White, and Still, and Taped Off
The yellow tape says crime scene. It flutters in the harbour wind, looped between bollards, keeping people back from the quayside where the whale lies. She is white — rare, ghostly white — beached against the stone, the cold water lifting her gently, as if the sea has not yet understood that she is gone.
Someone shot her. That is what the investigators believe, and it is difficult to sit with. Not because it is shocking in some abstract, headline sense — but because of the sheer bewilderment it brings. You stand on the quai and you look at this enormous, luminous, impossible creature, and you simply cannot construct in your mind the sequence of thoughts that ends with pulling a trigger.
Baleen whales are not quick. They are not threatening. They filter the sea. They sing to each other across distances we can barely imagine. A white one, in a northern harbour, was already a kind of wonder — the sort of thing people drive hours to see, that children remember for the rest of their lives.
Whatever compelled someone to shoot her, it was not reason, and it was not need. It was something smaller and uglier than either.
The tape will come down. The whale will be taken away. The harbour will look the same as it always did. But something passed through here that should still be alive, and that is not something to move past quickly.