quite skilled enough artistically haha
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You can do the sketch, someone else can perfect it. You definitely have the skills you need to give it movement. It’s already a “movie” π I believe in you!
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Hi Brian, your dream is great. I have a similar one…The short stories and all. Keep up at it, keep hope alive…try to keep them (really short). Design your site, read up how to make your articles pop out on google search…so more people can read. All the best. We could be friends too (like minds)
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