The Secret Library

Short Story Contest

A just-for-fun short story contest for young writers, ages 9-15.

Congratulations to our Winners!

Ages 9 to 10:

‘The Secret of the Room’ by Grace Kerr Voschezang – New Zealand

Ages 11 to 12:

‘Fifteen Minutes’ by Teddie DeMoss – United States

Ages 13 to 15:

‘Baldric’ by Rebecca – United States

Short Story Competition Prizes

Honourable Mentions:

‘The Secret Library’ by Moriah Borstad – Age 9

‘The Amazing Discovery’ by Freddie Chesswas  – Age 11

‘Problems Yield to Effort’ by Clover Alsop – Age 13

‘The Art of Forgiveness’ by Willow Brooke – Age 14

The Secret Library Picture Prompt

Winning Entry (Ages 9-10):

 

The Secret of the Room

© Grace Kerr Voschezang – Age 10, New Zealand

I brushed my hands across the dusty books of the library of mystery. The library had mysteriously appeared at April Road on June 26th, 1992.

I had been curious to find what books lay in the library’s arms; I came across a pink fabric covered book beside a large door shaped mirror. I pulled the book halfway off the shelf. Warm air rushed across my face as I read the title: ‘The Secret of the Room’.

I put the book back on the shelf and, turning to face the mirror again, I froze. The mirror had swung open, revealing a secret room! Heart pounding, adrenaline pulsing through my veins, I stepped into the hidden room. The mirror door closed behind me with a soft “click” and I was alone in the dark, secret room. I wandered forward, blinded by the darkness.

A screech echoed above me, and I stifled a cry. Soft, furry hands touched my back. I yelped, and leapt into the never-ending blackness, landing in a crouch. As I turned my head, I saw a soft glow emitting from the corner of the room. I slowly stood and began creeping across the room.

Cold air swooped over me, and a scream came from behind. I bolted forward and skidded to a holt beside the glow. It was the book! “Not you again!” I groaned. The book fell open to a page decorated with pictures of an island surrounded by sapphire coloured water.

A tall spire rose from the middle of the island. I leaned forward for a closer look. Suddenly, the book glowed brighter and the screams and screeches behind me turned to howls of fright. Salty air enveloped me, and I fell into the pages of the book. A kaleidoscope of colour swirled around me, and I twirled quickly in the salty, colourful air.

Without warning, I fell out of the colour tunnel and landed with a muffled “whoomph!” in the golden sand. I lay moaning in the hot sand, my mouth full of its grittiness. “What a nice surprise!” said a cheerful voice behind me. Then I turned onto my back and stared. I sat up, spat the sand out of my mouth and asked, “who are you?”

The man in front of me chuckled. “I’m the keeper of the island, so it’s my job to ask questions, keep secrets, and greet visitors!” He laughed. “Course, I also protect a few things round here.”

Looking serious, he turned away. I struggled up. Now standing, I followed the man into a thin border of trees that stood on the western side of the island. Waves lapped against the shore as we entered the leafy border. I followed the man through the thin canopy of trees. They leaned toward me as if they would like to snatch me up, they didn’t lean toward the keeper.

Instead, they parted to let him through onto a glowing silver path at the edge of the trees border.

The trees were closing in on me, and I realized I wouldn’t be able to get through to wherever the man had gone. I began running at breakneck speed, leaping over logs and hidden tree roots. At the last second, I threw myself forward and dove through the trees and onto the silver path.

I looked around and began walking down the path. The man was now a large speck in the distance, I began to jog and was soon metres away from the keeper.

After what felt like a year, the man stopped at the top of a small valley and lugged a long, smooth board out of a nearby bush. He sat down on it and slid down into the valley. I ran to the bush and bent down. “Wow!” I said with surprise. The bush was hiding a small cave which stored more boards. I grabbed a purple board and sat down on it, grabbing the handles on the sides I pushed off and slid down the slope into the valley below. Wind rushed past my face and my long hair flapped like a ship’s sail behind me, I guided the board onto a small track, and it began to go faster. I whooped in excitement and the board slid as fast as lightening! I slid the board into another small cave.

