They sailed past the island and were now somewhere in the middle of the archipelago. At the horizon, one could see that it was almost time for the ball of fire to get submerged into the waters and relinquish all the vigour with which it had burned during the day; this was considered one of the best hours of the day to try a hand at it. Everybody on the boat had a rod in their hands. Everyone was patient except one little girl. She had seen how Tom catches fish in her favourite cartoon and this always kept her under the impression that it was not a hard task. One just had to sit with the fishing rod in one’s hand, bait attached to its hook and it was only a matter of a few minutes before you see success; little idea did she have about the amount of force required to pull a fish up and that her lean arms were not apt for the job.
Her watch ticked by, the fish had stopped all movements and was still, even the sounds made by it could no more be heard. The sun had gone down, the light from the tiny CFL under the boat’s shade added even more gloom into the atmosphere and a quaint silence prevailed all around.
Her father was the first one to catch. It was a blowfish she had seen for the first time. They put it in one of those old-fashioned iron pails. It had a shiny black exterior speckled with white dots; the lower part of its body was white with yellow lines running through to the tail. The girl could see its gills throbbing. It was jumping and bouncing; trying to do something that could get it back into the water, so that she can live a few more days, a normal life, so that it could be with its little ones for whom it had come in search of food. But, how could it survive when everything it was surrounded by was against it. The girl watched the fish flutter; something inside her, urged her to save it.
Her watch ticked by, the fish had stopped all movements and was still, even the sounds made by it could no more be heard. The sun had gone down, the light from the tiny CFL under the boat’s shade added even more gloom into the atmosphere and a quaint silence prevailed all around.