Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Ebb tide (fiction)

Children learn the smell of decay from their grandparents. Grandma naps with her mouth open.
"Grandma smells...."

"Shhh...."

And death becomes scary.




A tottering gentleman walks near the edge, his shoes no longer sinking as they once did.

The bay pulls back. Low tide. A glimpse of mud flats reminds him of a thigh, of her. A quick flush, embarrassed by unshared thoughts.

On the jetty a few oysters and mussels gape like old folks sleeping. The sicksweet scent of death blends with the exuberant breath of critters who feast on the shore's edge, gorging on life before the tide returns.

The Delaware Bay etches the gray February skies. A single tern hovers a foot over a careless spearing, dives, then seemingly walks on water a moment as it swallows the writhing flash of silver, no longer alive, not yet dead.

The older man lifts a whelk shell, and sniffs. His nose knows before he does, and the still rotting corpse is tossed back to the water.

A grey shadow scuttles towards the whelk flesh.



The beach has shifted, he has grayed. He stands on the spot--almost sure. She showed him the sea monsters that grinned back at them when they arced underwater to stare at the August sun.

He trudges home.

The tide returns.