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Short Fiction and Non-Fiction

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The Float Home

"She’s not like other women who drown their sorrow in a box of wine. No. Sage goes straight for the protein and lots of it." When Guy calls to say he’s coming over because he’s got something he needs to say, Sage is convinced she’s about to get dumped. He sounds nervous, and a bit too formal, but at least this time she can give herself credit for falling for a guy with a conscience. Most just fuck off. ​ As soon as she gets off the phone, she tosses what’s left of her morning coffee in the sink and watches the black liquid swirl around the drain. That first jolt of caffeine usually perks her right up, but now she feels weak and considers going back to bed. Instead, she heads out to the yard to kill a chicken. Heartache makes her hungry, it always has and maybe that’s why her hips are a tight fit for an Adirondack chair. She’s not like other women who drown their sorrow in a box of wine. No. Sage goes straight for the protein and lots of it. ​ As she watches a beheaded chicken take its last few steps, she thinks she ought to kill another. She really likes Guy. In fact, just two nights ago she almost said, ‘I love you’. These are words she saves for her son and a few very close friends. Her romantic heart has been punted too many times. The last man she fell for got on a ferry one afternoon while she was preparing a special birthday dinner for him. The nurse from the clinic said she chatted with him on the way to the mainland. Sage never told the nurse about the asparagus risotto and lamb chops she was preparing at the exact moment when he said that island life made him feel claustrophobic and itchy all over. ​ It’s early morning, not even eight yet and Sage is still in her yellow flannel pajama bottoms and a faded black Iron Maiden t-shirt. No use getting all gussied up for the big rejection. She hopes Guy takes one look at her messy state and thinks he doesn’t mean that much to her after all, no big deal, he isn’t so important that she’d shower. Sage needs to hide her soft belly. ​ She gets a pot of hot water ready and carries it outside to her gardening/gutting table where everything hoses down neatly. It’s about to be a cooler August day and for that she’s grateful. Nothing grounds her better than a day outside weeding her garden and tending to her herbal remedies. Mr. Lavoie hasn’t shit for a week and she’s promised him a concoction that’s sure to flush him out, and Elsie needs an oregano oil tincture for her mess of cold sores. ​ As she plucks feathers, she tries not to cry. It was silly to fall for a man like Guy. He’s as odd and insecure as she is. “I’m only looking for a smile,” he said the first time they met outside the co-op where he’d been hired to replace the roof. His standards were lower than hers that day, because she wanted a trickle of kindness and a damned good laugh. Still, they’d done pretty good for the last few months. He loves to cook, and she loves to eat. They both think stars are better than television and he likes her boy, Levi. Calls him ‘special’, but in a good way. When she hears his old truck turn up her drive and make the slow turn around the large Garry Oak her great-grandfather planted before there were cars on this island she straightens up. Take it on the chin, she tells herself. She’s never asked why he’s moved from place to place so many times; Regina, Waterloo, New Denver, Halifax, even Hay River, and he’s never admitted to what prompts him to move on. No matter, it’s best if he leaves sooner rather than later. The island is overrun with drifters looking for something they’ll never find. ​ He parks beside the shed, walks towards her, and says with a wide smile, “How you doin?” ​ “Havin’ a time here.” She holds up the chicken that’s half plucked. ​ Guy is wearing his favourite cowboy boots and a red checkered shirt with a collar. His jeans are clean, and he’s trimmed his white beard and mustache shorter than she’s ever seen. Now she’s certain he’s leaving because no one here cares much about appearances. “So, what do you need to tell me?” She pucks more feathers. “I’ve done something, and I want to tell you before you hear it from someone else.” Fuck, shit, cocksucker! The old boy has stuck his flagpole somewhere else. Just the kind of gossip the island needs before a long dark winter! Sage plops the chicken in the pot of hot water and wipes her palms on the front of her t-shirt. She feels weak in the knees and walks towards her back steps to sit in the shade. He follows but doesn’t sit down beside her. He stands in front of her, too close sort of, but she likes the proximity, nonetheless. ​ “I don’t want to upset you, Sage, and I’m not sure how you’ll react to what I’ve done.” ​ Sage feels nauseous, a headache is coming on and she can’t hold back her emotions any longer. She yells, “Just tell me what the fuck you’re here to say!” then rests her elbows on her knees, stares down at the line of ants carrying food under her house. ​ “I bought a float home at the marina, and I got a steady job here working for highways. Good pay. I should have talked to you about all this … I like it here, and I’m sticking around.” ​ Sage rubs her face with her damp fresh-chicken-kill hands, feels strands of hair stick to her cheeks. This is not the rejection she expected, and her tummy feels all fluttery, but it’s far less than what she wants. He didn’t say he’s sticking around specifically for her. ​ Mixed with her anxiety is a good thread of fear that she might lose him after all. That crowd at the marina is not her crowd. In fact, quite the opposite and either Guy is unaware of all this or, he doesn’t care. ​ She scratches underneath her boobs that rest on her knees and tries to think of the right thing to say that doesn’t reveal her emotions. Her heart is pounding as if she’s ran uphill. “You bought the float house with the red door that’s next to the gift shop that woman named, Linda opened and calls an art studio?” ​ “Yup, that’s the one.” ​ She stands up, “You’ll have all those fancy tourists walking up and down the dock all summer long.” ​ “Only when her shop is opened.” ​ “She was sleeping with Mike when he was still living with my friend, Margaret.” Sage’s vocal cords strain and she’s surprised at the tension travelling up her neck to the base of her skull. ​ Guy looks at his boots, his brow is all creased as he bites his bottom lip. “Mike shouldn’t have done that.” ​ “No, he shouldn’t have done that. As soon as that woman arrived, she had her eyes on Mike and didn’t let up until his marriage was destroyed. She doesn’t even care about his daughter. The girl is only fifteen!” Sage licks her dry lips, breathes deeply. Her thoughts whirl like a balloon losing air. ​ Guy takes a few steps back and looks over his shoulder at his truck as if he might make a run for it. ​ Her peripheral vision shows her just how flushed her cheeks are and her own spittle has landed on her chin. She wipes it off and shuts up because Guy doesn’t need to see how Linda gets under her skin. Margaret is barely hanging on and her sorrow seeps into Sage like a damp February night. Sage can’t forget the night in the hospital after the seal bit Mike and he was in surgery. Linda waltzed in as if there was no question who Mike belonged to. The way she dismissed both Margaret and Sage as if they were of no concern at all. What kind of woman doesn’t fear her man’s ex and the ex’s best friend? ​ Guy shifts his weight from on leg to the other, back and forth still eyeing his truck. It strikes her that maybe it’s the weight of other peoples’ conflicts that keeps him moving on—she’s never seen him look so rattled before. And he’s shaved and dressed for this occasion and that must mean something. She lowers her voice, smiles and tries to restore some measure of balance to their exchange. “I knew someone who used to rent that float home back in the day before Jay McHardy owned the marina. It was half the size. The only boats that tied up were tugs and fishing fleets. No fancy yachts back then.” ​ “Is that so? It must have been nice as a working dock instead of a rich boaters’ hang-out.” His sheepish smile returns. ​ “It was a fun place to hang out. And I remember that float home never had a macerator or a holding tank. You’d flush the toilet and wait for a high tide to take your direct deposit out to sea.” Sage laughs, because it really was funny after smoking a big fat joint. ​ “Linda talked to me about that. She said she didn’t want any raw sewage floating past. She said her customers wouldn’t appreciate it. ​ “What does she expect you to do, run to the marina facilities every time nature calls?” Guy is a decent and modest fellow, and Sage believes he will use the marina’s facilities—time permitting. ​ “I guess so.” ​ Sage feels another Linda-rant coming on but stops herself. In a sweeter voice she says, “Well, until the by-laws change you have every right to use what plumbing system you’ve got.” ​ Guy nods in agreement, looks relieved. “I hope you can ignore her if you see her at the marina.” ​ “Absolutely,” Sage says. “None of her behavior has anything to do with us.” Her mind is already racing with ways to make Linda’s existence unbearable, crack her wide opened and see what’s inside. Grudges on this island are everything and there’s never enough space for them to fade away, but she figures Guy will figure that out on his own. ​ After a moment of awkward silence and smiles, Guy extends his hand and opens it slowly to reveal a shiny new gold door key. Sage runs her pointer finger along it. The edges have prickly shards that haven’t worn off yet. “I had this made for you … if you want it,” he says. ​ She takes it from his hand and squeezes it tightly to her own. Tears swell in her eyes because this is the closest thing to a proposal she’s ever had and look at her standing in front of him dressed in rags with chicken feathers stuck to them. Vindictive thoughts of Linda have almost left her but imagine if she didn’t curb her anger, and Guy had made a run for his truck. Then, Sage and Margaret would have to spend the day with a box of wine, a roasted chicken and enough hatred to feed a tornado. ​ “Do you want to see the new place?” Guy asks. ​ “I’d like to get cleaned up first.” ​ “Okay, how about you meet me there for lunch around noon. I’ll get a chunk of fresh salmon from one of the boats.” He points his chin towards her large vegetable garden. “Why don’t you make us one of your salads, with kale and onions and some of those sweet cherry tomatoes. And that spicy dressing, I really enjoyed that spicy dressing.” ​ “I can do that.” She’s still smiling as she leans in to kiss his cheek. ​ After he drives off, and her property is surrounded by a blanket of silence she finishes cleaning the chicken, brings it inside and soaks it in brine. Food for another day. She’s thrilled that he wants to stay on this island and that he’s given her a key to his new place, but location is everything and she wishes he’d spoken to her first. She could have warned him about staying clear of certain locales. Deep in thought she makes a salad she knows he’ll enjoy, and whisks together a dressing of avocado oil, aged balsamic vinegar, crushed garlic and a dash of ground up chilly peppers she grew herself. ​ Mr. Lavoie calls to ask about his remedy. “I’m desperate,” he says. ​ “I’ll drop it off within the hour, I haven’t forgotten about you,” she says, but she has, because her mind is overrun with thoughts of Guy living so close to Linda and so many other people she purposely avoids. ​ She meticulously drains off the Senna leaves and pours the liquid laxative into a small glass bottle with a cork topper. There’re about two doses left over. As she works, she remembers that this is the last week of summer and Linda is having an end-of-season art sale—the posters are plastered all over town. The sale will draw a crowd of fancy boat people who don’t care that none of the art in her shop is created by people on this island. A crying shame because there’s so much local talent to source from! ​ Sage showers, slips into a loose-fitting cotton dress with vivid green and gold flowers. She decorates her ears with large gold hoops and her wrists with as many bangles as will fit. She shakes her wet hair and lets her wild red curls do what they will. ​ She loves to make an entrance. ​ Back in her kitchen she ponders the leftover laxative that’s almost the same colour as the salad dressing. She glances at the calendar that hangs near the back door, yes, slack waters at mid-day. It will take hours for the tide to role in and flush out the cove. She wishes she still grew pot because this afternoon could be hysterical, and she’s almost positive Guy will appreciate her humour.

