PseudoPod 1016: Flash on the Borderlands LXXVI (76): Illume the Kingdom of the Drowned
Show Notes
Far from the frenzy
Of the frantic world above
Two beneath the blue
Could even fall in love
Links:
From the author of ‘Sirens Chasing Sirens’: I wrote this story with the original Greek myth in mind. I wondered how sirens themselves felt about the role they played. As a young queer person I found their plight incredibly compelling. I imagined how gay sirens might live in modern times and the rest suddenly flew out of me like a song.
Left By The Tide
By Edward E. Schiff
Were it not for that four-inch scar upon my forehead, I would have thought it a nightmare — some ghastly hallucination, even though it happened in broad daylight. But there is that scar, which mars my features for life, tangible and terrible evidence to prove that I did not dream it.
I had gone down to the beach with the rising sun, but I was the only one there. None of the other guests from the hotel had yet come down to take their early morning plunge. A charity affair that did not break up till 3 o’clock that morning kept them abed. So I was alone upon that sun-drenched stretch of sand.
The tide was low and I had to walk some hundred yards before I was waist-deep and breasting the invigorating waters of old ocean. I swam out at once to a pile of rocks, a good quarter of a mile from the shore, and climbed out upon them. Now, at low tide, they formed a nearly circular, barnacle- and weed-covered island, about fifty feet in diameter and rising only a few feet above the waters. After resting a few minutes I clambered over the jagged stones toward the center, where there was a depression about six or seven feet deep and about the same width, and where the retreating waters sometimes left strange denizens of the deep, which could be observed under ideal conditions.
Just before I reached the little pool, I thrilled to the sound of a splash of a heavy body. The tide had left something there with a vengeance, I thought gleefully, and I hastened forward to see what it was. (Continue Reading…)
