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March 29, 2025 by Stephen Cosgrove

SOS Chapter 15

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

The two of us moved toward the dryside and as the wa-

ters rippled around us in wake, I cheerfully chided my mate, “You

thought I was fat? In all my years I will never be as fat as your

head, you bait fish.”

“Well, how was I to know?” said he with a laugh.

I looked at him in total shock at his naiveté. I splashed him

in the face and, pretending insult, swam quickly away. It was be-

coming more of a chore to stay ahead, for I was now swimming for

two. Little Brother easily caught up and spoke a quick, mumbled,

and squeaky apology. Then he splashed me full in the face, and

the laughter returned to our journey as we sought the others. For

the Conclave of all who sang in the sea was to be the greatest event

ever since the beginning of ALL THAT IS RIGHT IN THE WORLD.

As we traveled down the world telling all of the great gath-

ering our play and love-making was restrained, as if the child I was

carrying was some frightening mystery. With the passing of the

tides, Little Brother once again began to act with the same reckless

abandon of our idyllic days in the corals of Winsome Bright. He

was a bit gentler and not quite as rough when we played the simple

games that made us dolphin.

I loved all the laughter and the games Little Brother invented,

for if anything, I played even rougher than before. Often I would slap

water full in his face with my tail for no other purpose than to hear

him squeak in shock and delight at the deception. Fat indeed!

For the moment, child bearing was a great lark, but there

were some little things that caused me a bit of dismay. The child

growing within me took away from my sleekness and also interfered

with the smoothness of my swimming. For the most part, I felt I was

swimming like a rock.

My dives, however, did become things of great power. I could

quickly drop into the deep, leaving my mate far behind. The return

was an entirely different matter. Little Brother and I would surge

up, and he would leap into the dryside in a great, powerful, rainbow

arch. I, on the other fin, would surface only to flop back to where we

belonged. Not quite a thing of beauty and grace.

To compensate for the extra weight I was carrying, I began

to eat more and more to add body fat, in theory — my theory — to

increase my buoyancy. I would devour anything and everything: the

firm fish that are sleek of skin and bright of eye, the twisted-legged

squid, and also the slow and somewhat dull-eyed bottom fish that

tasted like mud but were filling just the same.

The odd thing was that everything was absolutely delicious

— in unusual combinations, and in great quantities. I’m sure Little

Brother was dismayed and slightly disgusted with me, but what was

I to do? Everything tasted so good.

I came even to love the bitterness and texture of the long,

floppy kelp, which normally no self-respecting dolphin would eat. In

shock at my unusual diet, Little Brother would turn the color and

hue of a stormy sea and swim away. I found myself eating alone

quite often. It all tasted so good, and the extra fat did help me float,

though like a water-soaked bit of dryside wood.

The message carried by Little Brother and me was of ex-

treme importance to all who lived in the sea. My mate would dash

ahead to tell the others, and then return to check on my progress.

He would usually find me chugging along, with my cheeks both

plump and pumping, as I munched upon this or that.

One tide, in the bright of the morning sun that warmed our

sides as we swam, he said, “I know that you are great with our child,

but we must find some way to hurry on our way or the Conclave will

be sung, and all we will hear is a vague echo in the sea.”

“But I am doing all I can,” I argued. “Perhaps you could help?”

“And how would you best propose, my sweet Laughter Ring,

that I do that? Should I drag you through the seas with a bit of

kelp? Or maybe you wish that I would carry you on my great back?”

“Hmm,” I reflected in jest, “your back may be broad but I am

afraid not sturdy enough for the child and me. Maybe you could

give a ride to a bug-eye, something more your own size?”

I must have insulted Little Brother with my pregnant humor,

for he swam ahead and soon disappeared. I lumbered along, my

wake wide and without definition. Soon I was shocked to feel myself

lifted slightly in the water, and there I was swimming at great speed.

Below me, I could sense the strong undulations of Little

Brother as he tried vainly to accommodate my wishes. I could feel,

rather than hear, his laughter bubbling beneath me. Together, we final-

ly crashed through a wave and were left giggling in the surf and foam.

We rolled in the water nosing and slapping each other and

as was our desire we became delightfully entangled in love-making.

Our laughter and love was frozen in mid-giggle by dolphin voices.

In our frolic and play, we had broken into the perfect formation of

a regimented group of needle-nose dolphin, the strictest and most

organized in the sea. We settled down, feeling a bit foolish.

“I’m sorry,” Little Brother said gathering his composure as

best he could. “My mate and I are on a quest to tell all of the Con-

clave, a great congregation of all the thinking creatures of the sea.”

When he finished, the sea ran silent.

Finally, a wrinkled, narrow female spoke, “All this sounds

very suspect coming from two dolphin who cannot think two seri-

ous thoughts in a row. Could this be no more than a fabrication to

bring you laughter? How do we know whether you tell us nothing

more than fun-filled lies?”

“Yes,” the others chorused prudishly and prudently. “How do

we know that you do not lie?”

I was ready, as was Little Brother, to bash a few heads to

convince this group of needle nose dolphins the truth of our words,

when we were interrupted.

“Because they tell the truth!”

I spun to see our champion, only to be brushed aside by the

leader of the group who continued to speak. “These dolphin, silly

though they may be, do speak the truth. I have heard the Narwhal

sing in the colder waters. I have seen the whales throw themselves

up onto the dryside to die in protest of all the destruction wrought

by the sandwalker. I lost my mate to a shell-shark that carries the

sandwalker into the sea. We will join the Conclave!”

This odd pod of dolphin, in their strict formation, promised

to carry the message of the Conclave as they made their way up the

seas to the gathering. It was with relief that we bid them farewell,

but not until they admonished us again for our silliness and inappro-

priate behavior.

Rebuked, we swam away in solemn silence.

“Forgive me, Laughter Ring, I am so silly,” Little Brother

whispered as we moved away.

“No, it is not yours to forgive, for it was I who was most sil-

ly,” I said.

“No, no, little pregnant love-starved dolphin it was I and I

alone that was silliest of all. Yes, yes, I am silly most.” Argued Lit-

tle Brother.

“I think that I am silly most and more than you. You are

more the idiot.” I snickered.

We could contain ourselves no longer and both broke into

laughter, and the waves rippled with our joy.

We continued on but it was becoming more and more evident

that in my advanced state of pregnancy, I was holding us slow in the

water. Soon Little Brother began swimming ahead crying out his

message to any and all who would hear.

One tide as I lumbered along he came rushing excitedly to

me. “Come, my little lumpy lover,” he laughed merrily, “I have found

you a ride.”

Curiously, I followed. Soon we came upon a large shell-

shark plowing through the water. I was shocked to see Little Brother

rush to the front of the beast. There he threw himself in its path

but, instead of being run over, he was carried along by the massive

wave it created as it hacked its way through the seas.

So this was his ride for me. With a giggle, I soon caught

up with the ponderous shell-shark and placed myself beside Little

Brother in this great shell-made wave. I was carried along effortless-

ly, and with an occasional kick or two, I would stay there, racing

along at great speed.

