The Verdict -- Robert Gardner
Robert Gardner
The recent stories in the Pilot about the good ship Muriel certainly
dredged up memories. For the benefit of those who didn’t read the stories
about the Muriel, I would advise that she was a ship that went aground at
the harbor entrance some time during the 1920s. At that moment, she
became my playground, my home away from home, the place in which dreams
were born.
Although I have lived on or near the ocean most of my life, I don’t
know beans about boats or ships. I spent most of my time either in or
under the water and never paid much attention to what was on the water,
so I don’t know just what kind of a boat the Muriel was. I don’t know
port from starboard, but I do know warm water from cold, and that is the
reason I liked the Muriel.
For some reason, the water inside the hull was always warm. We urchins
played in the warm water inside the Muriel, and it was great fun until
some killjoy said the warm water had attracted a giant octopus, and when
I say giant, I mean GIANT. She/he/it was about 15 feet from tentacle to
tentacle, according to what we were told. That did it for the Muriel,
warm water notwithstanding.
That wasn’t my last adventure with an octopus, however. Some time
during WWII, I was stationed on the island of Saipan. There was a small
lagoon just below the bluff on which we heroes of WWII were stationed. I
always took advantage of whatever water opportunities there were, and so
I dove in that lagoon. I was swimming slowly along a wall of rocks.
Inside a big rock was a small hole. In that hole, I thought I saw an
octopus.
When I got back to camp, I happened to mention it to to someone who
happened to be a war correspondent, and he became very excited about the
story possibilities. He had seen too many horror movies and thought the
octopus was put on earth for the sole reason to eat up all us human
beings. His idea was that I go after the beast. I would spear the giant
octopus and drag it out of that hole and he would get pictures as the
beast tried to devour me. Big deal. What I had learned since the Muriel
was that an octopus is a very cowardly creature. Besides, it was a very
small hole.
And so we went octopus hunting. The war correspondent stationed
himself at an appropriate place, I stuck my spear down the hole, and out
came a tentative inch or so of tentacle. The inch became several, then
got bigger and bigger, while more tentacles emerged, and finally out of
that hole emerged the biggest, maddest octopus I had ever seen.
When an octopus is disturbed, he emits a purple liquid. Suddenly, the
clear water became murky purple, and underneath that murky purple water
lurked a giant octopus just waiting to snarf me for his lunch.
It never happened. When the water cleared, the octopus, true to its
timorous nature, had escaped. As for the war correspondent, all he got
out of it was a picture of purple water.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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