Isla Summer Francisco |verified| May 2026
Lena resents him for his silence. But slowly, across July, she learns that his silence is not absence—it is archive. He keeps boxes of letters from her mother (his sister), unsent. He plays the same Leonard Cohen album on repeat. He walks to the north shore every morning at 5:47 AM to watch a light that no longer shines from a lighthouse that was decommissioned in 1982.
To develop the text of Isla Summer Francisco is to recognize that some places are not on maps because they exist in the interval between who we were and who we are becoming. The island is a metaphor for the necessary isolation of growth. The summer is a metaphor for the heat required to transform. And Francisco? He is the name we give to the people who go away so that we can learn to find ourselves. isla summer francisco
One night, they break into the decommissioned lighthouse. They climb the rusted stairs. At the top, the island is a dark comma in a silver sea. Marisol says, “Your uncle told me you’re afraid of becoming him.” Lena resents him for his silence
Francisco, it turns out, is not just a person. He is a verb: to Francisco means to disappear into work to avoid disappearing into yourself. He plays the same Leonard Cohen album on repeat
The last day arrives like a held breath. Francisco finally speaks: not about the past, but about the future. He gives Lena a journal filled with his observations of Ojo de Francisco —the bioluminescent pool. He has named a new species of algae after her: Noctiluca lenae . “It only glows when the water is disturbed,” he says. “Like you.”
