
for Matt Miller
Focused on unraveling high tide’s
trashy embroidery, we foraged ahead, doubled
back to our dad in the morning game he
devised to keep us busy. He’d waited out
the War’s last spasms in a German camp.
Now, he kicked driftwood, toed a fish spine,
stopped to study the bay or bend with us
for whelk, limpet, “mermaid’s fingernail,”
violet mussel-pearl, lost lures
with talons tangled in rusty monofilament,
their painted eyes inscrutable. The rare seahorse,
poignant to find one brittle, dead. Generous
praise when we held up what was left
of bottles drowned in boat wakes, scuffed buttons
of Bud or Ballantine, green of Seven-Up
punctuating the ubiquitous aqua of shattered Cokes,
some of which he made us sling reluctantly
beyond the reach of waders’ feet, surrendered
to another winter’s grinding, to the sort of gray
sea a parent would scan for traces of a child’s
flight, the girl whose wings beat to leave
our kitchen counter’s magazine. Naked on a runway
of pain, herded by GI’s, racing a wall
of smoke, a little Icarus whose labyrinth had just
begun, scavenging survival instead of hoping
for explosion from the seaweed’s olive pods.
We’d found the real thing nesting among
the panicles, too, fifth of July’s damp
cylinders we pocketed, forgot. Later that week,
with the shells’ laundered nacre, flecks of fire-
cracker paper like down in the dryer’s lint trap.