It
was five in the afternoon, said the shadow of the post in the sand. Camellia
glanced down at the solitary wooden figure, waiting for the tide to come back
in. The news said high tide would be back at ten twenty-three. Waiting for another
five hours wouldn’t hurt.
She wandered down the thick stone
steps onto the beach. Sandals stripped and left behind she wandered barefoot to
the post, savouring the softness between her toes and that sinking feeling.
There weren’t many others on the
beach. The season for tourists was fading, the winds whipping too hard for the
day-trippers to make the effort from the cities. Kids from the neighbourhood
were tormenting the seagulls by the pier and a few venturous families had
attempted to make a day by the seaside, but they were packing up now. That
suited Camellia. She’d watched them play their games all day, she didn’t want
to watch anymore.
With no thought for the sand, she
sat down beside the post, spreading her skirts like a lady in a painting. She
leant her weight against it, the wood solid against her shoulder. How would it
feel, she thought, naked here by this post in the sand? It made her smile,
blush, feel the last of the heat from the sun and the chill breeze coming off
the water prickling her covered skin.
The post was a friend, without an
arm or a comforting word, but rigid. It was always there, no matter weather or
tide or time.
She did not draw circles or faces in
the sand as she sat on the beach and waited for the tide to come in. She didn’t
pick up the little shells that freckled the sand and pop them in her pocket
like she did as a child. She watched the water come forward and retreat, come
forward and retreat, and the clouds above grow and shrink and shift and fill
the sky with old light. She was in a photograph, she thought, being developed
as she sat.
Her head against the post in the
sand she let tears fall. Old eyes glanced her direction but shuffled on, young
eyes paid her no attention at all. If they did they only laughed with nervous
energy and ran on.
She cried through a sunset, watching
for the stars to stop hiding as the sand grew damp beneath her skirt. The post
no longer held her fast, but became the vicious liar that hides behind false
smiles. Camellia hit her head against the post in the sand; let the splinters
scratch at her face like fingernails and a careless smile she knew.
Ten twenty-three, like the news had
said. The beach was silent but for the waves. It was end of season, no
tourists.
And wasn’t the wind so much stronger
after the sunset?
And didn’t you hear about the girl they found, dead by a post in the sand?
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