Sometimes they eat each other, and we pull up shredded hooks clotted with white meat.
Sometimes they scramble underneath the surface and the film of water separating us from them becomes pink and flashing.
We pulled up a black saucer of an eye one night.
It clung to a hook by pink strings of optic muscle.
Our flashlights put little continents of light all over its placid, black surface, and I felt human sadness some type of animal-human empathy, it ****** me up so much that I threw the line overboard again, almost hitting Nestor in the face, with an un-baited hook.
Our hauls are getting smaller.
The carnivores used to jump into our boats, slicking the planks with an excretion the consistency of placental fluid.
Now, sometimes dusk burns as we yank seaweed, seagrass, and toilet seats over the prow; our bodies tenebrous; straining with the line like warriors stabbing the sea.