The salt air hits me before I see the water—thick and alive, carrying whispers of seaweed and diesel fuel from fishing boats returning with dawn's catch. I've wandered into Essaouira's fish market without meaning to, following the sound of voices calling prices in Darija, French, and broken English all at once.

An old woman in a faded blue djellaba gestures me over. Her hands, weathered as driftwood, move swiftly over silver sardines arranged in perfect rows. She doesn't speak English, and my Arabic extends only to greetings, but she reads my face—the mixture of curiosity and hunger—and grins, revealing a single gold tooth.

"Pour toi," she says, wrapping four fish in yesterday's newspaper with practiced efficiency. The paper is soft from handling, ink smudging onto her fingers. She won't let me pay what the sign says. When I protest, she waves me off, says something that sounds like blessing or maybe gentle mockery, and turns to the next customer.

An hour later, I'm sitting on the ramparts watching boys dive off the ancient Portuguese walls into the Atlantic. The sardines are being grilled at a nearby stand—the vendor charged me only for the charcoal and lemon. The fish splits easily, flesh white and sweet, tasting of smoke and ocean and this exact moment that exists nowhere else.

This is what guidebooks can't capture: the economics of generosity, the way a place reveals itself not in monuments but in the small exchanges that say you're welcome here, stranger. The morning light turns the medina walls amber. Seagulls wheel overhead, hoping for scraps. Somewhere, a muezzin's call drifts over the harbor.

I write this in my notebook, sardine oil making the pages translucent, and think about how the best travel stories are always the ones you can taste.

#travel #Morocco #wanderlust #slowtravel

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