Mortgage-bruised pilgrims linger along Silver Strand, pop caps against plywood boarding, edges furred with salt-rust flakes from storms that chewed the pier.
Seabee retirees swap tide updates on porch steps; third-generation surfers stitch wax into their palms and still call this south jetty 'church'.
Here my son and I rinsed sand from our ankles with a garden hose, him shrieking, laughing, shivering when cold bit his feet.
I once yelled at him, raging for dropping keys into surf, as if that mattered more than a day of chasing, wrestling in the tide. He doesn’t remember. I can’t forget.
Now, he’s taller than me, vanishing downshore.
I stand outside, voices rise in the salt-hard wind. Barbecue smoke drifts from driveways, tailgates, settles into dusk-lit lawn chairs.
Boarded bungalows peel to raw board, splintering porch rails; nails weep orange along the grain.
A bike frame, chainless, reddens into memory beside dune grass still gripping sand.
There is grace in forgetting: a tide lowers its voice, sand swallows what was said.