We glided this way, exhilarated by the effortless speed, shout-

ing to all of the coming Conclave. The message was received by a

small pod of whale here, and groups of dolphin and flipper-fin there,

as we moved along. Unfortunately, all good things soon come to an

end. When the great shell-shark reached shallow water, precursor to

the dryside, it slowed and then nearly stopped. Our free ride ended.

Little Brother began to swim once again under our own pow-

er, but it was obvious I was slowing us down. Finally, I stopped and

cried out to Little Brother who had rushed ahead.

He swam back to me, and I said, “My mate, my love, the

Conclave is too important. Go and tell all who would hear and

have them tell others. I will wait near the dryside, and when you are

finished come back for me. Together we shall move up the seas to

join the meeting.”

Little Brother protested about my safety but I quickly con-

vinced him that I would be safe. It was only after much arguing that

he reluctantly agreed, and after much cuddling, he resumed the

quest alone but unencumbered. I laughed at his warm memory as

I wiled the hours and tides, ever moving closer to shore where the

feeding was easy.

On the seventeenth tide after Little Brother departed, several

yellow-skinned shell-shark-hummers came buzzing into the cove

where I fed. I was much accustomed to the sandwalkers and their

odd, noisy craft. Truly, I feared them not at all, knowing I could eas-

ily escape if they became over-friendly. Besides, Little Brother and I

had taught Harmony that some of the puny-finned sandwalkers were

but curious to touch us.

As the hummers skittered about, they suddenly seemed to

be just over there, and there, and there. It was with much conster-

nation that I realized they seemed to be everywhere. Still I felt safe

in the knowledge that I could dive to safety if the need should arise,

and I continued my feeding.

Suddenly I knew that something was amiss. The shell-

sharks were moving slowly around me, circling in tighter and tighter

circles. If I swam this way they moved this way. If I swam that way

they moved that way, and now unfortunately I had been moved near-

ly to the dryside where I couldn’t dive beneath them for the water

was too shallow. I decided to charge at them, and then veer off

between. In that way, I would gain the open water.

I rushed at the hummers, and then at the last moment, I dove

and was shocked nearly out of my wits to find myself wrapped in

the strange kelp web. I struggled only to become wound in these

unnatural nets. I had seen these webs before, but never had I been

tangled. How stupid of me!

I struggled and tore at the captive kelp, but only succeeded

in using all my reserve of sweet air, and my strength ebbed fast. I

needed to breathe.

I twisted and turned in the effort to free myself, but to no

avail. I prepared to die and to return to the end . . . the beginning.

Little Brother, my mate, my friend, I loved you. . .

Filed Under: Uncategorized

March 29, 2025 by Stephen Cosgrove

SOS Chapter 14

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

We had no plans save for our daily needs, but one tide there

came a faint and plaintive song — a cry from across the sea. It

was so faint that for the longest of times we thought it was but the

rustling of the kelp against the coral but time after time it was sung

and finally we listened. The song turned the sweet water in which

we swam a bit bitter. It was the final song — the death of an entire

pod of whales. Unmistakably, somewhere the death song was being

sung, and somewhere a great many whales were dying a useless

death — in protest of the sandwalker.

We may not have sought the source of the song, albeit mor-

bid curiosity is a strong trait of dolphin. But there was another song,

a song sung in dirge, a wailing. We had no doubt of this song’s

origin. This dirge, this song was sung by our friend, Harmony.

Without question or word spoken, we immediately left the

corals of Winsome Bright not knowing whether we would ever re-

turn. We swam with an urgency that suited the situation.

The call we heard was filled with such agony, such longing, it

could only mean the death of our dear friend. Little Brother led and

I following in the path Harmony etched in the water with his song.

The song we heard had come a short way across the seas but as

close as we were, it still took nearly two tides. It was with great

trepidation that we approached the great dryside that reared from

the waters of life. We searched and searched, listening vainly for

traces of the song, but all we heard were the whispers of others who

had gathered in awe at this horrible spectacle.

Near the end of the fourth tide, we found the babies, the

whale calves, but there were no mothers here. The little whales cir-

cled us and called out short sobbing songs, wanting to be touched

even by us, their smaller cousins.

Little Brother and I calmed them as best we could as we

moved through this terrible tragedy. The babies sang about Harmo-

ny, the great white, and how he had pushed them out to sea when

they sought to join the others as they forced their way up onto the

dryside. It may not have been too late, for although they had heard

nothing for a time, recently they had heard a singular song — an an-

guished lament, Harmony’s dirge. We told them to stay where they

were and we rushed to the shore.

Leeching into the water from the dryside were the rotting

carcasses of hundreds of whales, but nowhere in the carnage did we

find a body cast in alabaster — the white. In the short wave troughs

we rushed from one end of the shore to the other finding nothing

but mounds of dead flesh. It was only as we were about to give up

that we found his body.

Harmony was pushed up against the shore, and we were sure

he was dead. As befitted our friendship, Little Brother and I felt that

he, above all, deserved a proper joining with ALL THAT IS RIGHT

IN THE WORLD. We began, in concert, to pull and tug on his

mighty form. Slowly, his hulk of a body began to move scraping the

beach as we drug it out to sea. Imagine our shock when the body

convulsed, pulled away from us and inched back up onto the shore.

We pulled on the body again and once again it shuddered

closer still to the shore. Our shock was compounded when this

corpse muttered in a guttural voice, “Ah, no matter. It matters not

whether it is a feathered fury or a great sharp-fin pulling me into the

sea as a meal. It matters not; the song is dead.”

I looked at Little Brother and he wide-eyed at me, “He is not

dead, at least not of body,” I laughed in relief.

“But he is surely dead of mind,” Little Brother groaned as

he tugged against the behemoth form. “Why else would he throw

himself at the shore?”

Harmony lurched up onto the shore and we yanked him back.

He struggled free and regained all the ground he had lost and

then a little more.

I was exhausted and mad at this self-pitying mound of flesh.

“You blubber brain,” I shouted in frustration, “help us, for pity’s sake!”

Harmony turned, his eyes half-lidded. “Help us? Help who?”

he asked deliriously.

Little Brother mimed his words, “Help us? Help who? Help

me? Help you? Come on,” he shouted, “help yourself.”

He blinked his great eyes, recognition brightening them for a

moment, but then they once again slipped into a fogged stupor. “Let

me die!” he cried. “For the song is silent, and the pod is dead!” With

that, he flopped higher onto the shore but was still short of his goal.

Again Little Brother and I yanked him back into the waters

of life.

Staring ahead to his self-sought destruction, he wailed like

some spoiled child-whale, “By all that is holy, let me die, for all is lost!”

With all of our strength, we yanked him farther into the

life-giving waters. “No, not quite all,” shouted Little Brother, “for

out in the deep wait the children that you saved. Did you simply

save them to let them die of confusion?”

