My hands were shaking worse than usual the day Todd Schultz first noticed me. Not from nerves, but from the milk. Twenty years of living downstream could do that to anyone.
It all started when I was refilling the punch bowl at the Elkhart Lake community center's monthly dance night when he lumbered over. “I’m Todd. I’ve heard about you.”
“What have you heard?”
“That you're from downstream,” he said. “And that downstream girls know how to keep a man happy. That true?”
I smiled the way that mom taught me, small and grateful. “I guess that depends on the man.”
He laughed too loud then bought me a beer. Later that night, when he drove me home, he tried to kiss me before I’d even said yes. When I pulled back, he shrugged. “I figured you’d be eager.”
His hand stayed heavy on my waist. I let it linger long enough to let him know he had a chance, if he played his cards right, before I slipped away.
The next morning, I dropped by his house to “thank him for the ride,” and drank the glass of milk his mother offered. Drinking the gloriously pure milk, unpasteurized with a layer of cream on top, my hands felt steady for the first time in ages.
Down at our place, Rayburn Rare Earth Processing sat right above us around a bend in the river. Whatever they leached into the water had been leaching into our cows ever since the government declared Rayburn a "vital national asset" at the beginning of the Iran war.
We called it “the curse”. Mom’s fingers trembled when she knit. Dad’s teeth had fell out one by one. But even mentioning the pollution was a crime under some federal statute. It also wasn’t polite to be asking questions about food safety twenty years into the Iran War when the price of ground beef was $100 a pound and farmers like us had plenty to eat.
But upstream farmers like the Schultzes had amazing clean water springing right off Wisconsin’s kettle moraine.
Downstream, no one could sell their land, and nobody even tried anymore.
Todd was rude more often than not. When I took him with me to our usual Sheepshead game at the Johnsons, he said, loud enough for everyone to hear, “Better not spill anything on the card table with your family’s shaky hands.”
Big Mike chuckled nervously. I laughed along and wiped a spill that wasn’t even there.
Later that night, parked behind the barn, he got handsy again and when I asked him to slow down he muttered, “Jesus, Hannah, I’m doing you a favor. Most upstream boys wouldn’t touch a downstream girl with a ten-foot pole.” So I let him touch what he wanted. The milk at breakfast the next day tasted like absolution.
It was like heaven came down to earth. His family’s milk didn’t taste like metal. Their cheese didn’t make your stomach cramp halfway through the meal. All that comfort at the Schultz’s, and it just made Todd repulsive, with a belly soft as a feed sack, sweat stains under his arms, and breath that smelled like a day-old beer can. But his mother poured real cream into her coffee without thinking twice.
Sometimes, Todd revealed a different side. After I twisted my ankle chasing a loose calf, he showed up at our place with a bag of ice from his family’s freezer. “Figured you could use this,” he said, almost shy. He sat on our porch steps and didn’t paw me once. We just talked about the war, and how it had been going on so long nobody remembered why it started. How the internet had been turned off and the three TV channels were repeating the same cheesy USDA ad with an ancient Timothee Chalamet telling the country to drink Wisconsin milk. We laughed at how downstream milk was being mixed in and the whole country didn’t even know (I had already started seeing myself as upstream). For a few days, Todd seemed almost kind. I told myself this was the version of Todd I was marrying.
Three months later, we stood in the same community center, and I heard myself say “I do” while my mother cried. The wedding cake was made with thick, sweet whipping cream.
The first week of marriage, he was the Todd I dated. Rough around the edges, but tolerable. Slowly things began to change. A dark side appeared. Mornings he’d slam the screen door and bark, “Where’s my coffee, Hannah? Make it right this time.” When I burned the toast once, he threw the plate across the kitchen. “Pick that up,” he said, already stomping out. At night, he climbed on top of me without asking, then rolled over and snored while I stared at the ceiling and reminded myself the milk in the fridge was worth it. My hands hadn’t trembled in months.
One Thursday night at his Poker game, he lost a hundred and fifty dollars and took it out on me the whole drive home. “You probably gave me bad luck. Everything from downstream is cursed.” I kept my eyes on the dark road and said nothing.
I thought I’d done what I needed to. I kept the house clean, cooked the meals, let him on top of me twice a week, like it was payment for the milk. That the trade was fair. It no longer seemed worth it.