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Broken English 

The Monday evening after James Cross, the British Trade Commissioner was taken from his residence at gunpoint by the Front de libération du Québec, or FLQ for short, my father arrived home from work later than usual because of police roadblocks. He was agitated when he came in. The breakfast dishes were still in the sink and the beds weren’t made. My mother said she’d been watching the news coverage of the abduction all afternoon and lost track of time, but that was a lie. When I ran up the stairs after school her cheeks were flushed from the cold wind, and she was hanging up her coat. ​ I was twelve years old and knew about the French separatist movement, the FLQ. They were responsible for the Montreal Stock Exchange bombing the previous year that had injured twenty-seven people and mailboxes in the wealthy Anglophone neighbourhood of Westmount. We lived in Ville LaSalle, a suburb that was neither wealthy nor exclusively English. ​ Our borough was wedged between the St. Lawrence River, the Lachine Canal, and the aqueduct that supplied the city’s water. Once an apple orchard, the land had been cleared, new roads pushed through, and each summer a few more duplexes were built, most of which were rental units. ​ That summer, I had my first crush on a boy named Marcel. He was a year older and attended the French Catholic school that was a block away. I attended an English Protestant school and was bussed five miles each way. By the time I’d return to the street at the end of each school day, Marcel was usually involved in a road hockey game with the other boys. When I’d walk past he’d flick the tennis ball at me with the tip of his hockey stick. I’d chase him up the street until he let me catch him. Sometimes we kissed and my stomach felt like a basket of gentle butterfly wings. My parents and I settled in front of our black and white television and watched the scene unfold in front of James Cross’ house on Redpath Crescent in Montreal. Marcel’s parents owned the duplex directly across the street from us and I could see into his living room. His colour television showed the same image of police standing on the front lawn of the Cross home. ​ “Are us English going to have to leave Quebec?” I asked. ​ My dad ignored me. ​ My mom reached for my hand. “There’s nothing for you to worry about.” But there were other things she’d told me not to worry about that had come true. My cat didn’t recover from a lung infection, and my best friend did end up moving to Ontario at the end of the summer because her father lost his job. My dad said the police would find James Cross soon, but my mother disagreed. She said we were in for the long haul, and he said she didn’t know what she was talking about. I wondered what Marcel’s parents thought of all this. The weather got colder for the rest of that week and no one was outside when I got off the school bus. ​ Four days after James Cross was kidnapped with still no leads to his whereabouts, the FLQ demands for his release were made public in a manifesto that was read by a reluctant news anchor on CBC. My father listened to the radio in the kitchen where he smoked Players Plain until a blue cloud circled his head and a row of empty Molson stubby beer bottles lined the table. When my mom came into the kitchen, he said, “The French make it out like they’re treated like slaves.” ​ She said the manifesto had made some solid points, because the French had less opportunity in the Province of Quebec compared to the English and they were generally poorer than us. That didn’t make sense to me because Marcel’s family owned their duplex, and we were renters. They had a swimming pool and both his parents drove cars newer than my dad’s. ​ My father accused her of siding with the French because of her Quebecois grandfather. His upper lip puckered in a sneer when he said, “the French.” Her Quebecois grandfather had married the daughter of a rich banker from Scotland and her family had insisted she raise their children English and Protestant if they expected financial help. At first, he’d refused but his wife kept having more kids, and it didn’t take long before his children joined an English Protestant church and school. Their mother tongue was recorded on the 1926 census as English even though their surname was French. ​ I’d told Marcel that my great grandfather was French and in his broken English he said that was good to know, it made us have more in common. He said I should try speaking French because maybe I still had it in my blood. I laughed and said, “No.” By Saturday, with still no leads as to the whereabouts of James Cross, another cell of the FLQ kidnapped Pierre Laporte, the Labour Minister of Québec. “If only they’d worked together,” my mother cried. ​ My father stared at her like she’d grown a second head. “They’re terrorists! Look what they’re doing to all the Anglophones in this province. If my company pulls out of Québec because of all this, I’ll be unemployed.” He brought up the Plains of Abraham and said he wouldn’t be bullied out of the city his great grandfather had helped build. ​ She stormed off to their bedroom and returned with a pillow and blanket, tossed it at him and said, “It’s your turn to sleep on the sofa.” ​ I didn’t know they were taking turns. ​ Come Monday morning everyone was so panicked about this second abduction that the English Protestant and French Catholic schools were closed for the day. My father left for work and my mother compared it to a snow day and said all the kids would be outside looking for something to do. My aunt had recently given me a hand-me-down, V-neck school tunic a cousin had outgrown. I wanted my mother to hem it and take in the sides, so it fit snug like the older girls wore, but she said she had no time to sew that day. ​ I headed out as ordered and called on Marcel. His mother answered the door and said he was not home, but his shoes were on the inside mat. ​ I walked up the abandoned street and climbed an old apple tree that had a wooden platform nailed to it, stretched out on my stomach hidden by branches with leaves and scanned the street hoping to spot Marcel if he left his house. I wanted to know if he’d told his mother to lie or, if she’d made that choice for him. My mother came out our front door, walked up our street wearing her new woollen coat she’d ordered from the Eaton’s catalogue, her hair pulled back in a stylish wave. Just around the corner, a large black sedan that I’d never seen before pulled up alongside her, stopped, the door opened, and she slipped in. Bile tickled my throat as I climbed down and ran home. On the kitchen counter beside an egg salad sandwich wrapped in wax paper, she’d left me a note. Be back soon, love Mom. ​ She called late afternoon and told me to take the pork chops out of the freezer. The meat was still frozen when she arrived home just minutes before my dad’s car pulled up. She knocked on my bedroom door to ask why I hadn’t done as she asked. I kept my face to the wall. “Because I saw you get into that car.” ​ She gasped. “Don’t tell your father, it will just make matters worse. Do you hear?” We ate grilled cheese sandwiches for dinner. My father took his to the living room and left his dirty dishes on the coffee table. ​ In the morning she promised to take in my tunic and buy me the white blouse with the Peter Pan collar that I’d asked for. I told her I didn’t