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Ch 47 – The Downside of Free Foodโ€Œ

Remarkably Bright Creatures

Cameron tosses a disgustingly mealy peach, whole but for a bite, into the trash can at the end of the pier. Ethanโ€™s expired-grocery offerings can be a blessing and a curse. But heโ€™s saved a crap ton of cash on groceries this summer, and to boot, heโ€™s been parking the camper in Ethanโ€™s driveway for free. He owes Ethan a solid, for sure.

Stars scatter across the sky over Puget Sound, reflecting their silvery glow on the inky water below, a beautifully random pattern of lights that reminds Cameron of the dark brown freckles on the bridge of Averyโ€™s nose. He turns from the water and heads back to the camper, where his phone is charging. He wonders, not for the first time, what it would be like to park here on the shore and wake up to nothing but the water view in his windshield. Heโ€™s thought about trying it, but Ethan says that Sowell Bayโ€™s overnight patrolman, a buddy of his called Mike, would apparently relish towing a camper from one of the public lots. Would give poor old Mike something to do in the tedious predawn hours. Maybe, someday, heโ€™d live here and have a house with a view of the water. Maybe, if he could just find Simon Brinks.

But thatโ€™s the bright future. Tonight, heโ€™ll drive back up the hill to his spot in Ethanโ€™s driveway, but first, he logs into his banking app to see if his latest paycheck has cleared. It has. The last chunk of money he needs to pay Aunt Jeanne back in full. A thrill courses through him as he taps through the transfer, adding a bonus to the sum just because he

can. He sends her a text, a heart emoji, but sheโ€™s probably asleep. Itโ€™s after eleven.

A couple hundred bucks left over. He should save all of it. Totally should. But he pulls up a site he knows well, one that sells music for indie bands. Moth Sausage used to have their tracks listed there, but thatโ€™s not why heโ€™s here. He searches his own name out of curiosity, but nothing comes up. Well, thatโ€™s not surprising. Brad probably had the bandโ€™s stuff taken down. Oh well. Instead, he searches until he finds two under-the-radar jam bands, ones that he knows are pretty decent. Like the Dead, like Phish or something, Ethanโ€™s style, but new. Cameron Cassmore may be a loser and a burnout, living in a shitty camper, but he knows good music. He buys digital albums from both bands and enters Ethanโ€™s email for delivery.

Itโ€™s a start.

THE CAMPERโ€™S WINDOWSย are still black when his phone buzzes. Cameron pats around until his hand finds the device. When he sees Aunt Jeanneโ€™s number on the screen, his stomach drops. The last time she called him in the middle of the night, it was from the hospital, when she had a dented head and a shattered hip and two cops in her hospital room, trying to take a statement about what had happened in an altercation at Dellโ€™s.

โ€œHello?โ€ he says, breathless. When heโ€™d rushed to the hospital back then, it was twenty minutes away. Now, he didnโ€™t want to think about how long the drive would be.

โ€œIโ€™m fine, Cammy,โ€ she says, apparently reading his anxious tone.

โ€œThen why are you calling me now?โ€ He checks the time. โ€œAt one in the morning?โ€

โ€œDid I wake you up?โ€ โ€œUh, yeah.โ€

โ€œThought youโ€™d be out at the bar or something.โ€

โ€œNo. I was sound asleep. I worked my ass off today.โ€

โ€œSorry. Just wanted to let you know I got your bank transfer. You sent too much.โ€ Aunt Jeanne lets out an off-key whistle. Has she been drinking? A muffled male voice shuffles in the background, and Cameron wonders whether Wally Perkins is there, with her, in her trailer.

Cameron sits up, rubbing his eyes. โ€œThe extra is interest.โ€ He doesnโ€™t add that heโ€™d calculated it in his head based on the current prime rate and what she might have plausibly gotten from bonds, if the money had been invested there, which it never would have been, but did that matter?

โ€œWe never said anything about interest.โ€ Her voice is cool.

โ€œBut I owed it to you.โ€ย And I owe you so much more, he doesnโ€™t add.

โ€œYou donโ€™t owe me anything.โ€ Her voice is slurry, for sure. Definitely some whiskey. โ€œYou know I never expected you to actually pay me back.โ€

โ€œFor sure I was going to pay you back.โ€ Cameron hesitates, kicking off the blanket. โ€œActually, I was thinking once I square things up with Simon Brinks for everything he owes, we could use the money for a down payment.โ€

โ€œA down payment?โ€

โ€œFor you. A house, back in town. Get you out of that trailer park.โ€

โ€œI happen to like this trailer park.โ€

In the background, a grizzled male voice pipes up. โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€

โ€œWally, did you realize we live in a dump?โ€ Cameron sputters, โ€œI never said it was a dump!โ€

โ€œNot in so many words,โ€ Aunt Jeanne says dryly. โ€œLook, Iโ€™m glad youโ€™re so flush with cash all of a sudden that you can go around buying houses for people who donโ€™t need them. Why donโ€™t you keep the money and actually make something of your life?โ€

โ€œWhat do you think Iโ€™m trying to do? Not my fault I was dealt a shitty hand.โ€

โ€œNo, the deal is never anyoneโ€™s fault. But you control the way you play.โ€ Thereโ€™s a splash and tinkling of ice cubes, then a momentโ€™s pause and another one. Two more drinks poured.

Cameron flings open the camperโ€™s back door, tumbles out, and starts pacing in Ethanโ€™s driveway. Under his bare feet, the pavement is still warm from the hot summer day. โ€œIโ€™ve played my hand as best I could. You couldโ€™ve told me Sowell Bay was where I came from.โ€

Aunt Jeanne snorts. โ€œWhat good would that have done?โ€ โ€œI might have maybe found my father before I was, say,

thirty years old.โ€

โ€œThat man is not your father.โ€ โ€œHow do you know for sure?โ€

โ€œShe was my sister, Cammy.โ€ Aunt Jeanneโ€™s voice is weary now, almost defeated. โ€œFor all your motherโ€™s flaws, she was no dummy. If your father was some big-shot business guy . . . I mean, if he were even a marginally productive member of society, or, hell, even alive . . . I donโ€™t know, Cammy. I think if it were that simple, she wouldnโ€™t have let him miss out on being a part of your life.โ€

โ€œShe missed out on being a part of my life.โ€ Cameron kicks a clump of crabgrass in a crack of Ethanโ€™s driveway. โ€œSeems like letting people go comes easy to her.โ€

โ€œLetting go,โ€ Aunt Jeanne says softly, โ€œcan be the hardest thing.โ€

Cameron feels his face twist into an involuntary scowl. Itโ€™s basically the same thing Avery said when they were paddleboarding under the pier, but somehow hearing it from Aunt Jeanne makes him want to kick right through the concrete.

โ€œLook, I need to bounce,โ€ he says. โ€œWork in the morning.โ€ This isnโ€™t true. He doesnโ€™t work until noon, but it

seems like the sort of excuse a responsible person might give to get off the phone in the middle of the night.

Aunt Jeanne muffles the receiver for a second, another exchange with Wally Perkins. โ€œOkay, Cammy. But Iโ€™d love to see you when we come through Seattle before our cruise next month.โ€

We?

โ€œSure thing,โ€ says Cameron. Whatever. He hangs up and slams the camper door behind him before flopping back onto his mattress.

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