The
Beachcomber brushed the sand from off it. It
was another eye stained with seaweed. He rinsed it in a low tide wave
that poured crackling towards him, sounding inside his cold cut ear
like sherbet exploding over the sands silver tongue.
Hed
found many before, exactly like this. Blue eyes marooned in the pools
in rocks, browns washed into his previous footprints, green hazels
stuck in the grip of sea grass.
Pushing
himself up to his evolved stoop, he dropped it into his bulging pocket
where six other eyes hed found this morning, blinked.
Back
at his thrown together hut, constructed from flotsam brought in on the
tide, thousands upon thousands of eyes, adorning one wall, followed
his movements around the ramshackle room.
There
was a table made from a broken dingy, a wood burning stove that burnt
whatever it touched, a cupboard so dark he called it secrets and a window
frame that the sun set through.
He
hadnt always been able to find them. For years the only eyes he
could find were his own. Now though, through circumstance and perseverance,
he had taught himself how to find them even when buried under several
layers of sand; discerning, then following a scant trickle of tears,
using in place of a shovel, his hand.
On
the weekend when the people came flocking, hed place a sign above
his door that read Other Views. But most he found had only
come for the water.
Unperturbed
each night hed pull his overcoat close, lifting its collar to
shield his neck, and grabbing his grubby, rusting bucket, trudge down
to the waters edge. And as the waves crashed like distant artillery,
and the seagulls stood, quiet and at home in the spray, hed crouch
above the freezing sand and observe the tide recess.
Each
night the Ocean would discard them there. Litter them in its diminishing
wake, where theyd either roll lost into cold crab holes, or blink
to reflect the moon spilling stars.
Bucket
in hand, hed feet scar the washes silver skin and begin loading
the pail with frightened orbs. Some screamed in silence to make sense
of it all, some remained still, watching others tumble in.
Overloaded,
and soaked to the skin, hed leave the ocean to its outgoing journey,
and labour back to his shack, weighed down by his buckets inconsolable
crying.
Sharp
night outside the door, hed place the weeping bucket on the broken
table, and after hanging his overcoat up, retrieve from his deep cupboard
called secrets a tinkered with slide projector. It was a
simple grey box, squat with a worn lens protruding out the front, a
hole at the back where the lit candle was placed, and an eye shaped
slot crudely carved into the top.
Hed
take time to position the slide projector on the table, then further
time adjusting its adjustable legs, till finally as the night wind wolfed
around his shack and his broken table mistook the tears for sea, hed
lean forward, excited in his chair, and plop a new eye in. Alone in
the dark bar a few thousand eyes, hed watch this eyes owners
life unfurl on the screen that was his cleanest wall.
Every
night was like this. Recollections pouring forth to enliven the dark
with hints and clues and mysteries. Eye after eye wallpapering the weathered
wood with life. It would be morning before the last candle died and
exhausted hed crawl into bed.
There
were others like him. Dispersed along the forever beach, in little inconsequential
shacks, scouring all their secrets found for different angles or evidence.
Always aware as they waited and combed, that with one good find; the
catalyst orb, every eye you had found to date and all that you were
destined to find, would become an eye of vision.
He
had found no such eye, only beauty in ones he had. They were presents
from the water, gifts from the sea. Friends on the wall, keeping an
eye on everything hed found. Friends that watched, concerned every
morning, the rising tide peak a footprint closer. Sometimes hed
wake to sodden steps and know, somewhere closer than the future, his
hut would collapse into its grasp, and all that hed uncovered,
including himself, would return in a wave, to the hungry water.