Ginny had been wondering in the forest for quite a while and found nothing. Now she wanted to go back to the coast. But after several minutes, she still hadn't reached the edge of the woods; she didn't even hear the breaking of waves. She stopped abruptly. Had she really gone in the right direction? Ginny felt a clot in her throat. She tried to ignore the mad beating of her heart and focus, run through all the changes in direction she had made...
From what she could piece together, she should go a little further right. She didn't know that was really it, but it was her best shot. Anxious to find out, she walked fast, and then started running. It was only a minute until she thought she could see the forest thin out. A moment later, she stopped and sighed with relief. It had really not been a good idea wandering off from the coast like that. Ginny pulled herself together and walked to she beach, where she sat down to rest.
Lying on her aching back, Ginny felt the fine drops of water fall in her face from the endless, indiscriminate grey above. It must have been around midday now, but the sun was still invisible behind the clouds. Pictures were trying to force their way into Ginny's conscious mind. Fleeting images of dark water masses, waves collapsing on a ship, sails being torn, wood breaking - their sound drowning the cries of the people on it. Maybe they had actually survived? The others, her father... She remembered him shouting at her as she sat in the boat, and being unable to understand him; and then his frantic gestures, telling her to leave.
The drizzle helped by making it difficult to focus. The memories remained more of a vague menace. She would surely come home and find her father there. Thinking of her own survival made her aware that she was becoming hungry. The woods hadn't seemed as if the contained anything edible at this time of the year. Ginny sat up and looked around. The beach was just as bleak and empty as before. She looked at the water. It seemed that she had to look for food there. There was, of course, no way she could catch a fish without a boat or a net, but maybe she would at least find some mussles. The fact that it wasn't exactly warm didn't hold her back. She was completely wet by now anyway, with a mixture of her own cooled sweat and the moisture from the air.
A minute later, a naked Ginny was failing to feel her feet in the cold water that was washing around them. At first, there had been a stinging sensation, but it was gone now. Ginny shivered, and then she stepped forward with determination. In fact, she started running, so the dreadful process of entering the water would be as short as possible. When she water reached her hips, she took a deep breath and just jumped forward. For a moment, it felt like needles all over her skin. Ginny swam forward and resurfaced a few meters deeper into the water. Feeling the sand under her feet, she discovered that she could still stand here. Ginny swam forward against the weak thrust of the incoming waves, first with her head above the water, and then under water. As she opened her eyes, a grey-blue veil laid itself over her eyes. She saw the slightly disturbed surface with breaking waves above herself, and looking down, the sand of the ground. It was becoming coarser.
The water was now three or four meters deep, with a mixture of sand and stones beneath her. Above the water, there was only grey either, and curiously, the air felt even colder. Ginny had been diving down repeatedly, but the only like she had discovered was a few pieces of algae on the stones. She was freezing and beginning to feel weak. But when she had swam up to the surface a moment ago, it had seemed to her that she saw something move in the corner of her eye. It may just have been the effect of the dim light, but Ginny felt hope and anxiety at the same time. She held her breath once again and dived down. Floating in the water, she looked around on the ground below her. And there it was, indeed! A crab seemed to be scraping algae off one of the stones. Hastily, and with eager anticipation, she swam towards it. But the animal had spotted her and quickly moved its numerous legs to escape to one side. The girl struggled, but after a few seconds, she was in arms reach. She extended her left hand to grasp the crab; but what she met was a sudden pain! It had caught her hand between the thumb and the index finger with its pincer, and it was surprisingly strong. Instinctively, the girl drew back her hand, but the crab didn't let go and was so drawn towards her. Ginny didn't think - she only wanted to get it off of her hand and back to the surface, feeling her air running out, too. With her right, she got to grasp three legs of the right side of the crab and pulled. A moment later, it was floating in the water, falling back to the ground, with its three legs coming after it as Ginny was struggling towards the surface.
Upon reaching it, she took a deep, relieving breath. Then she raised her left hand to examine it. There was no blood, but a purple bruise that hurt quite a lot. Ginny squinched up her face. And then she realized that she had torn off the crab's legs and that it was probably unable to move. She was shivering all over from the cold and exhaustion, but a little grin appeared on her face. |