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Jack curls a finger around the hair that falls between my shoulder blades. It’s the touch of someone playing at lover; I have to force myself not to flinch.

I wait for Patrick Bloom to finish talking before I rush to collect my things. When I go to wash my dishes, Patrick Bloom tells me not to bother. The housekeeper will be by later today.

He hands me two crisp hundred-dollar bills and thanks me. I sling my duffel bag over my shoulder, unlock my bike, walk Jack to the car he parked down the street. We do not say anything. He just gives me a half hug, gets in his car, and then he’s gone.

It’s much easier to bike home now that I’m heading downhill.

Months pass and I keep expecting something to happen. For Patrick Bloom to tell me that he found something in the dirt, worms coiled among bones. For the cops to bang down my door. For my life to be destroyed. But nothing does. Jack disappears again. For good, I think. I try calling, but his line has been disconnected. Eloise must have heard about my supposed boyfriend showing up at Patrick Bloom’s house, because she picks another student to be her successor and every time she sees me on campus, she glares. I finish my first year of grad school. I return to New York City over the summer for an internship. I don’t come back.

The Tangy Brine of Dark Night

by Lucy Jane Bledsoe

Berkeley Marina

Kaylie’s grandma weighed only ninety pounds by now, and so carrying her out to the car wasn’t too difficult. She cradled the old woman, one arm under her knees and the other under her shoulders, and gently placed her, lying down, along the bench of the backseat. She saw that she’d left her grandma’s sneakers untied, so she made secure knots in the laces and then straightened the purple windbreaker, which had bunched up around her bony hips. Kaylie gently shut the door.

Would the trunk be better? Just the thought sent a prickling uneasiness down the backs of Kaylie’s arms. She would not put her grandma in the trunk. Period. Besides, she’d need to put the kayak in there. She pointed the remote at the garage door, afraid that it wouldn’t open — her grandma hadn’t taken the car out in months — but it did. The old white Pontiac started too, and Kaylie backed into the street, carefully straightened the wheels, and put the automatic transmission in park.

This whole plan was fucking crazy. So much so that, if she got caught, she could probably plead insanity. Which was worse, the psych ward or prison? She tried to think of a way out of the course she’d started down, but none came to mind, and so she quietly exited the car and walked over to her neighbor’s side yard where they left the kayak, which hadn’t been used in so long that lichen crusted its hull. She’d return it before they even realized it was gone. Luckily it was a short boat, with an open deck, none of those scary little hatches to get stuck inside, but it was heavy. Kaylie ended up having to drag it to the car, the pavement grating the plastic, as loud as a cement mixer. If any neighbors looked out their windows, who knew what they’d surmise. Thankfully the Pontiac’s trunk was the size of a small room, and she managed to stuff about half of the kayak in, bow first. She put a hand on the stern and pressed down. It didn’t wiggle. Not much. It was only a mile or two to the pier — and downhill. Gravity ought to keep the kayak in place.

Kaylie jumped into the driver’s seat and began the short journey. As she turned left on San Pablo Avenue, panic fluttered in her chest. The stern end of the kayak angled out of the trunk like an erection. She should have attached a red flag. She should have secured a seat belt around Grandma.

Never mind. She was almost there, and no place calmed her frayed nerves more than the Berkeley Pier, the way that long wooden structure stretched far out into the bay, a lovely straight line conveying people into the world of fish and salt water and sky. Grandma and she had spent their happiest hours sitting in their short chairs, sipping iced tea, Grandma smoking Chesterfields, hands cradling the grips of their fishing rods, gazing at the most profound intersection on earth, the one between sky and sea. They rarely talked while fishing, not to each other, anyway. They didn’t have to. Water, fish, air, time. What else did a person need?

Kaylie had almost relaxed, at least she’d regained that gathering of resolve right behind her breastbone, the knowledge of doing right, when that damn Jimi Hendrix guitar riff vibrated in her pocket. Her sister Savannah had been calling repeatedly all day, at first once an hour, and recently about every twenty minutes, as if by calling multiple times today she could make up for the weeks and months she hadn’t called. When they had talked, the times when Kaylie thought Savannah would want to know about developments in their grandma’s condition, Savannah liked to cite her three children, making it crystal clear that Kaylie’s childlessness put her in a complete fog of ignorance about what real life entailed. “Three children,” Savannah would practically shout, as if parenthood was on par with being the CEO of a prison. She’d also note her “handful” husband. Or her “high-maintenance” husband, if she was irritated with him. Or her “demanding” husband, if she was outright angry with the man, which she often was. And yet all of these adjectives were spoken with pride, emphasizing the heft of her family responsibility load, how full her life was with this man — all to communicate that helping with Grandma was inconsequential compared to what she had on her plate. A man. A family.

Kaylie had tried to keep her resentment, her anger, in check: she too might have had someone “on her plate,” had she not spent the last few years caring for Grandma. Don’t mind that ragged cough in the next room, that’s just my grandma dying of emphysema. Very romantic.

Kaylie let the repetitive Jimi Hendrix phrase play out and then tried to return to her memories of hot summer nights, much like this one, on the pier with Grandma. But a siren, just a few streets away, pierced her thoughts. Even the sound of the Pontiac’s big rubber tires peeling along the still-sizzling pavement unnerved her. Noises tonight were too loud, as if the god she didn’t believe in had turned up the volume. Kaylie twisted on the radio and almost laughed at the sound of Frank Sinatra’s voice. Her grandma’s favorite. But of course Savannah wouldn’t allow a moment of respite — oh no, the woman could be fucking telepathic when it came to moments of joy that needed to be destroyed. Jimi Hendrix began playing his bit, yet again, and Kaylie couldn’t help it, she pulled her phone out of her pocket and looked, hoping it might be someone benign, like the woman she’d met at a conference in Dallas a couple of weeks ago, but no, of course it was Savannah. Again. She should have turned off her ringer, but somehow her sister’s angsty presence was almost a comfort. At least it was familiar. And the only family she had left. She tapped Ignore and kept driving.

Stopping at the intersection of University and San Pablo, Kaylie put her head out the window and breathed deeply, hoping for a hint of that fishy rotten-wood smell of the pier. Of course she was still a half mile away, but knowing that it was just there, in front of her, another couple of minutes, relieved her. She knew she was doing not just the right thing, but the exact perfect thing. Savannah could go to hell.

A pulsing red light swarmed into the Pontiac. Kaylie was riding the crest of her confidence, and she felt sorry for the poor sop getting pulled over. She strained her eyes toward the dark horizon, toward the bay, pretended she could maybe see, if she looked hard enough, the Golden Gate. That put her in mind of the future, her future, and the possibility that, at long last, she’d be free to pursue a life. A real life. Maybe she’d take a trip to Dallas. She and that woman had had a lovely one-night stand, and it’d felt authentic, not like a quickie, more like a glint of possibility. Kaylie had told Grandma all about it when she got home and Grandma had said, yanking off the tubes running to her oxygen tank so she could speak as forcefully as she wanted to speak, “For fuck’s sake, get on a goddamn plane for Dallas. I got a few months at best. Pull my damn plug and go get that woman.”