Looking for a shoulder to cry on, I went home to visit my parents for the first time since the wedding.
Mom hugged me tight and stared into my eyes as if she knew what I was going through. Filling her in on my burdens would just add more to the ones she was already carrying, so I said everything was fine upstream. When I was leaving, she slipped a brick of cheddar cheese wrapped in wax paper into my purse. “For your husband,” she whispered. “So he knows you haven’t forgotten where you’re from.” The cheese was the color of ivory, with the faint tang I used to think was normal. I almost threw it out on the drive back. Almost.
Instead, I crumbled it into Todd’s scrambled eggs the next morning.
He shoveled it in, chewing with delight. “Damn, Hannah. This is good. Tastes like… I don’t know. Real.” He wiped his chin with the back of his hand and grinned at me with the same grin he gave when he told me downstream girls knew how to keep a man happy. “You’re a good wife, you know that? Most girls would’ve turned mean by now.”
I smiled the same tight smile my mom taught me. “Just trying to keep you happy, Todd.”
After that, I started finding reasons to visit home every few weeks. Mom always had something for me: curds, a wedge of cheddar, a whole wheel of Colby. Being fourth-generation dairy farmers, their bounty was always overflowing.
I told Todd my new recipes were from “the women’s magazines”. The Internet had been turned off now forever, so he didn’t have any way to check. I spent more time alone in the kitchen, slicing the cheese thin enough to hide in his sandwiches.
He started asking for more. “Make me one of those special grilled cheeses, baby.” He’d eat three at a sitting, grease shining on his lips, and then pull me onto his lap afterward, even though I hated the way his sweaty belly felt against me. “You put up with a lot from me,” he’d say, breath already heavy with beer by lunch time. “Most wives would’ve left, but you’re loyal. I’m happy I married you, baby.”
I watched the tremors start in his fingers around the third month. Just a flicker when he picked up his coffee mug. He didn’t notice. He told his buddies at the VFW that his wife cooked better than any upstream girl he knew. I’d even take a bite of his sandwich when he offered them back to me. It was worth it.
Last Thursday we played Sheepshead at the Johnsons’ like usual. Todd’s hands shook as he dealt the cards. He laughed it off and blamed the beer. Under the table, I held his trembling palm with my steady hand. He squeezed back.
Later, in bed, he whispered against my neck, “I don’t deserve you, Hannah. You’re the best wife in Elkhart Lake.”
After he fell asleep, I lay in the dark and listened for hours to the cows, up here, where the water ran clean.
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Really good story! I wish I had more to read like someone said here lol. I also like the primitive future of it all. Congrats!
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Thx! Nice to hear my vision of dystopian dairy farmers was interesting enough to want more;)
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You excel at 'showing, not telling.' Such a compelling use of body horror. Thanks for a creative horror story.
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Thanks! Yeah horror isn't my usual genre so good to hear it was compelling toward the end.
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I love this. You've created a near future dystopian short story weaving the setting in with the narrative seamlessly and as the story itself. The story reads smoothly and quickly, the characters come alive on the page. I grappled with the notion that the dairy products from downstream tasted so good to the upstreamer, when they are made with the polluted water. This I could reflect on more, not sure if it is meant to be a commentary that we like what is different, much like the upstreamer falling for the downstreamer. That the MC would purposely bring her husband down is also thought provoking as to the implications beyond the ending...when eventually he realises it...and we know what will happen then. Look forward to reading more of your work.
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Thanks so much for reading and commenting! I had felt the husband was just intrigued by tasting something different, possibly risky, and maybe he even knew the risk without thinking about it. Kind of like how some people get a thrill out of tasting that poisonous fish in Japan. Or maybe deep down he understood the injustice of him being from upstream and didn't want to be that way.
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Congratulations on your win, Scott! The class system has, unfortunately, always given people reasons to judge and punch down. Even in the future, with the way things are in 2026, it pains me to read the future outcome of how the class system has devolved to upstream vs downstream. Out of survival, Hannah unfortunately felt the only choice to have a better life was to live with an abusive upstreamer. The subtle payback to right-sizing him was Chef's kiss. Thank you for sharing!
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That's a clever way to describe it. The class system has reached down to even dairy farmers upstream and downstream. All the unjustices of living in an un-open society. Hannah knocking down the upstreamer a notch just had to happen in this story.
