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            I

There were five on the boat
In the middle of the night:
Two in the cabin cramped under the deck,
Three with the ice chests under the stars.

Fishing all day
Under flat hot haze,
Drinking beer.
(The boy drank juice,
Sucked oranges.)
They let him cut the head
Off the maco shark Tom caught.
He sawed it with a bait knife
And saw what was inside.

No other boats that day,
Twenty-five miles out.
At Currington’s Ditch
The Gulf gave wonders:
A blowfish, valiant puffer,
Three porpoises,
And always sharks.
‘When you reel in your line
There could be anything.’

The sky began to clear
In the afternoon,
And sunset gave them glory
Yielding to stars.
They grilled the maco on the camp stove,
Finished the Fritos,
And cut into the chocolate cake
That Joe’s wife Sara sent.
Coffee kept them fishing in the dark,
With Coleman light and stars.
No moon until they slept.

Bill started in the cabin.
They sent him out for farting
And so he joined the two:
Joe on the ice chests,
A jacket for a pillow;
Wayne on a lounge chair,
Hand hanging in fish scales.
Bill took the rear,
Spread a tarp,
And lay watching stars swing above him.
Cradled in the rocking,
He slept.

And woke to water pouring in beside him.
Shouted,
Rose,
And watched Joe stand as
Wayne fell off the lounge chair,
Boat fell from their footing
And water welcomed all.

Bill came up.
Mound of white hull
Tracked by moonlight.
Tom climbing up one side
Joe clinging on a line
Wayne coming out from underneath the bow
And no one else.
The boy was gone.
Bill looked again:
The boat with three men clinging now.
He bellowed my son’s name
And fell under a wave
And rose to cry again.
Joe caught his arm
And hauled him out.
He caught a breath to shout again
When brown arm curving
Past the second wave
Gave answer.

Five on the boat again
Under the stars
Traitor turned over
They clung to her hull.

They talked of how it happened;
No one knew.
Of rescue, and Joe said,
“It’s Sunday one A.M.
They don’t expect us back
Till Monday night.”
So all fell silent for awhile
And watched the solid sea.

‘This was not my mother ocean.
No crest of beauty moving toward the shore
Nor sails near and far.
A bird perhaps
Or sometimes more
Who flew in safety and in power
Above us as we lay.’

They lay face down like sunbathers,
Lined up to broil.
And when the rain brought blessing
Embraced to hold their warmth against the cold.
Watched empty ocean over others’ shoulders.

‘This was another ocean,
Of curve and wave
And endless motion.
The sky itself would not be still,
But glittered stars
Or drifted clouds
And nowhere could our eyes have rest.’

Watched empty ocean teeming still below
(When you reel in your line…)
Thin sounds, thin light,
Dream-fish washed pale,
Seahorse, nightmare,
(When you reel in your line…)
Man o’ war from Portugal,
Tuna, grouper, mackerel,
Lemon, maco, hammerhead
(There could be anything.)
                             II

Inland, I had no idea of danger.
Free of lover and of son,
Three-day weekend to unwind,
I had no plans, I could do anything.

When Monday night came
And they didn’t
Angry at first (Bill promised he would call)
And then began to wonder.
Empty ocean, one head bobbing,
Pushed the vision under and
At midnight called the Coast Guard.

Dreamed: we’d found them
Woke: we hadn’t
All in a rush
Upon my chest
Seavisions sat
And stayed.

Thought motionless above a sword:
No certainty, no pain.
Waiting brings its own reward:
At eight o’clock, at ten, the phone again.
“No word.
They say a storm is building
North of Tampa Bay.”
“I know. I heard.”
And through the day and into dusk
No word.
Until the call from Joe’s wife Sara.
News so easy, words so plain.
“They found them all
And all are well.
Come to the house.
We’ll drive to fetch them
Back from Cedar Key.”

What story would they tell,

What could they say
To wash my fury and my fear away?
The engine died,
The truck broke down,
We lost our way?
Then at the house,
Joe’s mother in the door,
“I have bad news.
The Coast Guard called us back.
They only rescued four.
We know that they have Tom and Wayne.”
“But of the other three”?
“One of them is missing.
They wouldn’t tell us who.”

In the living room a country family.
Trophies on the mantelpiece,
Coffee on the table.
The television gave us light
Until an aunt turned on a lamp.
In the bedroom Sara lay
And waited by the phone.
Joe’s sister
Sat with her.< br />Two pregnant women waiting.
I stood by a window,
It will be finished soon.
When this cigarette is gone,
When that runner turns the corner
God, he runs so slow!

“The Coast Guard wants you on the phone.”
My son is dead my son is dead.
Someone walked me down the hall.
“Your son is safe, he’s doing well,
We need consent to treat him.”
“But Bill and Joe,
Which one is gone”?
“We cannot tell.
You all must come.”

And so Joe’s Dad and Mom and I
And theirs was dead or mine was dead
Took Sara’s car
(She had to rest and wait in that dark room.)
We took one car
And drove two hours
And I watched cars, clouds, trees, flowers,
And theirs was dead or mine was dead
We didn’t know.

             III

We didn’t know how long
The time had been for them.
Three days, almost three nights they lay,
No sleep, no food, no water.
No rest for eyes from emptiness
Though weary minds devised odd sights
And some they told aloud.
My son saw fires on the waves,
Wayne saw a barge,
And on the second night,
Bill saw Death in a cloud
And watched it pelting toward them lit by lightning.

The storm brought waves above their heads
That threw them off the boat.
They struggled back to cling
To the hull and to each other.

Third day brought thoughts of rescue.
They knew the search was on.
By afternoon Joe’s mind was gone.
He seemed to cheer a football game,
Cursed, and shouted Sara’s name.
All vision now inside his eyes
Behind the brown stain rising as life fell.
Bill held him on the boat
Still and heavy in his arms.
Did he die there
Or in the wave that threw them off again?
Bill swimming out to pull him back.
“He’s dead Bill.  Let him go.”
And as they spoke, he sank,
Lean scarecrow in the water.
A half an hour later
The helicopter came.

             IV
Thank God for days
That heal salt sores in the flesh
Change funeral to memory
(Joe’s mother in the door
Turned as I neared
And would not speak.
Her son was dead.)
The story encrusted with telling,
The pictures in ambush at night
Come fewer and fade.
Thank God for days.

But something stays.
Under wave the nightmare,
Under surf the stones.
And in a year I go
To the beach north of Daytona,
Pitch my tent behind the dunes,
Sleep and wake to rain,
Stagger between boulders   
And on the rock beach
Sit and watch the sea.

The rain ends with the sunrise.
Horizon shows the dawn:
No glory, merely da
y.

Above the line, pearl light.
Mist to the north tells rain.
Twelve pelicans measure the sky.
Below is broken slate,
But if there be measure of dread,
Dark under water confuses my eye.
Dark underwater:
Five lying, one dying,
The trying to save him
The waiting, the waves, yes
This is part of what they saw
Grey ocean, silver sky.
But from no land,
From grave instead.
My son is dead.
‘He is not dead.’
He almost died.
‘He did not die.’
He might have died.
‘He did not die.’
My son will die. Dark ocean, let me be the first to drown.

 

Motheroceancallypgia.600
image:callipygia600.com

 

Dear readers: I wrote this poem over thirty years ago. It is a true story, though the names are changed.

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NEXT POST: JULY 25

 

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