
ExmoorJane tagged me the other day to produce a 'memory.' I remonstrated, protesting that I had far too many memories; how could I pick just one? Then I remembered that I did have one that was already written up. It is in the form of a story but the events in it, the found crab and the lost comb, are completely true. Make of it what you will.
******
"I could tell you a story." I smiled, sweetly. Better than facing hordes of kids in the café.
"Not if it's a love story, Fennie, like most of your stories are." Helen yawned, a bored sort of yawn.
"No," I said. "This one isn't. And then, perhaps it is, in a kind of a way. It’s a true story, too. Anyway it's about a crab……and Karma."
"A what and what?"
"A crab….and Karma - that's how what happens to you in this life depends on how you’ve treated the world. Life gives you back what you give it."
She pulled her sunglasses down from the thick black hair on top of her head. "I'm sitting comfortably," she whispered, doubtfully.
And so I began.
"As you know we were staying with Charlotte in Brittany last summer. Her house is only about five minutes walk from this lovely little fishing port. There's a superb beach as well. Must be a mile long - beautiful yellow sand, shelving gently.
“Charlotte’s son-in-law Karim was there as well. He’s the one who spends all his time
fishing for shrimps."
"Shouldn't one shrimp for shrimps?" asked Helen, who can be irritatingly facetious at times.
"At low tide a veritable army of men - I guess women are far too sensible to enjoy this sort of thing - appears on the beach, wading out knee deep on the sands with a long pole thing from which hangs a kind of net. This disturbs the little grey shrimps that feed in the shallow water and they fly up into the net."
"But I thought this was a story about a crab?"
"It is! You see it's not only shrimps that fill the net. Sometimes you find an occasional crab."
"At last, we're getting somewhere," murmured Helen. "Now all we need is the Karma."
"One evening it was my turn to prepare supper. Karim had been out as usual and had helpfully deposited his shrimp catch in the kitchen sink. Now once out of the sea these little beasties die rapidly and unless they are cooked directly they go off and make a terrible smell. At the very least therefore I would have to serve the shrimps as a starter.
"But the problem with eating shrimps everyday is that you quickly run out of ideas of how to serve them. What could I do? But then I remembered we had not yet had shrimps with mayonnaise and that seemed a serviceable idea.
"I opened the fridge. There was no mayonnaise of course - but there were eggs, and we had oil and …..
“And.....a crab?”
“No - not quite! Well, the eggs turned out to be hard-boiled - don’t ask - and so I had to rush down to the supermarket to buy some. And when I came back there he was - in the sink - he had emerged from the shrimps.”
Helen rolled her eyes.
"The crab I mean! There he was - a little green fellow with eyes on stalks sidling across the forest of shrimps in the sink. They – that is the shrimps - had long since expired in their tap water bath, but he – if it was indeed a he, for I presume crabs come in more than one gender - was very much alive-o. I picked him out of the water and set him on the edge of the sink. His eyes swivelled maliciously as he scuttled about his little corner.
"He was tiny - about the size of a 10 penny piece – all legs and jaws and claws and feelers - a miniature masterpiece of arthropodic engineering. 'Help,' he seemed to say, and he fell backwards into the shrimps again.
"But what can you do with a baby crab with swivelling eyes? To consign him live to the boiling water I had prepared for the dead shrimps was something I could not do. Equally, I could not simply throw him out of the window or into the bin. Life, where possible, must be preserved after all – even that of inedible baby crabs.
"So there was no alternative, good follower of the Buddhist principle that I am, but to wrap him in some kitchen towel, get into the car again and drive him down to the sea.
I sneaked out of the house, not daring to admit that supper would be even later than it already was owing to my one woman mission to rescue a crab.
"I parked the car at the port - by now it was quite dark - and there, standing on the arm of the port jetty, with the wind whistling about my ears and the sea all turbulent below, I unwrapped the little fellow. He climbed over my hand and gripped my finger with his tiny claws.
"Maybe, I reflected, he had become enamoured of his recent life among the shrimps, or maybe he had just been fascinated to watch me at work in the kitchen. Maybe, he had enjoyed being chauffeured through the evening streets. Whatever it was, he was refusing to let go of my finger. I had pictured an appropriately sentimental parting, but in the end I just had to shake him off. He sailed away on the wind, back to his dark sea home far below.
"Will he, I thought as I drove home, now be telling lesser crabs about his life among the humans? Will he, as an old crab, ‘strip his sleeve and show his scars…remembering with advantages' - as Shakespeare puts it - the deeds he did that day? Will he be caught again and from another kitchen, some years in the future, confidently expect another safe return to the sea? Or will his life end in cruel and banal fashion as dinner for a seagull or codfish?"
I paused.
"You turn sentimentality into an art form, Fennie," said Helen cynically. I suppose now you will be telling me that saving this crab boosted your Karma credits and that now one day you will win the Lottery, or some such."
"But that's the funny thing. We joke about such coincidences but one really happened, Helen. The day before I had been swimming and I'd taken along a little blue plastic hair comb in my beach bag. It's not special or valuable but it is a very odd design. I've never seen another one remotely like it. And I've had it quite a long time. So when it went missing I was vexed. I wasn't exactly sure where I'd lost it. Maybe on the beach, maybe in the house, maybe in-between. But I thought it would turn up.
"But the day after the crab incident, I was walking along the beach, right at the water's edge. The waves were washing my feet. I told you it's a long beach - about a mile long and I was a long way past the spot where we usually swim. But just then, suddenly for some reason, something made me look down. And there in the surf at my feet was my little blue comb, just washing in on the tide.
"I picked it up, hardly believing my eyes. Incredible, I thought, is that coincidence or Karma or what?"
For a moment Helen was silent.



