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Drifting
for a moment in that space between awake and asleep, it felt like my
face and the seat were melting and mixing into a thin paste that
would harden as it cooled and leave me stuck to the seat forever. It
was a hot evening in late July and—mouth wide open—I had fallen
asleep with my face mashed against the vinyl of our Country Squire
station wagon.
It wasn’t the drool alone that
pulled me fully awake; it was also the sound. The driveway at the
beach house was topped with a mixture of crushed clamshells and
gravel and the sound of our tires on that driveway came up through
the rubber and steel of the car and into my toes, my stomach, my
teeth, my ears.

The drive from our house in
Wilmington took about two hours, even though it was only seventy
miles away. In spite of my excitement about a week at the beach
house, I didn’t usually stay awake for the whole trip. Inevitably,
we would make the drive on a summer Friday evening with beach-bound
traffic clogging the roads. My parents’ voices would blend with the
murmuring voices on the radio and the hum of the engine; it was a
potent spell that could lull me asleep in minutes if I wasn’t
careful.
I wanted to stay awake so I
could see Dover Air Force Base. The route to the beach house took us
right past the main gates. If we were lucky and our timing right, I
could roll down my window, stick my head all the way out, and stare
up at the huge transport planes floating just above the highway as
they slowed for a landing. They looked unreal hanging there in the
sky as their shadows chased our car. It wasn’t until years later,
when the Marine barracks were blown up in Lebanon that I learned
Dover Air Force Base was used as a morgue by the military. When I
found out, it added new weight to the memory of those long-gone
transports hovering above our long-gone car.
Once we passed the base I felt
okay about going to sleep. I would climb into the back-back and lie
down next to my brother Jerry or spread out on the middle seat by
myself. Sleep came quickly.

When we arrived, Uncle Vince
and my cousin Donna were out in the water with their long-handled
crab nets. There were ten lines set, each with a raw chicken neck
tied on as bait. They were walking slowly through the stomach-deep
water going from line to line, checking for crabs. Just offshore, in
a few inches of water, sat a wooden bushel basket with quarter-inch
gaps between the slats. Jerry and I kicked off our shoes and walked
out to the basket to see how many crabs were inside. The water
soothed my stub-toed-suburban-summer feet.
There were about forty crabs in
the basket, all of them blueclaws. The one on top was a mudder. It
was much bigger than the other crabs in the basket and much more
lively. It must have used its size and strength to continuously
fight its way to the top of the heap all day, even as new crabs
joined the crowd. When we came near to look in—it raised its claws
menacingly and brandished them the entire time we stood there.
The slanting sun threw a warm
light on the dark blue coloring the sides of the raised claws. The
crabs’ shells were a shade of green that just matched the color of
the water—a rich, deep green somewhere between olive and pine.
I looked up from the basket and
out to my uncle, who was standing next to one of the broomsticks we
used to anchor the crab lines. One end of the broomstick was pushed
into the sand at the bottom of the bay and the other end poked out
of the waves to mark the location of the line. The stick had thirty
or forty feet of heavy cotton twine tied near the end above the
waterline. Tied to the other end of the string, sitting on the
rippled sandy bottom, was a chicken neck. The row of broomsticks
protruding from the water made a dotted line parallel to the shore
about fifty feet out in the bay.
My uncle had the string in his
right hand, letting it run over his flattened palm and fingers as he
stalked out toward the bait. The crab net was in his left hand, its
long handle sticking out from his armpit and pointing back at us on
the beach, gathered around the basket.
The small waves were rocking
the basket of crabs rhythmically against my shins as I watched him
inch his way out. He walked so slowly with his legs under the
surface that the only way I knew he was walking at all was the
increasing distance between him and the broomstick. From where I was
standing I could see the muscles of his back and shoulders tense a
little. It looked like his legless torso was slowly drifting out
into the bay.
He stopped. The only movement
was his right arm pulling the string to raise the chicken neck an
inch or two off the bottom. Then his arm stopped and he stood
perfectly still, washed in the glow of the low-angled orange
sunlight. He stood there with the chicken neck underwater dangling
just above the sand. It felt like a movie to me—the entire screen
filled silently with Uncle Vince and his net and a sense of
something about to happen.
The scene exploded as he
stabbed the net down and through the water in one seamless motion
catching the chicken neck and the crab that had been tearing at it.
He dropped the bait back to the bottom and walked to where I was
standing. He held his net still for just a second and then flipped
it so the crab would fall in with the others in the basket. I
watched it fall, legs grasping at the air, and as it fell a thought
came to me, fully formed: I will catch a crab this week.