want a new blouse unless I got a brand-new tunic too. ​ Days passed without any leads as to the whereabouts of the abducted men. The streets were crawling with police cars, and everyone was told to stay home. The house was cleaner, and dinner was on time each night, but my parents moved around each other with explosive silence. ​ At school, I learned that the Quebec government had asked Ottawa for help because there weren’t enough police to catch regular law breakers and hunt down the kidnappers too. My teacher explained that the War Measures Act was necessary to keep us English safe. He said that if this Act was invoked it would be the third time in Canadian history—the last two times were for the two World Wars. The classroom got too quiet. No one passed notes or asked to go to the washroom. Mr. Fab, my most favourite teacher, saw the anxiety he’d created and ended with an interesting detail—the Montreal Canadians always took the Stanley Cup when the War Measures Act was invoked. ​ When I got off the bus after school that day, Marcel was sitting alone on his front stoop eating a big bag of Frito chips. I sat beside him, and he offered me some. They were my favourite, but I was noticing how food got caught between my teeth. It got too quiet between us, so I mentioned what my teacher had said about the Montreal Canadians winning the Stanley Cup when the War Measures Act was invoked. ​ “If they play at all.” His cautious English smothered by his thick French accent. I laughed and said, “If they can’t play, we’ll cheer for the Toronto Maple Leafs.” It was a joke—my dad would hit the roof if I ever cheered for any hockey team besides the Habs. ​ Marcel crumpled his chip bag closed, sprung to his feet and left me on his step as he went inside. ​ That evening, I worked on a jigsaw puzzle with my dad in the living room while I kept an eye on Marcel’s house, but the curtains were shut. My father sent me to the kitchen to get him another beer. My mother wouldn’t let me open the fridge. “Tell him to get it himself.” ​ He was already on his way toward the kitchen, and I knew the fight that had been brewing for days was on. I ran to my room and listened to them shout about housework, money, and why she didn’t answer when he phoned home on his afternoon break. He called her an emotional wreck and said she’d never be happy. She called him a bully and the reason why she was such a mess. I covered my head with a pillow, but their voices got louder and louder until the lady who rented the flat beneath us thumped on her ceiling. She was a friend of Marcel’s mother, and I knew he’d hear about my parents’ terrible fight. ​ One week after his abduction, Pierre Laporte was found dead in the trunk of a car. My mother took pills her doctor had prescribed and slept all day. My father visited his mom who was equally upset. I stood watch at the front room window to see if Marcel would come out to play road hockey, but the street remained deserted that Saturday. ​ Days later, I waited for the school bus with the other English Protestant kids, but our numbers had shrunk. Instead of the regular dozen there were only three at my stop. Some parents had decided to home school. Marcel walked past on his way to school wearing his Canadiens, Jean Beliveau hockey jersey, and ignored me. My mother had stayed in bed that morning sleeping off more pills. My dad had left without checking to see that I was up. We had a new bus driver because the one who started the school year with us kept asking the girls to sit on his knee. This new driver didn’t speak very good English, but my dad said as long as he kept his hands to himself and his eyes on the road it didn’t matter. As I boarded the school bus, I said, “Morning Jack.” ​ He grabbed my arm. “Je m’appelle Jacques, pas Jack. Tu comprends? ​ “Oui, je comprends.” I skulked to my seat, but an anger burned in my belly and my arm hurt where he’d grabbed it. ​ We weren’t allowed to eat on the bus, but I pulled out the lunch I’d packed for myself and started peeling an orange. Jacques yelled in his rear view mirror to put it away. I ignored him. When he yelled again, I belted out, “Je m’appelle Jacques, pas Jack.” ​ The other kids joined in. ​ Jacques shouted, “Debbie, ferme ta grande bouche!” ​ One of the popular grade seven girls poked my shoulder. “Big mouth!” She and her friends laughed. ​ My fingers held a chunk of sticky orange. I stood up, leaned forward and threw it as hard as I could. It hit the back of Jacques’ bald head. ​ The bus stopped. Everyone shut up. ​ He swung from his seat and stomped towards me, grabbed my bagged lunch, threw it on the floor and stepped on it. ​ When we reached the school, he made me stay seated while the other kids got off and then he escorted me to the principal’s office. I’d never been in serious trouble before, just the regular kind for passing notes or whispering during math class. I spent the day getting lectured about respect, leadership, and dangerous times. The principal called home but there was no answer and he said he had no choice but to call my father at work because this was a serious matter. When he ran out of things to say he sat me at the desk outside the office—the desk for bad kids. My classmates snickered as they walked past. My teacher ignored me. At the end of the day when the school bus arrived to take us home, I was brought outside to apologize. Jacques looked down at his scuffed shoes when my eyes teared up. ​ I sat alone at the front of the bus right behind him. As the bus headed towards the bridge that crossed the aqueduct and the Canadian soldiers that now guarded it, I stared at Jacques’ white knuckles—hands at two and ten. His aging skin stretched tight over fine bones and dark blue veins. ​ My father’s car was parked in front of our flat when I got off the bus. I expected the scolding of a lifetime, but when I got inside my mother was still out, and my father’s sorrow blanketed our home like dense fog. ​ “I messed up,” I cried. ​ He pulled me into a big hug, and I rested my head against his chest as he combed his fingers through my hair, which hadn’t been brushed all day. “You have to behave until this trouble passes,” he said. ​ I didn’t know if he meant the trouble on the street or the trouble in our house.

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The Seal That Ate My Father’s Fish Fiction

