Written in response to Crispina’s
Crimson’s Creative Challenge.
Here’s my take.

The ferryman’s cottage stood empty, as it had every winter since old Arthur passed. They said he’d rowed that crossing for forty years, shepherding artists with their easels, children with fishing nets, lovers stealing away to the marshes.
I watched the tide recede, exposing the mudflats where his boat once scraped ashore. The orange roof tiles glowed against the darkening wood, and I imagined him there on autumn evenings, lamp-lit windows reflecting on the water.
Someone had shuttered it tight now, preserving it like a museum piece. But preservation isn’t the same as living. The benches sat waiting for passengers who’d never come, the warning sign swaying uselessly in the wind.
Perhaps that’s the agreement we make with places like this …. that they’ll outlast us, patient and shuttered, holding a space for our memories.
NAR©2026
This is “Don’t Pay the Ferryman” by Chris de Burgh
All text and graphics are copyright for Nancy Richy and are not to be used without permission. NAR©2017-present.

A moving story sis
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The thing about Vancouver Island is that it has largest Ferry System in the world, and I had many enjoyable rides while I was staying on the island, Nancy …
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That reads like you knew the area and the ferryman. He did, indeed, die a few years back, and the ferry didn’t run. But it’s back in business now, at least in the summer months
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That’s a lovely story Nance 🩷
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Excellent work 💜💜
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