Uncle Chester Us Beaches 20 Review
He died that winter. Not dramatically—just a quiet heart failure in his sleep, in the small apartment he’d moved to after the cottage sold. His obituary ran six lines in the local paper. But at Beaches 20, his absence was a canyon. The next summer, I went alone. I walked the same paths, sat in the same spot near the jetty, watched the same sanderlings dart between the foam. And I understood, finally, what he had been trying to teach us all those years: that a beach is not a backdrop for memory but a vessel for it. The number twenty—the old mile marker, the two decades of summers, the age at which I now write this—is not an end. It is a fulcrum.
So here I am, twenty years old, writing this from a blanket on the same patch of sand. The wind is cool. The gulls are crying. And somewhere, in the flat light lying on the water, I believe Uncle Chester is keeping his promise, too—watching over Beaches 20 until the rest of us return. Uncle Chester Us Beaches 20
As the years passed, the “us” in “Uncle Chester, Us, and Beaches 20” began to change. Cousins grew too cool for family vacations. Grandparents stopped coming. My own parents, once young and laughing in the surf, began to move more slowly, preferring the shade of an umbrella to the shock of the waves. But I never missed a summer. And Uncle Chester never changed—or so I told myself. In truth, he was changing the way the bluff behind his cottage was changing: imperceptibly, then all at once. His hands, always calloused, began to shake when he poured his coffee. His stories, once crisp as a gull’s cry, looped and wandered. He died that winter
