She noticed the basking shark was wounded, weeping vaginal blood. The tall man in a fedora whispered as he passed. Whipped by exploratory waves, she blushed. The horizon was a hazy green line dipped in red. She had been there since morning searching for love, and found it from a six-pack merman offering solace as he rode on the silvery back of a ray. As he approached, the sun at his back, she moaned and threw out her arms like a supplicant.
Complete at last, the sand grasping at her shoeless feet, she sank towards the earthβs distant core using her arms as uncertain ballast.
She awoke with a shiver brushed away the sand and headed back home. The shark had turned belly-up, scavenged by seagulls.
Another day-dream enjoyed in the empty hours between lunch and dinner between her third cup of tea and fourth cigarette, her children snoozing in the back bedroom. Half-slumbering in a town barked at by bothersome seagulls where an unencumbered sun set on a postcard shoreline. Planning the rows of petunias to be planted by the hedge, making shopping lists, writing novels, never to be published, staring out of her windows at the sea she waited for her husbandβs return, tedious evenings of T.V. and coition under the brightly coloured duvet. The waves that overwhelmed her, flooding her senses, were her own. The man in the fedora had made her smile.