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Chapter no 6

Wish You Were Here

Four weeks after I arrive on Isabela, I get an early birthday present: a

strange and unlikely dump of old emails into my inbox. I have no idea why some were coming through, yet not othersโ€”but there are several from Finn, and two from my motherโ€™s facility, updating me on her health (no significant change, which I figure is good news). There is also a note from Sothebyโ€™s, saying that I have been furloughed, along with two hundred other employees, because of a massive downturn in the art sales industry. I stare at this for a while, wondering if Kitomi wasnโ€™t the only one to delay her auction, and trying to rationalize that being furloughed is better than being fired. Thereโ€™s also an email from Rodney, telling me that Sothebyโ€™s can suck a dick, and that the only people who werenโ€™t furloughed were tech support, because theyโ€™re pivoting to online sales. He never thought heโ€™d

have to return to his sisterโ€™s house in New Orleans, but who can afford rent in the city on unemployment?

The last line of his email isย Girl, if I were you, Iโ€™d stay in paradise as long as I could.

On my actual birthday a week later, I am invited to Gabrielโ€™s farm. Itโ€™s twenty minutes by car into the highlands, and he comes to pick me and Abuela up in a rusty Jeep with no side doors. โ€œYou donโ€™t look a day over forty,โ€ he deadpans when he sees me, and when I shove at him he starts laughing. โ€œWomen are so sensitive about their age,โ€ he jokes.

As we drive, we see more galapagueรฑos out and about than I have in weeks. At first, when the island closed down, I could walk the beach or hike into the highlands and not see another soul. But now, by the fifth week of lockdown, with no actual cases of Covid on Isabela and no one new arriving to spread it, people have begun to sneak out of their houses and break curfew.

As we wind into the center of the island, the scrub and desert landscape at the shoreline gives way to lush, thick vegetation. The shipments of food

and supplies to the island have been extremely limited, and I know that Gabriel isnโ€™t the only person here to rely on family farmland to supplement them during the pandemic. We pass dirty sheep in pens, goats, a lowing cow with an udder as full as the moon. There are banana trees, with green fruit defying gravity to grow upward, and girls squatting in fields pulling weeds. Finally Gabriel turns onto a dusty path that winds toward a small house.

Beatriz had led me to believe that it was nothing more than a glorified tent, but only half of it is under construction. Gabriel isnโ€™t building a house as much as he is expanding it.

For Beatriz, I bet.

Iโ€™ve been thinking nonstop about her confession to me in the trillizos. Iโ€™d said that if Beatriz talked to me about suicide, Iโ€™d tell Gabrielโ€”and her

recklessness in the tunnel truly worried me. But I couldnโ€™t confess to Gabriel what had happened unless I explained why, and that would mean talking about Ana Maria not returning Beatrizโ€™s affections. That, I know, is not my secret to share. Gabriel doesnโ€™t strike me as the kind of parent whoโ€™d be upset if his daughter came out, but then, I do not truly know him. Whatever strides the LGBTQ+ community has made in the United States, they are not universal; moreover, this is a predominantly Catholic country and gay rights arenโ€™t exactly the mainstay of that dogma. I think about Abuelaโ€™s house, where painted crosses decorate every bit of wall space. In the absence of church services, suspended because of Covid, she has created a small altar where she prays and lights candles.

Instead, Iโ€™ve found ways to see Beatriz every day, to take her emotional temperature, and hope I donโ€™t have to betray her in order to protect her.

Beatriz comes bounding out of the front of the house as Gabriel pulls the emergency brake on the Jeep.ย โ€œFelicidades!โ€ย she says, smiling at me.

โ€œThanks.โ€

I realize something is tugging at me and I turn to find a little white goat with brown ears chewing on the hem of my T-shirt. โ€œOoh,โ€ I say, kneeling down to rub its knobby horns. โ€œWhoโ€™s this?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t name my food,โ€ Gabriel says, and I gasp.