It was spring break and the weather so hot and sunny that the cherry trees were in full bloom. Their crowns looked like pink cotton candy. My mother and I were mopping the green winter slime off our deck that overlooked the bay. She worked at one end, I stayed at the other. Scattered between us were the hoses and attachments to the pressure washer we couldn’t start. I watched her from the corner of my eye as she rinsed her mop in the bucket, then slapped it back down on the deck for a few more swipes before rinsing it again. When she stopped mopping, I stopped mopping. “Your father should be here to do this,” she said. “Let’s call him.” ​ So, he can see that I can’t manage to clean a deck without him? Don’t be ridiculous.” ​ “No. Just to see if he’ll help us, that’s all.” My father had moved out after Christmas, said he needed to get his shit together. His shit turned out to be a woman named Linda who owned the artisan gift shop at the island’s marina where boaters visited. True islanders avoided the place. The influx of so many people each summer was annoying, and my mother said Linda’s business wrecked the ambience of the island. ​ I was trying to decide if I dared to call my father behind her back again when a gunshot ripped across the bay. My whole body jerked. She dropped her mop. Everything went still until a fishing boat revved up and sped off. A minute later a seal started barking and wailing on the rocky jut of land near the mouth of the bay. The other seals slid into the water and left it all alone. The agony of its cries made the afternoon sun appear brighter, the smell of bleach at my feet even stronger and the need to see my father even more unbearable. We ran down the steps to the water and stood at the end of our dock. “What should we do?” I asked. ​ “I don’t know.” ​ “We have to do something.” ​ My mother got in her kayak that was tied alongside our dock and paddled out to the mouth of the bay without putting on her life jacket. I watched and worried she’d tip. She angled herself directly into the breeze coming across the Salish Sea and paddled hard. When she got close to the rocks she stopped. Her orange kayak bobbed on the water. The kerchief that kept her long brown curls off her face blew away and her hair swirled around her face like a swarm of bees. When she got back and was securing her kayak, I asked, “Is it going to live?” ​ “Looks like it got shot on the side of the head. Right through its eye.” ​ “Nasty! We can’t just leave it. I’m calling Dad.” ​ “Tina, don’t you dare!” ​ She ran up to our kitchen taking the steps two at a time. I followed. My mother stood at the sink; her foot tapped the floor as fast as a hummingbird’s wings. “Go get a fish from the freezer,” she said. ​ I ran down to our dark cellar and found at least a dozen salmon covered in freezer burn. Leftovers from my father’s weekends spent fishing with his brother. We never ate anything he caught because one large fish was too much for the three of us and he never bothered to cut them up or wrap them properly. He’d say to my mother, “Marg, you’re better at filleting than I am.” She’d say, “Why would I package the fish you caught on a trip that didn’t include me?” The fish piled up. ​ We filled the kitchen sink with warm water and when the fish was all limp and slimy, she placed it on old newspapers. I watched as she guided the sharp knife across one side of the fish skimming off a centimeter of yellowed flesh. The inner meat was a deep red. She flipped the fish over. By the time she finished, it looked good enough to serve in a restaurant. ​ The seal was still alone on the rocks, barking and wailing when she got back in her kayak, this time wearing her life jacket with her hair up in a tight bun. I followed in mine, and we paddled out to it with our offering. I knew my father wouldn’t approve. He didn’t believe in feeding wildlife, even injured ones. ​ We got as close as we could and threw the fish in the water. The seal slipped off the rocks and circled. He submerged then came up directly underneath the fish. He bit into it and dragged it under. ​ The seal resurfaced close to me, and I almost tipped when I saw its eye half gone. It swam around us a few times then climbed on to a rock exposed by the ebbing tide. Blood oozed from its head as it lifted its face out of the water. ​ When we got back to the house, I went to my room and cried. Why did everything have to be so sad. My mother came in and asked what was wrong. How could I say, EVERYTHING when she was struggling with her own heart ache? Every night I heard her cry after the lights were out and worse, sometimes I heard her on the phone begging my father to come home. ​ The next day I got up after my mother had gone to work. She left her regular note stuck to the fridge telling me to stay away from the water and to do my chores. The weather had cooled off and clouded over. As I made toast and emptied the dish washer, I could hear the seal out on the rocks again. Its pain every bit as loud as yesterday. I thawed another fish, removed the ugly white freezer burn as best as I could and paddled out to it. When it galumphed off the rocks and swam towards me, I tossed the fish in the water. The eye socket wasn’t bleeding anymore but the gash in its head looked deep. ​ Before my mother got home from work, I thawed another fish. It ate that one just as fast. ​ The next morning, my father was supposed to pick me up. He’d promised me a day in Nanaimo clothes shopping. I waited and waited by the front door for the sound of his muffler to come roaring down our quiet road. Close to noon, long after all the morning ferries had departed, he called to say, “Sorry, Tina something came up.” ​ “Will I see you at all this week?” ​ “I’ll try.” ​ I went to the end of the dock, dangled my feet in the water and cried. My mother would be furious he stood me up again – this would make them fight even more and I hated getting stuck in the middle. ​ In between my sobs, I heard the seal cry, too. ​ Back to the cellar I went. This time I pulled out the largest Chinook salmon my father had ever caught—a trophy fish. He’d wanted to have a big party the day he caught it, invite the whole island but my mother was already suspicious of the woman from the marina. “She’s circling awfully close to my nest,” she’d said. ​ “She’s not a bird,” he said. ​ “I don’t like that skinny blond with her fake tits?” ​ “They’re not fake.” After that my mother refused to invite anyone over for a salmon grill. ​ The Chinook salmon was almost a metre long and thick in the middle. I thawed it in the bathtub then carried it outside where I used the new hatchet with the shiny wooden handle that we’d bought at the co-op to chop in into chunks the size of my head. By the time I finished, its smelly juices saturated the chopping block and black flies were everywhere. I rinsed everything with the garden hose but the fishy smell lingered. ​ The wind was up, and it was tough going as I made my way out to the jut of rocks again with the salmon chunks in a burlap sac balanced on the bow. When I got close enough, I tossed the pieces into the water one at a time. As the seal came up to feed, I got a close-up look inside its mouth – tight rows of pointy yellow teeth. As I paddled towards home, it followed. While I tied up my kayak, it hauled out on the rocky shelf beneath our deck. It watched me with its one good eye while I sat crossed legged on the dock about twenty feet away. I texted my friends to come see it, but no one got back to me. I used my phone to search for seal facts. I learned that its toes are called digits, each digit has a long nail on it. The back flippers are webbed, and seals can stay under water for over 25 minutes. They’re called pinnipeds because of their sharp pointy teeth that are perfect for ripping at their food. And even when they’re blind, they can feel their way underwater with their whiskers. ​ For the rest of the day, I completely forgot about my father and my mother and all the awful things they yelled at each other. I didn’t hate the woman my father was with, and I didn’t care that I’d be returning to grade nine in a few days wearing the same old jeans and t-shirts. A seal had followed me home. ​ When my mother got home from work and learned it had hauled out under the deck she said, “Oh shit, I shouldn’t have fed it that fish.” I couldn’t exactly admit to being on the water alone. ​ By Friday, all the fish from the freezer were gone, even the ones we could still eat if we wanted. It was another unbelievably