Orca Boy
“It’s
okay guys,” says Josh, trembling, his heart pounding, “we’re not going to hurt
you.” He stops rowing and slowly drifts towards the bigger killer whales snout.
“My name is Josh; this other fellow
is my Uncle Charley. We live in that big
old house up on the hill. Over there, on
the dock, is my Aunt Maggie with the camera, and Sammie and Sadie. Sadie’s
barking brought us to you.” Josh’s
constant patter is supposed to calm the huge animals and bolster his own courage. So far, the orcas appear to be in control of
their emotions.
The two killer whales have brought an
exciting nervous calmness to the cove, and then they both spout—ending the tranquil
spell. They exhale a foul smelling steamy mist high
into the air. Their breath erupts for ten long seconds from fist size
blowholes. Everyone is caught by
surprise. Charley swallows hard and dry; his neck muscles knot and won’t
cooperate. Their guttural inhales sound
like the earth herself is drawing breath.
“Hi momma,” says Josh, still shaking
a little, “that was impressive up close like that,” his voice barely above a
whisper. “Like I said, I’m Josh, this
was your idea to come here, wasn’t it? Do
you have names? What do you call each other?
Has anyone ever told you your black and white outfits look formal? You
know, like a penguin looks. This conversation is totally one sided, but I need
to talk. I know—you both look like salt
and pepper, I’m calling you Pepper, and mom, I’m not calling you salt, you
don’t seem like an old salt, you tell me what to call you?” Josh pauses for his own deep breath; the
quiet moment is Sadie’s cue to whimper her concern.
Pepper moves her flipper fin in a circular
motion pushing her blowhole and eye back above the surface. She is half
resting, half perched on momma orca’s outstretched six foot fin. Without constant
swimming or her mother’s support, the heavy net and weights tangling her body
will pull her to the bottom. She calmly
watches the rowboat drift closer.
Fifty feet away on the dock, Sadie
whines, Sammie rubs her neck soothing her, maybe Sadie senses something, maybe
dog and orca have somehow connected. Sadie
was certainly drawn to the cove, bringing Sammie and Josh running.
The puny little boat offers no
protection should the two orcas suddenly thrash about. Josh rows directly in
front of Pepper; with one eye, she watches him pull the oars in, and reach for
his hiking stick. Her left eye is dark blue
the other is dark green. Above each eye
is a white eye-patch, nature’s subtle disguise. She is black on top and white on her
belly. The black and white markings are duplicated
on her mom. Like mother, like daughter,
Pepper is a ten-foot version of her twenty-two foot mother.
“Well Charley, so far so good,” says
Josh, “It’s okay Pepper, I need to keep from banging into you and your mom so
I’m going to touch your mom lightly with this stick, that’s okay with your mom—right?” Charley holds his breath, he squeezes the
edge of the boat with white knuckles. Josh
exhales slowly through pursed lips, and reaches the stick out to momma—he
gently pushes.
“Oh jeez,” says Josh trembling all over again,
“this is scary—pushing on her is like shoving on a piling or dock covered with
old truck tires. This momma is
definitely a serious animal.” The boat
rebounds backwards. Momma’s eye follows them;
ever so slowly, she strokes her fin on the far side. Under water, she flexes her broad tail fluke—Josh
freezes while holding the stick hovering over her.
“It’s okay momma, Uncle Charlie and I are your friends, I’m going to rub
this stick over here on Pepper’s back.”He lightly touches the tip of his stick
on her back between her blowhole and pectoral fin. “Would you like me to scratch your back, Pepper?”
He rubs the stick back and forth, and
wonders what to do next.
“You really are a big girl Pepper;
let me scratch you a little bit over here by your big back fin.”
Josh slides the stick over the ropes
that are cutting into her skin and scratches in front of her dorsal fin.
“What the heck is that noise,” says Josh,
“Pepper, is that you squealing? No, you’re whistling—you sure are. You like this scratching, don’t you?” Josh lifts the stick and raps it in one spot
like when Sammie smacks Sadie on her haunches as part of a good-dog back rub. Pepper’s whistles continue with an occasional
click sound.
“Josh, I think that whale likes you,”
says Charley, loosening his grip on the boat while the strange almost unbelievable
sight unfolds in front of him. “If I
didn’t know better I would say Pepper is purring.”