We caught our breath, and the seas became quiet save for

the distant discordant singing of the children.

“No!” Harmony bellowed as he twisted from us. “I am whale

and my right is to die as the others before.”

“Fine,” I taunted, “and the Narwhal are right as they sing.

But, what happens when there are no more whale? What happens

when all have cast themselves upon the shore? Do you think the

sandwalker will feel your protest after you are gone? No! They will

push your fat, rotting carcass back to the sea — or better still, leave

it where it lies. Then, they will quickly forget and continue with their

ruination of the world.”

“But, “ Harmony protested weakly, “I have sung the song I

am entitled to die.”

“That’s coral crap and you know it,” snapped Little Brother.

“Just who did you sing to? Did you sing to the children, so they

can continue this madness? Or did you sing to the sandwalker?

There is good reason why the sandwalker does not sing the Song of

the Sea. For how can it sing that which it cannot hear?”

Harmony froze in his undulations to escape. With a sigh

breathed deep, he exhaled all that was wrong with his soul and

slowly turned his great body back to the sea.

We all said not a word as we moved out into the deeper,

cleaner waters. No words needed to be spoken for Harmony was

filled with grief, a sadness best cleansed with silence. Suddenly,

quietly, and without word he sank deep into the world.

Little Brother looked worriedly around, “Do you think we

should go after him? Does he still mean himself harm?”

“No, I think not,” I said. “I think he needs a greater silence

than can be provided here with us. He needs to learn again to sing

the Song of the Sea.”

We waited there on the inky surface and nearly gave way to

our own fears of his self-destruction, then Harmony breached with

such power we were tossed to the sides like foam in a windy sea.

We uttered not a word as Harmony breathed deep the sweet

air that swept the seas. The gleam was once again in his eye, and

we knew he was resolved to put life before him and his fears in the

past. Little Brother and I quietly followed as we moved out to sea to

find the children who waited. After a brief time, we found them not

far from shore, confused and so very alone.

There were seven whale calves in all, four of them female.

They sang to us for guidance. They asked for the song and they

asked for food. Fortunately, all but one of them had the first taste

of fish and needed not their mother’s milk. Little Brother, Harmony,

and I swam ourselves ragged, hunting fish and returning to feed the

hungry mouths that waited.

Though we tried vainly to feed the littlest one, she was so

distraught she would not eat of the fish. Instead, she cried fitfully for

the warmth of her mother’s milk. Little Brother cavorted about with

a tiny tuna-tail balanced on his nose trying to achieve with laughter

that which nature refused to allow. Still, the child refused to eat.

Harmony sang soothing songs laced with hungry messages, but the

child would have none of that either.

“What can we do?” the great whale asked. “I can soothe them

with song and feed them the fish, but I cannot help this little one.”

“It has been done before,” I said quietly. “We are both of

the family of the sea. I will nurse this young one until she can be

taught to eat the fish. It is not much but it will have to do.”

“That’s ridiculous,” snorted Little Brother. “You can’t nurse

another unless you are with child.” He paused and looked foolishly

at me. “Are you . . . are we with child?”

I laughed nervously, “I don’t know about you, but I am. If you

haven’t noticed these last many tides, I have been growing large.”

Little Brother, my mate, with his eyes wide in amazement swam

around and around like a sharp-fin examining a soon-to-be meal.

“But, but,” he stuttered and stammered, “I just thought you

were getting a little fat. I mean, I thought you were eating a bit more

than I . . .”

“Hmm,” I muttered as I swam close to the child, “you and I

shall talk of this later. Fatter indeed!” Fortunately, the child-whale

and I were able to work things out between us, and she quietly

suckled. Surprisingly, this sharing — this need and meeting of the

need — created a strong bond. I soon felt oddly tied to this child.

Hardly enough to satisfy the young whale the milk did en-

courage her to try tiny bits of fish. Nourished a bit by both the

fish, and me she survived. We wiled the tides, gaining strength and

confidence for the young pod.

During these tides, Harmony would often disappear and we

would be left to our own devices, herding this pod of tiny whales,

keeping them in some measure of safety. There was no fear of

sharp-fin but there was the bitter taste of the sandwalker, and always

the possibility that they would come to harvest the young whales.

It was in this protective mode that we now circled the group when

Harmony returned after three tides. His eyes, before lack-luster,

now sparked with life. He called us to him and while the young

calves played quietly amongst themselves he sang, “The Narwhal

are right, but wrong in how to teach it. They hide within their frozen

crystal walls and give gifts of hate to any whale that happens by.

One by one, the whale is disappearing. The Narwhal could do no

better if they all gave their twisted horns to the sandwalker, so that

they could kill even more of us in the seas. A new song must be

sung. Not a song sung by just a single pod of whale, here or there,

but all in one massive chorus. I call for a Conclave, the greatest

meeting of all the brethren of the sea.”

There followed a faint echo from afar, “And that is good!”

Little Brother and I turned toward the faint accented voice

but could see nothing. “Who is that that sings?” I asked.

To which Harmony muttered, “Narwhal! The ghosts now

move beyond their enchanted chambers.”

“What did you sing?” asked Little Brother.

“Nothing,” he murmured. “Nothing. But both draw close. It

is time that I pass to you the entire Song of the Sea.”

“No!” I said. “I will not listen. There is no way that I will let

you sing the song and die!”

“I have no plans to die,” whispered the whale, “but it is time

to break with traditions. No single brethren should be responsible

for the Song of the Sea. I will give it to you and you in turn will

pass it to chosen others. In that way the song will live.” And with

that he began singing the long, memorable song, the history of our

world.

When he finished Little Brother muttered, “By all that is holy,

I never would have thought any song could be so long.”

“Or beautiful,” I sighed.

“And long,” Little Brother quietly laughed.

“It is the history of the world that you now share.” Harmony

sang, “Go, go my friends. Call your pod of dolphins together, and

tell them of the Conclave. Send them out to the waters of the world

and each one of that group shall go to another and another group,

tell them of the Conclave. Call to the flipper-fin and the great-backed

whale. Call to the blue and the bowhead. We shall all meet in

five-hundred tides near the crystal walls of the Narwhal of the Horn.”

The laughter gone, Little Brother spoke, “We shall be three

when we meet again: Laughter Ring, our baby, and me. Worry not

of us. We shall carry the invitation to sing to all that have the will

to hear.”

With that brief farewell and promises to meet again in the

cold icy waters, Little Brother and I swam quickly away.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

March 18, 2025 by Stephen Cosgrove

Chapter 13

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

As Little Brother and I left our friend, the great white whale,

we felt fouled from all the cruelty and horror that we had seen. Try

though we might, it did not seem possible to quickly cleanse our-

selves of our terrible adventure. The seas were soiled, perhaps

forever, and all our senses were clouded and gray.

We swam hard and fast down from the up of the earth to-

wards the warmer waters of Winsome Bright. With every wave, we

seemed to swim faster and faster, as if speed alone could eradicate

the memories etched so deeply.

