Mosaic | Page 40

ABALONE CAN’T LIVE OUT OF WATER By: Sarah Hudson - Barbara Bretting Fiction Runner-Up R iley lifted her face skyward in the water, glancing through the stalks of giant kelp at the glow of the midday sun whose rays were like the distant beacon of a lighthouse lost to a foggy night. She had glided toward the ocean floor, parallel with the kelp fronds as she followed them into the murky depths. The deep entanglement of rubbery bulbs, from which hundreds of deep sepia blades swayed, extending themselves out and moving in tandem with the slight lull of the ocean water, was difficult for Riley to swim through. She had to maneuver herself like a seal, rolling her body and slipping past the gnarled cords, meanwhile taking care not to get caught in any of the particularly thick bundles. Her mesh bag was tucked away in a pocket of her wetsuit, and she had a knife cinched to the side of her calf just in case she did become caught. Riley reached the holdfasts, where the kelp trunks were rooted beneath the sand, just twenty feet below the surface. She quickly scanned the area; to her left were basaltic formations, encrusted with barnacles and teeming with the luring tentacles of anemones that clung to the rocky sides. A sea star layered in maroon armor was suctioned in a crevice, and a small school of sand dollar perch darted past. Riley had to go back up for air, so she coiled her legs and sprung herself toward the surface, where she emerged with her mouth agape and sucked in the salty 35 air. She was glad to see th