I looked up, I saw a big, gleaming silver building in the middle of the valley. A tall, twisted spire rose from the centre like a phoenix from the ashes. A sign beside it proclaimed its name ‘The Library of Answers’. I gasped and ran towards the library, not caring about the long, scratchy grass and sweet- smelling blooming thistles that tore away at my blue patterned jeans.

I stopped by the library doors, and slowly, they swung open. I stepped inside. To my right was a tall bookcase which boasted many books of all size and colour. To my left was a large poster on a pink wall.

A single shelf held one book, the pink fabric book which brought me to the island. Beneath it was the poster. On it was a map of ‘The Library of Answers’. One section of the library was called ‘The Library of Mystery’. I headed in that direction, as I wanted to know how and why the Library of Mystery appeared on April Road, June 26th, 1992.

As I entered the Library of Mystery section, I gasped. The room was as round as a full moon, and it was as if the bookshelves reached to the heavens. My eyes scanned the shelves eagerly. Unexpectantly, a small yellow book fell from one of the shelves. I caught it and read the books title. It was called ‘Answers to the Library of Mystery’ I flipped the book open to the first page…

Winning Entry (Ages 11-12):

 

Fifteen Minutes

© Teddie DeMoss – Age 12, United States

Fifteen minutes.

Sweat trickled down Piper’s forehead as she rummaged through the many colorful books stacked neatly on the shelves.

Fifteen minutes. Move fast, Piper.

She pulled a book out, frantic hopefulness sparking in her green eyes–and then sputtering out when she put it back. Not what she was looking for.

Think, think, think.

If she was an unknown sorceress disguised as the Queen of Tampesk, where would she hide her complex Masterplan to take over the city?

She reached far back into one shelf hiding in the corner. Her groping hands bumped into something. Something unexpected. She felt it more to determine what it was. A handle maybe? She ducked her head inside the bookshelf and pulled out a small penlight from her jeans pocket. She flashed the light at the back of the shelf. A knob. With a padlock on it.

Thirteen minutes to go.

Thirteen minutes before the guards woke up from their drugged sleep. Thirteen minutes before they would see Piper’s empty cell and come storming through the palace to find her.

Move fast, Piper.

Thirteen.

Twelve.

Eleven.

Her fingers worked methodically over the padlock, and after three minutes and fourteen seconds, the lock sprang with a relieving click! She poked her hand through the small, revealed space. She grasped something thin and small. She dragged it out into the light.

A piece of the Masterplan.

It was ripped along the edges, which gave Piper the impression that the sorceress had hidden different pieces of it all around the room. Hope bubbled up in Piper’s heart–a trickle of anticipation–but she fought it down, careful to stay on track.

Ten.

Nine.

She ran her hands down the next shelf, feeling through every nook and cranny. Goosebumps erupted on her skin as she pulled out another piece.

Eight.

Seven.

Her body wanted to shut down. Sensory overload. TOO MUCH! Her brain screamed as anticipation, fear, hope, and dread corroded her veins. She ignored it and continued to search.

Move fast, Piper.

Six.

Five.

Her hands found another one hiding in a secret compartment underneath a floorboard.

She pieced the three scraps together and determined that she was only missing one, maybe two more pieces.

Move fast, Piper.

Faster.

Faster.

Fifteen minutes. That was it.

She found the last piece wedged beneath the cushion of a chair. She eagerly set to work at piecing them together.

Three.

Finish strong.

Piper finished gluing the pieces together. She gasped at the finished product. An intricate map, ancient and yellowed. A long path, filled with snares and monsters. And at the end…a volcano. Circled in blood red ink.

Vulcan’s Inferno.

The legend of the monster, Vulcan, was one that Piper had heard many times. The wicked lava monster unleashed torrents of hot, fiery chaos on whoever had been cursed by…

His owner.

The so-called mythical sorceress Milani.

That’s what she was looking for. Now she knew who she was fighting against. Milani.