With muscles working in concert, I darted from side to side

and quick-breached to gain even more speed. The grip and ripple of

the water as it smoothly crossed over my body made me feel eel-

slick and sinewy.

My heart boldly pounded, reminding me of my mortality, and I

pushed even harder, twisting my body in torturous, powerful undula-

tions. I felt fast and the faster I felt, the faster I swam.

I had always been quicker than Little Brother and loved to

challenge him to race after race, knowing the sure outcome of every

challenge. He gamely tried to beat me, but rarely did. Even now,

as we raced away from both good memory and bad, he was hard

pressed to keep up as I slip-breached through the waters, chasing

tuna-tails and bits of froth.

I was tired from all the adventures with our new friend, Har-

mony, yet I was still excited about our travels throughout the seas.

We had not been back to the corals of Winsome Bright since birth.

The memory of the beginning of that particular delight burned hotly

in both our souls and urged us on faster and faster.

But there was change coming — great change. Little Brother

and I could feel it but really didn’t know what it was. The sun still

set in purples turned to black, and morning still peeked from wave

to wave in a silver wash of golden hush. The fish were sweet to eat,

Little Brother was still a delightful fool, but yet there was something

different — odd, not about the water but rather about us.

It was a time as if I could feel my body grow. I felt longer and

sleeker. I felt both vain and embarrassed by my vanity. For the first

time, I felt that I was different from Little Brother and he was different

from me. It was frightening. It made me mad at him and him at me.

Now this feeling made me swim faster still, and in time I had

distanced myself from my mate.

My mate? To say, even think that word both angered and

confused me. Was he my mate? Always, we had been the best of

friends and, as such, we had called each other “mate,” but what

did it really mean? Were we mates as friends, or friends as mates?

Why was I faster than he? Yet why did I feel as though I should be

slower and allow him to protect me? Was I destined to be dominat-

ed? Was this what was meant by being female: one who subordi-

nates her own feelings to the feelings of her mate, her best friend.

My mind spun round like a waterspout.

Little Brother finally caught up with me after I arrived at a

small atoll where the waters were warm and blue. His breath came

in ragged gasps of vented air mixed with laughter. “Why,” he ques-

tioned, “are you swimming so fast? Do you fear Harmony’s Nar-

whal, or do you race your tail, a race that can never be won?”

I turned and nipped in anger. “If you can’t keep up,” said I,

“then follow my wake and catch up at a leisure pace like the turtles

that wallow in the sea.”

He backed away, his eyes turning icy.

I continued angrily but not really knowing why, “If you

weren’t such a coddish clown, and had learned to swim as a child,

you wouldn’t have so much trouble keeping up!” I railed.

We swam on in icy silence, only stopping at times to slap

verbal insults at one another, then we would swim on again, sulk-

ing all the while, only to stop and rest — and spit more indignities.

Finally, with eyes squeezed tight, we swam on in total silence, no

longer speaking.

Yes, something was different, and though we never spoke

of it, both Little Brother and I felt it. Was all this in response to a

chance meeting with a whale and all that we had seen? Is every-

thing changed because of that or is this what it means to get old-

er? Is up really up or down really down? Or is this simply another

mystery, to be solved with the old parental dictum, “When you are

older, you’ll know.”

No answers, but many questions clouded my horizon. I

soon found myself loathing the friend whom I had known and

shared all with since birth, since tides too numerous to count.

Finally, at the end of our stormy trip, we arrived under bright,

blue skies at our destination — the corals of Winsome Bright. Our

anger — no, truly it was my anger alone that brought on his anger —

seemed diffused and softened in this place of magical delight.

We began to zip about in the waters, racing only a breath

away from the sharp coral walls as we chased bright butterfly fishes

that dashed away in explosions of light. This exuberance at reach-

ing our destination put distance on the memories of the horrors and

difficulties of the journey, but I still felt charged like the clouds of a

loud-noised storm.

I filled myself with the joy of the lagoons and bays, pretend-

ing Little Brother was but a pest best forgotten. I swam about this

coral sea, amazed as always how fishes changed with the waters,

from the deep silvers, blues and purples of colder fish, to pinks,

blues, and yellows of the apparently slower, but happier, fishes that

swam in these waters.

There was a constant celebration of all of life here, a feeling

of a festive tide-to-tide party that had continued since the very be-

ginning of time. This was the feeling; the emotion sensed by those

who entered these magical, coral pools of Winsome Bright.

Oh, and how the memories of a youth long past flooded

one’s senses with bubbles of joy and ecstasy, as I swam in the

warm waters of this enchanted place.

Ridges of coral were rounded about the atolls and tiny is-

lands of the bright side, the dryside. Fishes darted about, playing

the silly games that ring true with the survival of all in no matter the

water, but here it was funny, here it was wonderful.

I swam with the fishes, and chased them in sport and chased

them for food. I feasted, and then washed myself clean of my an-

ger-filled journey to this idyllic place and Little Brother did the same.

But still and all, he and I maintained our distance because we

were different, we were changed, and it seemed that these changes

were to be forever. When I felt the need to be in his company and

went to him, once there I felt nothing but agitation towards him and

soon after would swim away. Once away, I wished only to seek him

out again.

What was going on?

There were other times that I would rush to his side and

breach over him as I had done in the earlier tides of our childhood.

He would begin to play, and I would begin to play, and then for some

insignificant reason I would turn and order him to go away. I was

very confused about my feelings and could only imagine what Little

Brother must be feeling — although how he felt was certainly no con-

cern of mine. My own feelings were turned first on, then off, like a

waterspout.

Finally he could take no more of my cruelty and angrily

rebuffed me with, “Leave me be, little girl. Swim alone in these

waters, and if you should find me by accident in some sheltered

bay, warn me that you are coming and I will swim away!” With that

he surged into the surf and with a flip of his tail disappeared in the

foam of an arcing wave.

“Ah, good riddance,” said I as he left me alone. “What I need

is some peace and quiet.”

I swam without aim, idling my time by eating constantly of

the sweet little fishes when I wasn’t even hungry — the ultimate sin

of the sea. In this black mood of desperate straits, I came suddenly

upon the oddest whale I had ever seen. She was white to the point

of almost being pink and plump as could be. Her eyes twinkled

as she watched me streak through the waters of Winsome Bright.

Delighted at last to have someone to talk with besides that dull but

clownish Little Brother, I swam near. “My name is Laughter Ring,

and I have come here to Winsome Bright after a long journey in

order to rinse myself clean of all that I have seen,” I gushed.

She laughed in a low rolling song and then began, “Ah,

my little one, I know. I have listened to you and your mate playing

throughout the waters of Winsome Bright.”

“He is not my mate!” I snapped. “We have unfortunately

known each other since birth, and as such have called each other

mate, but it is only by a twist of fate that we have been together on

this journey at all.” I paused, embarrassed at my outburst.

The tension broken, I laughed, “Who and what are you?”

