Slippery Nonsense and Other Atmospheric Crimes

🏆 Contest #332 Winner!

Fiction Funny Speculative

Written in response to: "Write a story in which the weather takes an unexpected turn." as part of Under the Weather.

They say the British complain about the weather at least three times a day.

Personally, I consider that an underestimation bordering on slander.

I complain about the weather the way other people hydrate: constantly, instinctively, and with a faint sense of moral duty.

It’s one of my most finely honed talents, practically a calling.

Too hot. Too cold. Too windy. Not windy enough.

The drizzle is rude. The cloud cover is smug. The frost feels judgmental.

Some people complain recreationally. I complain as if the climate owes me money.

Until last Tuesday, I assumed this was harmless.

A personality quirk.

A coping mechanism.

A British pastime with strong instincts for survival and sarcasm.

I only realised the weather had developed a personal vendetta against me the morning my umbrella tried to bite me.

The Umbrella Revolt

To be clear, it wasn’t a mouth or anything.

My umbrella, a device whose sole purpose is loyalty in adversity, snapped shut on my fingers like it had been hired to assassinate me.

I yelped and dropped it. A gust of wind immediately rolled it away down the pavement, with the vindictive enthusiasm of something that had finally handed in its notice.

I glared upward.

“Oh, so THAT’S your mood today,” I said.

A sunbeam appeared briefly to spotlight the discarded umbrella like a fallen soldier in a crime drama.

The sky, in my professional opinion, was smirking.

The Fog With Abandonment Issues

At first, I assumed it was normal fog — the ordinary kind that mists around a field like it’s auditioning for a period drama.

But no.

This fog had… intentions.

It didn’t float around generally.

It didn’t drift vaguely.

It followed me.

A tight, three-foot-wide clump of fog stuck directly behind my shoulder like an anxious intern afraid to ask where the toilets are.

I walked faster.

It drifted faster.

I stopped.

It bumped gently into my back, then hovered there apologetically.

“I don’t do clingy weather,” I informed it.

It oozed closer.

“I mean it,” I hissed. “I can’t even handle clingy people, or even people in the near vicinity.”

The fog quivered with what could only be described as hurt feelings.

By the time I reached Tesco Express, the fog had developed what I can only describe as an attachment style.

It pressed itself against the automatic doors, trying to seep in.

The sensor lights flickered in confusion as the fog repeatedly slammed its non-existent face into the glass.

“Stay,” I told it firmly. “You do not need a meal deal.”

It pulsed sadly.

Inside, the manager eyed me suspiciously.

“Is that… with you?” she asked, nodding at the fog plastered to the glass like it was auditioning to be my emotional support moisture.

“It is NOT,” I said, loudly enough for the fog to hear.

The fog sagged against the pane.

When I left the shop, it perked right up, swirling adoringly around my ankles like a weather-based pet with boundary issues.

“For the last time,” I said, stepping away, “I’m not your mother.”

It followed anyway.

A low rumble rolled across the sky, the kind of exasperated parental sigh clouds make when weather systems adopt a mortal without approval.

“Don’t look at me,” I snapped upward. “YOU made it emotional.”

The fog wrapped around my calf in a clingy, damp hug.

Fantastic.

I had accidentally imprinted on precipitation.

Hail, But Make It Personal

The hail arrived midweek, as if the weather had realised emotional intimidation alone was not enough.

Not normal hail.

Not polite, spherical hail.

Spiky daggers of death hail.

Tiny frozen weapons hammered my hood, my shoulders, my patience.

“REALLY?” I shouted up at the clouds. “THIS FEELS AGGRESSIVE.”

One perfect little ice arrow bounced off my temple, landed in my palm, and slowly melted down my lifeline like it was underlining a point.

“Why do you hate me?” I whispered.

Another hailstone hit me square in the back of the head, which I took as an answer.

The Sunshine That Wouldn’t Leave Me Alone

Sunshine normally avoids me, and I, having the complexion of a Victorian ghost who died of something poetic, have always respected the distance.

But that day?

It trailed after me.

