Dan Zak: LEEVILLE, LA. — Their eyes are bloodshot. Their scraggy skin glows reddish-brown. They clutch cans of beer. On the wooden deck of Griffin’s Marina and Ice, they recoil when approached, like a nest of vipers.
“We used to be fishermen,” one sneers, drunk, seething with wounded pride. “But now we work for BP.”
They won’t say more than that. From their perch, they glare across the silent street at the gorgeous marshland now closed to fishing. At dusk they screech away in pickup trucks, barely pausing at the town’s one blinking traffic light. They surrender Leeville to shadow, to the mosquitoes, to what used to be and now isn’t, to a solemn reality captured in two words that embody the collapse of a way of life.
Ghost town.
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