The Lutes Of Beacon
Island
By Alan Ira Gordon
"I got the Black Shakes real bad, May Louise."
The first lucid words I’d heard from Abel
in two days. He looked like crap lying there all gaunt
and drained on his sweat-soaked mattress, seemingly
closer
to seventy years old than his true forty-five.
I turned back on the video player at the foot
of Abel’s cot. The old Disney movie Fantasia kicked-in. Abel
sighed deeply as his favorite scene flickered
on, the calming zen-like Ave Maria sequence. Near
the end of the film, right after that nightmarish good
versus evil battle scene of Night On Bald Mountain.
My daddy Abel. Paratrooper veteran of the last
terrorist war. A chronic Black Shakes disabled vet. And
when it all boiled down to it, the best keeper and
protector
of the Lutes of Beacon Island that there ever was.
We are the remnants of a very dying breed, "real
fryin’, dyin’ New Englanders," Abel liked
to say. In all my seventeen years, I can’t say I’ve
ever met nor seen more’n a handful ‘a folk.
After two and a half greenhouse centuries of rising
tides
and frying ecologies, not many are willing to hang-on
along the coastline. The focus of the world’s moved
way In-Land, and I suppose its for the best...
To read the rest order Strange
Stories of Sand and Sea