“Uh, I hope not, I once had a cat
that purred when I rubbed its back, but then it bit me.”
The scratching, whistling and clicks
continue while momma orca supports Pepper on her extended fin. Her gentle fin movements hold their position opposite the floating
dock. His courage showing, Josh
experiments and rubs the stick on different parts of Peppers body. He carefully shoves and manipulates the area
where the ropes are cutting into her thick skin. Except for the clicks, she
shows no preference nor displays any pain or displeasure; she tolerates his
touching and doesn’t mind the boat bumping against her. Momma orca is motionless just a few feet
away, and except for the occasional tail and fin adjustment, she could be
asleep.
Josh and Charley lock eyes, Charley
shakes his head, “Josh again—you don’t have to do this.”
“Yes I do, Uncle Charley, now more
than ever, I can’t not help them.” He clenches his jaw and with his hand, gently
rubs the white patch above her open eye, comforting the small orca. With his other hand, he wipes his own wet
eyes.
Using the hooked pole, he reaches into the water
underneath Pepper and snags a piece of net.
He pulls the snarled mass to the surface. With his Leatherman tool lanyard securely
looped on his wrist, he slices into the netting. He saws the serrated blade through
seaweed-encrusted line. He hooks more gobs and cuts through fifteen or more
lines before coming to an extra heavy rope holding a lot of weight. It takes
both him and Charley to pull the taught rope to the surface. Josh braces himself up on one knee and leans
out over the ten foot orca.
“This is horrible Pepper, how the
heck can you swim with all this junk hanging from you?”
The knife cleanly separates the stretched
rope and hundreds of pounds suddenly sink to the bottom of the cove. When the weight falls, Pepper, Charley, Josh
and the rowboat all rebound at once. Big
momma’s huge supporting fin snaps upward like a catapult unleashed, lifting and
tilting the boat. Charley falls over
backward in the middle of the boat and rides it out, but Josh’s precarious
position is impossible to recover from, and he sails over the side flopping onto
Peppers back. Her dorsal fin trips him
up and he slides into the water between mother and daughter. Sadie jumps to her
feet barking her alarm. Sammie pulls her
down clamping a hand over her muzzle quieting her. Maggie yells Josh’s
name. Charley with the boat hook still in
his hand pulls himself up and looks for his nephew.
“Oh my god,” says Charley, eyes wide,
fresh adrenalin replacing stale fear.
“It’s okay Pepper,” says Josh, “It’s okay
momma, just a little mishap—everyone remain calm.”
Josh has slipped between the two
killer whales, one arm resting on Pepper, the other forced upward over the much
higher mom.
“Charley, you aren’t going to believe
this, I’m kneeling on her fin. I’m going
to climb over Pepper and get back in the boat.” He crouches, ready to stand and
straddle Pepper, but when he stretches for the boat, he doesn’t quite make it
and falls on her again. With both arms,
he pushes off ungracefully rejecting sitting on her. He lands with a flying crash back in the
rocking boat. The two orcas watch but remain
motionless, unlike Josh and Charley their emotions and fear are still in check.
“Oh boy,” Says Josh, able to breathe
again, “I thought that was going to do it, and we would be smashed to bits, or
big momma’s tail would toss us over the dock.”
“Are you okay,” says Maggie, “what
happened, did the big whale hit you?”
“No, everything is fine,” says
Charley, “we just got off balance.”
Getting back to work, Josh says. “That
last cut released a ton of weight, but it didn’t loosen these two tight ones
around her body, we have to keep fishing for hanging lines.”
In the next fifteen minutes, Josh and
Charley manage to make another dozen cuts, removing a lot of netting and line
but no more significant weight like the gob that threw him into the water.
“Okay, we’re almost done, this is the
one digging in, I’ll slice—what the!!
This rope has a wire inside of it, it’s dulled my knife, I can’t cut
it.”
“I should have told you, some of
these fishing nets are made with a thin wire cable in the top line. It’s ultra strong and doesn’t stretch,” says
Charley.
“It’s also
killing Pepper, we have to get it off somehow, but I can’t cut it or even reach
it without cutting into her blubber.”
Chapter Two -
Sammie
Yesterday—
“Hi!—Hellooo......
I said Hi!—”
“Oh
. . . you’re talking to me?” Oh geez, you
dweeb, what a dumb answer.