It was a warm afternoon in Summer and he was standing in the damp sand, water washing off the back of his feet. And next minute he was sucked into a whirlpool. When he was pulled out from the ocean, he was already filled with the gold that took him in.
You thought she called your name in a low whisper but it was just the splashing waves hitting against the rocks underneath your dangling feet. The picture in your mind of the story that your mother told you was gone in an instant – all the whirling sunlight, the shining dust that lost hold of the boy's feet, the glitter on the surface of the sea. Everything became pitch-black. The ocean looked like diesel again; its edges a jagged blunt blade, persistent and cold like memories. The story was brief, but you imagined the boy float to the surface and you imagined hearing his muffled scream under the shimmering water.
Sometimes we could use up all our luck to meet someone, so that we wouldn't have much of it left to make them stay. It was her turn to smoke. You passed her the joint but she was too wallowed in her own world to take hold of it. But you just kept your posture of holding it next to her. You didn't feel the need to call her. You didn't want to touch her either because she felt a lot like heartache. There were 2 billion songs written about it, and you thought they sounded very much like the muffled screaming of the boy. There's a voice in your head and that was what it was telling you.
Another gust of wind hit the shore, and her eyes came back into focus. She took hold of the joint and smiled politely, dismissing the short period of distraction. She was lost in contemplation and it was a thought that was not of you, and would not let you in unless you learnt to love enough.
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