A single golden spotlight illuminating me and only me, across:

- the pavement

- the bus stop

- the bakery aisle (offensive)

- the dentist’s waiting room (illegal in at least three moral frameworks)

A toddler pointed and said, “Mummy, that person’s glowing.”

The sunbeam brightened proudly.

I stepped left; the light stepped left.

I ducked under a tree; it bent itself round the branches like a determined torch.

“Oh, pick a personality,” I snapped. “Either ignore me or stalk me, but you can’t do both in one week.”

The beam warmed my face in what I could only interpret as smug.

The Final Straw

The next afternoon, I was mugged.

I wish that were an exaggeration.

I had just purchased a glorious, steaming carton of chips — golden, salted, perfect, the kind of chips that make you briefly believe in higher powers.

I lifted the first one.

Just one.

And that’s when the gust hit.

A sudden, deliberate blast from underneath, executed with the precision of a weather system that had trained for this moment.

My arm jerked.

The tray flipped, gracefully, insultingly gracefully, a perfect double somersault with a smug little twist at the end.

The chips lifted into the air like a choir ascending to heaven.

And then I noticed them.

The pigeons.

Roughly seventeen of them, though the way they moved in formation suggested some kind of feathery hive mind. They stood in a loose semicircle, staring up with the quiet, reverent hunger of a Roman audience awaiting gladiatorial bloodshed.

The airborne chips began to fall.

A hush fell over the pigeons, the kind usually reserved for royal weddings or bread sightings.

All seventeen pigeons inhaled sharply, in unison.

Then they descended.

It was carnage.

Wings flapped.

Feathers flew.

Two pigeons body-slammed each other mid-air in a fight over a single chip.

One particularly round pigeon executed what could only be described as a tactical combat roll to reach a fallen wedge.

Another perched triumphantly on my shoe, clutching a chip like a trophy, staring at me dead in the eye as if to say:

I am victorious. And you let it happen.

I watched, helpless, chipless, betrayed.

“…Why?” I whispered at the sky. “Why ME?”

A second gust slapped me across the face with the force of a wet towel.

Because it was funny, it seemed to say.

Something inside me cracked.

“THAT WAS UNCALLED FOR!” I shouted upward. “ABSOLUTELY UNCALLED FOR. THEY WERE MINE. THEY WERE HOT. THEY WERE A SYMBOL OF HOPE.”

Thunder rumbled — the kind of rumble someone makes when they’re trying very hard not to laugh.

“Oh, go on then!” I yelled. “ENJOY YOURSELF. RUIN SOMETHING ELSE WHILE YOU’RE AT IT.”

The clouds churned with mischief.

The wind looped around me like a bully who’d found a new hobby.

Below, the pigeons continued their feeding frenzy.

One strutted past with two chips in its beak like a tiny gangster carrying cigars.

Another attempted to fly away but was simply too full, ascending a tragic six inches before giving up entirely.

A third waddled onto my fallen carton, sat on it, and claimed it as property.

The wind rustled through my coat in a way that can only be described as applause.

I stood there, soaked, starving, surrounded by triumphant pigeons and divine mockery.

It was, unquestionably, the final straw.

By the time I got back to my flat, I was furious, and emotionally bereaved over fried potatoes.

Which is why, when a single raindrop fell directly onto my forehead as I unlocked my front door, I snapped.

Personal rain cloud hovering. Of course.

“That’s IT,” I shouted, dropping my keys. “WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME?”

The rain stopped.

The streetlights flickered.

The wind held its breath.

And then, with the terrible inevitability of a printer deciding to jam during a deadline, a voice spoke behind me.

“Enough,” said the voice.

The Performance Review

The man under my porch light looked like he’d lost an argument with both the wind and a filing cabinet.

His suit was damp. His hair was damp. His expression was the dampest thing about him, the kind that suggested he'd hit the end of his patience around the time Stonehenge was installed.

He flashed a badge.

WEATHER OPERATIONS, DIVINE DIVISION — GOD LEVEL: JUNIOR

He sighed like I'd personally contributed to his downfall.

“Right,” he said. “Which one of your little critiques pushed me over the edge?”

