Inspired by The house at Cape May Point, and how it felt. |
To the north, three jetties are thrashed for attempting to slow nature’s will. (An old man once caught an eight-foot mako in the trough between the first two.) Another hundred feet of shoreline taken this year. At the southern most tip, a ghost house haunted by the absence of dwellers, stands alone on a crest of land where the ocean and bay conspire in a closing arc. Atop the house, a copper cupola is crusted in blue tarnish and crowned with a thrashing marlin weathervane, the western pointer bent down and to the side. The wood siding has warped and curled to expose ribs and wiring. Two balconies connect with a walkway that sags and spills seaward, the rail posts jut like crooked teeth in an ugly smile. Sheets hang as lids to conceal the soulless insides behind broken windows that blindly stare at a point where the neighbor house went under. Green shafts break the sandy yard to fester in purple berry flowers and the lone tree is wedge shaped from the restless wind, but the backyard has eroded to a small, precarious cliff. The house turns colorless in the fading light, awaiting some final storm in early Spring. With no witness, the waves will slash at the foundation and swallow the house in a shift, slide and sudden disappearance. |