PERSPECTIVES Page Three MOMENT IN LONELINESS ... Maizie Gzsakoff -KAREN and Arthur walked down the pier together, but Karen kept a little behind Arthur so that she could run to the side and look over at the whitened outlines of dead fish in the harbor mud or let her eyes follow the swoop of the gulls around the thin masts of the fishing-boats. Their steps made hollow sounds on the pier-boards. As her steps stopped for moments or quickened as she looked about her, the sounds under Arthur's heels became angrier and an- grier. They advanced to the end of the pier, she trailing behind him with eyes narrowed in intensity, absorbing the shape of the sloops, the gulls, the long- coated fishermen, 'til finally the sound of his heels was loud enough to make her notice their loudness and she closed her eyes a second, then ran to catch up with him, taking his hand. "I'm sorry I'mslow," she said. "That's all right, kid," he said grin- ning. "Just that it's nice to have you with me." The warmth of his'- smile and his voice heartened Karen and relieved the moment of apprehension she had felt at the quickening rising noise of his step. This time, at least, he was not really angry. She kissed him for it quickly on the cheek and his tense face relaxed into contentment. "The rest of the afternoon will be nice," he said. "There's lots of fish out here and it'll be nice for you watching the boats. If they start coming in easy, you might pull in a few yourself again." He knew, though, that she lost interest quickly in watching for the bob of the cork on the water. Before they'd come here she had spent a week with him, fishing intensely, concentrating on it, baiting the hook herself with the wrig- gly, boody sand-worms and cursing with him at the disappointment of in- edible bagalls circle-eyed and heavy on the hook, And once she had watched with wide eyes when he pulled a long writhing eel into the boat. He had loved to watch her as deep in it as he was, close to his thoughts. Most of all he had loved to teach her the knacks of winding line, 8f fastening cork, all the tricks he had learned so painstakingly in the high-school days when he'd felt he could not face the stuffy room, the rasping teacher and his own incompe- tence, but had instead run wild-winged on the subway up to City Island for the freedom of the rowboat in the wide bay, blue above and blue about, a catch to be thrown back for secrecy, and the hand-wa hing ritual to scrub off the smell of the sand-worms. But since that one week where she had been truly involved in the essence of fishing she had lost interest quickly, particularly here where there was so much else she wanted to do, to see, to watch and im- press on her quick mind, as if having once absorbed the joys and bitternesses of the experience completely she was done with it, though it was still a plea- sure to him. Nevertheless he thought it would be a nice afternoon and a nicer night if she, his wife, kept so close to him as to kiss him out here again. He kept holding her hand, slowing his steps to hers. The gulls came shrieking in around the pier following the fishing-boats. The slant sun hit their wings, marking white, bright patches against the blue sky, swift and swoop in changing line. The gulls shrieked and swirled about the boats, hovering over the piles of silver mackerel, the glaring brightnesses of whiting,,the dull flatness of flounder, The fishermen stood on the wet fish decks in their oilskins, shouting at the dock and the gulls and each other, sloshing through the limp high-piled fish. Even before the boats were tied to the pier, they began to throw out the bad fish and prepare for the unloading. A squid sailed squashly through the air landing with a squish in the dirty port water and coming tc the top to float, its tentacles waving. A gull dived for it and swooped up again in rejection, yel- low legs flat against white chest. Karen and Arthur settled themselves on the side of the pier where the boats were coming in. Karen watched him seriously as he undid the rod and pulled out the line with a long stretch of his arm and added the hooks and a small piece of pier-dirty squid for bait and dropped it over the side. He worked quickly and eagerly and Karen loved to see him thus, absorbed and competent, sure of himself, the tall muscular body in action. She was happy to be his wife then, she thought, and sat down beside him, her legs around one of the pier- posts and hanging over the side. He looked up from his exploration of turned the thing over in his hand. "Say, they say this stuff makes good bait. Did you want it for anything or do you mind if I break it up?" The girl lost interest in the shell. "Sure, go ahead," she said and turned back to lean on the post and stare at the boats. Finally the men threw their thick green-coated rope cable from the pier on to the deck, then jumped to the boat from the water-logged ladder, They waved casual goodbyes as thq engine started, and went inside to the cabin, brushing the dampness from their clothes. The worn boat chugged off, sounds of laughter coming from the yellow-warm-lighted windows sur- rounded by the first darkness of the night. For afternoon had turned to late aft- ernoon and evening while they had been it they turned their silver bellies up and the fins shone through the oily boat- water. Karen caught her breath at the silver flashes. Arthur jerked at his line with a gut- teral explosion of breath and a thick line of silver traced back and forth in the water. "Got him!" he said, and reeled the line in half way, the fis squirming on the end of it. "Grab it and pull him