The name sent frigid shivers up Piper’s spine. She had to stop this.

Madness.

She gathered the map and sprang to her feet, just as…

Two.

One.

Zero.

Angry shouts carried through the castle and burned their way into Piper’s ears. She leaped onto a bookshelf and tried to unscrew the bolts of a window high up on the wall.

Move fast, Piper. Here they come.

A soldier knocked down the heavy oak door. His comrades followed, crossbows raised. Their brass buttons shone immaculately on their professional uniforms.

“Piper Trokan,” boomed the first soldier, “you are under arrest for stealing the personal property of the newly crowned Queen of Tampesk, leading the revolt of rebels against royal authority, and escaping from detainment! I suggest you come down right now; my men have crossbows and are ready to use them.”

Piper smiled.

“Sorry, officer. Not going to happen.”

“And, may I ask, why not?”

“Because I’m about to jump out of this window.”

The bolt fell to the floor and Piper knocked open the window. With a playful smirk, she dove out and fell three stories, arrows flying all around her. She hurtled toward the ground and somersaulted onto it, jumping up and running as fast as she could into the forest.

Swish, swish!

Arrows pierced the air with screaming hisses, and Piper stumbled many times while she dodged them. Suddenly…

Swi–SHICK

An arrow shot into Piper’s calf. She gasped and winced. “I guess I do have an Achille’s heel,” she deadpanned through gritted teeth. She dragged herself up onto her horse, who was tied to a tree deeper in the forest.

“Come on, Stalyan,” she urged, “let’s get to the hideout.”

Half an hour later, Piper reached it: a cave hidden in the crevice of a tall mountain. She tied Stalyan outside and pushed through the thick ivy covering the entrance. She limped to the small, crackling fire in the back of the main entrance and sank to the floor.

“Enza! Corbin! Where’s everyone?”

A petite girl with gorgeous dark hair, skin, and eyes appeared from an entrance in the back. A boy with tan skin, chestnut hair, and blue eyes followed.

“Piper, what happened?” Enza rushed to her friend’s aid, her long dark hair flying. She bent down and handed Piper a bottle filled with deep blue liquid. “Here, drink this,” she said. Piper drank it, grateful for something to soothe her parched throat, and immediately felt smooth relief calming her heart and numbing the pain in her leg. Enza delicately pulled out the arrow and bandaged it with a shred of her light blue tunic.

“What happened?” Corbin echoed, standing behind Enza with concern in his stunning eyes.

“Spread the word,” Piper answered with a satisfied smile on her face. “Tell the others that I stole her masterplans from right under her nose. The rebellion is finally going our way. We have a lead.”

 

Winning Entry (Ages 13-15):

 

Baldric

© Rebecca – Age 13, United States

Once there was a girl named Ada, who despised reading. She thought it was boring and a complete waste of time.

One summer she visited her grandmother’s house. In Ada’s room was a tall bookshelf crammed with books.

On her first morning there her grandmother said, “There’s a present for you in the living room.”

Ada ran into the living room and saw a wrapped present on the couch. She sat down, grabbed it, hurriedly tore off the wrapping paper, and stared in disappointment at the object in her hand. It was a book called Paddington.

“My mother gave me this book,” said Ada’s grandmother. “I disliked reading books as much as you do now. When she gave it to me, she told me what I am going to tell you now: Read some tonight, before you go to sleep, and after that you can forget all about it.”

“Okay,” said Ada, “I will.”

That night she read the first chapter of Paddington and found it better than she expected. She put the book on her nightstand, turned off her lamp, and fell asleep. Sometime in the middle of the night a strange noise startled her awake. It had come from her bookshelf. She turned on her lamp and saw, to her surprise, that some of the books on the bottom shelf were getting pulled inward. As she stared in amazement out clambered a bear. He looked familiar.

“Hello,” he said, lifting his hat.

“Why, you look just like Paddington!” she exclaimed.

“I am Paddington, who else would I be?” he said, sounding slightly offended. “I’ve come to take you to Baldric.”