She laughed again, and her sides rolled with the merriment

she carried within. “I am a Beluga and the others that have come

here before you called me Momma Love.”

“Well,” I continued, “Momma Love, it is wonderful to have a

creature of intellect to talk with. I have found you just in the nick of

time, for Little Brother has been swimming me crazy. He is such a

baby. All he wants to do is play and make childish jokes. It is good

that I am away from him. Even now I can hear him as he swims

away from me.”

“And does that make you happy?” asked Momma Love.

“Certainly,” I said resolutely, “It makes me very happy that

the tuna-brain has gone away. It makes me very content indeed

that that bubble-butted, jelly-fished, flat-eyed, kelp-finned, wannabe

swimming sandwalker has gone from my life forever. Now I will have

a chance for some peace.”

Momma Love looked at me with her great soft eyes, and gen-

tly asked, “But then, why do you cry?”

It was only then I realized I was uncontrollably sobbing

adding to the salt in the sea. “I don’t know,” I blubbered. “Every-

thing seems to be changing so fast, and I don’t understand what

is happening.”

Then, like a crested wave washing to the dryside, I told Mom-

ma Love all that had happened. I rambled and railed about how I

felt about this and that blaming all on Little Brother.

“He’s a pain,” I cried. “I hate him!”

“Hardly that,” she said, as her eyes twinkled. “You are in love.”

“With him?” I asked incredulously. “How could anyone be

in love with a silly dolphin who wears kelp-weed on his head like a

crown? Me? In love with a shell-brained fool like Little Brother?” I

backed quickly away from this Beluga in revulsion.

“Oh, it is true, little one,” she blithely continued. “You are

in love and you should not fear that which will come. Listen, child,

once I felt just as you do. Sometimes, I fought that change from

childhood to adulthood, and then at other times I tried to urge it to

come faster. But all things in time, and in time all things. It is well to

wait for complete commitment, for true love, but don’t be so blind

that you cannot see that which should be.”

With that, Momma Love laughed and swam away, leaving

me swirling in the wake of all that she had said. “In love with Little

Brother? Me? Just wait until I tell him. If ever there has been a

joke to be told in the sea, it is this.” I quickly, even eagerly, sought

out my old friend, Little Brother, in the corals of Winsome Bright.

I found him in a shallow, warm-water pool nose-to-nose

with a clacker claw. It was only with a bit of gentle teasing that I

convinced him that I had more to say than his hard-shelled friend.

Eventually, I coaxed him into the deeper waters that surrounded this

atoll. I laughingly told him all that had happened. He joined in my

laughter as I told him of Momma Love and her hilarious observation

that he and I were in love.

It felt so good to laugh again with my friend — my lover.

My lover?

How did that word slip into my thoughts? What was this

feeling that had come over me? Had Momma Love cast a spell over

me to allow such language to seep into my vocabulary?

I watched Little Brother frolic in the foam of the oncoming

waves and I had to admit there was a sleekness about him, a mus-

cular grace that belied his silly nature. I shook my head and spit

the thought from my mind. That’s it! I was losing my sanity. Little

Brother? Muscular grace?

Coral crap!

I found my mind switching from thoughts of loathing to lov-

ing like the swishing of a sharp-fin’s tail.

As the golden light dropped into the sea mixing all in purpled

splendor, Little Brother inadvertently smoothed against my side. A

charge, like the touch of a twisty fire eel, burst from my dorsal to the

tip of my tail, and I was changed forever. The waters turned a ghost-

ly blue and light flashed on the waves. It wasn’t just me, for in Little

Brother’s eyes I saw a change, a gentling. A fever set over us and

cast our blood afire.

The winds of the dryside, filled with the essence of whisper-

ing, golden sands — heady perfume. We paused gazing into one

another’s eyes and for the first time, but forever and a day, we saw

and touched each other’s souls. Then, for no apparent reason we

raced off leaping from crest to crest, seeming not to touch the water.

We swam as one; we were one, our bodies coiled and spinning.

There was only the beating of one heart, the passion of one mind.

We were wed on that night of the silverside moon. With the commit-

ment of our souls, we dedicated ourselves to each other and to the

will of ALL THAT IS RIGHT IN THE WORLD.

Far out to sea, I sensed the gentle rolling laughter of

Momma Love.

We rested enraptured there in those still waters for hundreds

of tides, I truly know not how long. Life took on new meaning. We

became bonded and, like the others that had come before, noth-

ing would part us save death. We pledged to live and die together.

Nothing would separate us.

Under the watchful eye of delightful Momma Love, we learned

of the joys and responsibilities of adulthood. We were filled with

a longing to know more of one another — to join both in spirit and

life’s direction. What Little Brother would do for the rest of his life,

so would I. Where I would go, he would follow. These were more

than simple pledges cast upon an empty shore. These vows would

bind us for all of eternity.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

March 18, 2025 by Stephen Cosgrove

Chapter 12

CHAPTER TWELVE

We swam slower now as the sea filled with massive chunks

of ice. And it was early the next tide that we came upon a group of

our distant cousins, the flipper-fins. We happily called to them and

were delighted to notice that Harmony, too, seemed to recognize the

flipper-fin as an extension of the intelligence in the sea. He became

excited and before we could tell him the tales of our cousins, he

swam quickly away from us to meet with them.

It was with horror that we watched Harmony surge into this

herd of simple-minded relatives–not to play, but to feast. The herd

scattered, dashing up onto the shore, as this great white whale

chased a fat cousin into the deep and quickly devoured him in two

or three bites at best. We waited–no laughter, no smile–until he

swam back to rejoin us.

“What is the matter?” Harmony sang innocently enough, “Is

there some evil in the water, some sandwalker drawing near?”

I couldn’t even talk so revolted was I, but Little Brother

spoke angrily, “You speak of seeking the sandwalker and wish to

see their evil ways. Yet you prey on and eat the flesh of our near-to-

cousins, the flipper-fins.”

Harmony looked at us, his eyes going blank. “That’s impos-

sible,” he said. “I’ve never heard them sing.”

“You and your songs,” I snapped. “Not all are related by a

musical song alone. Listen as they speak in the water. Listen to

their words so true as they dash and tell of the brutal you!”

The whale paused and listened carefully to the fearful cries

of the flipper-fin as they made their escape to the dryside. “I hear

not but their bark,” he retorted.

“That,” said Little Brother, “is the song of the flipper-fin.

Whether you know it or not, they are of our family and yours.”

The flipper-fin kept singing their song of fear. They sang

of that great white hunter who had killed their leader. They sang a

warning in the sea for all to leap to the frozen islands in order to

escape the monstrous fiend. It took Harmony a bit of time to realize

that he was the great white hunter . . . he was the fiend. This dis-

tant cousin of ours, though over-sized and munch-mouthed, stared

at us in total shock-horror as the truth seeped into his dryside brain.

His eyes widened and his skin seemed to pale. He backed away and

disappeared for a time into the gloom of the deep.

