The red flower centered between exotic curled lines evokes the smell of old Jaipur the Hawa Mahal ~ Palace of the Winds where the maharaja’s women once peered from pink honeycombed windows above streets overflowing with painted elephants, camels, turbaned men. A river of color, movement, sound from red-dust shrouded sunrise to ember scorch at the horizon line the desert broken only by the organic rise of dung and mud-bricked houses sheltered by one denuded tree, a mirage of shade.
A cobalt hurricane spiral or vine’s end worn smaller than its origins its story, the shelf on which it sat perhaps a fragile immigrant, hand-carried from the old country by someone’s mother’s mother. Whole and admired for a century before its demise, told with regret-laden mouths mother to daughter, daughter to mother Oh, I wish we still had that blue bowl great grandmother dropped when she heard about Roy a circle of memory, come to rest on this distant curve of beach.
The cream and blue striped shard could be my grandmother’s coffee cup rimmed brown and lipstick stamped sip, then drag on the Raleigh cigarette always attached to electric-tipped fingers. The cup was most likely broken in the war that raged until death parted my grandparents maybe it sailed harmlessly past my grandfather’s shiny head and hit a rock near the creek, exploding into pieces a small token of their shattered marriage a lifetime of regrets carried to the sea grievance-scrubbed, muted by the journey this sliver must be handled with care.
The largest fragment found tangled in the eelgrass at my feet delivered on a tide of need at the ebb of an unexpected storm a perfect cross, soft edges raised on a rough slab of terra cotta. The fragile sun had warmed the worn shape nesting in my palm like a missing piece as my restless fingers traced down and across, across and down
asking questions, seeking answers.
The stories "told" by my favorite collection of beach treasures...