For what seemed like much of my life, from late high school until my mother's death and memorial service up the coast, year's end was spent on the Big Island of Hawaii, most often at Keauhou Bay, south of Kailua-Kona. I collected innumerable impressions and filled notebooks with loving detail of the place and its people, which felt akin and important to my own story. An abandoned hotel figured in that, as well as the old temples of black lava fallen and reshaped into sea-walls.
Mention of those was casually slipped into a story set in England a few years ago, with an entirely different focus, and only last year did I write a fictional piece situated directly in that place of memory, setting and ambiance true and truthful, with only the facts changed to meet my whimsical fictional needs. (The way, perhaps, I used to reinvent myself each year again waiting for New Year's Eve—and Chinese fireworks—under a little palm or other tree beside the bay.) Whether I did it justice, finally, I don't know, and doubt, but it meant lots to me to be back there.
"Stillborn" was published by the wonderful The Plentitudes in February, their Issue 21 (Winter 2026). Here's a small taste of it—
Marley could get fairly close to some of the abandoned structures, approaching either from the boat harbor or the golf course, and get into the gardens on the property's periphery. She unfolded the flowered beach chair she had bought up at the shopping center on the hill, and sat for hours on a strip of sandy lawn, or just in from the pitch black lava pools mirroring sky (cornflower, Maya, satiated blue), and try to picture how the place had been once, full of life. The ocean was a living presence still, black-hearted blue, the color Helena had christened Kona blue, full of the spiritual energy the Hawaiians called mana. A graceful freehand tree at harbor's edge, not a species she recognized, was her sole company. Even the birds seemed to have gone for good.
Line by line again she read her mother's poems, watched kayaks slipping in and out of the harbor like needles through green silk. The harbor where the king was born, her mother said—just across the water from here. Where boats anchored, cruise boats for snorkeling and island history tours, sportfishing boats, kayak rentals, and paddle boards. She watched a fishing boat go by out of the harbor, past her observation post, loaded with brightly colored floats. She glanced again the other way, toward the silent old hotel, bare as a scoured bone.
image: Keauhou Bay collage, Christie Cochrell











