The sky, the sea, the dog The big sky laps the wooden planks,
string bean poles hold nothing but themselves, sticking out like a ratted wall on both sides, it and its reflection. The sea is something spiritual to me, said the round woman, on the dark-sand beach. The dog we watch with a wary eye is magical because he swims and drifts between the wall, where he leaps from pole to pole and our dark beach, and sniffs at our charred fire, and when we wake the kelong is at sea, and seems a fence, a fence that strangely moved in the deep night, and loomed in front of me. We were fevered with the blankets' cold, and the rain's cold, and so we left that place dripping, sandy plastic bags on our sore bums, on rusty mountain bikes, and never saw the floating dog again. By Judith Huang QLRS Vol. 11 No. 1 Jan 2012_____
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