"Great Lakes Octopus" by Brian Lintner
(Inspired
by the Arowhon Writing Retreat in Algonquin Park)
The Great Lakes Octopus – ten tentacles, because "ten" is in tentacles. None have ever been caught, but they have been spotted, usually at dawn or late dusk, feeding. A tentacle is an occasional sight on small placid lakes, far from shore, far from people. The first signs are present are the ripples, created as the tentacle breaks the water surface from below. A long black arm, as though stretching from a nap, reaching skyward. Two long pincers at the end of the tentacle flex and snap at the air. A reflex? The tentacle may sway for moments, longer if you’re lucky, silently slip back beneath the surface. Another ripple.
With
patience, the octopus tentacle can be spotted resurfacing elsewhere, repeating
the process. Stretch, snap, dip.
It is
believed they feed on medium sized fish. But if hungry enough, they will near
the shore and snack on leeches, frogs, or occasional ducklings.
***
This was my
first writer’s retreat. I was there to kill two birds with one stone; to learn
how to better tell stories and depart the mundane cycle of routine.
I drove from
the city wasteland until the tarmac was no longer flat. Small lakes and forests
were the boundaries of the road. I arrived at the destination sign that said
‘turn here.’ The laneway was gravel and dust, a ribbon of tight hilly turns
amid the cathedral of conifers and maples.
Was I in the
right place? It was too nice.
Long drives
create full bladders, and I wondered if I took ten paces into the bush to
relieve myself, would I lose sight of the beaten path? People have been lost
for days, only meters from the main trail. Panic, dehydration, eventual death. Did
Stephen King have eyes in the forest that could spot me? Would Hercule Poirot
stand over my mosquito bitten lumpy carcass, disembowelled by predators and
raptors, and find the missing clue? Lunatic silliness. I could wait for the loo
until I arrived. A sign said the hotel was around the corner, past the big tree,
dead ahead.
At the car
park, I knuckle-rubbed the glare of the drive from my eyes. I could hear the
quiet of remoteness. Eerily quiet, save for the buzz of mosquitoes and
occasional squawking water fowl.
***
At dinner, I met
the other writers. The evening was full of enlightened chatter as they spoke of
their stories, themselves, titillations and imaginations. Would my titillating
imagination compare? Could I flock with these birds of a feather?
I told my
fellow writers of the Colossal Great Lakes Octopus that occupy the lake water
next to our cabins. Their tree limb tentacles come with one evolutionary
difference to their smaller cousins; their snapping phalanges have developed
into spiney-spike beak-claws. Their favoured meals, rumours of course, are monster
sturgeon. However, when foraging, they are capable of coming close to shore to
snatch turtles, dogs, or misbehaving children.
I asked them if
they had noticed any children running about.
There was a
breath-beat of unanswered thought.
***
After this richness
of supper and company, I strolled beyond the trail to the water’s edge, to the guest
dock, beside the staff dock, where anyone can borrow a canoe. By now, it was night.
The air was filled with humid earthy dew and the haze of distant fires. The
forest silhouette and blue-purple horizon shimmied on the flatness of lake.
Tranquility.
Was that a
ripple?
Voices and
someone with a headlamp approached the staff dock. They chattered. Two young
men and a woman. They removed a canoe from the storage rack. There were hollow bumps
and thumps as it was dragged across the lawn. It scratched the shoreline as they
slid it into the calm water.
They loaded
themselves into the canoe. By the amount of topsy-turvying going on, I wondered
about their skill.
I watched the
woman step into the middle seat and lean on the gunnels for support. The canoe
dipped to the tipping point.
The fellow
with the headlamp sat in the back. He said to the fellow at the front, “Turn
left, now right…”
I’d
understood that the rear seat in a canoe was the steerage control. Those kids
must have a new way of doing it.
I watched them
zig-zag almost out of sight. I saw the flicker of a lighter, a couple of times.
Their laughter became quieter. Tranquility once again.
Splosh! Snap snap!
Splashes. Ripples. Then, a creepy quiet.
***
The next morning,
I returned from breakfast and crossed paths with a fellow guest, a hiker, not a
writer. She told me her name was Agatha. Her mosquito net head-covering topped
a mop of white hair, her false teeth aligned looked new, not stained by tea or nubbed
with age. With her walking sticks and gloves, it was obvious she was on an
exercise mission. We paused at the bridge adjacent to the cabins and looked out
to the water, where there was a ripple.
She pointed
and said with delight, “A crane!”
“Yes, a crane.”
I lowered my voice and asked, “Have you ever heard about the Great Lakes
Octopus?”
She smiled, a
gentle smile, and said “Oh, I’m not concerned about the octopus. It fed well
last night. Besides, I don’t have any children … anymore.”
Like an
apparition, Agatha disappeared into the woods.
***
Brian Lintner is a veteran and former corporate guy who loves
good stories and word salads. He and his tolerant wife of 37 years have dragged
their kids around Canada and overseas, and now live somewhere in the armpit of
the Golden Horseshoe. When not writing, he is known to paint (www.zendenart.ca) and continues to pluck away at his ukulele, or
occasionally babysit the grandkids.
For information about upcoming writing retreats, see here {and scroll down; there's usually more than one coming up}.
See Brian Henry’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.
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