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Each cold wave was starting to slap me in the face and the grayness of morning wasn’t lifting as the sun rose. Goosebumps had made my legs slim sharks, heavy and rough, so I swam to shore spitting out icy water. I was thinking about coffee, maybe crawling into my sleeping bag and listening to loons’ far-off howls until breakfast, and I reached the splintery dock when I choked – tried to struggle backward, without any splash which might wash her in with me. Dock spiders swim. Did you know? They fasten long ropes of silk and dive for their prey, something big since no horsefly sustains a spider the size of a mouse. This one was monstrous, motionless, spiky black legs jointed white at her knees, face-level to my wet bobbing head. She gripped an egg sac, papery and white, marble-sized. It held hundreds of tiny hers. It looked heavy. I had come to her panting but now the water or inertia maybe pushed my face close to that enormous silent mother so I fought harder to stay away, though if the lake had been still I might have treaded at a distance, stared hard, dared her to scuttle and disappear in the cracks in the plywood-patched dock with its rotting ladder and a dozen more spiders, probably, white sacs strapped firmly to their bellies. I flopped like I’d hooked a lip, gasping, desperate for rough open water where depth would deter any diving hairy creature. Somehow I struggled to remoter shoreline where I slid over boulders’ upholstery of algae, shivering, legs frog-splayed, stringent and numb. I never felt it when I scratched my legs crashing through buckthorn, the way to the cabin, though I saw the lines later when I put on soft clothing in a warm inside corner where spiders are smaller and at least have the kindness to keep out of sight.
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Jan 12, 2010
Jan 12, 2010 at 6:44 AM UTC
The Lake Spider
Each cold wave was starting to slap me in the face and the grayness of morning wasn’t lifting as the sun rose. Goosebumps had made my legs slim sharks, heavy and rough, so I swam to shore spitting out icy water. I was thinking about coffee, maybe crawling into my sleeping bag and listening to loons’ far-off howls until breakfast, and I reached the splintery dock when I choked – tried to struggle backward, without any splash which might wash her in with me. Dock spiders swim. Did you know? They fasten long ropes of silk and dive for their prey, something big since no horsefly sustains a spider the size of a mouse. This one was monstrous, motionless, spiky black legs jointed white at her knees, face-level to my wet bobbing head. She gripped an egg sac, papery and white, marble-sized. It held hundreds of tiny hers. It looked heavy. I had come to her panting but now the water or inertia maybe pushed my face close to that enormous silent mother so I fought harder to stay away, though if the lake had been still I might have treaded at a distance, stared hard, dared her to scuttle and disappear in the cracks in the plywood-patched dock with its rotting ladder and a dozen more spiders, probably, white sacs strapped firmly to their bellies. I flopped like I’d hooked a lip, gasping, desperate for rough open water where depth would deter any diving hairy creature. Somehow I struggled to remoter shoreline where I slid over boulders’ upholstery of algae, shivering, legs frog-splayed, stringent and numb. I never felt it when I scratched my legs crashing through buckthorn, the way to the cabin, though I saw the lines later when I put on soft clothing in a warm inside corner where spiders are smaller and at least have the kindness to keep out of sight.
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Jan 12, 2010
Jan 12, 2010 at 6:44 AM UTC
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