โ€œYou are not eating this sweetheart,โ€ I tell him, โ€œand he has to have a name.โ€

โ€œFine.โ€ He grins. โ€œStew.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ I fold my arms. โ€œPromise me. Consider it my birthday gift.โ€

Gabriel laughs. โ€œOnly because Stewโ€™s a terrible name for a lady goat. As long as we can milk her, sheโ€™s safe. We trade her milk to the neighbor for

eggs.โ€

He helps Abuela up the steps into his house. The livable area is two rooms: one with a small kitchen, a tiny table, two mismatched wooden chairs, and a beanbag chair; the other a bedroom. I donโ€™t see a bathroom, just a little outhouse in the distance. While Gabriel and Abuela stand at the table, unpacking the food sheโ€™s brought to cook and talking in Spanish,

Beatriz pulls me into the bedroom.

There is a mattress on the floor and a scarred chest of drawers, but there is also a mirror with mosaic glass around it, and a quilt with flowers embroidered on it, and fairy lights strung on a series of nails that have been tacked to the wall. This must have been Gabrielโ€™s room, I realize. I wonder if he transformed it into this little oasis for her, hoping for the best before

she came here from school. I wonder where he sleeps now.

โ€œOh,โ€ I say, pulling several postcards from my tote. โ€œI brought some more.โ€

โ€œCool.โ€ Beatriz takes them, setting them in front of the mirror.

Since our day at the trillizos, we havenโ€™t talked about the girl she left behind on Santa Cruz, or if she still feels like cutting. Only once in the past two weeks has she even alluded to what transpired. We were sitting in Puerto Villamil, watching boobies torpedo into the water to catch fish, our legs dangling off the pier, just letting the afternoon settle around us like

cotton batting. โ€œDiana?โ€ Beatriz had said, apropos of nothing. โ€œThanks. For catching me.โ€

What I wanted to do was wrap my arms around her tight. What I did instead was bump her shoulder with mine.ย โ€œDe nada,โ€ย I said, when I meant the very opposite. It wasnโ€™t nothing. It wasย everything.

I figure Beatriz will tell me what she wants to tell me and needs to tell me when sheโ€™s ready. And God knows, right now, I have nothing but time.

Thereโ€™s a knock on the door and Gabriel pokes his head inside. โ€œYou ready to earn your supper? I need help picking fruit.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s my birthday,โ€ I protest.

โ€œNo problema.โ€ย He shrugs. โ€œWeโ€™ll have the goat for dinner instead.โ€ โ€œFunny,โ€ I tell him, and turn to Beatriz. โ€œCome help. Iโ€™m way too old for

physical labor.โ€

She shakes her head. โ€œIโ€™ve got other things to do.ย Secretย things.โ€

Gabriel leans toward her and in an exaggerated whisper asks, โ€œWas that good?โ€

โ€œPerfect,โ€ Beatriz says, and she skirts us on her way to the small table, where Abuela is already measuring out flour. โ€œGo on,โ€ she shoos. โ€œLeave.โ€

I follow Gabriel outside. โ€œSheโ€™s making a cake for me, isnโ€™t she?โ€ โ€œYou didnโ€™t hear it from me,โ€ he says.

โ€œThatโ€™s sweet.โ€ I sit down on a stump near the front door as Gabriel

untangles something from a pile of tools. He hands it to meโ€”a wire basket on a stickโ€”and then picks up a five-gallon plastic bucket.

โ€œVamos,โ€ย he says.

โ€œYou mean weโ€™re really picking fruit? I thought that was just a ruse to get me out of the house.โ€

โ€œIt was. But also, this is a farm.โ€ I follow him into the fields that stretch behind the house, where he points to yams and corn, lettuce and carrots.

