The Only Social Part of the Squid
is the indigestible triangular beak in a kaleidoscope
with other beaks in the belly of a sperm whale.
Squid just prefer solitude. But here we are, wearing
squid headpieces, long iridescent tentacles down
to our jeans, the two of us a rare squid family.
My daughter hops over to two un-cephalopod-ed girls
for hide and seek, and I strike up with their mother:
The gorgeous new jellyfish exhibit! It’s like graceful
entrails in slow motion. It’s sunset hair. She says she
isn’t their mother. Their mom, her sister-in-law, recently
killed herself. So she’s filled the days with museums
and movies and the aquarium with its half million
gallons of water. One girl lies under a bench, still
as a stingray save her chest rising and falling.
The movers are packing up her house. The woman hides
a tissue in her fist. Her other niece sneaks behind
a larger-than-life cardboard reef shark, but my squid isn’t
with her. The exhibits have closed, so I duck under
velvet ropes and wander down ramps. Once I’m underwater,
I speak to a darkness I know all too well:
They’re beautiful. Somewhere my only child twirls
with tentacles like handlebar streamers. I know the mother
is here watching her wide-eyed girls, their fingers
and breath against foot-thick glass. Any ghost would be.