March 6, 2023
The Belmont Bay community begins maybe a mile beyond a left-hand turn off Dawson Beach Road, a gritty commercial street in Woodbridge, east of U.S. 1 and the Virginia Railway Express depot. The place is more or less isolated from the auto repair shops and tiny bungalows of the Dawson Beach neighborhood by fields and scrub woods.
Ten days ago we sat on a bench and stared out past the marina and across the water. It was mid-afternoon, near 80F, the sky a hazy August blue. The sunlight shimmered on the glass-calm bay. A mile across the water, on a deep-green neck of land, two enormous homes perched near the shore. Beyond the row of sleek schooners, their sails tied and tucked, a couple of yachts tacked to the Potomac. I recalled my mother’s advice when I was a kid: “If you ever have money, buy a boat.”
Belmont Bay is a golf/waterfront/retirement village of giant single-family homes, townhomes, and condominiums, designed to mimic West End London or Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown. Apart from the golf course only a few near-invisible businesses, a doctor’s office, a yoga studio, that sort of thing, are allowed.

A few cars eased past the Harbor View East and Harbor View West condo towers. A half-dozen older folks strolled near our bench. The quiet seemed to create an eerie, almost surreal distance from the droning traffic warfare and the staccato workplace pace of the Washington Beltway.
This Northern Virginia trip had a point. Friends and the Massanutten Mountains are still there. In northwestern South Carolina, five hundred miles south, we packed and left at dawn.
We glided past Mount Mitchell, the tallest peak east of the Mississippi, in the shadows of the eastern Great Smokies, to Erwin, Tennessee. The Choo-Choo Café had closed. Instead we got breakfast at the Dari-Ace off the Erwin exit, beneath the mountains ten miles south of Johnson City. We sat with seven local men at a U-shaped counter. The conversation hinted at driving trucks for TVA or local utilities, technical talk mixed with chitchat. TVA has a lot going on in East Tennessee. The bacon sizzled on the fryer. We finished our eggs and hit the road.
It was I-26 to I-81 to I-64 to Charlottesville. I missed the exit by seven miles. We backtracked then chugged through the local rush hour. Two hours later we reached the Lake Ridge cascade of subdivisions in Woodbridge in eastern Prince William County. The local streets still were choked.
It was a moment of strange events, the dueling Putin-Biden speeches, Biden’s incandescent visit to Kyiv four days before the war’s one-year mark. With Zelensky he walked ancient streets that now are missile targets.
We made it to our old church for the evening Ash Wednesday Mass. Downstairs, the bare sheetrock, the paint dust, the construction tape of the latest renovation signaled the obliteration of the place we knew. We looked around the once-again spruced-up church, full of strangers. It had been two years. I guessed everyone our age had followed us out of town.

The priest spoke about people who—he said—say they don’t want to act like the hypocrites who go to church. “I see a lot of hypocrites out there,” he said. “At least you’re showing up, making the effort.” The faces around me looked puzzled. It was a tortured point. I couldn’t recognize the hypocrites. We left early.
The memories were faint and a bit sad, summoning Thomas Wolfe’s moodiness when he picked the name for You Can’t Go Home Again, complied from the millions of words he left his publisher when he died at 38. So much the same, so much different, in clumsy, awkward ways.
We had visited Belmont Bay a couple of times years ago and once walked through a condo for sale. The pseudo-old-world architecture hinted at the idea of a soft landing near water, away from the Woodbridge dreck. “Upscale” was the word that we thought would spiffy up our lowbrow tastes. We knew we were not a fit. I never did buy the boat.
Looking out over the still water, the attraction of the place and others restricted by membership covenants or net worth dawned on us. What some old folks and eccentric younger ones want from this is a hideout within the fantasy of not being bothered. The wide stretch of water, not especially pretty, the gigantic brick and concrete structures, the narrow one-way streets between the retirement towers whisper, “This place is for well-off recluses.”
We learned that a good man passed last Saturday evening. Ed Kelleher, for 32 years an editor for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, was a much-loved newspaperman who had a half-dozen years on me. “He deeply cared about people,” said one of his colleagues. “His kindness and empathy were at the core of what made him a great journalist and co-worker.” He lived and wrote his stories in his hometown, close to people he loved.
We brought home new wisdom: no hiding out in fake places. The passing of a compassionate man and the tolling rush of time sharpens understanding: hold those you love close wherever you find adventure in existence, what you have left. The rough-edged neighborhood we left was a sensible place for a long time but whatever the landing place, discovery, passion, goodness still are possible to the end.
We unpacked. I walked out the kitchen door and looked at the yard. It was early evening, the sun was starting to sink beyond the roofs of neighbors’ homes. Nothing had changed: lawn furniture blown over in a storm, weeds spreading bright and green, a chunk of the back fence broken. I went back inside. Here, we’ll go on.