“He makes me a bit nervous,” said I. “He talks of lofty ideals

and sweet sung songs and then turns and eats his relatives. I don’t

know whether I trust him or not. I mean, first a flipper-fin and then

one of us?”

“I don’t know about you,” said Little Brother chuckling, “but

if I hear his stomach grumbling one more time in hunger, you’ll find

yourself swimming alone.”

Later the great white hunter returned looking shamefaced,

but still I could not trust him. We moved closer to the dryside shore

and after a time, I quietly whispered to him, “Keep low in the water

and watch the shore of the dryside. There you will see part of that

which you seek.”

We watched the flipper-fin that cavorted on the dryside, safe

from the “menace in the sea.” Soon, as we had watched so many

times before, sandwalkers wobbled swiftly along on spindly fins

trapping the baby flipper-fins they called seals against an ice wall,

cutting off any escape to the sea. Then with clubs they summarily

beat the babies to death.

Harmony, after a long time of watching this horror turned

and solemnly said, “The sandwalker gathers meat, as does the pod.

They are no better or worse than the whale.”

“Look again, dear friend,” cried Little Brother, as tears traced

their way down his silver skin. “The sandwalkers are much worse

than you who only seek a meal.”

We gazed again at the shore and watched as the sandwalkers

ripped the furry skins off the dead children and tossed their car-

casses away. Then, as quickly as they had arrived, the sandwalkers

retreated from the bloodied beach.

Our minds filled with this horrible carnage and waste, we

pulled the whale away from the shore to the deeper waters. “I

should have,” Harmony rumbled angrily, “snapped the arm from the

sandwalker on the creaker that touched me before it could do this

harm,” not even able to sing his message in song.

“It wasn’t them,” said I very subdued. “For there are many

sandwalkers, some are good but most are bad.”

We rolled in the silence of the sea, soothed by its very si-

lence. Little Brother and I watched the great whale as he wrestled

with all that he had seen. Finally, he roused himself from his intro-

spection and said, “Now it is time for me to return to the pod. For

I have seen the good and the evil of the sandwalker and there are

many lessons that must be sung into the Song.”

As much as we would have been glad to be rid of this float-

ing appetite and as much as we wanted to continue our search for

delight in the world, I spoke again, “Not yet, my great whale. There

is more that you should see.”

“More!” he cried in disbelief. “More of the sandwalkers killing

the flipper-fin young, and then defying the basest law of the sea by

not consuming their kill?”

“No,” answered Little Brother, “it is worse than that. Much,

much worse.”

We silently swam down the seas and left the cold, stained

waters of the flipper-fin. We didn’t talk, let alone sing for a time, out

of fear that we might become the next meal for our glutton friend.

We ate sparingly of the bottom fish, bug-eye, and flat-tail, and sped

quickly down from the cold following the swift currents.

Within a tide or two as the dark turned to light, turned to

dark and back to light, Little Brother and I both tried to bring laugh-

ter back to the sea. We frolicked and played, breaching over this

behemoth, but little could we do to make him laugh. It may have

been his introspection of all he had seen, or it may have been that

the water changed as the air warmed.

Whenever Little Brother and I swam in this part of the sea,

we felt and tasted the wrongness, the bitterness that seemed to

seep from the dryside. Often we would have to swim around, or

under, a floating island of rot and filth. Objects, the likes of which

Harmony had never seen, floated crazily on the water, and because

they smelled strongly of evil; a closer inspection was not advised.

Little Brother explained that all these objects and all this filth

had come from the sandwalkers that lived on the dryside nearby. The

water had become so fouled that Harmony’s bright-white skin began

to turn an oily black. I jokingly said that Harmony had begun to

look like a real whale, but I don’t think he was much amused by the

transformation. Time and tide again, he would dive to the deep in an

effort to rid himself of his stains, only to breach in yet another slick

of the brackish, putrid water, and he would be blackened once again.

Soon after, in the distance, we finally could hear the plaintive

cries of other dolphin. Tired though we were, we swam faster and

soon closed in on their pleas for help.

What we found, though so hideous as to be beyond the pos-

sibility of belief, were dolphin that were wrapped in kelp-like stream-

ers holding them fast. The sea was filled with their screams of

torture as the dolphin tried desperately to rip free from their death-

bound prison.

Harmony, without thinking of the possible consequences to

himself, tore at these webs with his teeth. He thrashed about, his

great bulk wracking great havoc with the sandwalkers’ woven kelp

but, even with all of this tremendous effort, only one was freed.

Harmony never stopped trying, reason deafened by the screams of

dolphin pain and anguish.

He was finally pushed firmly away by Little Brother and

myself. “Try not, our friend,” we cried, “for these dolphin have been

trapped too long. If they lived, they would be stranger still, for they

have been long without the air to fill their lungs.”

We backed away, watching in horror as hundreds, of dolphin

died in that cove. Above, we could see the sandwalkers still milling

about inside their shells. Soon they began to pull the kelp-like ma-

terial to the surface, and the dolphin found still clinging to life were

beaten until the waters ran red with their deaths — a horrible death.

When all was done and silence returned to the sea, a som-

ber Harmony asked, “Why? The fishes are food for all to share as

was commanded by ALL THAT IS RIGHT IN THE WORLD but the

dolphin have song. Why does the sandwalker murder them?”

“We don’t know,” Little Brother said, answering in kind and

then continued, “We think the sandwalkers believe all the fishes to

be theirs. We think they don’t wish to share, and kill anything that

gets in the way. But we really don’t know why. We, the dolphin,

love all things created, even the sandwalkers, only to be rewarded at

times like this with death.”

“I have seen enough!” the great white said in anguish. “Now

surely you will let me return to my pod to add all these horrors to

the Song — to tell of the right and to tell of the wrong.”

“No!” I cried. “There is one more truth that you should see.

You must know everything.”

Knowing the depth of Harmony’s pain at seeing all this for

the first time, Little Brother consoled, “It isn’t far and it truly is on

the way back to your pod.” Harmony, so numbed, meekly followed

as we led him back to sea and the sweetness of open water. We

swam slowly, in silence. The great whale sank many times to the

deep in attempts to cleanse himself of the filth that had tainted his

body. But his memory would never be the same, and the worst was

yet to come. As we swam true to the rising golden light, the water

seemed to reverberate with keening, a soft high-pitched sound. We

swam hard, and the volume of the noise increased until we were

bathed in its unearthly sound.

Little Brother and I knew that sound. We understood from

all that we had seen before that the carnage to be seen would be

beyond that which we could bear. We gently warned our friend, “Go

no closer. You must see what you can see from where we are now.”

On the horizon, many giant shell-sharks were filled with

hundreds of sandwalkers. Harmony leaned high into the dryside,

gazing at the horizon, trying to discern what could be causing such

a commotion. “I must go closer. I can barely see,” he protested.

