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Hennessey Part 8: A Circle of Death

Shark in the ocean
Photo credit 1: Elias Levy, Cropped. Creative Commons Attribution 2.0

Hennessey’s pups were not only big, they were also warm. Her muscles generated tremendous body heat with every tail stroke. Intricate loops in her blood vessels jealously kept this heat inside her, flouting the sucking cold of the water. So, her pups were constantly bathed in the warmth of her exertions.

But a basic problem existed for large, warm blooded sharks like Hennessey - the shock that would hit their pups if their small bodies were born into frigid water, spit out into the cold uncaring sea. She herself could haunt such cold waters, her bulk and metabolism could keep her warm for a while. But her pups would be born without her mass or ability to traverse long distances and find warm water. So, she had to find a stable cocoon of warmth for her pups to be born – far from the cold-water seals she was just feeding on. That created a conflict between what her hunting computer decided – “hunt where it is cold” - and what her mother’s brain demanded. Now that her hunting instinct was calmed by food, she could turn back south and find the warm cove her pups required.

She left the hook of rock housing the big seals, and struck out for the original rookery - where the small seals swam. Beyond that rookery, she knew there was a string of shallow sandy coves – almost lagoons - stretching to the south that could be the warm water coves she needed.

It was a short journey for such an ocean sojourner, especially with the metabolic glow of a full stomach. Within a day’s travel she retraced her path along the ocean highway. Arriving unerringly at Seal Rocks, she expected to find the small sharks and small seals that she’d so recently left...and then expected that she would move south to some warm nursery bay. Easy.

But Seal Rocks was not the same. The seals were all hauled up on the beach, frightened by a shallow-water frenzy. The young sharks raced from one side of the rookery to the other. Not hunting, just racing. They had been jolted from their normal behavior by some overwhelming stimulus. They had been jolted from thier normal behavior by a smell.

Hennessey stopped. She sensed liver and blood and oil in the water - a heavy olfactory burden that crept up on her, quickly scrambling her senses and overpowering her decisions. There was already a burning need to be cautious. But caution lay crushed under that smell. Slick smells of fish oil and metallic blood in the water trapped her in a sensory prison.

She spun, very much like the younger sharks were doing, swimming a frantic tight circle trying to triangulate the origin of the smell. The direction of the scent was not toward the seals at Seal Rocks. Instead it was toward the south and west – toward the beach.

Hennessey crept in this direction warily, moving away from Seal Rocks. The bloody smell reeked of danger but exerted a pull that she found irresistible, even though the warm water coves she needed for her pups were further to the south, along a different trajectory. With fatal attraction in one direction and pupping lagoons in another, conflicting decisions warred within her. Finally, the increasing scent took complete charge and she moved toward it.

Halfway toward the beach from Seal Rocks, she sensed something else – a sound that increased slowly, a coarse pounding in the water, human machines circling in great number. Little by little she approached a ring of human noises. And soon the noise rose to such a pitch that it became a vicious pounding of floating engines. The sound defined a stinking patch of ocean that had been converted into a death stage.

Other sharks swirled, just as confused, equally trapped, a congregation of terrible risk. Under the deadly circle of boats, frantic sharks churned and twisted and snapped at nothing, their senses burning with the chemical intensity ignited from above. The blood was so thick that it was more than a smell now; it hung in the sea like a shrieking fog, commanding an attack, driving sharks all around to spin in near-frenzy. It was an oily reek dumped in the water for a terrible purpose.

The boats that circled above, dumping blood into the water, were looking for her. They’d gathered after Hennessey’s boogie board attack, having seen her from the beach, ignited by a raging, wrong idea that they had to protect their beach from a violent monster. Driven by the subsequent social media storm that drove a spiral of violence, the boats coaxed sharks to the surface with a lie of liquid chum, and then shot them dead.

Hennessey circled, trying to resist. She circled again, pulled toward the southern shores and safety - away from this melee. She circled again, now pulled toward the center, finding even higher concentrations of chum. The circle of death flared every reflex Hennessey had, and all at once she arrowed towards the overpowering scent. She bulled between the other crazed sharks, thrashing the sea into froth. Frantic to attack the source of this chemical insult, she charged towards the boats and the guns. Heedless of the danger.

Then, an overwhelming new smell ignited her agitation. It rang the alarm bell of her highest alert, throwing over her frenzy in an instant of screaming danger. Overlain on the melee and the chum were the sounds of explosions, and the smell of fresh shark blood. Something was killing her kind.

Start at the beginning of Hennessey's journey here.

Shark in the ocean
Photo Credit: Bernard DUPONT from FRANCE, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike

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