Just before sunset my
grandmother came down to the water’s edge and asked me to bring her
the basket. She must have been about fifty then, but she was an old
woman to me. Its weight felt good in my arms as the warm water ran
out the bottom and down my legs. I placed the basket at her feet and
then knelt down next to her in
the sun-heated sand. She called out to Uncle Vince to give it up for
the night and start bringing in the lines. She had her big white
enamel pot, flecked with black, balanced on a wooden cutting board.
Jutting out from the pot were her tongs and the heavy blade she used
to chop the crabs.
There were about forty crabs in
the basket and she was done with them in less than ten minutes. She
would grab one with her tongs where the shell comes to a point, lift
it out of the basket, and hold it pinned to the cutting board. Then
she would line up the blade with the center of the shell and bring
it down hard and sharp through the crab and into the board. She
would pick up her half and put it in the pot and I would do the same
with mine. I always thought it was magic, and a little sad, when the
half I picked up was still moving its legs or stretching out its
claw.
She saved the mudder for last,
and even though it was nearly dead and had frothy bubbles spilling
out of its mouth, it was still impressive. She held it up to catch
the last of the fading light on its white underside.
"That sure is a big one," she
said.
"Yeah. It sure is," I said,
wondering how many years was old for a crab. "I wonder how old he
is?"
"Not as old as me … and you
should say was."
"What?"
"Was. I wonder how old
he WAS."
And with that she brought her
cleaver down hard and fast and through the crab. As she did, some
salty water flew up and landed on my lip. I licked it away. I picked
up my half of the mudder and looked at it again in the dying light
as its lifeless legs dangled. The underside glowed orange with the
sky and the blue on his claw looked like it would come off on my
fingers if I rubbed it.
"I’m going to catch one
bigger," I said, more to myself than to my grandmother.
"Someday," she said, just as
quietly.

Jerry and I slept in a
queen-size bed in a room on the bay side of the house. We usually
had just a sheet over us as we slept with the windows open. That
night I had the left side of the bed, closest to the window, and I
fell asleep with the sound of the waves washing into my head through
the screen.
I had a dream that night:
In the dream I am in the
Philadelphia Phillies’ dugout at Veterans Stadium. I am sitting on
the bench in a Phillies uniform with my baseball glove in my lap and
an old brown baseball in my hand. I raise the ball to my nose and
inhale, filling my head with the smell of dirt-and-turf-scuffed
leather. I look up from the ball and the manager is signaling for me
to hustle out and play right field.
As I trot out to my place in
the outfield I spot my family in the stands, but none of them seem
to notice that I am in the game. When I am in position I wave my
glove to the pitcher to let him know I am ready.
As the first pitch is thrown I
know that it will be hit to me. Even before the batter swings I am
sprinting back toward the wall. I hear the crack of the bat as I
feel the green turf under my feet change to the red of the warning
track. I begin my leap. I find myself flying up, floating six feet
off the ground, waiting for the ball to come to me. Amazingly, my
shoulders are even with the top of the wall as I look up to find the
ball glowing white against the black of the night sky. It is arcing
down to me as I raise my glove. The ball falls silently,
weightlessly, into my leather mitt. I float there for a second, ball
in my glove, six feet off the ground, before I start falling back to
earth. As I fall, I raise the ball to my nose once more and smell
the dew and dirt and leather.
When I land my uniform and the
stadium and the ball are all gone. My feet splash down in the waters
of the Indian River Bay behind my grandfather’s beach house. I have
a net in my right hand and I start out toward a crab line twenty
feet away. There is a soft breeze brushing past my face and carrying
with it a sweet sea smell. I have no shirt on, just shorts and some
old Keds on my feet.
I get to the stick marking a
crab line and grab the string in my left hand and follow it out. It
takes a long time to get to the end and as I’m walking I hear
nothing but the sound of the waves lapping against my thighs.
Suddenly, the line goes tight in my hand and it feels like the
chicken is being yanked away from me. I scoop the net down into the
water and come up with the bait the same way Uncle Vince did, but I
keep my eyes shut.
As the net comes out of the
water it feels heavy—heavier than just one scrawny chicken neck
would feel. I keep my eyes closed a second longer and in that second
I see my sneakers on the rippled, sandy bottom. The sunlight is
making them glow as if from inside and the laces are dancing around
my ankles in the currents.
I open my eyes and there is a
huge crab in the net. I turn to go back and dump my crab in the
basket, but the basket and the shore are a mile away.