There is a patch of pineapple not ripe enough to harvest, and then we come to a small group of trees. โ€œPapaya,โ€ Gabriel says. He takes the pole and

squints up at the leaves, jostling the tool for a minute before he lowers it again and with a little flip of the wrist, drops the heavy fruit into my hand.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know papaya grew on trees,โ€ I marvel.

We work in companionable quiet while he strips the tree of its ripe fruit, and then I kneel beside him to dig up a few yams. By the time we get back to the house, Iโ€™m filthy. Gabriel leads me to a water pump, jacking its

handle so that I have a stream to wash my hands and my face. When I return the favor, he strips off his shirt and ducks his head and torso under the water, shaking off like a hound and making me shriek.

The noise draws Beatriz, who stands in the doorway. โ€œPerfect timing,โ€ she says. Then she claps, and Abuela appears behind her holding a small one-tier chocolate cake on a plate.ย โ€œCumpleaรฑos feliz,โ€ย they sing,ย โ€œte

deseamos a ti โ€ฆโ€ย Beatriz runs ahead and whispers something to Gabriel, who takes out a lighter and flicks the flame to life with his thumb.

โ€œNo candle,โ€ he explains.

Abuela sets the cake down on a picnic table outside the house, which has been decorated with strewn flowers. โ€œMake a wish,โ€ Beatriz orders.

Dutifully, I close my eyes. I wish โ€ฆ

That I was back in New York with Finn. That my mother will get better.

That this will be over soon.

These things are what I should be wishing for. But instead, all that runs through my mind is that it is hard to make wishes, when in the moment, it feels like you have everything you need.

I open my eyes again and lean toward the lighter in Gabrielโ€™s hand.

Gently, I blow.

He winks at me, and snaps the lid so the flame disappears. โ€œThat means it will come true,โ€ he says.

After we finish the cake, Gabriel builds a fire in a ring of lava stones in the yard. He turns on a small transistor radio and we all sit on folding lawn chairs. To my shock, there are presents for me: Beatriz gives me a small box she has decorated with shells; Abuela gives me a necklace with a medal of

the Virgin Mary on it and insists on securing it around my neck. Even Gabriel tells me he has a giftโ€”but itโ€™s an experience, not a thing, and heโ€™ll take me in a few days. Afterward, Beatriz brings me a blank journal and

demands I do a portrait of her, like the ones I did at the feria. When the last of the light leaves the sky itโ€™s decided that Beatriz will share her bed with Abuela, and that Gabriel and I will camp out under the stars.

When we are alone, I look at the medal nestled between my breasts. โ€œDid I just get baptized or something?โ€ I ask.

Gabriel grins. โ€œItโ€™s called a miraculous medal. Itโ€™s supposed to bring blessings to people who wear it with faith.โ€

I glance at him. โ€œSo basically if Iโ€™m not Catholic, lightning could strike at any moment?โ€

โ€œIf it does, it will likely hit me first, so youโ€™re safe,โ€ he says. He pokes at the embers with a stick, stirring them, and then picks up the journal with the sketch I made of Beatriz. โ€œYouโ€™re very talented,โ€ he tells me, carefully closing the book and setting it on the picnic table.

I shrug. โ€œParty trick,โ€ I say.

He disappears into the house for a moment. When he reappears with two rolled sleeping bags, the radio is playing a Nightjars song. โ€œThe first vinyl album I ever bought was Sam Prideโ€™s.โ€

I look up at him. โ€œWas it the one with Kitomi Ito naked on the cover?โ€ Gabriel blinks. โ€œWell,โ€ he says, โ€œactually, yeah.โ€

โ€œI know her,โ€ I tell him.

โ€œEveryoneย knows her.โ€ He lays one of the sleeping bags at my feet, and shakes out the other on the opposite side of the fire.