“Where?” asked Ada in confusion.

“Baldric,” said Paddington turning around and jumping through the hole he had just clambered through.

Ada walked over to the bookshelf and peered through the hole. She was surprised to see a room full of books.

“Come on,” Paddington called, and Ada jumped in.

“The emergency meeting will now commence,” called a loud voice from behind Ada.

She whirled around and saw an old man with a pointy hat and a long beard. Behind him stood a large mouse on its hind legs, a girl with a bright red bucket hanging from her belt, an old man, and a young girl with a crutch.

“I am Gandalf,” said the old man, addressing Ada, “you may know of me from the Lord of the Rings movies. Sadly, you do not know me as well as if you had read the books. However, you can mend that if you wish.”

Then Gandalf turned to the people behind him,

“Please introduce yourselves to this young lady.”

The mouse stepped forward, “I am Reepicheep, Chief mouse of Narnia. You can read about me in Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and The Last Battle.”

The girl with the crutch stepped forward next, “I am Leeli, Song-maiden of Anniera. I’m in all four books of The Wingfeather Saga, along with my brothers.”

“I’m Kate Weatherall,” said the girl with the red bucket. “I’m 13 years old and I’m from The Mysterious Benedict Society.”

The other old man said, “I am Ebeneezer Scrooge, from A Christmas Carol.”

“And I’m Paddington,” said the bear, “from the Paddington books.”

Then they all looked at her expectantly.

“I’m Ada,” she said, a little uncertainly.

“This meeting has been called to address your resistance to reading,” said Gandalf. “We are permitted to tell you a few things, but most you will have to find out on your own, by reading.”

“May I ask some questions?” wondered Ada aloud.

“Yes,” said Gandalf, “but we can only answer one question each, so be careful.”

“What is your bucket for?” Ada asked, turning towards Kate.

“It’s for carrying my tools and equipment,” she answered.

“What kind of equipment?” Ada started to ask, then she stopped, “I guess I’ll have to read the book if I want to find out,” she said slowly.

“Weren’t you once really mean?” Ada asked, looking at Scrooge.

“Unfortunately, yes,” he said, “but not anymore.”

Then Ada turned to Leeli, “What’s a Song-maiden of, umm?”

“Anniera?” said Leeli, “A Song-maiden of Anniera is the third child of the King of Anniera. They have a gift for music.”

“So you’re a princess? Oh, never mind, this only one question rule is hard to remember,” sighed Ada.

“Your Grandma has the whole Wingfeather Saga series,” said Leeli, “if you really want to find out more.”

“Please, sir, Gandalf,” Ada said, “is this a magic bookshelf?”

“I’m afraid, my dear girl,” said Gandalf, “that you have already asked me a question.”

Then Paddington said, “I can answer your question, and yes, it is a magic bookshelf, though I don’t think it’s as nice as my magic kit.”

“There’s one more thing I’ve been wondering about,” said Ada to Reepicheep, “I’ve watched a Narnia movie, and you were much smaller.”

“In the Narnia books,” said Reepicheep, “I am about three feet tall, which is the height I am know.”

“Now,” said Gandalf, “you must go back to bed. Paddington will show you how to get up.”

There was a kind of stair, partly hidden by books, up to the bottom of the bookshelf in Ada’s room. She followed Paddington up. When she was standing in her room, she remembered something.

“When we were here before, I asked a question that you answered, but then you answered another in Baldric.”

“Up here I can answer as many questions as you ask, as long as they don’t tell what happens in books.”

“Then I have one more question” asked Ada, “Why did Grandma say to read Paddington before I went to bed?”

“In order for the magic to work, you must read something before bed,” said Paddington. “Now goodnight.”

In the morning Ada asked her grandmother if she knew about Baldric.

“Yes, I do,” said her grandmother, “Did you visit it?”

“Yes,” said Ada, “and Grandma, where are your Wingfeather Saga books?”