in!" Arthur said, excitedly. Karen brought the line on to the pier and Arthur shook the fish from the hook. It trembled and squirmed on the dock, beating the wood with its tail and curving itself into frantic tight-strung bows. Karen took the fish in her hands and felt its wet bending coldness. "Pretty small," Arthur said. "We can get better ones." He threw the line in again. Expertly and subtly he bounced the bait and the swiftly circling lines of green and black raced for it, hit it and passed it. It was hard to see them in the dark water, but every now and then the curving swimming mass would stand out in swift clarity. The silver flashes of light multiplied around the bait. Ar- thur pulled up another, grabbed the line himself and shook it off. He cut the tail from the first mackerel, and the bloody miniature guts began to ooze out. Ar- thur baited the hook with the silver tail. He threw the line in again and the fish swarmed and swooped after its dips and bobs. "They're all cannibals," he said "Look at them go after that!" The second fish beat a tortured tail- less tattoo on the dock. "Baitig them with their own beauty," said Karen, "Hardly seems fair." "Don't worry about them," Arthur said. "Look there's another one' We can have some supper tonight, hon'." He looked over at her a minute, his eyes teasing, yet not quite frank. "Glad you. married me?" he asked and, leaning over, peck-bit her cheek. He threw the line without waiting for an answer, but he left her with the question unsettled in the air. "Sure thing, sweet," she said finally, but the delay made the flippancy a frightening - thing, to her as well as to him. Panic darted in her like thin fish swooping. Off to the right where the Cape curved in, the lighthouse began its steady beat of red flashes and the evening seemed to blacken all at once. The tide had gone out, leaving the town end of the pier standing on long skeleton legs in the sand. The lights of the town were beginning to go on, each light seeming to add to the darkness around it. When the moon caine round- ly out over the shacks at the end of the piers, the day had fully darkened and was gone. The wooden salt-encrusted buildings started right at the water's edge, so that the whole town, looked as though it had been washed up cas- ually by the water and left to dry and whiten on the beach. The piers stretched long to the town, almost con- verging at the land-end. They were alone on the widest part of the angle, suspended at the periphery, separate and secret and apart from all others. The large anchored boats stirred silent- ly. One moon-eyed gull flew from above them across through the masts to where, on the other pier, the rows of shadow gulls kept silent watch. It scrambled for a foot-hold on the roof, then too was silent. In the green water the silver fish swam. Karen felt as though her very pores were opening to take it in, to remember, to understand. "Now the night wind lives whistling in my shell," she thought, remembering. "In the heart's place and singing in the skull; Beauty the wolf has eatea out my soul and left me' empty." Karen shuddered slightly. The poet was wrong, she (Continued on Page 4) the water. "You're beautiful," he said, "in those dirty old blue jeans and that shirt." He leaned over boyishly. "I love you," he whispered, blowing in her ear. "Let's go home and go to bed." She laughed and kissed him lightly again, then he turned back to watching the fish and she, after, to watch the un- loading. There were two sloops at the dock now. In the one nearest them, the Port- uguese fishermen had silver mackerel, piled shining sun-brightened on the deck. They began to shovel fish into the baskets and, dull and odorous, they swayed up past Karen to the barrels on the deck. "Hy-yah!" the moustached fisherman shouted at her, and threw up something that had been pulled in with the mack- erel. The delicate shell landed near her and she leaned for it. Holding it up she yelled, "Thanks a lot!" to the men in the boat. Arthur looked up. "What. was that?" he asked. She showed him the shell. "He threw this up," she said. "It's a scallop," he decided. "You can tell by the wavy edges." She looked at it again. "It's nice, isn't it, Art;" she said, "the way it's so per- fectly done with the two halves fitting so tight against each other, I mean." "Yeah, sure," he said. "It's'nice." He sitting there on the pier. The mists were coming in from the sea, and the boats, their masts standing lonesome on the deserted decks, went like shadows into the mistiness. The long row of gulls sitting on the opposite pier were quiet as shadows, dark against the darkening sky. Occasionally one bird would cry aloud and swoop down from the roof to the water. They passed and repassed in front of her, squawking their cries, swooping and reswooping. "Arthur," she said, suddenly chilled, pulling at his jacket. "How long do you want to stay?" He hardly looked up. "Say, you must be getting cold. I hadn't thought," he said. "Just let me try the other end, huh? They say it's a cinch to catch tink- er mackerel this time of night." He jumped up and ran down to the ocean end of the pier. He threw his line be- tween the anchorings of two large slow- stirring boats. "Say, come and look, Karen," he said. "There are millions of them, and they're beauties!" She looked into the shadowed water and saw the green thin fish, speckled with black dots. "A mess of them cooked up in butter would be nice, eh? Arthur said. He dangled the line among them, and they swarmed about the bait, hit- ting at it in short quick bites. Like kisses, Karen thought. When they darted for