The Blue Crab
>> Tuesday, March 3, 2015 –
North Carolina,
summer crush,
summer love,
the outer banks,
topsail island
The
end of swim season was the end. There were no digital fibers in the fabric of
our lives to keep us connected. Gone was the shock of the early morning water
and the honey combed sunlight quivering beneath the surface of the pool. Gone
were the Lycra suited lords and ladies of summer cheering from the edge. There
would be no more frozen snickers, wafting scents of crinkled French fries
frying or coconut scented mothers glistening. And most all, it was the end of congratulatory
pats on the rear end from coach Hal with the blonde wavy hair and muscled legs like
tree trunks. I was a moonchild born in July. The end of swim season was the end of me.
But
after the end, my mother piled brown paper grocery bags filled with a week’s
worth of food into the back of our wood paneled station wagon and so we began the
four hour trek to Topsail Island on the outer banks of North Carolina. As the
landscape flattened out and the green stalks of corn flickered by the window, we
hit a bump in the road and my lungs deflated with a hissing sigh.
“What’s
wrong with you?” my older brother Chuck asked.
“Shut-up,”
I replied. Because how could I explain what was wrong with me, when what was
wrong
with me was so terribly wrong?
When
the shoulders of the roads became sandy and the dunes dotted with nodding sea
oats came into view, we rolled down the windows and inhaled the warm salty air,
each attempting to spot the blue of the ocean first. It was an elixir that
brought me back from the brink of death caused by teenage summer crush.
Towards
the end of the week, my three brothers and I bolted through the screen door
with the rusted spring hinge of the faded blue cottage, whack! Chuck with the fish heads, John with the string, Matt with
the Styrofoam cooler and me with the net. We navigated our way across the street
and through the reeds, side stepping the fiddler crabs retreating backwards.
We
tied a string in a loop through the mouth of a fish head, our faces screwed
up as if we had just bitten into a lemon and tossed the head into the
shallow water of the sound. Within a minute or two there was a tug on the line
and Chuck slowly pulled the string towards us as I dropped the net and scooped
up a blue crab. I inverted the net over the cooler and shook it, releasing the
clamoring crustacean.
After
we deposited about ten crabs, Chuck pulled up another and when I captured it in
the net and shook it, I discovered that it was hopelessly tangled.
“Reach
in and pull it out,” Chuck commanded, but I could not.
“Come
on you fag, just do it.”
I’m
certain now that he used the term loosely, more as an insult and less as an
accusation, but I felt ensnared in the word. And so I whacked the net against a
barnacled wooden pole over and over again, tears streaming down my face as the
crab’s body cracked and my brothers looked on with wide eyes and gaping mouths.
The sun dipped below the horizon smearing orange streaks in the sky and I was
left alone to pick the dismantled pieces of the crab out of the net.
It
was the end of the season and it was the end of me.