Mr. Gustafson had us all preparing for Christmas. There was a great confusion about this, because we were also preparing for Hanukkah and Chinese New Year and Diwali and something in Korea, but the dates weren’t the same and we all knew we were really preparing for Christmas without being able to say it. Everything was red and green and said Happy Holidays. This was our last year of grades that didn’t matter, so we were still free to work on art projects.
I was working on a paper-mache reindeer with Shalini, who was from New Delhi, so we were making it a Diwali reindeer, even though Diwali had already passed a month ago on November 3. It was a different date every year according to the moon.
Add more water to the paste, Shalini said. She was bossy.
Our reindeer was a goddess named Lakshmi Rudolph and wore a hat we were going to paint gold. She was going to make everyone rich and beautiful whether the other reindeer allowed it or not. She would still have a red nose but maybe not any horns, which were difficult anyway in paper-mache.
Shalini had a scarf that was gold, and I was intensely jealous. She had delicious lunches in Tupperware from home, but I had to eat the school lunch. Tater tots almost every day, steamed vegetables, and some kind of meat with gravy, even though I didn’t like meat. I was going to be a vegetarian like Shalini when I got older, and I never ate fish.
Shalini was also allowed to wear perfume, which my mother said was ridiculous for twelve-year-olds.
Let me smell your wrists, I said.
You always ask for that.
I like it.
She lifted a wrist for me. Her smooth, beautiful brown arm, and I put my nose against her wrist and closed my eyes and breathed in another world. Things I couldn’t name, spicy and sweet.
Your mother should let you wear perfume.
She won’t.
Let’s keep moving, Caitlin and Shalini, Mr. Gustafson said. Rudolph has no legs.
Lakshmi Rudolph, I said, but Mr. Gustafson had already moved on to the sleigh.
Shalini scrunched her nose to make a pig face. She always said Mr. Gustafson looked like a pig, and it’s true the end of his nose did seem cut short a bit, so you could see the dark holes of his nostrils. But every teacher in school was named after an animal. Mr. Callahan was named badger, Miss Martinez was called turtle. None of them were named after fish.
Lakshmi Rudolph had a thin chest still, and bare wire legs, but her head and crown looked good, and her butt and small tail, which we were going to paint white at the tip. Shalini was working on the ribs.
Tell me more about your family, I said.
You always ask about my family.
Tell me more about the wedding, with two elephants and many days and hundreds of people.
That was in India. You should come to my house for a sleepover.
Yay!
Okay. I’ll ask my mother.
~ ~ ~
There was almost no snow left outside. Everything soaked, every patch of lawn swelled, slush in the gutters, ribbons of black. Even the pavement and buildings looked fat with water. Clouds bending downward, gray and darker gray, nothing white. I was one of the only walkers. Everyone drove.
East Yesler Way didn’t seem like it was in a city. Lined with two-story apartment complexes, with front yards that looked like backyards, some of them littered with plastic toys and laundry and thrown-away furniture but most looking tidy enough behind their chain-link fences. Smokers standing in the cold, watching me pass. Maybe it did look like a city. Just not downtown, even though we were close.
Almost every day someone was moving in or out. And they could be anyone, any race or age, with or without kids. Like one big motel, that entire long street, built for no one’s dream. I didn’t like East Yesler Way because no one belonged, but for some reason I never walked down one of the other streets. I had a pathway, a route, as unthinking as the sharks that circled like monks. I felt safe, at least, in my big jacket, and no one bothered me, which I find amazing when I look back on it now. I Google the street and see the crime rate at three times the national average, car theft almost six times higher. I think of my mother and the teachers at school letting me walk that route every day, and I’m filled with a rage that will never go away because it comes from some hollow vertigo unfinished. I feel dizzy with fear for my former self, and how can that be? I’m here now. I’m safe. I have a job. I’m thirty-two years old. I live in a better section of town. I should forgive and forget.
The only thing that kept me moving along that street each afternoon was the blue at the end, the sea visible because we were on a hill. That blue promised the aquarium. A gauntlet leading to a sanctuary. I could have stayed in an after-school program, but it was my choice to visit the fish. They were emissaries sent from a larger world. They were the same as possibility, a kind of promise.
When I crossed over the freeway, downtown began. The hill slanting downward, large buildings shaped like wedges burrowed into the hill, hiding in their own caves. Hunched for safety, as if something enormous swam in the skies above. One brave skyscraper at the end with a pointy top, trying not to look soft. The entire city a colony like coral, made of an endless network of small chambers. I imagined each room a polyp, a creature without a spine, tentacled mouth looking up toward the sky, finding a place to sit and excreting its exoskeleton, a thin layer of concrete, to attach itself here forever, at each full moon waving its tentacles upward and releasing gametes, fairy creatures made of light, each of them a new room floating through the air, looking for a place to build itself.
And so the city would grow without end, but why here? This was no Bali or Belize. Cold, raining all the time, windy, overcast, and dark. Seattle never made sense to me. We had orcas, and beautiful islands I had never seen, called the San Juans, but why the city?
I walked along the ferry terminal, the large green and white ferries that went to these islands, and I wished my mother was free and had money and we could ride north on the water. We would never stop but would just keep voyaging all over the world, across to Japan and down to the Philippines, from island to island, learning to dive, visiting every reef.
I passed fireboats and private yachts, the same private yachts that were always at the dock, never used, always waiting, owned by people with money who never left either, caught somewhere in the city. The waterfront park and then the aquarium. I had a yearly pass, but they all recognized me here and I never had to show it. I just walked in, as if it were my home.
I found him at the darkest tank, in a corner, alone, peering through what could have been a window to the stars, endless black and cold and only a few points of light. Hung in this void like a small constellation, the ghost pipefish, impossible.
Like a leaf giving birth to stars, I said, whispering, as if any sound might make the fish vanish.
Yes, the old man whispered back. Exactly that. I couldn’t have said it better myself. Sometimes I can’t believe you’re only twelve. You should become an ichthyologist. This is who you are.
Body of small green leaves, veined, very thin, its fins painted in light cast from elsewhere, but from his eye out his long snout, an eruption of galaxies without foreign source, born in the fish itself. An opening in the small fabric of the world, a place to fall into endlessly.