“My what?”

He snapped open a dripping folder.

“You complain constantly,” he said. “And normally I let it go. Truly, I do. I’m a tolerant deity. I once handled an entire century of sailors shouting slurs at headwinds.”

He flipped a page dramatically.

“But you? You are relentless.”

He jabbed a finger at the soggy dossier.

“Tuesday: ‘This drizzle feels personal.’

Wednesday: ‘Who approved this wind?’

Thursday morning: ‘If the sun could stop being smug for TEN MINUTES—’”

He mimicked my voice. Poorly.

I sputtered. “I didn’t mean it literally!”

“Oh, I know,” he snapped. “But the OTHER GODS don’t.”

He slammed the folder shut so hard a tiny thunderclap went off.

“You know what it’s like for me?” he demanded.

“I— no?”

“Of course you don’t!” he said, pacing in a small furious circle. “Do you have ANY idea what it’s like to be the Weather God? DO YOU?”

I shook my head.

“It’s humiliating,” he hissed.

“Everyone else gets something glamorous. War. Love. Death. Fate. Meanwhile I get—”

He waved a hand at the sky.

“Moisture distribution.”

Behind him, a small cloud drooped sympathetically.

“The War God stops by my office once a millennium just to laugh,” he said bitterly.

“The Love Goddess calls me ‘Mister Drippy.’ The Agriculture Gods only speak to me when they want favours. And don’t get me STARTED on the Sea God. Smug tidal bastard.”

He leaned in.

“So when YOU spend your entire mortal existence criticising my work, do you know what that sounds like?”

I shook my head again.

“Like confirmation,” he said grimly. “Confirmation that I am BAD at my job.”

“I never said—”

“You IMPLIED,” he snapped. “Which, in divine terms, is WORSE. Mortals moaning is basically performance feedback.”

“Oh God.”

“I AM A GOD,” he thundered, outraged.

Fair point.

“And do you know what the other gods said at our last Divine Operations Meeting?”

His voice lowered to a wounded whisper.

“They said I couldn’t even keep one mortal happy. ONE.”

He pointed at me like this was entirely my fault.

“And honestly?” he said, voice cracking slightly, “they are not wrong.”

A tiny gust of embarrassed wind swirled at his feet.

Negotiations with Management

We stood there, me in my doorway clutching damp keys, him dripping divine resentment onto the doormat.

“Look,” I said, “I’m sure you’re not actually bad at your job.”

He squinted at me like I’d just suggested hailstones were optional.

“Don’t patronise me,” he said. “Do you know how many storm systems I juggle in a day? How many microclimates? Do you know how often people shout at their weather apps? That all comes to ME.”

He thumped his chest. A faint rumble of thunder echoed the gesture.

“You lot scream at a five-day forecast like it personally wronged your ancestors, and then you come outside and yell at the sky as WELL. It’s like working in customer service when all the customers are unhinged.”

“I didn’t know you could hear that,” I muttered.

He stared.

I cleared my throat.

“So, um. What now? You’ve… told me off. Are you going to smite me? Send a personalised hailstorm? Replace my wardrobe with gym gear?”

He pulled a face.

“Smite you? For complaining?” He snorted. “Please. I’d have to smite an entire country. Besides, HR says I’m ‘too reactive.’”

He adjusted his tie, which made a small squelching sound.

“No,” he said. “We are going to establish… expectations.”

Nothing good has ever followed that sentence.

He snapped his fingers. A clipboard appeared, also damp, with a form titled:

MORTAL/WEATHER SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENT

(Pilot Scheme – Do Not Copy to Other Regions)

He handed it to me along with a dripping pen.

“Clause One,” he said. “You will limit yourself to three weather complaints per calendar month.”

“Three a month?” I yelped. “That’s not even enough for today.”

“Rollovers permitted,” he said. “But no backdating. I am not recalculating your emotional climate for the past decade.”

“Unbelievable.”

“Clause Two,” he continued, “you will cease attributing malicious intent to specific weather phenomena. Drizzle is not ‘petty.’ Frost is not ‘classist.’ Fog is not ‘cowardly steam.’”

