Showing posts with label crabs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crabs. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Metis Is Spared



Metis, the goddess of wisdom and cunning skills, sits on the edge of the Aegean Sea and whittles away at drift wood; her knife a razor clam shell. She carves all the creatures of the sea: turtles, dolphins, crabs, and seahorses. Little figurines pile up beside her as the waves come in and recede; turning the gray stone black: sunfish and starfish and eels like thick strands of kelp. The little shavings tumble at her feet and collect in the tide pools like apple blossoms. Her carvings keep her company. They do not become the real fish of the sea but sit beside her; gently watching the tides rise. She does not enchant them to grow scales and webbed fins. The crabs are not brown and red but stay remain cool and colorless; if anything, they bleach in sunlight. They become white like marble , like the tops of waves.

She is not bothered by anyone on this lone island. It is just the figurines with their pearly eyes and herself. No one wants schematics to thunderbolts or weapons of mass extinction.  She hears nothing but the content motion of sea spray against rock. She has hidden herself away and no one can find her.

And yet here comes Hecate in a boat of silver and stars. She has been given dominion over the sky, land, and sea and she knows where Metis is. The sun casts its rays upon the water and they shatter it into a thousand pieces of glass. Hecate sails through the sea black and white gold silently as a specter, as a wraith.  

“Dear Sister,” Metis says as she cuts into a crab’s basswood back.

“I come baring news of the war,” Hecate replies and steps from her gilded boat and onto the black rocks flecked with algae like moss.  

“Is it over? What has happened?” Metis stands to greet her sister with arms wide as the gray horizon.

“It is and we have lost,” Hecate says and Metis knows she will stay on this island from now onto forever, “He has spared a number of us from the world below the underground. You may stay here on these islands and that is better than the abyss and darkness of Tartius.”

They both breathe sighs of relief. The war is over and they have been spared. The world has shifted, reformed, levels upon levels; a hierarchy made of unmatchable force.

“I have been given all things her on earth,” Hecate says as she slips back into her boat, “and I will tell our daughters our story. Persephone will listen. Artemis is strong. We have not lost everything. There is still hope.”

She watches her sister disappear over the waves; a shadow in the light of day. She wants to feel for the mighty Cronus, the many headed, thousand armed Hecatonchires, and the all-seeing Cyclopes but she cannot. She has been saved from eternal damnation and she will use her time sagely; just like she has always done.

She reaches into the ocean and draws up another piece of sun-whitened wood. She beings lathing away at its already smooth skin. Under her hands and the edge of that amber colored clam shell she forms the body of Typhon: the great and terrible beast that sleeps beneath the waves of that primordial sea.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Queen of Crustaceans

She was the Queen of Crustaceans and her sister was the Duchess of Cephalopods. The Queen of Crustaceans kingdom lay in the ecotone on the western most edge of France. At high tide, only the spires from the palace and the temples of the Crab God and Lobster Goddess speared through the tide. Those who would peer over the cliffs at this time would think nothing of these jagged and rocky minarets. But when the tide recedes the sandy city is exposed in all its aquatic glory. The cities quartered sections appear as tide pools with the Queen of Crustaceans palace in the center. Giant fans of sea weed and kelp cling to door frames and hang from window frames. They dry in the midday sun and become delicate and crisp nutrients to her majesty. Her armored children crawl over every surface, risking their life at the hand of the black-tipped seagulls, and harvest the kelp for their queen.
Look, she can be seen at her dais. Great coral bowls of dried vegetation lay at her feet. See her rust, ochre, and rouge dress hang from her great shoulders. Thin and segmented crab or lobster legs make up her bodice and crab shells cover her small breasts. Her pale blue skin can be seen in the sunlight, he turns her face skyward and it flushed a deeper blue, shades of the ocean. Many believe her to be made of cast off shells and sea spray. But those who know her well have come to find that her clothes are made of the naturally deceased and the blue tint is formed by copper infused blood. She told me this and I quote.
“Unlike the mammalian blood which runs red with an iron molecule sounded by protein, at the center of my bloods core lies a beautiful copper nucleolus. My children and I share this.”
She has served me plates of her kelp and sea grass, sweet, salty and crisp. I have given her bottles of ruby red wine but never a white for this would seam to cruel.