hot day. When the seal heard me come down the steps towards the water, it slid off the rocks and swam towards the end of the dock where I’d fed it from. Its skin and fur puckered around the empty eye socket. As I sat there trying to figure out if I ought to try feeding it food scraps from the composter, I heard my father’s truck coming down the road. Shit! I’d be in big trouble for being on the dock alone. The rule was in place since we’d moved here when I was only five and before I’d learned how to swim. It was the one thing they agreed on, “A kid drowns every summer, we don’t want it to be you,” they’d say. As fast as I could, I ran up the stairs. He still had a key and by the time I was back in the kitchen, he was opening the front door. ​ “Hey, Tina. Sorry about the other day.” ​ “That’s okay.” ​ He had his swimming trunks on and his own towel in hand. “Want to jump off the dock like we used to?” ​ It was our thing on hot summer days. He’d go first then I’d try to jump past him. “It’s kind of cold,” I said. The sun and tide flow only warmed the top of the water. Deeper than that held a bitter freeze. ​ “Are you kidding, look out the window.” I looked across the bay and sure enough a couple were diving off the bow of their sailboat. ​ I got my bathing suit on and followed him to the water. He didn’t have much to say and I was busy looking for the seal. The water did feel warm but even warmer than the sun and the water was his smile. He said, “I never should have cancelled our day together.” ​ My heart felt all fluffy and loved. ​ “Come on, let’s jump in,” he said. ​ Not far from the dock, the seal’s head bobbed up and it looked like the head of a Rottweiler pup. Then it went under. ​ My father backed up about ten feet, took a good run towards the end of the dock and jumped. What a splash. I went to his starting point and waited for him to surface. His head bobbed up, arms in the air, mouth and eyes wide opened then he went down again. I thought it must be outrageously cold. I hesitated, took a few steps closer to the end thinking I’d jump short, closer to the ladder. That’s when I saw the seal, sliding over his body pulling him down. I screamed, ran to the end and jumped in right beside him. I felt the seal’s body slide between us all smooth and heavy. Then it was gone. ​ I helped my dad to the ladder, climbed first then pulled him up. The calf of his leg was all ripped opened, a flap of skin four inches long hung over the back of his heel. I had to look away. ​ Lying on his side he tried to reach for his phone. I took it from him and called 911. He threw his t-shirt over his leg and told me to go up to the road and wait for the ambulance. I ran up the stairs. At the top, I turned back to look at him. He was flat on his back. The t-shirt covering his leg was crimson red. When I got to the front of the house I started to shake uncontrollably. ​ The ambulance finally arrived, and a paramedic told me to stay right there. He wrapped a blanket around me and made me sit on the grass. Each minute passed so slowly; I could hear voices echoing up from the water. I wanted to run to my dad, but I couldn’t get my legs to move. ​ Finally, a gurney got rolled from around the house along the cement walkway. My father was sitting up, telling the paramedics that he didn’t live here anymore – he was just visiting. When I tried to go to him, my legs gave way and I fell to the grass. My throat was locked, and I couldn’t get a word out. As the ambulance door closed, he waved to me and smiled. I don’t remember if I waved back or called out to him. He was airlifted to a main land hospital. My mother’s friend, Sage, took us to the ferry. We got to the hospital late that evening when my father was out of surgery and asleep in his room. He’d lost a whole lot of blood. My mother donated a pint. His brother arrived and gave more. We weren’t allowed to see him, but my mother insisted we stay until she could talk to him. Sage went down to the lobby and came back with banana bread and fresh coffee from Starbucks. “Why would a seal just bite someone like that?” she said. ​ My mother hung her head, her nose pointed down towards the large coffee she held close to her face. ​ I was working up the courage to admit that I’d been feeding the seal and that’s why it was hanging around so close to the dock, when my father’s girlfriend came down the hallway from the direction of his room. I’d never paid much attention to her when I’d seen her around the island. No need to until now. Her hair was naturally blonde, not died like my mother suggested. Her big boobs did look a little high for a forty-year-old but so what, and her skin was as lined as my mother’s. What was strikingly different about her was her posture, her clothes and the confidence that oozed from her. My mother, Sage nor I intimidated her. “What are you doing here,” my mother asked. ​ “Where else would I be? He phoned me while he was on the dock waiting for the ambulance to arrive.” ​ My mother put her coffee down on top of a pile of old newspapers that sat on a coffee table. It tilted to one side, and I was certain it would tip. She pointed a finger at me. “Did you know he called her first?” ​ “No, I was on the road waiting for the ambulance.” ​ My mother started to cry. ​ My father’s girlfriend said, “Look, this is an awkward situation. I have to get home and I won’t be back until the end of next week. The doctor said he’ll be here for at least that long and it would help if he had someone to visit with him.” ​ Sage said my mother ought to leave and let him sit alone all week seeing as he’d made his choice. My mother refused to leave, and I pleaded to stay on the mainland with her. ​ We sat in his room, got him ice water, brought him salads and subs from the cafeteria, and my mother rubbed his neck to help get his mind off the pain in his leg. She helped him hop to the toilet and stood just outside the door until he was finished, then helped him back to bed. When his pain became unbearable, she argued with the nurse to give him more painkillers. ​ By Wednesday my mouth felt thick and sticky with the confession I’d been keeping in. When my mother finally left his side to return to our motel room for some rest, I stayed with him. “Dad, this wasn’t entirely a freak accident.” ​ “What do you mean, Kiddo?” ​ “The seal that bit you … I’d been feeding it the fish from our freezer.” ​ “Even the big Spring?” ​ “The seal was hungry.” ​ “Oh.” The corners of his mouth curled down. He looked like he might cry and that got me feeling anxious. I didn’t want to see my father cry. At least not over a fish. ​ I rambled on about trying to start the power washer, the gun shot that echoed across the bay and the injured seal that didn’t die. And how hard it was to live with my mother since he’d left us. “She’s so hurt,” I said. ​ It took him a long time to say anything, and I feared this seal incident would never be discussed, that it would get tossed in that great big vat of unresolved issues. Finally, he said, “I wanted to fillet that prize fish. Serve it with wild asparagus and a lemon-dill drizzle. It was so hard to reel in. The kick to that fish – I almost lost my rod! I told everyone I was going to have the biggest salmon grill the island had seen in a long time.” ​ “That would have been nice.” ​ “Yes, it would have been nice.” He reached for my hand. When he pressed it flat on his chest over his heart, I knew he was never coming home.