I opened my mouth.

“Do not say ‘humidity is manipulative,’” he warned. “He can hear you.”

The air thickened guiltily around my ankles.

“Clause Three,” he went on, “all rhetorical questions addressed to the sky will be considered non-actionable. No more ‘What else do you want?’ No more ‘Is this the best you can do?’ Lightning interprets those as direct requests. Lightning should not be empowered.”

“That one is fair,” I admitted.

“Clause Four: no demanding ‘proper snow’ and then complaining when it arrives.”

“That happened ONE time.”

“Twice,” he said. “And you called it ‘slippery nonsense.’”

“It was!”

We glared at each other for a moment, rain pattering gently around us like polite applause.

“Fine,” I said at last. “I’ll sign your divine terms and conditions. But I have a condition too.”

He folded his arms. “Go on.”

“You stop taking it so personally,” I said. “My complaining isn’t about you. It’s about… everything else, disguised as rain.”

He frowned.

“That makes no sense,” he said.

“It makes perfect sense,” I said back. “It’s easier to shout at the wind than at, I don’t know, capitalism. Or my own life choices. You’re… safe to blame.”

He blinked a few times, rain dripping off his lashes.

“So you use my entire global system,” he said slowly, “as emotional target practice?”

“…Yes?”

He stared up at the clouds, then back at me, then let out a laugh so short and sharp it startled the nearest lamppost.

“Of course you do,” he muttered. “Of course you do. War gets devotion. Love gets desperation. I get… displaced ennui.”

He rubbed his forehead.

“All right,” he sighed. “Fine. I will… attempt not to interpret every sigh at a grey sky as a personal appraisal of my competence.”

“That’s all I’m asking,” I said. “Well, that and slightly less targeted murderous hail.”

He glanced upward.

The clouds shuffled guiltily.

“We’ll… review hail allocation,” he said.

He held the pen out again.

“Sign?”

I scrawled my name on the soggy line. The ink bled, ran, and then glowed faintly before settling.

The clipboard vanished with a small pop.

Closing Skies

The Weather God straightened up, water dripping from his cuffs.

“Right,” he said. “I have a storm front to untangle over Wales and a heatwave having a panic attack in Spain. Try to complain less. I will try to fail less. Perhaps we’ll meet somewhere in the middle.”

“Lukewarm and overcast?” I suggested.

His mouth twitched.

“That’s my best work,” he said.

He took a step back. His outline blurred, edges unravelling into mist.

“Oh,” he added, half-faded, “and for the record? You were right about the sunshine. She’s terribly smug,” he confided. “Don’t tell her I said so.”

“I knew it.”

Then he was gone.

The porch light steadied.

Rain resumed with what felt, for the first time in days, like a complete lack of agenda.

Weather, After

I stood there a moment longer, listening to the soft hiss of it on the pavement.

No hail.

No personal spotlight.

No fog pressing its emotional issues against the glass.

Just… weather.

A breeze brushed past my cheek, cool and tentative.

“All right,” I said quietly. “Truce.”

It ruffled my hair in what I chose to interpret as apology.

A single raindrop plonked into the middle of the step in front of me, oversized and dramatic, like a final exclamation mark.

I pointed at the sky.

“That does NOT count as a complaint,” I warned it. “I’m just saying.”

The clouds shifted, noncommittal.

I went inside, hung my traitor umbrella up to dry, and put the kettle on.

Outside, the weather carried on with its strange, complicated, overworked little existence.

For once, it didn’t feel like it was all about me.

And for once, I decided not to take it personally.

Progress, apparently, is incremental.

Posted Dec 11, 2025
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117 likes 99 comments

18:13 Mar 02, 2026

OMG, that is HILARIOUS. You could even write a sequel where someone who experienced heartbreak is mad at the God of Love! It's great, and if you make it, like, WAY longer, you could make it a book! I'd read it for sure. Congrats on your win!