“You don’t understand,” I said, as I leaned into his bulk to

restrain him from going closer. “You are in mortal danger here. For

these sandwalkers kill not flipper-fin or dolphin. Here they kill the

whale, the very Song itself.”

Harmony shook his great head, still without complete un-

derstanding. Little Brother came close to his side and whispered,

“Here they kill your song. Here they murder whales. All within this

pod will die.”

Against our warning, Harmony blindly surged forward, brush-

ing us both out of the way like we were a bit of storm foam. We fol-

lowed to help if we were needed, and it wasn’t long before the water

turned brown with the blood-sludge of the dead. Around us, strange

screaming shell-sharks chased whale after whale and stabbed them

deep with pointed sticks.

In less than a tide the white whale, numbed by all that he

had seen, had to be forcibly guided into the cleaner seas. His eyes

were glazed with the pain and misery. Harmony quietly sank from

our sight, and we politely held our distance, knowing that he need-

ed to be alone to cleanse himself. From the deep, we could feel

the vibration of his song, and it welled all about us, filling us with

its sadness. We did not talk, we did not laugh, and it was only by

conscious effort that we even remembered to breathe, so beautifully

plaintive was the song as sung by Harmony.

Finally, the seas were silent again. Soon after, the great white

breached from the sea with a roar. There he floated for a bit and,

when the silence echoed on the trailing waves, he sang. “I don’t

know whether to love you for showing me all of this or to hate you

forever. My song is filled with confusion.”

“Go now to your pod,” we said in gentle voice. “Though you

be confused, remember that there is good and bad in all things in the

sea. You must learn to value each for its balance. Someday we will

meet again and share a memory, and we will learn to laugh again.”

Filled with sorrow because we understood his great pain, we

slowly swam farther down the world to a gentler place. Here we,

too, would be able to cleanse ourselves of all the great wrongs we

had seen these past many tides.

Although the great white needed to learn these lessons that

we taught, it is hard for a dolphin to be without its natural purpose

— laughter in the sea. We hadn’t laughed freely in gleeful abandon-

ment for such a long time and had need for the clear blue waters of

the downside — the corals of Winsome Bright.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

March 18, 2025 by Stephen Cosgrove

SOS Chapter 11

CHAPTER ELEVEN

There were also many non-living creatures that swam in our

seas — the shell-sharks that carry the sandwalkers over the top of

the waters of life. Throughout our many young journeys around our

sea, we came into contact with them over and over again. Some

were good, but, for the most part, they brought a sense of wrong-

ness with them–something that didn’t belong and was best left on

the dryside.

We saw the shell-sharks filled with sandwalkers we called

fisher-catchers drag behind them great weavings of twisted kelp

that trapped all within its confines. To be caught in these weavings

meant instant death, for a strong-lunged dolphin needs the sweet air

to breathe and these weavings forced us too long below the surface.

At other times, we saw dolphin dragged from the waters still full with

life, and only moments later, their useless dead bodies were thrown

back to us in the taunt and tease of uselessness, proof of our inabil-

ity to fight the great sandwalkers. Our group as a whole survived

without fatality. We viewed much and during these times with the

fisher-catchers churning the waters we experienced little laughter

and much fear.

But in life there is always a balance. For every tear shed,

there is a giggle given; and for the dark, there is light. So was

it with the shell-sharks and the sandwalkers that rode upon the

sea. Little Brother and I had found great sport in chasing the little

sun-colored shell-sharks that we called hummers. Unlike the hard-

shelled variety, their thin skin was somewhat akin to the whales’

hide, but they smelled tangy and not right with the world.

They would wildly race to where Little Brother and I would

be swimming or chasing tuna-tails, and the humming would stop

and so would they. The sandwalkers sat upon the hummer’s back

and gazed for long periods of time as we played. When we ventured

close, they dangled their puny fins in the water as if inviting us to

savor the texture and the flavor of their meat. I personally have

never tasted them, but there are many tales of sharp-fins who have

had one or two sandwalkers for a meal. Thankfully, they were not

something that I savored.

However, the sandwalkers were fun to play with, and their

antics delighted Little Brother and me almost to the point of tears.

Little Brother, in particular, recounted to them long, bizarre stories.

They would stare intently at him with those intense, tiny eyes that

appeared so very intelligent, simulating understanding but I swear

they never understood a word he said. Fun to play with, yes but

intelligent, no!

Little Brother persisted in chattering away telling them tales

of flipper-fin and tuna-tails. They, in turn, would nod their puny

heads, moaning their moronic moans, which would send my mate

and me into paroxysms of laughter. Little Brother would even at

times swipe his head from side to side, splashing them in a very

irritating way. Their little puny fins would wave furiously, and their

moans would turn to squeals and squeaks, and then they would

rush back for more. Not intelligent, these creatures, definitely

not intelligent.

The seemingly innocuous sandwalkers would, on some oc-

casions, even share their food with us. I tried it only once. It was

a bit of white, fluffy stuff with a blob of brown glop spread on it. It

was horrible! It stuck to the roof of my mouth and surely never had

its beginning as flesh. Little Brother seemed to like some of the

stuff they tried to feed us, and he once encouraged me to try some-

thing he said tasted something like tuna-tails. I politely refused.

“Poor little things, the sandwalkers,” I used to think. “They

give offerings, so in awe are they of us.” How wrong I was, not

about their intelligence, for I still feel they have little if any, but of

their gentle intent.

The shell-sharks came in a variety of shapes and sizes.

There were hummers both big and little, some made of whale-like

skin, and others of some kind of odd-smelling smooth stone. There

were giant hummers that sometimes screamed as they skimmed

over the water, and monstrous moaners greater still that groaned

their way slowly across the seas.

But of the shell-sharks, my favorites were the silent ones

that creaked about in the seas, rocking as the waves rolled. They

were aptly called creakers. Held above their great shells were flat-

tened sheets of cloud that filled with the wind, or sometimes the

clouds seemed to just slap at themselves, beating out their distort-

ed rhythms. Often Little Brother and I sought out the creakers, for

the sandwalkers that flopped about in them seemed to be a kind and

gentle lot.

It was great fun to dance in front of these behemoths of the

sea, leaping in the froth and foam as they cut laboriously through

the water. On one such adventure, Little Brother and I came upon

an isolated white whale. Of course, we had met whales before in

our travels, but this whale was to change our lives forever — we

would never be the same.

We were leading a large creaker on a twisted, convoluted trail

through the sea, when just ahead breached a large white whale. He

was nearly rammed in the side by the creaker which was never known

for its ability to turn quickly in the water. My immediate fear was for

the safety of the creaker and the puny creatures it carried within.

Who could know who would survive a collision of that magnitude?

Once again, Little Brother came to the rescue and chanted

merrily, “Out of the way. Out of the way. Sandwalkers come looking

for fun and they can’t seem to find their way.”

The whale turned his mighty head, his eyes opened wide in

shock, and then he sank like a rock into the deep. Knowing the

creaker was safe, at least for a time, we swam quickly back to the

whale. He was wallowing in the trough of a wave and muttering to

himself, “Where was the warning–the hum, the song that is not a

song–that flows with every shell-shark I have seen?”

