By JR Fenn
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We moved the cabin from Anchor Point to Homer, thirty miles on winding roads, up Diamond Ridge and down the bluff; but it wasn’t, technically, us who moved it—it was Mike, with his flatbed truck and winch (a flatbed big enough to fit a 12x20 cabin, lifted off its cinderblocks with its tidy white windows and red walls flying through the air, the windows where we had once lit candles in the dark, no longer a fishing shack by the Anchor River, now carted along the road to be hoisted into the air once more and set down by the slough, where the grasses waved in salt water and the gulls and murres circled overhead), though it wasn’t the moving of the cabin I remembered later, not the groaning of the timbers as the structure strained against gravity, not its undercarriage exposed, floating high above the ground, its roof outlined against the greenery of the ridge, not how it settled beside the 80-foot spruce, its porch looking out to sea like a face aghast at the volcanic peaks across the bay, their tops covered in snow against the still blue of the sky—no, what I remembered was taking the check to Mike a month later (half down, half after delivery and a few phone messages reminding us of the balance due; it’d been a cash-poor summer) when he was cleaning fish caught that day, dipnetting on the Kasilof—what stuck in my mind, emblazoned in fire once I’d taken it in, was the way he stood in his Carhartts by the tailgate of his flatbed and turned a fish belly-up to slit it from chin to gonads, holding the lips of the cut wide so I could see the deep red of the flesh, the blue and purple of the organs nestled inside tight and compact as gems—“A woman’s purse,” he said, echoing the metaphor beginning to shape itself on my tongue—before he sliced off a translucent piece of flesh, so thin it could be a veil for a glittering sun seen from far underwater, or the cold petal of a tidal flower, and held it out to me, the fish open in his hand, all it had grown and miraculously brought back home quivering on the tip of the blade.
JR Fenn's work has appeared in Boston Review, Gulf Coast, Diagram, Flash, and Versal, among other places; she teaches Environmental Writing at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry and lives in Western New York with her family.
Art by Melissa Warp.