Reply

Eric Doolin
05:05 Feb 21, 2026

people, this is how IT all starts. first the accusations. followed by the parinoia. then what we thought for sure is A.I. isn't anything more than well thought out, carefully placed nostalgia and blurry fever dreams, MADE BY HUMANS!! MADE IN CHINA, thing of the past. Made by human hands is the new refresh. This story, may it be quirky and a bit dry at times, which I personally love, isn't anything worth getting your undergarments in an uproar!! its simply not worth the energy to become upset about. Worry about the next time you see a "news bulliten" if there has really been an assasination, bombing, mass suicide etc?? good story. making the cliche NOT cliche?? that deserves at the very least a thoughtful nod of the head, or tip of the hat. if inspiration had been taken from anywhere, isn't where all thought comes from anyway?? Dust off an old classic and make it brand new, and all yours?? Who isn't humping those old franchises now a days. If youy made it all the way through, like read the whole thing, it grabbed you enough that u felt it needed closure. right? a story about the weather? Entitled to that? there's just no way......whats the hub bub?? My main critisism is that the conversation was so, while deep into it, the emotions were just lacking. Like the actual PERSON there wasn;'t feeling those emotions out. example, magical appearance of this deiaty........greeted with little to no reaction. like, "christ so there is like a god? or what i'd imagine alot of folks would do, "sorry mate, not interested in what ur selling" or ."get lost jehovah" or my personal favorite, "baaaaaaahhhhhhhh!!!" as they flee in utter distress. then i thought, perhaps a clanker really did write this....? then i thought, or maybe thats what the PERSON was trying to really say. The weather. Cliche?? hell no. why? cause we all experience it?? we all have it in common?? fr worse things we could talk about we all have in common deary. We all poop!! lets all write a short story about an unpleasnt poop we had once. think we can all chime in........what to cliche?? no, has got to be A.I..............i think all those solder heads have better things to do than write short stories...u think?? master thinking robot: great news!!! ive uncovered an unexploited hole of obtainable cash on a monthly basis. and its not even crypto!!! programmer: ok, we need to updat that server a.s.a.p. built it to make me rich, lousy 250.......bah...monthly, thinking its.........blah....money....blah ...humbug! thats my rant and ramble. good read, love. it was cute. dry. current and accurate. if it rubbed anyone the wrong way, well maybe they need a new stroke game perhaps. i thoufght it was proper fun. cheers. from MO, USA.

Reply

Michelle James
09:05 Feb 24, 2026

Exactly…. I think.

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Brenda Kniceley
18:48 Feb 11, 2026

I absolutely loved this story. It was funny, entertaining, and clever! Great job!!

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20:13 Feb 05, 2026

This is such a fun story. As I read, I could see it play out as a cute cartoon. Fog is my favorite weather character. I envisioned drippy condensation on the windowpane like tear drops. Very clever.

Thank you for sharing your story.

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S Gabriel
18:06 Jan 21, 2026

Absolutely hilarious! I was chuckling through the entire story. Thank you for sharing such a delightful view on weather! I concur for your award. Congratulations! I look forward to reading more from you.

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Franki K
17:17 Jan 14, 2026

This is hilarious. I'm #teamboycottwinter. I live in a camper, and the weather can make or break you on any given day.
I'm reading through the comments, and some think this story is AI. I don't know what the heck is going on here. I'm new, and I'm just gonna keep reading stories.

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Tommy Goround
17:00 Jan 10, 2026

Smart, fun and very creative. I would stand to applaud but I'm on the toilet just now.

Clap clap.

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Michelle James
10:54 Jan 11, 2026

I hope everything went well for you, sir.

Reply

Allysha Sprunt
01:27 Jan 05, 2026

Hi there Michelle,
I was wondering if you could please provide me with a contact for yourself as I would love to discuss using an extract for your piece for an educational publication.
Many thanks
Allysha Sprunt

Reply

Allysha Sprunt
08:47 Jan 03, 2026

Hi there Michelle,
I was wondering if we could please get in contact and I would like to see if I could please use your story for an educational publication?
Many thanks
Allysha Sprunt

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Meg Shaughnessy
00:45 Jan 01, 2026

I don't do clingy weather...lol, love the humor!