โ€œBut Iย knowย know her,โ€ I tell him. โ€œI was in the process of selling her painting. The one from that album cover, actually.โ€

Gabriel pulls his own sleeping bag closer to the fire pit. The reflections of the flames dance over his forearms as he pours what looks like water from a bottle into two shot glasses. โ€œThat sounds like a story,โ€ he says, and he passes me a glass.ย โ€œSalud,โ€ย he says, and clinks his own against mine.

Following his lead, I drain it in one swallow, and nearly choke, because it is most definitely not water. โ€œHolyย fuck,โ€ I gasp. โ€œWhat is this?โ€

โ€œCaรฑa.โ€ He laughs. โ€œCane sugar alcohol. One hundred proof.โ€ Then he leans back on his elbows. โ€œNow tell me why you know Sam Prideโ€™s wife.โ€

I do, skirting over the fact that my last conversation with her may have cost me a promotion, if not my job. When I finish talking I look up to find Gabriel staring at me, puzzled. โ€œSo your job is to sell other peopleโ€™s art?โ€ he asks, and I nod. โ€œBut what about your own?โ€

Surprised, I shake my head. โ€œOh, Iโ€™m not an artist. I just have an art history degree.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€

โ€œUseless arcane knowledge,โ€ I reply. โ€œI doubt that โ€ฆโ€

โ€œWell, at Williams I wrote a thesis on the paintings of saints and how they died.โ€

He laughs. โ€œMaybe that miraculous medal isnโ€™t such a stretch after all

โ€ฆโ€

I hold out my glass for another shot of liquor. โ€œHey, Iโ€™ll have you know that Saint Margaret of Antioch was eaten by a dragon, but is usually painted with said dragon hanging out at her side. Saint Peter the Martyrโ€™s portraits

includeย the cleaver in his skull. Saint Lucyโ€”patron saint of eye problemsโ€” was always shown holding a dish with two eyeballs on it. Oh, and Saint

Nicholasโ€”โ€

โ€œPapรก Noel?โ€ Gabriel pours me more caรฑa.

โ€œThe very same. Heโ€™s often painted holding three gold balls that look like candy, but theyโ€™re actually dowries heโ€™d give to poor virgins.โ€

Gabrielโ€™s eyebrows rise. He lifts his own glass. โ€œMerry Christmas,โ€ he says.

We toast, and I swallow; the second time, Iโ€™m expecting the burn. โ€œSo as you can see,โ€ I tell him, โ€œmy esteemed education has made me very good for trivia at cocktail parties.โ€ I shrug. โ€œAnd it helped land me my dream

job.โ€

He leans back on the mattress heโ€™s made of his sleeping bag, his feet crossed. โ€œPeople dream of making art,โ€ he says. โ€œNobody dreams of selling it.โ€

This makes me think of my mother, gallivanting all over the world to

take pictures that won awards, that graced magazine covers, that chronicled struggle and war and famine. How her images were in museums and even gifted to the White House but had never been sold in a public forum until I auctioned some off to pay for her assisted living facility.

I shake my head. โ€œYou donโ€™t understand. These pieces of art โ€ฆ theyโ€™re worth millions. Sothebyโ€™s is synonymous with prestige.โ€

โ€œAnd that,โ€ Gabriel says, โ€œis important to you?โ€

I stare into the fire. Flames are the one thing you canโ€™t ever really

replicate in art. The moment you make them static in paint, you take away their magic. โ€œYes,โ€ I reply. โ€œMy best friend, Rodney, and I have been plotting our meteoric rise through the company since we met there nine

years ago.โ€

โ€œRodney,โ€ Gabriel repeats. โ€œYour boyfriend doesnโ€™t mind that your best friend is a man?โ€

โ€œNo, Gabriel,โ€ I say sharply, โ€œbecause my boyfriend and I do not live in the Dark Ages. Plus, Rodney is โ€ฆ well, Rodney. Heโ€™s Black, Southern, and gay, or as he puts it, a golden trifecta.โ€ I look carefully at Gabriel as I say

the wordย gay,ย gauging his reaction. Beatrizโ€™s confidences are still not mine to tell, but I canโ€™t help wondering what his reaction would be if she were

brave enough to confide in him. Gabriel, however, doesnโ€™t bat an eye. โ€œAre there a lot of LGBTQ people here?โ€ I ask breezily.

