Some short story
collections open with a very strong story that takes you by surprise, to the
point of making you wonder whether the writer would live up to the expectations thus
raised, as you read the stories that follow. ‘Sometimes Gulls Kill Other Gulls’
in A.J. Ashworth’s collection of stories Somewhere Else, Or Even Here was
one that had such an effect on me. It made me doubt whether it was humanly
possible to be so consistently brilliant in all the fourteen stories in the
collection. My doubts were proven wrong. It was not just that the other stories were
as good, but there were some that even surpassed the structural and thematic originality
of the first, like ‘The Future Husband’, ‘Paper Lanterns’, ‘Bone Fire’,
‘Tattoo’, ‘Offerings’ and ‘Overnight Miracles’, to mention just the ones that
bowled me over.
'Sometimes Gulls Kill
Other Gulls’ remains my favorite though. I would remember the author and the
book for this opening story, in the years to come. The title drew me in
instantly, and the casual, understated observations that later progressed to a
chilling narration of a totally unexpected turn of events on a beach in a rainy
evening kept me on tenterhooks.
In an interview with the writer/academic Adnan Mahmutovic, Ashworth reflects on her approach to short fiction:
In an interview with the writer/academic Adnan Mahmutovic, Ashworth reflects on her approach to short fiction:
I start small and stay small. I don’t
really think about the larger life and take a chunk of that; I just
automatically see the fragment and explore that. For me, it’s like the idea of
the microcosm and the macrocosm. The microcosm or little world will always
contain enough detail to hint at that bigger world. A grain of sand contains
aspects of the shell or rock from which it came, as well as the beach and ocean
(to paraphrase Steven Millhauser).
This explains how the story works. Though it is narrated in
third person, it explores the point of view of the young girl Lainey for most
part. She is shown self-indulgently drawing her name on the beach sand with a
stick, being aware of her dad “asleep on a towel the colour of dull grass” and
her mother reading “the magazine that’s collapsed in her lap like a huge, tired
butterfly”. As an intrusion to this state of bliss comes a local boy a couple
of years older than her. Just like any other girl would, Lainey resists this
intrusion of her space by the boy, who introduces himself as Jeremy. But she
also experiences a pull towards the strange, unknown world Jermey represents
and tries to describe.
When Jeremy mentions that gulls kill each other at times,
she tries to counter that. When he describes such an incident in which a gull
dies with its eye hanging out, she thinks it’s disgusting. When he reveals that
it was he who put it out of its misery by stamping on its head, she observes
that he was wrong then about gulls killing other gulls.
Jeremy entices her with the description of rock pools and a
cave away from the visibility of her parents. In an adventurous spirit, she
follows him, without taking permission from her parents who are asleep now.
Once in the cave, she feels at ease for a while, as long as they enjoy the
innocent exploration of the hidden world. Then they come across an old Labrador
trapped in the pool. It is unable to come out of the cold water, and is about
to die. Lainey’s earnest efforts to save it are mocked by Jeremy, though he
seems to know how to deal with the dog better than her. She takes charge, asks him
to hold the dog’s head up as she goes in search of her stick which she left
near the rocks. Once she is out of the cave, she realizes the passing of time, and
there are dark clouds. When she comes back with the stick, the dog is dead, and
she suspects that Jeremy killed it.
Lainey argues with Jeremy and threatens to go out and tell
what he did, to the man she thinks is the owner of the dog. It is then that
Jeremy shows a different face:
‘I’m going to tell that man,’ she says,
her voice strong again. ‘And I’m going to tell him what you’ve done.’ She
marches towards the opening.
He sticks his leg out so she can’t get
past. ‘You’re not.’
She pushes at his leg, but he steps in
front of her, still looking at the ground.
‘I’m,’ she says.
He speaks again, so low this time that at
first she doesn’t understand what he’s said. Then her brain makes sense of it.
‘What if I push you in the water with that dog?’
Lainey sees the shadows on the rocky walls
of the cave and how they lurch and stagger from side to side. Her heart taps
inside her like fingers on a window. ‘What?’ she says, noticing how Jeremy
seems bigger now, so that she can hardly see the way out at all.
‘I could,’ he says, ‘push you in.’
Just as Lainey considers using her stick in self defense,
she is relieved to hear noises outside and her dad comes in to save her from
the situation. Something changes among the kids that moment at which both were
up to harm the other, and it seemed danger, or even death, was just a second
away.
…Jeremy’s shoulders drop and he stands
aside to let her pass, presses his back into the cave wall.
‘I wasn’t going to do anything,’ he says,
in the same quiet way. ‘I wouldn’t have touched you.’
Once she escapes from the situation, Lainey is eager to go
home, leaving behind her stick, her name written on the beach, the dead dog,
the man calling out for it, and Jeremy.
The title of the story has a menacing effect during the
climax. The mystery about Jeremy, as seen through the eyes of Lainey,
contributes a lot to the tension. It is not clear whether Jeremy is really
harmful or just a small kid trying desperately to impress a younger girl in his
own ways. His big talk has an effect too, though Lainey is always on the
defensive. There is a moment when a reader might wonder Lainey would overreact
and put Jeremy’s life in danger. That is a moment when the story escapes a bit
from Lainey’s view of the situation.
Despite the notion of danger that lurks in the background,
Ashworth narrates the charming ways in which children connect, though
fleetingly, beyond their disparate life circumstances. It can be considered a
coming of age story as well, despite its length of just above twelve pages. Just
as Ashworth reflects, a small fragment of life is her concern here, but there
is a lot about the larger aspects of life in that fragment. However, there is
no attempt to present it as a cautionary tale, or to limit it wholly to the
perspective of the privileged class. She keeps the story open-ended. Jeremy is
an intriguing character, and though his motives remain vague, he is capable of
taking charge and keeping at least a few situations under control. His acts can
have multilayered interpretations, just as the acts of Lainey. While it is not
an easy task to tell an entire story from the perspective of a child and to
hint at social and class differences, Ashworth succeeds wholly in the task by
juxtaposing conflicting dialogues, images and ways of thinking entirely from
the world of children.