A crab leg, disattached and thrown on the beach by tides and waves, its color still vibrant as if its dismembering was a recent thing, an escape perhaps, from the trap that claimed the rest of the crab, destined to become someone’s dinner.
But not this leg. It is a remainder, all that is left, a splash of God’s art on the sand, temporary as life, just as precious, flaunting it’s broken beauty for just the briefest moment between waves,
It was fate that I happened along. Or perhaps more than fate. Perhaps I was fated to see it, to capture its image, fated to make certain its life and its death were captured, recorded, its beauty made less fleeting than traps ever wished for.