y66 Posted February 23, 2011 Report Share Posted February 23, 2011 A Day at the Beach by Peter Schmitt If he had been paying more attentionto whatever my mother was sayingfrom under her hat beneath the umbrella, or watching more closely over my brother,off playing somewhere with his shovel and pail,or me, idly tracing my name in the sand, if he hadn't had that faraway look,gazing out to where the freighters crawled alongthe horizon – so that when he suddenly pushed up and off, sand in his wake, visortaking wing behind him, you could believe,as he churned toward the glassy water, that it had just come to him to chuck it all,this whole idea of family, and makefor those southbound freighters and the islands – then he might have never seen the arm heaved up,the lifeguards running just as my fatherwas lifting the old man out of the surf and bearing him ashore, the blue recedingfrom his cramped limbs. And as a crowd closed aroundthe gasping figure struggling to his knees, my father turned back to us – sheepishly,almost, back to the endless vigilanceof husband and of father, which was all he had ever asked for in the first place. from Hazard Duty. © Copper Beach Press, 1995. Reprinted with permission at The Writer's Almanac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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