STORYTIME
TAPESTRY
Special Treat - April 10,
2005
A MAN FOR THE
SEA
Charith Pelpola
There is
an island I have been to. Bleached like forgotten bone ???neath an unforgiving,
vengeful sky. I have walked its salt-stained streets; stung my feet on the burn
of its cobbles. Coral blocks, dressed and trimmed, resilient for decades,
centuries before. Built to withstand the monsoon, the hurricane, the easterly
tempests, these houses of old are museums for days that have come and gone. The
fishermen have left, swept away by the red dawn, across the fathomless
Indian
Ocean, far from their island home, whose name is
written in a language I cannot read.
All good women shun the daylight,
gathered up in satins and bright colour ??“ resplendent in the coolness of their
homes. Children occupy vacant doorways, three abreast, with smiles so old for
their young skin. Does everyone here know something I do not? I know nothing of
the struggles here, it??™s true. Of days that are spent hand to mouth, watching
the sterile sky; longing for a benevolent breeze; waiting for fathers, brothers
and sons to return, not just with the catch, but also with their
lives.
As a mark of time??™s passage the coral cottages give way to things
of steel and concrete; the dull insult of cable television now mocks the cry
from the distant minaret, calling the faithful to count their blessings, to
continue their faithful harvest. But what of these times? I am a foreigner who
will be forgotten in the blink of an eye, and yet I still sense time catching up
with them, their little space of something, a drop in this
ocean.
Languished in the harbour, only one defiant sailing ship sits,
drowning gracefully in flooded repose. She has not ventured forth for years, yet
she retains a timeless splendour which the fiberglass boats cannot match. Her
timbers rot and stain the shallows, but she has outlasted her crew, long
departed.
Save perhaps one.
Down the coastal road, under the sway
and dappled light of yellowing fruit trees, past the provisions store, the
school, and the one-room hospital. In a shadowed doorway a figure sways and
saunters. I can see him in the deeper labyrinth of his light and shade house,
moving through clutter that only he could decipher. He reveals himself at the
bare timbers of his door. His weathered, salt-cured skin breaks into a wide,
white smile, and his great age suddenly drops away from his face, swept away
like the tide across a worn beach. I am his guest ??“ unexpected but welcome and
we sit together ??“ broken English and the indignant stare of his infant
grand-daughter, pride of place atop his lap.
???I was a sea captain???. The
lines on his face have already told me that story. ???She was my ship???. Of course,
we three were meant to meet. She can no longer brave the current, and he
faithful to the last, remains by her side, watching over her.
The old man
is sinewy, muscled, honed by a slow grill under the southern sun. His face has
borne the brunt of it, but his frame is strong. He carries the infant
effortlessly in one hand and shoos her to sleep. He seems half my height, but is
clearly twice the man.
First impressions are deceptive. At first I
thought of him as a stranded soul, having struggled perhaps like Hemingway??™s Old
Man, to calm the tempests, to carve a piece of this endless sea for himself. And
yet in the draining of this shared spiced tea, I meet a man who struggles no
more. He has won his fight, proved his worth. The light in his eyes shine for
his grand-daughter, not for the riches of the sea. He is grounded with the love
of his life, but he is content I think, to share brief memories with brief
friends and speak of things that the young ones have no memory of.
As he
gathers up the baby and adjusts the colourful but faded sarong about his lean
waist, I thank him for his time. He bids me good travel to the place of my heart
??“ and for a brief tantalizing moment I realize the allure of this place, the
timelessness of it all. Centuries cannot change history here, although
fiberglass surely replaces wood and merchants concede to tourists. How can time
change a world governed by tides and the pull of the moon? It cannot, and I find
that I have outstayed my welcome, because time still has an effect on
me??¦
So we take each other??™s leave, and I head for open waters, gliding
past the love of his life, turning back one last time, to salute a man for the
sea.
(c)Charith Pelpola, 2004
Charith
@starwaves.tv
As
for me: I'm a wildlife documentary maker, have been in the business for almost
10 years and have spent most of my life in the field of environmental
conservation. After qualifying in environmental science in '96, I moved out of
the UK where I was brought up, and
proceeded to lead a nomadic existence throughout South and
South East
Asia, and have now taken root in the
island-state of
Singapore. My factual and scientific
writings have appeared in several publications, from wildlife periodicals to
in-flight magazines, to coffee-table photography books. My fictional writing has
remained entirely personal - until very recently!
I
am of Anglo-Germanic Sri Lankan heritage, 32 years old, husband to Kristen
and parent to four cats and two dogs.
Cheers,
Charith.