This is getting far too complicated.
Take a 1 litre plastic bowl to a beach, & pushing it down into the sand produces resistance, but once pushed down, it stays there.
That’s because the sand particles have no interacting force between them.
Liquids, such as water, have intermolecular forces holding the molecules together. Intermolecular forces are generally much weaker than covalent bonds. For example, it requires 927 kJ to overcome the intramolecular forces and break both O–H bonds in 1 mol of water, but it takes only about 41 kJ to overcome the intermolecular attractions and convert 1 mol of liquid water to water vapour at 100°C.
Despite this seemingly low value, the intermolecular forces in liquid water are among the strongest such forces known!
Imagine pushing the bowl down onto a trampoline made of sheet rubber. The rubber molecules stretch but want to return to normal, thus providing a reactionary opposite force.
But water molecules, unlike rubber, do not stretch or compress.
Since the water does not get compressed/stretched downwards or sideways, it simply rises upwards against the force of gravity, as the displaced water has absolutely nowhere else to go. This means gravity is the reactionary opposite force acting on any object placed in water.
When removing the object, the intermolecular forces of the water will normalise back to the previous level.
This was Archimedes observation & resulting principle of buoyancy.
Unlike metal, except for mercury, its difficult to make a dent in liquid water.