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Skin
Like Shining Armour
by Tom Conoboy
When I woke up I was in
sand dunes. Sand was in my mouth. Grass scratched at
my eyes. The sun was white and burning. My body felt
heavy, moulded into the sand like a body sunk into its
coffin. I couldn’t open my eyes and I concentrated on
sound, but all I could hear was wind on the sea and water
lapping on the shore and grass rustling beside my head.
I focused on that grass through slitted eyes, on its
browned stem where it was anchored in sand, at the roughness
of its texture, sharpness of its edges. It shook it
seemed to me dismissively. My throat was raw, tongue
dry and thick. The sun was too hot. I felt sure I would
be sick.
When my eyes adjusted
to the sunlight, and gravity loosened its grip enough
to allow me to move, I got onto my hands and knees like
a dog. I looked up and sniffed the air the sea was
that way, behind the largest dune. I crawled up it and
lay flat, head above the horizon like a suicidal soldier,
and looked at the sea, blue and creeping towards land
as though seeking sanctuary. I could hear it and it sounded
like a song, a windsong.
I had water but no food.
At first, I hated the hunger because it reminded me of
my body when I was trying to live in my head, but I grew
to like the sensation of my body eating itself, molecule
by molecule. I deserved that. The first night was hard,
so cold, so long but never truly dark. There were too
many stars wasting their light. I didn’t think to make
a fire. The second night I thought it, but didn’t know
how. The third night I had fire, but I didn’t know where
it came from. I sat and watched it till light. After
a while it is possible to read fire. First impressions
are of individual flames, jagged, unconnected, but then,
in the darkest of the dark, your thoughts begin to slide
together and so does the fire and it becomes a single,
flowing entity, a life drawn from death, born in destruction.
You can read it, every action, but you don’t know what
it is saying, not about you, anyway, not about why you’re
here, alone, in sand dunes, waiting for an angel or for
death or for some damned thing. That was when I was at
my lowest. I thought then that I needed to eat.
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When I woke
up the next morning there was a fish beside the fire
with
me next to it. It was dead but it was looking at
me, as though I’d done this. Its eye was black
and it looked like it wanted to blink, like it
was uncomfortable with all this. It had skin like
a suit of armour, shining in the light. Its mouth
was closed. Its tail was brown. I held it in my
hands and it was cold, not quite slimy, as though
if I held it in the water it could come back to
life and its spine would twist and its tail would
twist and it would turn and swim away and leave
me behind, leave me with the cold, dark, pleading
eye and skin like shining armour, roasting in the
fire.
I didn’t want to
eat it, not at first. I had grown accustomed to
hunger: more than that, it felt comfortable, as
though I was cleansing my body. Such thoughts are
like cancer. As the cold of night descended and
darkness spread beyond the fire, I fought that
cancer. I ate the fish. I wrapped it in grass and
slid it onto the embers of the edge of the fire
and watched their white and red force transform
that fish. Its eye popped and bubbled. The silver
of its skin tarnished brown to black. Its flesh
turned to carbon, protein, flesh of my flesh. I
ate. It was beautiful. Flames danced, I danced,
I felt drunk with the power of living. I stared
into the fire and saw life, saw myself, laughing,
saw my world, growing, saw happiness. That night,
delirious, for the first time I slept until dawn.
Every morning after
that, when I awoke next to the remains of the fire,
there was a fish beside me. Sometimes it was flat,
sometimes round, sometimes silver, sometimes brown.
I learned that wrapping them in different types
of leaves changed the taste: those of the squat
tree by the edge of the wood made the fish taste
of aniseed, while the plentiful red-flowered shrubs
with the bright, fat berries, tasted of honey and
smoke. I learned not to cook them too long, that
stuffing them with figs and berries and seaweed
made them more succulent. My body filled out, I
felt full of energy, took to swimming every morning
in the coolness of the sea as a way of escaping
the sun. I found I could stay afloat for an hour
at a time, then two, then three. I explored the
depths. I learned to hold my breath and kick and
push downwards, into a mysterious, bubbling world
of texture and silence where I felt welcome like
a guest at a feast.
In the evenings
I danced. I stripped naked and the touch of sand
on my skin felt precious, the squeeze of it between
my toes, its wind-whipped strafe across my calves,
thighs. I planted my feet wide apart, bending low,
arms spread for balance, and I felt a pulse of
life run through me, one-fish-two-figs-three-leaves-four-flames,
over, over, slower than a heartbeat, solid like
a memory. It was deep and sultry, like a smooth
voice romancing. It was everywhere, in my head,
the sand, the sea, the trees. It echoed in the
air, shaping and re-shaping itself in the wake
of my dance, sliding around and against and inside
me and holding me in its embrace like the kiss
of a lover for the very first time. That’s how
I fell in love. This was how it was meant to be.
