Anchored
There is a dead man anchored at the bottom of the sea.
My name is Luther. Due to my
parents’…incompetence, I was raised by my grandfather, a retired sailor who
lives in and mans a lighthouse. Some may have viewed such a life with distaste;
a lighthouse on a rocky beach, fish for every meal, somewhat isolated from the
rest of town. On the contrary, it is a satisfying, peaceful way of life.
I was strolling along the
beach one night when I saw something bobbing in the ocean several yards from
shore. The moonlight illuminated a man, young and seemingly naked, with dark
hair and ghostly pale skin. He stared at the sky, looking sorrowful, and I felt
sympathy without reason. He didn’t answer when I called to him, but he did
lower his head. Our eyes locked, and I could tell even from such a distance
that his were the same dark blue as the sea. A breeze blew by, words carried on
it, but not spoken by him. They seemed to be uttered by the wind itself.
“Years ago,” it whispered, “in
a small town, a well-liked ship captain found love letters written to his wife
from another man. The skipper demanded his wife reveal the writer’s identity.
Fearing for her lover’s safety, she lied and answered with the first name that
came to mind: that of a young boy who’d just began working on the captain’s
boat.
“The captain gathered some of his fishermen
companions and told them of the treason he’d discovered. That evening the
captain called on the boy, who was oblivious to the wife’s falsehoods. The boy
obediently followed, and when he reached the ship was ambushed by fury and
blunt weapons. They knocked the poor soul unconscious, then put his body in the
boat’s furnace, barbarically burning him to death.
“They put his ashes in a metal box and tossed
it into the sea. As long as the ashes are trapped, the boy will never be able
to move on. He will never be free.”
When the voices ceased, I
found tears streaming down my face. An overwhelming urge to help filled me. I
determinedly waded into the water, swimming towards the man, my clothes
weighing me down to some degree. I was confident I could hold my breath long
enough to find the box. Even if I couldn’t, I had to try. For the anchored
ghost boy, knowing how badly he’d been hurt.
I stopped, floating a few
feet away. He stared at me, a small smile on his face, unreadable. For a brief
moment, I glanced around, marveling at how calm the night was. Like the calm
before the storm…
Suddenly, he was in front of
me, face contorted unspeakably. He
was the storm the calm had warned me of. Then…there was darkness.
There is indeed a dead man
anchored at the bottom of the sea. But there is no box of ashes - the dead man
is me.
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