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“I have mostly good days,” he says, carefully. “Many more than I do bad days. But it’ll never leave me completely. The depths you go to in those places…and I’m one of the lucky ones. I was able to walk back into a family who had the means to support me while I put myself back together. It’s only because of them that I was able to retrain. Plenty of people get out of those hellholes and end up dead within a year. Overdoses, suicide, addiction.”

I want so badly to go over and put my arms around him. “I’m glad you’re OK,” I say instead.

He shrugs again. “Like I said, I was able to get a lot of help. I still see a therapist every week. I’ve been lucky.”

“So why did you retrain?”

“It turns out diving doesn’t go well with active PTSD. I started having panic attacks forty feet down. It was the sense of being trapped—I couldn’t take it. We’re trained to deal with panic attacks but it all went out of the window. I couldn’t sort myself out at all.”

I wait for him to go on.

“Architecture was actually Lucas’s idea. He wrote me this beautifulstory about two boys making a whole town out of cardboard boxes. That was us, when we were seven and five. I was the boss. I spent hours designing and making those houses. He was right to suggest it. It’s been good for me.”

I smile, touched, and we lapse into silence, staring out at the darkened sea, grateful for a natural break in conversation. After a while Johan gets up and takes two beers out of the fridge. He turns off the main light and puts on lamps, like he always did, because—as he always said—there’s no magic in a room lit from above. “I leave these for all my guests,” he says, opening both beers and putting one in front of me.

We drink. I’m not sure what to do with all this information. I’m not sure what it means for the decision I made back then to remove Johan Kullberg from my heart and never allow him back in.

“I can’t believe you’re here, in my summer house,” Johan says after a while. “I can’t believe we’re talking about this. I never really stopped imagining what it would be like if I gave in and contacted you.”

I close my eyes briefly. Those hours I spent awake at night, looking at the green stain of the squid boats from space, wondering if he was safe and well. If he ever thought about me.

My phone starts ringing. It’s Nicola.

I silence it. She’ll be calling to tell me the good news about Dad; she won’t know Maya’s already been in touch. Apparently Dad ate most of his lunch today and they talked for a couple of minutes.

Johan looks at my phone, flashing silently on the table. “How is Nicola?” he asks.

The call ends, and I put my phone in my pocket—just as it starts ringing again.

Nicola.

He watches me, with those steely blue eyes, as I answer the phone.As I hear the sound of sobbing, as I stand up, asking her sharply to tell me what’s happened.

Johan stands there at the counter, watching me as I learn that Dad, my beloved dad, went suddenly downhill this afternoon and died half an hour ago.

And because there is no mistaking what this call is about, he comes and stands with me after the call has ended, and he holds me while I sob. I lean in and he smells just like he always smelled, and he feels just like he always felt, and even though my life is falling away under my feet I want to stay here, like this, until someone comes with a chisel to prize us apart.

Thirty-four.

Six a.m. The sea is flat as glass. A pale sunrise quivers across the water in amethyst pools; the willows and reeds are still. I’ve managed to get a flight just before five o’clock this afternoon, and I’ll need to drive back to Stockholm and pack up the flat before I go. I don’t know if I’ll come back to finish the clinical attachment. I don’t know anything now. My father is dead.

I’ve been calling Robin intermittently since I woke, but he’s not answered yet. Eventually, worried that the children might somehow find out through the grapevine that their granddad has died, I text him the news and ask him if he can steer clear of other people so we can tell them together, tomorrow morning. The loss of their only solid grandparent—Robin’s parents are dead and my mother seldom visits—will hit them hard. But they’re six years old. I have a feeling that the loss of their holiday to Sweden will hurt almost as much.


When I leave later on, I don’t look around the cabin or say goodbye to it. I just get into the car, desperate to leave. Glancingbriefly, guiltily, in the rearview mirror, I see the sea, the bulrushes, Johan’s large wooden picnic table disappearing out of sight, and I feel only relief. I need to get back to my family.

I call Robin again as I leave the woods, heading toward Trosa. This morning, as yesterday, deer graze in the grass by the roadside, unbothered by the cold rain falling in blunt needles on their backs. This time, Robin cancels my call after two rings, which is odd. I try again, assuming he must have mistakenly canceled the call while trying to answer, but this time it goes straight to voicemail.

I imagine his phone battery has died but, for reasons I can’t put my finger on, I’m a little worried. I’ve sent him a message telling him Dad has died, yet no reply?

Has something happened to one of the kids? Is it Raffy? His asthma?

I call Robin once more but, again, it goes straight to voicemail.

I drive on, clouds jamming a low sky. Robin carries fully charged power banks everywhere with him. In his line of work he can’t be unreachable: when we moved to Dartmoor he wouldn’t view any house that didn’t have strong phone signal. If his battery has died it’ll be charged soon enough.

Unless he’s in hospital with Raffy. Unless power banks are the last thing on his mind right now.