I danced to the spark of the fire, to the setting
of the sun, to the lingering taste of fish in my
mouth, to the carefree knowledge of fish in the
morning, and when it was dark, and when my legs
were weary I lay down in the twilight and reminisced
on the fullness of my day.
“Thank you, fish,” I
was accustomed to saying when I had eaten. “Thank
you for giving me your flesh, for nourishing mine.” It
was a small gesture but it took nothing from me
and gave me satisfaction. And then I would swim
among the fish in the sea and they seemed to accept
me.
The matter of who
I was and how I came to be there bothered me little.
In the early days I wondered. There was some vestigial
memory in the shadows of my head which, if examined,
might have become clearer, but I saw no need to
probe. I had food and I had fire. I had swimming
and dancing. This was life. When I danced, the
ground and the air pulsed with something like music,
but richer, more real, as though it was a part
of me. It was the rapture of the dance, that was
when I was living. And when I was resting, when
I was eating, that was when I knew happiness.
I was aware from
early on of the other. His fires glowed further
down the beach and when the wind was from the east
I could smell his cooking. His shouts filled the
air at regular intervals through the day, harsh
and staccato, and I could tell from this that he
had not found how to ride the pulse as I could.
I felt sorry for that, because it was a source
of joy. He must have known I was there, too, but
made no effort to contact me and we lived together,
apart, for a long time. That was a good way to
be.
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When rains came my fire would
move under the cover of trees. Although it was cold, I
found that the bark of the tall tree with no branches could
be stripped and woven into a pliable fabric. It became
my coat, my trousers, my shoes, it brought me comfort.
A fresh fish awaited me every morning. My dives went ever
deeper and I came to love the variety of life which existed
beneath the waters. Back on land, beneath a drying sun,
the pulse of my dance rippled ever stronger through my
body, as though pulling me into the fabric of the earth
itself. I belonged.
“Thank you, fish,” I said
one day after eating a flounder with figs.
“Why do you thank the fish?” said
a voice.
I turned. Behind me was
a man and behind him footsteps, mazy, forming a giant half
crescent all the way down the beach to where the other
fire was.
“Because I’ve just eaten
it,” I replied. “It has fed me.”
The man said nothing but
watched me. He looked much as I must myself, I imagined,
though I had only seen my watery reflection in all the
time I had been there and was happy to forget what I looked
like. He had a beard, long hair. His eyes were black and
staring, as though they didn’t approve.
“Did it choose to feed you?” he
said. I replied I didn’t know. “Did it give itself willingly?” I
replied the same and the man turned away in disgust. I
thought he was going to leave, but he stopped and came
back. “Have you never asked,” he said, “have you never
asked how you come to have those fish?”
“No,” I replied. As long
as I had them, the thought had never seemed important.
“Do you thank the fire,
the way you thank the fish?”
“Yes.”
He called me a fool. He
talked of many things I didn’t understand. He told me the
fish and the fire were gifts and only a fool would thank
the gift but ignore the giver. There was no giver, I replied.
I saw no-one. The fish and the fire were mine.
They could not be mine,
he said, because I had nothing. “You must understand that
fish is a gift. What would you do if that gift was taken
away?”
His face was strained, unhappy.
He reminded me of the morning I first awoke on the beach. “You
think too deeply,” I said. I wanted to show him my dance.
I felt sure he would enjoy it but, as I thought about it,
I couldn’t remember how it started. I tried to adopt my
stance, wide-legged and low, waiting for the pulse, one-fish-two-figs-three-leaves-four-flames,
but the man looked at me with contempt.
“My name is Mark,” he said.
He took my arm and I felt his hand like ice on my skin.
It was as though I had been burned. I held it limply as
he walked away, and I turned and looked at my fire, which
seemed smaller in the dusk. I shivered, coldness infesting
my whole body.
That night I sat by the
fire as Mark’s voice drifted loud and dull through the
darkness. His fire seemed to glow fiercely in the night
sky and I prodded more driftwood on to mine. I wanted to
dance but I couldn’t hear the pulse and the ground seemed
flat, unresponsive. Flames flickered like a line of the
dead and the fire crackled and groaned to accommodate the
fresh driftwood. I longed to hear the sea foaming into
land but it seemed out of reach, beyond the dunes. I felt
a knot in my stomach, like a hunger, although I had eaten
well, and my body was still cold. The memory of his ice
touch still burned on my skin. As I lay down to sleep I
patted the sand next to me, where the fish would be in
the morning, or so I hoped.
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