Honourable Mention:

The Secret Library

© Moriah Borstad – Age 9, United States

Deep in a mountain where no man ever dared to set foot a dragon lived. She was not a big dragon like in the Middle Ages. She was the size of a cat, but she was dangerous. Her name was Thorn. She was golden. Thorn had been sent there by a group of wizards to protect a secret library. The library was stuffed; practically bursting with scrolls and books. They were ancient and filled to the brim with magic. Thorn slept in the hole that led to the library. One night just as she was beginning to drop off, she felt eyes on her. She jumped up and looked around, hissing. There was an overhanging rock ledge. Thorn began climbing up the rock wall. She jumped on to the rock ledge and began to twitch her growing wings. Just then she saw a shadow of a dragon.

 

“I know that you are there,” she said.

 

A dragon stepped out of the shadows. She saw that he was her age.

 

“What are you doing here?” Thorn asked.

Honourable Mention:

The Amazing Discovery

© Freddie Chesswas – Age 11, New Zealand

I ran up the huge stone steps, and walked into the new library that had just opened today. “Hello young man!’’ said a lady at the counter of the library, just as I got in. “Enjoy yourself!’’
“Yes, Madame.’’ I said. I eagerly started looking for books in the children’s section. I found one labeled ‘Stories and Secrets’ by J.S.H Sharkle-Coltvesh and started to read.
It was written by hand in very elegant writing. I started to read.

 

A record of all the secret places in the town of Gustruphes.

I looked up, surprised. I lived in the town of Gustruphes.

 

I flipped through the book, and went to the back.

 

No. 65,730. In the new library of Gustruphes, opened 5th of September 2023.

 

I looked up, and a gasp caught in my throat. I was in the new library of Gustruphes. Today was the fifth of September. The library opened today. I looked back down at the book.

Honourable Mention:

Problems Yield to Effort

© Clover Alsop – Age 13, New Zealand

Flora sighed, sitting down on her bed and looking at the picture she was holding. “I’m sure everyone here is capable of solving this problem,” Miss Vivian, Flora’s maths teacher, had said as she gave each student a copy of this picture. “The instructions are on the back of the page.”

  

“Well, I’m certainly not capable of solving this,” said Flora aloud. She glanced down at the picture. It was quite a nice picture, actually—a room lined with books leading to another book-filled room, possibly a secret one, given the way that the room was shaped. 

 

But the questions on its back spoilt the picture entirely…

 

The dimensions of the first room are 12 feet x 10 feet x 8 feet (the length, width, and height of the room), which makes its volume 960 feet3 or 1,658,880 inches3.

 

The second room is triangular, so you would find its volume by multiplying its length (8 feet) by its width (8 feet), dividing the product by 2, and then multiplying the quotient by its height (8 feet). This equals 256 feet3, or 442,368 inches3.

 

If the first room is filled with 47,396 books, and the volume of each book is 35 inches3, how many books (hypothetically) will it take to fill the second room, given the fact that it already contains 200 books?

 

“Yes,” decided Flora. “ I definitely can’t solve this.”

Honourable Mention:

The Art of Forgiveness

© Willow Brooke – Age 14, New Zealand

Tiron

 

When I was twelve, I cursed someone.
All I said was, “I put the curse of the hills upon you,” to people who were being cruel. When using words was the only way I knew to fight back.
But words have a hidden power I didn’t realise then. When I was told I was wrong, I prayed for forgiveness, but the guilt burdened me, and I thought I was beyond redemption. So I turned bitter inside. It’s easy to go wrong at that age, when you’re poised between childhood and adulthood. In any case, I came to the crossroads, and I took the wrong path.
Instead of building up, I broke down. I left home and became an outlaw, searching for treasure that never satisfied me when I found it. Now, following a rumour I had heard in the last village I had passed, I strode through a dark forest, looking for a cottage reputed to be full of treasure. “The girl who lives there’s the richest in the world,” folk whispered, and I had believed them, fool that I was. I was regretting my blind trust in their rumours as I heard a wolf howling in the distance.

A good book makes you want to live in the story. A great book gives you no choice.

– Unknown