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Congratulations on the win! I thought the storytelling style and voice were especially strong here. The first-person narration felt very realistic, as did all of the characters (not everyone is perfect or purely evil). There was something really unsettling about how calmly she explained everything; it just showed how normalized the situation has become for her without outright saying it.
Going into it, knowing the prompt was about a protagonist making a difficult choice for survival, I expected a much darker or more tragic ending for Hannah herself, especially after the marriage happened. Instead, I really liked that she ultimately gets the final say in her unique, special way. It wasn't bold, but that made it all the more realistic and satisfying—if it had been more obvious, I'm sure the community would have noticed.
What I appreciated most was that it also read like a speculative extension of real-world issues. The upstream/downstream divide feels very grounded in the kinds of environmental and resource inequalities that already exist. It made me think about how differently “upstream” communities might view sharing—or even responsibility—if they actually experienced what “downstream” communities live with every day.
And I’ll admit, my mind immediately went to the old saying about “salmon in the milk”—the idea that something meant to be pure or nourishing can carry hidden harm—which made the ending feel even more fitting. The story really made me think about what’s “in” the “milk”—who benefits from it and who pays the cost—and how the ending effectively flips that. Overall, well done!
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Thanks for commenting and reading into the themes of my story so deeply! I had thought about all the little things that get lost in an authoritarian society... the problems covered up, and freedoms lost, people trapped in places or jobs without options... all in the name of some supposedly greater national goal.
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Congrats! I enjoyed the ending. The ending was a captivating plot twist!
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Thanks! GOod to hear the dark ending was a real twist.
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Congratulations Scott!
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Thanks Wally!
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Glad you won Scott, I enjoyed your story and learned from reading it. The emotion was subtle yet strong at the same time. Could sense Hannah's quiet desperation that bought her to the point of poisoning Todd.
My last story was about as subtle as shock therapy. I am glad to be here reading the stories and comments.
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Thanks for reading and commenting! I had tried to write as if this was all normal in her world, and let the reader look over her shoulder at how insane the world has become. Best of luck with your writing!
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I didn't think something so simple as milk could turn into a matter of survival and yet you executed it so well. Perhaps that's the most post-apocalyptic thing of all: after the world crumbles, milk isn't just milk and things can't be simple anymore. Congrats on the win!!
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Thanks! In a war simple things like food might become really important I think.
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Ohh, this all sounds too plausible, too close to being true. No heroes here, just people doing what they can to survive.
Thanks!
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Just a few more steps in the direction things might be going if we're unlucky. Thanks for commenting Marty!
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Yo, this is an amazing story! Great job! I love the mention of the Iran War!
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Thanks so much! Thinking about how pointless the Iran War is, was def the seed for imagining this dystopian future.
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Yes, it was a great idea!
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Congratulations, Scott! I was gripped from the first line. Excellent work and well deserved.
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Thanks for your comment! happy to hear you enjoyed it.
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Congratulations! You do such a great job focusing on the characters while letting the world-building details layer in. The restricted tone hammers in the oppressive structure of the setting, and the sensory details emphasize that duality in a visceral way. Excellent work!
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Thanks so much for reading and commenting Keba! I'm glad you appreciated the limited view I gave in this. The first draft had a lot more exposition and I experimented by taking it all out and just letting bits slip in.
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Congrats
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Thanks so much!
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Congrats on the win! This story pulled me in and kept me engaged the whole way through. Hannah switched her life with Todd's. Now he's the one suffering.
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Thanks! I'm happy to here that. Wasn't sure how well this would work with bits of wisconsin life mixed in with the dystopia, but felt in this terrible unfair world, revenge was in the cards for the ending.
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I love the way this story has a diary-like feeling about it. She's describing some terrible things, but seems so controlled and calculated. She chooses Todd for survival and when he becomes the thing she needs to survive, she adjusts and conquers. Fantastic! Congrats! 👏👏👏
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Thanks for reading! Yes, I feel when people must survive, they might find ways to rationalize terrible compromises. I felt she needed to conquer this situation in the only way that felt fair (in her very unjust circumastances) in the end.
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:)
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Thanks, this story went in new directions for me but seems to have worked out after all.
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Yep,great i agree :) Ik ive already said but just remembering it :)
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So gooood!!!
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retire right now
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