Storm clouds raged across the sky and the silver sea boiled in the wind. The great green fin of La Isla de Tiburon cut the water, Mysterious, so painfully close, yet dangerously distant. Monsters swam the gap and past waist deep the ocean had a lethal tug.
All morning we (father, big brother, little sister, and me) hunted in the sand for clams and later boiled them in a sardine can. Dad ran along the shoreline and into the waves wearing yellow trunks, hunting with a sharpened stick. Dad, the Wildman —hairy and shirtless—ran for our entertainment into the surf and whooped when a skate flapped pitifully at the end of his spear. My brother kicked a trio of *****, fishermen's gifts, kept them from scuttling back into sea, and leaped over them for fun.
Sardines on saltines tided us over as the main course—crab, clam and skate—cooked on burning drift wood. We children watched in drooling anticipation as a claw, wreathed in flame rose in agonized supplication then collapsed back into embers to cook. Froth bubbled out alien mouths and black stalk eyes. Roasted alive seems an awful fate, but, oh, how delicious the meat!
Later, by lantern light my sister read her book over the protests of a gathering wind that scratched at our tent all night. The sand spat out the tent stakes, but the poles held firm and our weight held our shelter down. Never before and never again I live here in my dreams.