The ocean shone under the sunlight,
Every sparkle a glimmering gold,
A buried treasure,
A captain’s cap.
Reflection,
Refraction,
Everything sailed within sight.
Enamored and enchanted,
Not by siren’s song, but by thirst,
He dives headlong into the deep,
Heedless of ship and crew.
The brine quenches nothing.
He struggles to plunge further,
The seawater drags him, drugs him,
It clutches him and damns him further and further below,
His thirst tinging, infecting, infiltrating every thought, every moment.
The sky had long fallen, the sparkles without sun, the gold and prestige far on the horizon.
The sea toiled in anguish, the waves wailing in turmoil, cutting like steel, striking like iron.
The ship, long abandoned, saw nothing through the storm.
Nothing remained for him.
Faced only with black, he sluggishly tosses and turns, reaching for starlight.
A shrieking cacophony of chains and rust pierces him.
A hook and chain, taut with tension, creaks for but a moment.
Reflection.
Refraction.
It pulls.
A thrashing.
A threshing.
And the sea silenced.
