OCR Text |
Show /^7 to the water. I watched her moonlit rear and then followed her down the beach and into the ocean, tightening a bit with the expectation of cold water and finding it perfect, the water surprising me with its wonder, for when I moved through it, sweeping my arms through the silky sea, I saw fire, a flashing sweep of luminescence. Amazed, I watched her white body slide through the dark water outlined in light, a strange flashing fish in the sea. I had no idea such beauty existed, or that we could be so much in the midst of it, ikka like being ourselves figures in a great painting. On the shallow shore we laughed and splashed one another, and then swam out to deeper waters, slowly, leisurely, pausing to tread water and to look back at the deserted shore, and then we swam back to shallow water again and touched our feet. "Great, huh?" I looked at her wet pleased face, hair darkly plastered to her skull, ixzxx We both crouched up to our necks out of the air, she pfrQAah^y to hide herself as well, her head floating on the moon-lit water. "I hope sharks sleep at night." "Yeah. Are there sharks arou^i here?" I looked out beyond the shimmering moonlit shallows to the deeper water beyond, out to the dark water, the black emptiness. "Sharks are everywhere, dodo." ',(AUt they probably sleep at night. When else?" "Know what I've always wondered? Do sharks play?" "Do what?" "Play. Do they have fun?" "Sharks? Play? Like checkers?" "Like tag or follow the leader. Dogs and cats play, smartie." "Cats don't even like water." "On land. Hey, otters.' Otters play in the water. Lots of animals do." "Our animals played on the farm. But sharks are fish. Fish don't play." "Why not?" |