The London Magazine

Tsunami-

(Kho Phra Thong, 2004)

- George Tardios

We realise we are going to die.

A rushing roar. Waves rise like hooded cobras Chase our panic barefoot through sand As we attempt to outpace time.

Scarring screams punch us forward People behind are clawed mid-wail by cancerous water.

Leaping at sheer hillsides Pull ourselves clear on creepers. ‘Is this all there is?’ Broken glass scratches hearts. ‘A nuclear sub must have exploded!’

Though daytime, it feels dark. Sea drowns the island Waves climb up our hill Throats blocked, we watch a liquid world expand.

Sea-gypsies tie themselves to trees Family groups shrink closer The hill sinks lower, twenty feet remain. ‘Please look after my daughter for me…’ Exhausted gasps - fractured vision breaks daughter into three. Lost monkeys encircle us like Buddhas.

Thunder of another wave. Shrieks trail to silence We are alone

Though bound by blood, each remains separate. Having climbed inside ourselves We are going to die. And there are no last words.

As if called Everyone looks up into a velvet sea-blue sky Hearing each others minds.

At first, automatic whispers stir the air Then unashamedl­y loudly We beg for help.

But nothing is lost forever. Souls are rising.

N.B.

Sea-gypsies – Thai or Burmese families that live from small-scale subsistenc­e fishing. More at home on sea than on land, they sail their flimsy craft from one small uninhabite­d island to another. They are recognised as experts on sea-lore.

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