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Last night, I dreamt that the friend of a friend had died. His body floated lifeless on the surface of the Pacific, tossed about between the Bering Sea whitecaps like an orca’s seal-pup plaything while the Arctic wind whipped and beat the freezing cold water across his pallid face and through his chestnut hair. Then his body began to sink, its silhouette appearing against various monotone canvases of blue on its trip downward: a vivid cornflower, a pelagic cerulean, a chasm of cold cobalt, a starless twilight, a forest of indigo, a velvet curtain of navy. Finally, as it reached the deepest possible shade of midnight— only a quantum away from black— it stopped sinking. There, in that void, where daylight and color are considered but outlandish theories, strange fish of all and shapes and sizes began to surround the decomposing corpse: Greenland sharks hailing from the frozen arctic, mantis shrimp from the mangrove labyrinths, eyeless electric eels from undersea caves near the Galápagos, vampire squid rising cautiously up out of their World War One trenches, scores of spindly ***** and pale worms that had ventured far beyond the safe familiarity of their alien geothermal worlds. At first, they approached the corpse gingerly, nibbling only the tips of its hair and fingernails, and then suddenly, voraciously, they consumed it—until not even a skeleton remained. Now, only a single point of light was left there floating in the void. And from this single point of light, where just a moment before the corpse had floated, a brilliant white lattice structure emerged, unfurling as would a fern across a forest floor. It fanned out onto the seabed and then swept upward, upward back toward those reaches of sea where color is known and fresh air gleefully permeates that foamy outer membrane that skirts the base of the sky. Scores of familiar fish began to lift up the crystalline structure— schools of shimmering sardines, stately, dignified manta rays, skipjacks, bluefins, and white-tips, brilliant cuttlefish, humble pufferfish, shifty barracuda, gargantuan whale sharks, all of them beating their tails in concert to carry this lattice away, this measure of a life, this husk of a soul at last freed from its earthly bindings. The fish were carrying it somewhere deeper, somewhere darker, to a place that I understood— even from the inky depths of my dreaming mind— that I could not enter. But then again, I knew that someday I would.
0
Dec 20, 2018
Dec 20, 2018 at 11:33 AM UTC
Lattice
Last night, I dreamt that the friend of a friend had died. His body floated lifeless on the surface of the Pacific, tossed about between the Bering Sea whitecaps like an orca’s seal-pup plaything while the Arctic wind whipped and beat the freezing cold water across his pallid face and through his chestnut hair. Then his body began to sink, its silhouette appearing against various monotone canvases of blue on its trip downward: a vivid cornflower, a pelagic cerulean, a chasm of cold cobalt, a starless twilight, a forest of indigo, a velvet curtain of navy. Finally, as it reached the deepest possible shade of midnight— only a quantum away from black— it stopped sinking. There, in that void, where daylight and color are considered but outlandish theories, strange fish of all and shapes and sizes began to surround the decomposing corpse: Greenland sharks hailing from the frozen arctic, mantis shrimp from the mangrove labyrinths, eyeless electric eels from undersea caves near the Galápagos, vampire squid rising cautiously up out of their World War One trenches, scores of spindly ***** and pale worms that had ventured far beyond the safe familiarity of their alien geothermal worlds. At first, they approached the corpse gingerly, nibbling only the tips of its hair and fingernails, and then suddenly, voraciously, they consumed it—until not even a skeleton remained. Now, only a single point of light was left there floating in the void. And from this single point of light, where just a moment before the corpse had floated, a brilliant white lattice structure emerged, unfurling as would a fern across a forest floor. It fanned out onto the seabed and then swept upward, upward back toward those reaches of sea where color is known and fresh air gleefully permeates that foamy outer membrane that skirts the base of the sky. Scores of familiar fish began to lift up the crystalline structure— schools of shimmering sardines, stately, dignified manta rays, skipjacks, bluefins, and white-tips, brilliant cuttlefish, humble pufferfish, shifty barracuda, gargantuan whale sharks, all of them beating their tails in concert to carry this lattice away, this measure of a life, this husk of a soul at last freed from its earthly bindings. The fish were carrying it somewhere deeper, somewhere darker, to a place that I understood— even from the inky depths of my dreaming mind— that I could not enter. But then again, I knew that someday I would.
Ira-Desmond
Written by
42/M/American
Dec 20, 2018
Dec 20, 2018 at 11:33 AM UTC
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