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Rose City Publishers
                March of Time and Skin Excerpt



     
       The boat was rocking so bad you could run up and down the door frames.  People like to
imagine the ocean as being blue and beautiful.  I used to imagine it that way.  When you're that
far out at sea the water is black.  Day or night it is black and deadly looking, like obsidian in
slow motion.  Black as far as you could see.  The boat was small, anyway.  We were going
side to side like the boat was plastic.  Everyone was grabbing their survival suits.  Some were
crying and some were scribbling down their wills.  I laid in my rack and drank from the flask..
Let them fire my corpse.  I sat back and thought how it figured that I would end out there.  I
masturbated one last time, emptied the flask and closed my eyes.  If the boat capsized then
their survival suits were useless.  The boat crashed through the swells and you could hear the
waves roaring into the sides.  My last thought before I made myself sleep was Helena.

       It was calm and dark.  I didn't know what to expect.  There was no light or movement. I
heard nothing.  I reached out and pulled the curtain back and stood in the dark.  Then I felt it,
a gentle rocking beneath my feet.  I walked to the door and went outside.

       It was warm out there.  I was shirtless.  The sun sat dark red on the horizon and it was
huge.  You could look right at it.  The black water stretched out far to reach it.  I breathed in
and held the handrail, watched the horizon melt around the sun.  How small we were against
the grace of the heavens.  Our petty dreams, our need for self, our weak assurances.
       I was the only one out there.  I saw a whale emerge from the water and twist out there in
front of the red.  It hung there upside down it front of the sun, it hung there careless and lazy,
totally oblivious to us, the human refuse of the boat, sacrificing our luck and lives for a
goddamned dollar.  It went back through and my heart swelled in my chest so fast that it
cracked my bones.  Something happened to me which I could not understand.  I wept.  I stood
there and wept at the beauty of what I saw.  I wept when I thought that the moment was
meant for me and me alone, as I so badly wanted it to be that way.  I so badly wanted to be
chosen by God there, to pulled out amongst the clean cold blackness of the water, to stand
naked on the back of a whale before the harmlessness of a sun which was now trained for
damage.  I wanted that scene.  I wanted to be transcended into that scene forever.  I wanted
everything to be beautiful again.  I wanted to be beautiful again.   
       I never told anybody about the whale.  That day we circled the Aleutian Islands and
headed inward over Alaska's horn.  It was the first land we had seen in over a week.  They
were dead, white capped volcanoes atop small isles.  It was unlike anything I had seen in the
contiguous states.  It was a completely different planet.  We were up there now, during the six
months of light.  We were on the southern end of Alaska, so the sun only fade out for about
40 minutes, then jump back up.  It was strange to see broad daylight at three in the morning.
       The boat slowed into the bay and set anchor next to the processor.  A plank was drawn
and secured.  That day in the galley, the lady who hired us was choppered in and she
introduced us to the main foremen.  They were both young with attitudes.  Their eyes sunk
into us like dirty teeth into clean food.  We had to walk the plank and listen to the main
medic's lecture, listen to him spew out bullshit about him being able to recognize us by our
coughs within a week.  He talked about how filthy the fish were.  He said that if a scale would
reach into a slice on our fingers then it was possible to lose the whole hand.  A lot of what he
said sounded dramatic.  I didn't like his eyes.  They were beady and they peered at you over a
fat, hairy face.