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Elzie Van Duck
18:06 Dec 31, 2025

I know a lot of people have been saying this is AI but honestly don't think AI is this good yet, and it doesn't feel AI either. It didn't even occur to me until I saw the comments. In my opinion, this is a really great story and super funny, and I loved all the imagery and analogies. Congrats!

Reply

Renee Yancey
16:03 Dec 31, 2025

Laugh out loud funny. Can absolutely see why you won. Grand job. And as someone who lives where the temp went from 70°f to 30°f in a day, I completely understand your protagonist frustration.

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Melissa Wood
21:41 Dec 30, 2025

This story is hilarious and very relatable. I live in Alaska and complain about the weather daily for 10 month out of the year 😂

For everyone worried about AI “winning” contests, I think it’s worth saying this: even when writers use AI to brainstorm, bounce ideas, or research, they’re still doing the work. AI isn’t writing their stories for them. Anyone who is asking AI to write a story for them isn't a writer at all.

These kinds of stories still come from humans, especially in a community like Reedsy. Most of us are here to strengthen our creativity, learn from each other, and support other writers, not copy and paste computer generated stories. Most my stories I don't even post for prize money and I'm sure there are a lot of others out there like me. We're just trying to become better writers.

Congrats to this writer!

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Michelle James
22:12 Dec 30, 2025

Thank you, Melissa x

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Craig Brown
15:15 Dec 30, 2025

Love this, Michelle. Great job!

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Michelle James
22:12 Dec 30, 2025

Thank you, Craig!

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John Dorman
13:02 Dec 27, 2025

Read this in the waiting room at a doctors office. Made my day (and the wait). Whether or not this was ChatGPT or not, I enjoyed it.

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Annie FH
20:29 Dec 26, 2025

Oh. I have just read the 'chat GPT' comments. I hope it was just you who wrote it. It's fine to get AI's help to tidy somethign and that sort of thing, but then the author needs to ensure the story is theirs. I'm sure you know this. I'm looking forward to the resolution of this situation and with lots of apologies going your way.

Reply

Valery Rubin
21:58 Dec 22, 2025

Frankly speaking—and we writers, authors, must be honest with ourselves and our colleagues—the story is far from perfect, both in style and writing. The humour? Very peculiar. The story's theme itself is quite interesting, but the execution raises questions.

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Michelle James
08:26 Dec 23, 2025

Thanks for your comments, Valery.
I’ll take the ‘very peculiar humour’ as a compliment!

Reply

Hazel Swiger
00:11 Dec 22, 2025

Congrats on your win, Michelle. But, I did have a few notes, that some of my fellow authors recognized in the comment section. It did have a bit much dialogue for my liking, and yeah, it did feel a little chatGPT. But it overall was a funny story, despite it maybe being created a bit by AI. Congrats again.

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Oliver Rolandson
08:20 Dec 20, 2025

Congratulations on the win! The concept is clever, and the execution is polished.

The narrator's deadpan British voice is well-crafted, and the personified weather (clingy fog, smug sunshine) creates absurd situations that clearly worked for many readers. The Weather God's entrance is the story's strongest moment – his rant about being stuck with "moisture distribution" is both funny and unexpectedly touching, and the reveal that complaints read as divine performance reviews reframes everything nicely.

However, this wasn't quite my cup of tea. The constant stream of metaphors and comparisons ("fog like an anxious intern," "drizzle is rude," "frost feels judgmental") felt exhausting rather than funny to me. Almost every single sentence is a comparison or embellishment, which made it hard to find breathing room. While individual lines are clever, the relentless density kept me at arm's length from the story.

The emotional core around displaced ennui works well, and the twist is genuinely good. The writing is technically strong, with excellent pacing and cultural specificity. It's clear why this won – the style just wasn't for me personally. Genre preference, perhaps. Congratulations again!

Reply

Valery Rubin
20:37 Dec 19, 2025

Not bad. There's a sense of humor. Original. The weather god plot hasn't been seen before. BUT, I think there's too much dialogue.

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Danielle Tanton
03:11 Dec 20, 2025

Agreed, I thought it was funny.

Reply

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