Posts tagged ‘sailor’

04/23/2012

Abradant

by Pierce Nahigyan

The shark’s skin was smooth from gill to tail. When he dragged his palm towards the massive head, the dermal denticles, minute teeth that formed the aft edges of the gray, oily skin, tore his palm. He pulled the hand back to inspect the blood.

“Just because it’s dead don’t mean it ain’t dangerous,” the old whaler told him. He grinned over the coil of lines in his husky arms.

He shuffled to the bow, his heavy tread arousing a chorus of groans from the salt-swollen shipboards. Rene wiped his bloody hand on his tarred shirt.

The shark was massive: A whole great white, thick from tail to snout, like an overgrown, bloodless pork sausage, over twenty feet long and Jove knew how many hundreds of pounds. The whaler had killed it last night, when the tempest was at its most unforgiving, the waves higher than their masts, the spray tumbling over the ratlines and rails – even with the drainage ports the water roiling about their knees thick with seaweed and sea life, horrendously misplaced crabs and glowing, ornery squid. The shark had come soaring over the bow, open-mouthed, eyes black.

“Pardon, boys!” it had bellowed over the cyclone. It flattened McDonald, killed him outright. “Terribly sorry!” it had screamed, then it rolled to the port side as the ship tipped, the wave carrying the brig higher and higher. It smeared Seamus and the second mate to the taffrails, impaling them on the pins. When the ship bucked and came crashing down on the far side of the monstrous roller the two men went over into the abyss. The shark flipped end over end; each sailor prayed to his God that it would sail beyond the edge of the aft cabin but, instead, it shattered the captain’s rotten wooden leg and swallowed half the helm. “This is dreadfully embarrassing,” the shark could be heard to mumble over the splinters in its tooth-ringed jaws. The ship yawed alee once more and the captain was crushed by the iron ten-pounder. Rene and the whaler had tried to push the gun into the sea when the squall first began but had both been flung to the main deck by their half-mad first mate, and so it fell freely. Yet the captain made a valiant attempt to crawl away from it, half sunk into the pale belly of the shark.

Before the storm had ceased and the few still remaining had their wits once more about them, they circled the shark where it came to rest on the main deck. It bawled; long, low howlings, lisping occasionally with the shredded bits of the wheel still trapped in its gums. The whaler beat it senseless with their last (and broken) harpoon. When that was nothing more than a split switch of wood, they decided to jump on it. A throaty hiccup, and another burbled apology, and Renton’s misplaced boot coincided to separate the man from his lower half, between the jaws of the abashed shark.

They spent the night killing the damn thing, until only Rene and the old whaler were left, and the shark’s sloppy grief was only a fresh, irritating memory. There was no place for remorse in the deep blue sea.

03/28/2012

Aboutship

by Pierce Nahigyan

Near the northern tip of Catalina Island we faced a sudden gust of unseasonable wind. It came on heavily for so early in spring, so we tacked within sight of Two Harbors. I scrambled up the shrouds, right over the lubber’s hole, forgetting the harness (it would have taken too long and the ratlines and wood were mostly dry). Owing to lazy hands before me, the baggy wrinkles nearest the topgallant yard were in a state, and somehow the lines to the royals had come loose.

The lines flapping across my ears, high upon the topm’st, I couldn’t hear the frantic shriek of Bethany, our ship’s cook, when a monstrous heron dropped a fat garibaldi on my face. The eviscerated fish flopped wetly against my cheek, its insides slithering down my neck, into my blouse. Instinctively, I reached up, just as we swung aboutship.

The fish and I were suddenly off the mast, in open air high above the decks, nigh on ninety feet. I didn’t hear Bethany’s next cry either, nor the mate’s. I did hear the ragged wind flood the curled holes in my ears, dropping thick thunders upon my eardrums, spilling upward through my hair.

Flailing through the air, the world growing bigger and bigger, the mostly intact fish unfurling with the mast, I thought, that heron must have had a big breakfast this morning to have given up the rest of his meal. It’s funny, in situations like that, what hits you first.

05/30/2011

Abeam

by Pierce Nahigyan

The captain called Rudy to the stern and asked him to peer through the spyglass. He took the telescope in hand and, reverently, put it to his face.

There, far beyond the strand of a green and lonely islet, was a woman perched on a slab of rock, surrounded by coral. The woman was nude. Her only claim to modesty was the length of her wet hair, which draped down from her shoulders and covered her shimmering skin.

Rudy had to have the spyglass pried from his hands.

After a moment’s collection, the young boy swallowed and addressed the captain. “Sir, there appears to be a woman in the middle of the ocean.”

The captain brought his corn cob pipe out of his pocket and proceeded to chew on the tip. With a grimace, he sighed and nodded. “I was afraid of that. I was hoping it was a manatee.”

He dismissed Rudy to the main deck and the boy drifted starboard to gaze abeam at the pink ghost in the distance. The gunner appeared beside him.

Squinting, the gunner shaded his eyes and followed the cabin boy’s hungry expression into the ocean. “Jove!” the man exclaimed. “There’s a gal out there!”

Rudy nodded.

“Do you swim?” the gunner asked. No, said Rudy. “Shame,” said the gunner. “She looks lonely.”

12/19/2010

Abaft

by Pierce Nahigyan

Many years ago, on an old trawler out from Nantucket, I crewed with a man very on in years and yet whose hands and forearms resembled those of a shaved bear, his eyes under beetled brows like black pearls. He had a straight back and the lined, leathery skin of a man who has spent most of his waking life working beneath the sun. I was still green, barely a proper seaman, and the man had no end of criticism for my shoddy knots and lubberly habits. He articulated with a limited vocabulary of grunts and cusses but his meaning was seldom unclear.

One night we were stationed together for the second dogwatch. The Atlantic was flat as a mirror, the bare slap of the water against our hull almost noiseless. The ship, of course, groaned like the hinges of a rotten trunk, but that had long ceased to intrude on our thoughts. The drowsy mist of the late evening had settled into a moonlit cloud.

I was almost dozing when a thick hand fell to my shoulder. I wanted to cry out. I would have, if the old man’s face hadn’t struck me dumb. He placed his other hand on my arm and turned me towards the stern. “Go abaft,” he whispered. “There’s something you should see.”

I did as I was told. I took the ladder to the poop and nodded slowly to the helmsman, who gave me the barest acknowledgment before returning his gaze to our starboard aft. I looked as well and held the wet railing with both hands. Humps. Limitless humps, the thick, bulbous heads of monsters resolved in my vision. With the yellow moon they had risen from the deep and surrounded our ship. I lost count after forty, my mind elsewhere, on the confusion of it, the sperm whales’ attentive, menacing composition. The heavy hand fell on my shoulder and I looked at the face of the old salt.

“They’re here for me,” he said. He squeezed his hands together. Those hands would never pop nor feel the sting of the night’s cold. He was built too hard for that. I stared at his inscrutable face shining with the same slick light as danced on the monsters’ mighty heads.

But they weren’t there for him. In pairs and then severally, they submerged. And then the old man, too, went down to the main deck. The Atlantic was alone again, save for the creaks of the hull, the shrug of the waves, and the silence that now seemed to grunt and cuss with the things it couldn’t say.

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