Читать книгу Pigs - Johanna Stoberock - Страница 14

Оглавление

Otis opened his locket and stared at its hollow center. What had he done with the pictures? He scrambled on the ground, looking for them for the fifty millionth time, but there was nothing. Just sand and shadows and twigs to feed the fire. How could he have let them slip away?

It was so lonely here. The sea murmured and grumbled and even screamed but he couldn’t understand anything it said. He caught crabs and let them go and tried to laugh while they scrambled away but they didn’t even look at him, their odd eyes pivoting around, searching for a hole to hide in. He caught them again and ripped their legs off and held them over the fire and sucked the meat out of their shells and shook his head, wondering how they’d ever seemed anything more than food.

Now that he thought about it, he’d been lonely his entire life. How was that possible? He’d had a wife. He remembered Alice’s eyes looking into his in bed in the early morning when they’d forgotten to shut the curtains the night before and the dawn came spreading over them like a rose-colored blanket. He’d lain there as the dark turned to light and watched her waking up, the flutter of lashes, the unfocused gaze, the smile, that moment when the eyes first take in light. He’d smiled back. Her eyes were endless. He’d reached out for her. And then the baby cried.

He’d had a son.

How could he have been lonely with a wife and a child?

He reached out and grabbed another crab. It wriggled in his hand and then he broke it and it stopped.

There was a strange shadow at the edge of the beach, but he couldn’t tell what it attached to. He looked back down and brushed a handful of sand out of the way, searching for the edge of a photo, torn paper, a color from something other than nature. Nothing. Just more sand under the sand he moved away. His whole body ached. His stomach growled. Crab legs weren’t enough to keep him going. The shadow moved again, just at the outside edge of his vision. He shook his head. Shadows weren’t worth pursuing. Find the pictures now—that’s what he cared about. But there it was again. He turned his head quickly. Whatever had caused it was gone. It could have been anything. That dove hadn’t stopped cooing, and the gulls set out for sea every so often, and who knew what other creatures lived on the island. There were probably some goats around. He should make a spear. The thought of a goat roasting over his tiny fire was pitiful, but it made his mouth water just the same. He was hungry. He was tired of scavenging. He wanted to go home.

The log against his back was rough. His skin was rough. His lips were peeling. His joints ached. His body didn’t smell the way his body should.

He thought about the other women. He couldn’t help it. It made him cringe to think about them, but they had been so beautiful. Why did he care so much about beauty? It was better than food, better even than water. But what was it? The first time he’d left Alice, it had been for a short weekend with a woman he’d met at the grocery store. Her hair was blonde and it fell straight down to her ankles so that when she walked across the room toward him, naked, it was like she was surrounded by a curtain of gold. Who wouldn’t leave for that? The second time he’d left her, he’d gone to a cabin in the mountains for two weeks. The woman who’d brought him there had eyes so brown they looked like deer’s eyes, and fingers so thin they looked like blades of grass. When she moved she looked like a willow tree. But sexy. A sexy tree. It made him laugh even now to think of her. What had he done?

Alice was beautiful, too, with her gray, endless eyes. Why wasn’t a single woman’s beauty enough? What was wrong with him? Why couldn’t he stick with one choice and be happy?

There had been others. He could deal them all out in his memory like a deck of cards. But there was always Alice crying at the end. Or worse, Alice not caring anymore. She’d barely waved goodbye when he shipped out the last time.

He pulled his scabby knees to his chest. He brushed the sand off his shins. He dealt out his life and wished he’d made other choices or any choices at all and that the choices he’d made or hadn’t made hadn’t led to this deserted beach on this deserted island with a deserted life back home. He wished that his natural condition was not to lose things.

That shadow—there was definitely something there. He threw another stick on the fire and stood up. He shaded his eyes and looked in all directions. No ships on the horizon. No smoke from the interior of the island. No twine to make a raft. The dolphins he could see playing just at the edge of the horizon were definitely not thinking about him. His body ached and the dead crab in his hand was nothing but food and he thought he knew what it would be like to die. He stood up, his body creaking, and waved and waved at nothing.

Pigs

Подняться наверх