โ€œI donโ€™t know. What people do in private is what they do in private.โ€ He shrugs, a smile tugging at his mouth. โ€œBut when I was a tour guide, the gay couples always tipped best.โ€

I hug my knees to my chest. โ€œHow did you become a tour guide?โ€

I donโ€™t expect him to answer, since he keeps that part of his lifeโ€”and his subsequent departure from itโ€”close to his chest, but Gabriel shrugs. โ€œWhen my parents honeymooned on Isabela in the eighties, there were maybe like two hundred residents on island, and they wanted to stay. So they brought

Abuela in from the mainland. My father loved it here. People used to call himย El Alcaldeโ€”the mayorโ€”because he would go on and on about how amazing Isabela is to anyone and everyone who landed in Puerto Villamil. He didnโ€™t have the scientific background to be a park ranger, so he became a tour guide.โ€

Gabriel looks at me across the fire. โ€œWhen I was growing up, it was expected that Iโ€™d join the family business. Iโ€™d been doing it unofficially with him for years. You have to train for seven months to be certified as a guide by the government of Ecuadorโ€”studying biology, history, natural history, genetics, languages. Professors come here from all over the world

โ€”the University of Vienna, and the University of North Carolina, and the University of Miamiโ€”they ask for the help of the guides to continue research for them when theyโ€™re off-island. So you know, we might wind up taking pictures of green sea turtles, and sending them back to a scientist so he can track them around the island for his research. We might be asked to document penguin behaviors that seem unique.โ€

โ€œI was bit by one,โ€ I say, rubbing my arm. โ€œWhen I first got here.โ€ โ€œWell, thatโ€™s unique.โ€ Gabriel laughs. โ€œThey usually are pretty shy

around people, but with the quarantine, they seem to crave human interaction a little more. Even if it hurts the humans.โ€ He pokes at the fire with a stick. โ€œThere was a time, believe it or not, that I thought Iโ€™d be the scientist doing marine biology. Not the tour guide doing the grunt work.โ€

โ€œWhat happened?โ€

โ€œBeatriz,โ€ he says, smiling faintly. โ€œMy ex, Luz, got pregnant, when we were seventeen. We got married.โ€

โ€œSo you didnโ€™t become a marine biologist.โ€

He shakes his head. โ€œPlans change. Shit happens.โ€ โ€œBeatriz told me her mother โ€ฆ left.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s a polite way of putting it,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œThe truth is, we didnโ€™t stay together because we didnโ€™t belong together. Not even for a baby. I learned the hard way that you shouldnโ€™t stay with someone because of your past togetherโ€”what matters more is if you want the same things in the future. Luz felt like she was too young to be trapped as a mother, and she was always looking for the escape hatch. I just didnโ€™t think it was going to take the shape of aย National Geographicย photographer.โ€ He glances at me. โ€œVery different from you and your boyfriend, Iโ€™m sure.โ€

I am glad for the darkness, because he cannot see the flush on my cheeks. Finn and I are the couple that our friends tagย #relationshipgoals. Every time Rodney has cried over another breakup, Iโ€™ve curled up in Finnโ€™s arms in bed and silently given thanks that of all the people in the world, we found each other. I trust him and he trusts me. Itโ€™s steady and stable and I know exactly what to expect: Iโ€™ll get my promotion; heโ€™ll get a fellowship. Weโ€™ll get married in a vineyard upstate (tasteful, no more than a hundred guests, band not DJ, justice of the peace officiating); honeymoon on the Amalfi coast; buy a house outside the city during the first year of his fellowship; have our first child during the second year and a sibling two years after that.