I wake up from the dream and it
is still dark outside. A warm wind is coming in through the screen
and it brings with it the sound of the waves chasing each other up
the beach. Jerry is asleep next to me, his breathing matching the
rhythm of the waves. I have to go to the bathroom.
I climb out of bed as quietly
as I can and stand at the window for a second. The wind feels good
on my face and chest. It smells like the breeze from my dream and it
brings my dream back to me—the smell of the ball, the flying leap,
the heaviness of the net, and the certainty. I stand there at the
window and sink back into the smell and the sound, picturing myself
out in the water with the net in my right hand and the line in my
left. I already know what it feels like to catch a crab—I just need
to do it.
I walk to the bathroom. There
is a florescent tube over the mirror and its light makes me look
yellow as I walk by. I don’t want to be yellow, so I reach back and
switch off the light.
As I stand in the dark, peeing
and listening to the sound it makes, I can feel a few grains of sand
between the soles of my feet and the cool, flat tiles. I look down
at my feet and they are black against the grey of the floor. I stand
staring down at them for a long while, not really thinking about
anything, almost falling asleep. I snap out of it when a chill
shakes my body.
I pull up my underwear and
shuffle down the hallway toward my room. But instead of going to
bed, I go to the kitchen. The window in the kitchen is closed and
all I hear is the hum of the refrigerator in the dark. I walk
straight to the back door and unlock it. There is no real plan in my
head; I just want to be outside. I pull the wooden door open and
again feel the breeze like a living thing caress me. I unlock the
screen door and step out onto the peeling rust-red paint of the top
step, sure that I am the only person awake in the world.
As I walk across the lawn in my
bare feet and underwear the longer blades of grass tickle my ankles.
I stand on the seawall for a second, smelling the creosote used to
waterproof the wood. Pegasus is high overhead and as I look at him a
shooting star blazes through his belly and off into nothingness. I
stare at the sky, stars filling my eyes, the sound of the waves
filling my ears. I step down to the sand and it is still warm from
the day’s sunshine. I stop where the sand and water meet,
wind-driven waves rubbing against my ankles and calves like a cat. I
look to the horizon and find my constellation—Scorpio—and I am
intensely aware of each star in it. Something about the night has
made the stars stand out from the black background. It is as if they
are hurtling through space right at me.
I stagger a bit with the
surging water pushing and pulling at my legs and the stars singing
in my head. I feel like I am what joins them together. This night, I
am all that joins them together. I imagine that if I weren’t here
the stars would drift away.
I stay that way for a long
time, letting the stars etch themselves into my mind.
The breeze blows a little
stronger, sending ripples of tiredness through my head and a chill
over my skin. I go back inside quietly and go to bed.

