spill the seeds squeeze the juice and **** the flesh
when we were kids we played in mother's garden: carrots, strawberries, rhubarb, tomatoes, plums, raspberries, cucumbers, pumpkins, green beans, watermelon, onions, potatoes and a goldfish named Pierre
he died after my parents cleaned his tank and didn't rinse it properly
done in by soap-- life can be such a fragile thing sometimes
we buried him in the garden and marked his grave with a smooth river stone
one summer we picked a great big watermelon from its dirt nap; heavy as a bowling ball and green as a cat's eye
we heaved it onto the picnic table and carved it into smaller and smaller wedges until each one of us was holding our very own chunk of melon
everyone dug in after admiring their piece for a moment; eating it with their eyes before their mouths
but as I went to bite into mine I noticed a seed in the way
so I peeled at it to free it and as I fingered the dripping flesh of the fruit the 'seed' revealed itself to be not a seed at all
but the eye of a goldfish staring back at me lodged in the melon in its death throws gasping for breath in the open air
its mouth opening and closing like it had a secret to tell
I stood there in stupefaction when suddenly it slipped free of its womb and landed in the grass behind me
but when I turned around to retrieve it I couldn't find it
there was no goldfish anywhere in that yard I checked under my feet under the picnic table-- under other people's feet--nothing
"what are you looking for?" someone asked
"nothing," I said, because who would've believed it anyway?--I'm not even sure if I did-- "just thought I dropped something."
I stood back up feeling different about the world-- like the mystery ran deeper than any of us realize-- looked at my hunk of fruit and discovered I wasn't hungry anymore
so I put it down on the picnic table and walked over to Pierre's grave
there, underneath that river stone, was a watermelon seed just beginning to sprout
I smiled in bewilderment and gently covered it with fresh soil moving the stone a few centimeters off the sprouting seed
'Pierre, the watermelon fish,' I thought-- wiping the dirt from my hands--