c. 2026 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(6-26)
Amanda Breen had grown up with a mother who took to air travel naturally. As a family trio with her older brother, they flew all around the continental United States, and across the ocean to Europe. So, the thought of hopping on a mechanized bird, with Ohio as her intended destination, was not something that caused any anxiety. Though she had never visited the heartland in person, it presented an opportunity to broaden her horizons, and perhaps, to discover the true origin of a genetic bloodline that had heretofore been shrouded in mystery.
But after arriving in Cleveland, and renting a vehicle to transport her to the nearby realm of Geauga County, this mood of confidence began to wane just a bit. With each mile traversed, she found herself moving away not only in terms of geographical distance, but also, from the metropolitan confines of an urban environment. To the more primitive and underdeveloped land of an isolated community populated with crude, manufactured homes. The paradigm shift in terms of social order was considerable. Soon, she saw nothing but untended fields, loafing tractors and pickup trucks, along with four-wheelers piloted by reckless inhabitants who seemed to be visibly inebriated, or stoned.
Evergreen Estates reminded her of a foreign village located in some distant, third-world country. It boasted a random variety of structures that had obviously been built by hand, with pallet boards and construction debris. Everything reeked of wood rot, mold, tobacco smoke, and stale alcohol. Few of the homes had actual curtains in their windows. Instead, blankets and bedsheets served to guarantee a measure of modesty for those inside. Everything looked to have been in place for decades before the present day. The access road and streets were crumbling, literally full of potholes deep enough to flatten tires and break suspension components. Yards here and there were weedy and overgrown. Trees had invaded spaces not already occupied by storage barns or concrete walkways.
She circled the neighborhood in her hired, economy car, attempting to sort out the system of lot numbers in use. This chore took longer than expected, because of the undisciplined order in which prefab houses had been arranged.
Finally, the California native parked in front of a narrow driveway that looked familiar from views she had curated via Google maps. There was a ratty, older SUV in the yard. And a long ramp up the side of a plain, singlewide dwelling. A window facing the planked slope was cracked, and broken. There were muddy stains all up and down this amateurish boardwalk. With rails on each side that had weathered in the hot sun, and warped accordingly.
There at the pinnacle, on his familiar bench, sat a graying, shaggy recluse cradling a whiskey jug in his callused hands. He did not react when she skipped lightly up the incline. Only when she stood before him did he look up from his oversized bottle, and cough. Then, he scratched his rowdy thatch of facial hair, and smiled. The woman he beheld had the look of her mother, blonde and tall and beautiful in a sense. Yet stricken with deep, indigenous eyes, and a prominent nose that projected inner strength. Two characteristics that matched his own physical profile.
“Well I’ll be damned... you’re actually here!”
Amanda could barely pull any air into her lungs. She had turned pale, and was trembling visibly.
“I’m at a loss for words right now, so I’ll just say hello. Hello, Dad! Hellooooo!”
She fell into his arms and began to sob loudly. A dozen minutes or more passed before either of them could speak again.
After this wordless exchange of emotion, Lincoln gestured toward a Walmart, shower chair that sat in a corner by his trash bin.
“That’s where guests make themselves at home. Pull it over here by me, and sit if you want...”
The young woman was still breathless, and woozy.
“I wanted to bring my son along, but it wasn’t workable right now. Mom is watching him back on the coast. You’d be proud of that kid, I am very sure!”
The aging hermit sipped liquor while thinking to himself.
“How is your momma? I haven’t seen her since I we had that apartment on West Spencer Street, in Ithaca. We ended up abandoning it when she left with your brother. The landlord must have been pissed off, but that kind of thing happened everywhere, especially in college towns...”
The wandering female brushed strands of hair out of her eyes, before answering.
“She’s not who you remember. A grandma now, all leathery and gaunt, but still energetic. She’s a throwback to the hippie scene. We’re alike in some characteristics, but much different in others! She even calls me a prude, sometimes!”
Lincoln chortled and continued to imbibe his refreshment.
“I can’t hate on any of that. You can see where I’ve ended up, not exactly what I was aiming to be in life. No glory, that’s for damn sure! Not many friends, or fringe benefits from living on the down-low...”
Amanda shook her head in disagreement.
“Don’t be so hard on yourself! I can tell that you never quite surrendered that artistic vibe. Mom didn’t either. That’s what keeps you old souls going. It’s a different way of looking at the world, a viewpoint that we need more of, I think!”
Her prospective progenitor looked across the lot at other homes along his rustic boulevard.
“Out here in the hinterland, things like art don’t matter too much. These folks make do with what they can build, fix up, or cobble together. They work with their hands and survive by their wits. I won’t say that we necessarily see eye-to-eye, but it has definitely taught me some things about how to survive. Maybe it’s a connection to my Appalachian forebears as well, I don’t know. I never wanted to be like them, or live like them, but here I am. Hunkered down in the dirt, and crawling along...”
His guest reached out with both hands, and offered a loving embrace of affection.
“I can feel your aura right here, in my own heart. It’s a glow that resonates with meaning. All the things that my mother said, about your summer together in New York are still there. All of the love, all of the passion, all of the creativity. I know it would never be said out loud, to me or anyone, but she’s missed you all these years. Despite doing her best to forget. And despite trying to shield me from the true story of my birth! I am glad to have finally figured out that riddle!”
Lincoln felt oddly fatigued, and weary. As if he had completed a challenging trek through an emotional wilderness. One that left him totally spent, yet satisfied.
“I reckon this is a new beginning. And right now, anything new seems out of place to me. But you’re here to prod me off my spot, like a frog ready to jump into creek water. So here I go, let’s do this thing, Miss Breen! Let’s do it!”