The next morning I woke up with
Jerry and we went down to the water to watch Uncle Vince set up the
lines.
While he was out in the bay I
lifted a frozen chicken neck from its yellow Styrofoam tray and tied
it to the end of a line. Jerry watched closely but didn’t say
anything. I picked up the stick and walked down the incline of the
beach to the row of cinder blocks that marked the end of the
property.
I walked out into the water and
drove the broken end of the broomstick into the bottom, twisting as
I did. The sound of the sand grating against the stick came up to
me, magnified by the wood.
As I pulled the chicken neck
through the water toward me it left a trail of oily rainbows that
burst silently to the surface. I grabbed the string about a foot
from the end and let the chicken dangle, dripping in the air. I
looked to make sure it was tied on securely. Satisfied, I threw it
out as far as the string would let it fly. Before it even splashed
in the water I turned and headed back to the beach.
"What do you think you’re
doing?" Jerry asked.
"I’m gonna catch a crab,
dummy," I answered.
"You’re not allowed."
"Try to stop me," I said,
picking up a crab net.
Uncle Vince was sorting through
the chicken necks, trying to find the meatiest ones. But I could
tell he had one eye cast my way as I walked out into the water, net
in hand.
When I thought the chicken neck
had been on the bottom long enough for a crab to find it I took the
string in my left hand where it was tied to the stick. I slowly
started walking next to the line, letting it run out over my open
hand. I stopped to see if I could tell by the feel of the line
whether there was a crab nibbling at the chicken on the other end.
I couldn’t.
As I stood motionless in the
water, trying to see down through the green to the chicken on the
bottom three feet below, a seagull wheeled out of the low morning
sun and its shadow glided silently over my skin. I had the feeling
it had come to watch me. I turned my head to follow its flight and
saw Jerry and Uncle Vince on the shore, staring out at me.
I pivoted back to the business
at hand and gently pulled the chicken up off the bottom just an
inch. When I did, there was a tug on the line that was unmistakable.
There was a crab claiming the chicken as his own, trying to pull it
out to deeper water. I let the bait sink back and then stood
perfectly still. A wind snuck by and covered my skin with goose
bumps. I forced myself to count to ten and then gave the line
another little tug.
Again, the line jerked tight.
It was still there.
As I waited, I replayed the
scene in my head—Uncle Vince scooping up the bait with his net the
day before. Then I held my breath and stabbed my net down into the
water where I hoped the chicken and my crab were. As I raised the
net up out of the bay to look inside, before the net even broke the
surface I felt its weight.
As I lifted the aluminum and
mesh net out of the green, I looked in and there it was. Big and
beautiful and mine.
It wasn’t a mudder, but it was
definitely a keeper. I let the bait sink back down and turned to put
my crab in the basket. Jerry came over to look and Uncle Vince took
a peek before I dumped it in—the first crab of the day.
"That’s a nice one," he said.
"Why don’t you show your brother how to do that?"

We drove home on a Sunday
night. I was spent, so I climbed into the back-back and leaned a
pillow up against the inside of the tailgate. I lay flat, looking up
through the glass and into the darkness. Jerry was sprawled across
the middle seat, asleep. My parents’ voices floated back to me from
the front seat, but not their actual words. The sounds and
vibrations of the engine and the wheels came up through the car and
into my body. But my thoughts were somewhere else. We were on a dark
road that ran along the Delaware River and the sky was thick with
stars.
They were shining for me again,
and again I felt connected to them—like they needed me to keep them
in place. I felt somehow bigger than I had just a week earlier—like
there was more of me. My dream and my crab and my night in the water
and the stars stretched me out. I stared up out of that window for
as long as I could keep my eyes open, not wanting to blink, not
wanting the stars to spin away and be gone. I didn’t want anything
to chase away the feeling I had of flying in the stars. And I
drifted off to sleep as I floated up to meet them.
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