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Leo’s phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: Dad, I found your book. Can I come home now?

“And are you?”

The nightgown belonged to his mother, Bernice, who had died of a quiet heart attack three months prior, clutching a laminated photo of Leo’s daughter, Sophie. Sophie lived two hundred miles away with her mother, who had remarried a man who sold MRI machines. Leo wasn’t allowed within five hundred feet of a school or a park or a photograph of a child under twelve. The restraining order, now expired, had become a habit of absence. bay crazy

The sheriff squinted. The jacket could have washed up. The book could have drifted. But he didn’t say that. He’d seen too much to believe in nothing. Leo’s phone buzzed

The term had a genealogy. First came the fishermen who lived too long on the brackish edge, their hands stained with eel slime, their stories looping like the tides. Then the widows who talked to gulls. Then the veterans who built forts from driftwood and declared war on Canada. But Leo was different. Leo was young, thirty-two, with the hollowed-out look of someone who had once been brilliant—an engineer, a husband, a father—before the ammonia leak at the chicken processing plant erased his sense of smell and, piece by piece, everything else. “And are you