Little Brother, never at a loss for words, leaped into the

whale’s soliloquy and answered the question he had not been

asked, “This shell-shark is silent. It is called a creaker and it fol-

lows the wind.”

“What are you?” sang the whale in a richly accented voice,

“You nearly sing the whale song, but you are not whale. What

are you?”

“Hmm,” laughed Little Brother, “What are I? Well, I are not

sandwalker, I are not whale. If I are not these things, then I must

be dolphin.” With that, Little Brother swam right up to this whale

and stopped only when he was nearly eye to eye. “My name is Little

Brother and that is my mate, Laughter Ring.”

“I am called Harmony,” sang the whale in a deep pleasing

tone, “I have come seeking wisdom about the sandwalker. What is

your purpose, dolphin?”

“Our purpose, whale, is to lead the way before yonder creaker.”

“But why?” sang the whale.

“Why? You of all creatures need to ask why?” Quickly, before

the white whale could answer, Little Brother continued his tease.

“The sandwalkers that ride the creakers make us laugh, and we dol-

phin live to laugh. Besides, if we didn’t lead the way, yonder creaker

would run over dumb whales like you.”

It was my feeling that maybe, just maybe, my mate had gone

too far. This whale was ten times our size, and just one little swipe

of his mighty tail would send both of us reeling into the seas with

aches of the head that could last a lifetime. Many times, we had

heard tales that some angry or very hungry whales of this sort had

been known to munch upon sharp-tongued dolphin. I rushed be-

tween the two of them as they bristled angrily in the water.

“He means no harm,” I laughed merrily to break the tension.

“He means only to make you smile and laugh at all the fun that

spreads beneath the sun.”

The whale paused and considered all that had been said.

His eyes relaxed and his tone turned from tense to curious. “You

say,” said he, “that the sandwalkers make you laugh. How can that

be? I have seen sandwalkers in their shell-sharks before, and in

their wake I have only found death and destruction.”

“Oh, ‘tis true,” continued Little Brother as if there were no

threat at all and as if this huge whale were nothing more than some

young dolphin to be taught a lesson of life. “Most of the sandwalk-

ers are evil to the very core, but some are fun, and many, in their

simple way, bring joy to me on a sunny day. Look, even as we sing,

they turn the lumbering shell to follow us.”

The whale turned his mighty body in the water. Noticing

Little Brother was right in his observation, he took a breath to

prepare for diving deep. “Never fear, my friend,” said I. “They will not

hurt you. They are but curious and love to touch all that they see.”

The whale looked completely terrified. “Do you mean you

would actually allow the sandwalkers to touch you?” he asked

nervously.

“Yup,” teased Little Brother, “It doesn’t hurt, and besides,

it tickles.”

The whale floated shaking in the water, scared nearly out of

his wits, as the creaker drew near. Both Little Brother and I, in an

attempt to set the whale at ease, began our usual entertainment of

these simple creatures that sailed.

As was our style we danced on our tails on the surface of

the sea rather than within it followed by breaches high into the air.

But the odd, white whale never joined us. He just floated anxiously

three or four sea troughs away ready to escape at any moment.

Swimming to where he waited quivering with fear, I laughed,

“The sandwalkers care not about watching us dolphin in our play

this day. They are more entertained by you, great white whale. Go

to them. Feel their strange dry skin upon your flesh. It will make

you laugh, or at the very least, it will enlighten you. Go. These

sandwalkers have no evil intent.”

Harmony stared at me for a long moment, as if for reassur-

ance. Challenged by our fearlessness he made his way slowly over

to the creaker that was standing still in the water, its white clouds

that reached up to the far above flapping in the breeze.

The sandwalkers, following the custom they had established

with us, the dolphin, leaned over the edge of the shell to reach

down and pet this great white whale. I once again noted their abso-

lute ignorance, for this huge whale could have inhaled one of them

with plenty of room left over for a burp.

After a time, Harmony relaxed and seemed to enjoy the

stroking and petting. He finally sang to us in his deep, rich tones,

“Maybe they, too, have a song but it appears to be an odd song,

without depth or soul. Possibly, if I took them into the deep, they

would be able to sing their song with more strength.”

This innocent statement sent Little Brother and me into

gales of laughter. We rolled, unable to talk, unable to catch our

breath. Our composure finally regained, we patiently explained that

the sandwalkers knew not how to hold their breath and if they were

taken to the deep they would surely die.

Harmony finally swam away from the creaker and called to us.

“I must leave, for this is quite perplexing to me. I have been told the

sandwalkers bring only death to the sea. Now I see they are not so

bad. I must go back to my pod and add this information to our song.”

“Ah,” I laughed, “so that is what you are about: a great seek-

er of information.” I quickly explained that all the sandwalkers were

not as gentle as these and that some, yea even many, bring much

death and evil to the sea.

Harmony batted his great eyes and looked wonderingly at my

mate and me. “Then,” he sang, “I must seek out these other sand-

walkers that bring evil to the sea. I have many answers that have

need of questions to be asked.”

Little Brother and I looked at each other and, without even

talking it over, chorused together, “We shall guide you if you will

have us. For we have traveled far in our journeys and have seen

what you seek.”

With a flash of our tails, Little Brother and I swam off up

the sea towards the coldest of waters in the farthest reaches of our

domain. For if Harmony sought to see all the evil of the sandwalk-

ers, then we would show him the greatest of their evils. The journey

would be far and it would take many tides to accomplish.

We looked back, and it wasn’t long before this lumbering

great white whale joined us on our swim to the cold waters and the

answers to the questions he carried.

Though reluctant to laugh at first, Harmony truly was more

in tune with the world than either Little Brother or I. Little Brother

loved to make others laugh, and Harmony was his greatest chal-

lenge. My laughter would ring about the sea as Little Brother came

floating by with a crown of seaweed or mush-fish on his head. But

Harmony would only chuckle a little, at best, and continue on his

way. Little Brother told the tale of Bubble Butt and his imaginary

brother and sister, and although I had heard the story at least a

hundred times before, I laughed, but Harmony simply smiled. It was

only when Little Brother, by accident, got a clacker-claw stuck to

his nose that Harmony finally broke down and laughed so hard that

he nearly cried.

The ice now broken, Harmony easily and often laughed and

sang with us as we continued our journey together. He was at the

same time both patient and impatient as we swam along. Impatient

when we needed an occasional rest, and patient in the understand-

ing that without that rest we all would have to travel slower.

Finally, Harmony asked, “When and where will we see this

evil side of the sandwalker, whale, or dolphin. Other than the puny

fish we feed upon, the sea seems to be barren of life.”

Little Brother sipped a tiny sip of the sea and shuddered in

revulsion, “There is a taste in the water of the sandwalker and the

evil he brings to the sea. Come the next tide, two at the most, you

will see that which you won’t want to see.”

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