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Levi’s Practice

Levi counts his steps to the threshold of the kitchen—exactly sixteen. He loves when his counting ends on an even number and he hates foods that can’t be counted like blueberry jam and peanut butter. His mother knows this and is usually very careful about what she cooks, but this morning, as he stands in the doorway of the kitchen looking in, the flesh of her upper arm jiggles as she beats the hell out of a bowl of raw eggs. “I like my eggs hard boiled. What are you doing?” ​ “I’m making a big messy cheese omelette for breakfast.” ​ “I won’t eat that.” ​ “Then don’t.” ​ Her abrupt response feels like a slap. It was silly to think she’d forgive him for hiding in his room last evening when her new friend visited. He would have greeted him politely, but just before the man showed up, she said, “Levi, if only you had somewhere to go.” ​ Well, he didn’t have anywhere to go except his bedroom, so he locked himself in it and refused to come out to meet her friend. ​ She tosses the whisk in the sink. The sun streams in the kitchen window and her thick auburn hair looks like a mess of copper wire. “It would do you some good to practice eating food that’s not prepared exactly as you like it.” ​ Practice, yes Levi needs to practice. At the end of the summer he’ll leave this island, this house he was born in and move to a university dorm where no one will care about his food preferences or his need to count. He’s scared to leave home but if he stays here, he may never find a friend. There are so few people his age on the island and none of them have ever wanted him around. In elementary school he sat alone at the desk closest to the teacher’s and in high school he walked the halls alone trying to avoid the worst of the bullies. ​ He sits at his usual spot at the kitchen table and adjusts the salt and pepper shakers so that they’re perfectly centred on the rectangular surface, close together but not touching. His mother sits across from him with a coffee. She drops three sugar cubes into her mug and stirs eleven times. With her head tilted down, her double chin looks extra thick and Levi tries to remember how old she is. Forty-two, an even year and she hasn’t had a serious relationship in at least five. From down the hall he hears the toilet flush. “He’s still here?” He hates it when she has sleepovers. ​ “Yes, so be polite. Last night you embarrassed me by not even coming out of your room to say hi.” ​ “You know I don’t like talking to new people.” ​ She props her elbows on the table, covers her face with her hands and lets out an exhausted sigh. “Just try to act normal.” ​ “I’ll be gone soon.” ​ “I don’t want you ‘gone’, but I’d appreciate better manners when I invite someone into our home. Jez, you’re not helping my love life.” ​ “Neither is your woodpecker laugh or your Wiccan practices!” Levi didn’t mean to say all that, but sometimes he can’t stop his words from tumbling out and didn’t he just overhear her friend, Margaret say the exact same thing two days ago. Truth is, he likes his mother’s laugh—it’s contagious and since she became a witch, she stopped dragging him to church. ​ Her back straightens. “Don’t be mean!” She points a finger at him and is about to say more, but her friend comes down the hall and into the kitchen. She springs out of her chair, puts a smile on her face, and kisses his cheek. “Good morning. Coffee?” He sits across from Levi. ​ Levi stares at his face and counts the small dark moles–six in all. Levi prefers moles to his own freckles because freckles bleed into one another and look like splashed chocolate milk. Impossible to count. ​ “So, you must be Levi. My name is Guy.” His shoulders are rounded, he’s got a small pot belly, a long grey pony tail and a faded tattoo of an eagle on his right forearm. There’s nothing symmetrical about him—no crisp lines, no definition, nothing else to count. ​ Still, Levi wants to make amends for being rude last night. “Guy, that’s a nice name.” ​ “It’s French.” ​ “You don’t sound French.” ​ “I’m not. My parents thought the name suited me.” ​ “Oh, so like when you were born, they said, ‘He’s a guy, not a gal?’” Guy laughs. “You’re funny.” ​ Levi isn’t trying to be funny, he wants to know. He gets stuck on repeat—“guy, gal, guy, gal.” “What?” Guy said. ​ His mother picks the carton of milk off the table, shakes it and says, “Levi, we’re almost out, go to the Co-op and get more.” ​ Guy looks down at his coffee. His mother shakes the carton again and gives Levi her tight-lipped, do as I say look. Levi heads to the sun porch just off the kitchen where he keeps his runners. As he hunches over to tie his laces, she sticks her head out. “Talk to people and don’t count everything.” ​ Levi walks down the long driveway to the main road that cuts across the island and feels a familiar pain in his chest. It hurts when she tries to fix him. He wants her to be proud of him, to look at him as he’s witnessed other moms look at their children, but his mother always adjusts his shirt collar, adds to his sentences or tells him where to stand. Without her help, he’s sure he’ll make a total ass of himself at university. People will laugh at him and that will make him cry. Then, people will laugh some more. ​ His eyes land on the fence posts that run the length of their property. Counting settles his mind and if no one is listening he doesn’t think it’s a bad thing. ​ There are exactly thirty-two posts, two metres apart until the driveway meets the road. Then there’re exactly eight driveways until he hits the beach. The beach is a bit tricky. Boys from his high school hang out there, drinking beer and starting bon fires. Last weekend when he walked past, they wiggled their dicks and yelled, “Hey Levi, count this.” He did—four limp penises, two circumcised, two not. ​ As the beach comes into view, there are no vehicles parked beside the road. He loves watching the incoming tide lick the dry sand then pull back like a lizard’s tongue. He crosses the road and heads towards the water. ​ A two-foot chop ripples across the bay and the wind whooshes in the tops of tall cedars. The morning air holds a chill. ​ At the water’s edge where the rocks jut out of the sand, he spots a tiny seal pup. He scans the horizon looking for its mother. He doesn’t want to scare it and stays a good ten metres back. He imagines lying on the cold sand abandoned and terrified, and thinks of his mom back at the house with a guy named Guy. He wants to run home and tell her about the baby seal, but she wants time alone with this man. She’s made that perfectly clear so why all the fuss about not coming out of his room last night? Harder than any coursework he’s ever done to get through high school is trying to figure out how to please his mother. ​ Levi bends over and rests his hands on his knees as he thinks about what to do. He could text her and ask for advice. She’ll be waiting for the ‘ding’, will answer within seconds, and tell him how to manage the situation. Annoyed, but protective as her new friend listens. And then she’ll be disappointed that he can’t even go to the Co-op by himself for a litre of milk without finding a dilemma. ​ Levi decides to watch over the pup until its mother returns. He sits on a fat log, crosses his legs and places his hands on his knees. With his eyes closed, he counts each deep breath. He feels better. This counting isn’t weird, it’s called meditation—not quirky at all. ​ When a male voice asks, “What are you counting?” he jumps to his feet and is face-to-face with, Jason from his grad class. Jason used to be one of the meanest bullies, but at the beginning of his grade twelve year, Levi boarded the school bus, expected Jason to trip him or throw grapes at his head but instead, Jason said, “Hey, Levi. How are you doing?” In the cafeteria at lunchtime Jason didn’t yell numbers at him which always made Levi lose count of whatever he was focused on like how many trays were stacked at the start of the food line or how many females—boobs, were in the cafeteria. ​ Levi scans the beach, but Jason is alone. “I was counting my breaths.” ​ “You even count how many breaths you take? You’re weird,” Jason laughs and looks towards the seal. ​ Levi shoves his hands in the pockets of his size 32, straight legged Gap jeans of medium fade and wraps his hand around his phone. Maybe he should call his mother whether she gets annoyed or not. His mother has warned him to stay clear of this fellow. ​ Jason, with his athletic build stands a good head taller than Levi. He has the same colouring, but no one ever calls him shit-face for having a mess of freckles across his nose. Everyone wants to be Jason’s friend and Levi has noticed that girls smile more when he’s around. ​ As Jason heads towards the seal, Levi blocks his path and says, “It’s waiting for its mom.” ​ “It’s dead, Levi.” ​ “No, it isn’t.” ​ Jason picks up a stick and walks towards it, but Levi blocks his path. His heart races because he’s afraid Jason will hit him—he’s seen him fight other guys for no good reason and he always wins. ​ “What the fuck? It’s dead!” ​ Levi cowers a bit but manages to say, “No, it isn’t. Its mother will be back.” ​ “The mother got shot. Go look at it—it’s dead!” ​ Levi turns his back to Jason and walks closer to the pup until he sees flies crawling over its opened eyes. He bends down to get a better look. The flies have already ruined the shiny surface of its eyeballs. “Its mother got shot?” ​ “Yeah. It interfered with a fisherman’s net.” ​ “That’s awful!” Levi says. The incoming tide laps against the dead pup. Its fin flaps. “Who would shoot a mother seal?” ​ “My asshole father. That’s who.” Jason’s face is flushed. ​ Levi doesn’t know what to say, but if Jason is upset, he should say something to comfort him. “Your father is an asshole. My mother says so all the time.” ​ “Your mother’s right. Everyone on this island hates my dad.” Jason’s voice sounds gravelly, and his nose is snotty. ​ “Send your father a picture of this dead baby and show him what he’s done.” ​ “He’d beat on me.” ​ Levi stares at Jason. He doesn’t look so tough when he’s biting his fingernails. He’s afraid of his father and that’s even worse than not knowing who your father is. Levi takes out his phone, snaps two pictures. “I can send a picture to your father if you want. He wouldn’t beat on me.” ​ Jason smirks. “You’re right, he wouldn’t dare pick on you.” ​ “Cause I’m a weirdo?” ​ “No. Cause your mother’s a witch. My father says she put a curse on our cow last summer after he drove through a puddle and splashed her. The meat tastes like shit. Our dogs won’t even eat it.” ​ “That’s something she’d do.” ​ The tide laps in a bit more. Sea gulls screech overhead circling closer and closer. Levi doesn’t want to witness what happens next. “I have to go to the Co-op for milk.” ​ “I’ll walk with you.” ​ They leave the beach, the dead pup, and walk the road together. They talk about leaving the island at the end of the summer. Jason is headed to the mainland to work with his uncle who’s an electrician. “I wanted to go to university but I’m not smart like you,” he says. Cars pass and toot and Levi smiles because he’s with cool Jason and he isn’t nervous. Not really. ​ At the Co-op, Levi wrestles his urge to count cans of soup and dust the shelves. A cloth hangs by the door especially for him and he closes his eyes as he steps past it. He buys the milk and he and Jason stand outside together drinking Cokes. He keeps his back to the glass door because the shelves are crooked and dusty. Jason invites him to a grad party at Rocky Point that’s planned for the coming weekend. “Most everyone who hasn’t left the island will be there. It’s a chance to say good-bye.” ​ Levi is hesitant. “Your friends pick on me.” ​ “Tell them to fuck-off. We’re getting too old for that shit.” ​ “Fuck off, fuck off,” Levi says. He likes how it feels to press his top teeth into his bottom lip to form a strong F. ​ “Just say it once like you mean it.” “Fuck-off!” Levi says. ​ “You own it!” Jason play-punches Levi’s arm. They laugh and joke about high school as if it’s been years since they were students. Levi doesn’t agree that the science teacher, Mr. Livingstone was a dork, but he agrees the man always had bad breath. ​ As they part ways Jason says, “See you on the weekend.” ​ Levi answers, “I’ll try.” ​ “Just get yourself there. It’ll be fun and no one will pick on you. I promise.” ​ By the time Levi starts to walk home, the milk is warm. He doesn’t count the cars or fence posts because he’s too busy thinking about the party next weekend and Jason’s promise to look out for him, the laughs they shared today and how great it feels to say, fuck-off. ​ As he turns up his driveway his enthusiasm begins to fade and his eyes lock on the fence posts. The counting begins. He can’t stop himself and suddenly he doubts everything that happened today. Is he really invited to the grad party or is Jason setting him up? Is fuck-off something he should say? ​ Guy’s truck is still parked in front of the house. He hears his mother’s laughter and walks around to the back deck where they sit in the shade sipping beers. She stands when she sees him. Her smile disappears. “You were gone a while, what happened?” ​ He sorts through his day thinking of what part might please her the most: that he and Jason got along, that he didn’t count cans or dust shelves at the co-op, or maybe the invite to the grad party. ​ “You were bullied again, weren’t you?” She brings a hand to her forehead, the other lands on her hip. ​ “No.” Suddenly he feels protective of his day and doesn’t want her to rip it apart. “I sat on the beach and watched a baby seal until its mother returned.” ​ “You sat on the beach all this time?” ​ “Yes. I watched the seal with her pup.” ​ “For three hours?” ​ “Yes.” ​ She glances at Guy, raises an eyebrow. Levi imagines she’s already told him how hard it is to raise a boy with so many ‘issues’—he’s overheard her complain to her friends many times. ​ “Put the milk in the fridge,” she says as if he doesn’t know where it belongs. Levi goes inside. ​ This is the first time he didn’t tell his mother every little detail about his day—and it’s the first time he’s lied to her. His heart races, a trickle of sweat rolls down his temples but he can’t stop smiling. ​ She enters the kitchen. “Are you hungry? I can make you some lunch.” ​ “No. I’m not hungry.” Two lies—he hasn’t eaten anything substantial since lunch the previous day. ​ He holds his breath as he waits for her reaction. When she shrugs, and heads back outside, he exhales and decides it’s not necessary to tell her everything. If he’s about to leave the island, it makes perfect sense to store his own experiences separate from hers. It will take practice to keep things to himself, but he’s almost certain that’s what a normal son would do.

©2026 Deb Vail

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