Honestly, the only point of contention was whether weโ€™d get a Bernese or an English springer spaniel. I had believed that Finn and I were so attuned that even a forced separation like this one wouldnโ€™t shake our rock- solidness. But itโ€™s taken only three weeks for me to feel disconnected; for doubt to grow like weeds, so insidious that itโ€™s hard to see what used to blossom in that bed instead.

There is still the niggling thought that Finn suggested I leave New York without expecting me to actuallyย doย itโ€”as if this were some sort of relationship test I was supposed to pass, but failed. And maybe I am equally to blame for not insisting that I stay. But I also know that focusing on that

one moment of miscommunication keeps me from examining a more painful, scarier truth: here on Isabela, there are times I forget to miss him.

I can explain it away: At first, I was distracted trying to figure out how to stay fed and housed. Iโ€™ve been thinking of Beatriz, and trying to keep her from cutting. Iโ€™ve been literally disconnected because of a lack of technology.

But if you have toย rememberย to miss the love of your life โ€ฆ does that mean heโ€™s not the love of your life?

I pin a smile on my face and nod. โ€œIโ€™m lucky,โ€ I tell Gabriel. โ€œWhen Finn and I are together, itโ€™s perfect.โ€

And when weโ€™re not?

โ€œFinn,โ€ he repeats slowly. โ€œYou know what finning is?โ€ โ€œIs this a s*x thing?โ€

His teeth flash white. โ€œItโ€™s when massive Chinese fleets fish for tons of sharks. They cut off their fins for soup and traditional medicinesโ€”and then leave the sharks to die in the ocean.โ€

โ€œThat isย awful,โ€ I say, thinking that now Iโ€™ll always associate this with Finnโ€™s name.

Maybe thatโ€™s what Gabriel intended.

โ€œThatโ€™s the part of paradise you donโ€™t get to see,โ€ he says. โ€œAm I a terrible person?โ€ I ask quietly. โ€œFor being here?โ€ โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s been weeks. Maybe I should have been trying harder to get back to New York.โ€

He glances at me. โ€œShort of growing a pair of wings, Iโ€™m not sure how that would happen.โ€

I lift my gaze. โ€œNatural selection favors wings โ€ฆโ€

His mouth curves. โ€œI guess anything is possible. It just may take a few thousand years for you to evolve.โ€

I scrub my hands over my face. โ€œIf you read his emails, Gabriel โ€ฆ itโ€™s so bad. Itโ€™s killing him slowly to watch all those patients die, and I canโ€™t do anything to help him.โ€

โ€œEven if you were there,โ€ he says, โ€œyou might not be able to do anything.

Thereโ€™s some shit that people have to work through on their own.โ€ โ€œI know. I just feel so โ€ฆ powerless.โ€

He nods. โ€œI imagine it feels like youโ€™re caged in and canโ€™t get to him,โ€ Gabriel says, โ€œbut maybe youโ€™re the only one who sees it as a cage.โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œIf it were me,โ€ he says, looking down at the fire, โ€œand if you were the person I love โ€ฆ Iโ€™d want you as far away as possible so that I could battle the monsters and not have to worry about you getting hurt.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not a relationship,โ€ I argue. โ€œThatโ€™s โ€ฆ thatโ€™s like a beautiful piece of artwork you donโ€™t display because youโ€™re afraid it will get

damaged. So, instead, you crate it up and stick it in storage and it doesnโ€™t bring you any joy or any beauty.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know about that,โ€ Gabriel says softly. โ€œWhat if itโ€™s something youโ€™d fight like hell to protect so you can someday see it one more time?โ€

His words make a shiver run down my spine, so I unzip my sleeping bag and slide into it. It smells like soap and salt, like Gabriel. I lie down, my head still spinning a little from the caรฑa, and blink at the night sky. Gabriel does the same, lying on top of his own sleeping bag, his arms folded over his stomach. The crowns of our heads are nearly touching.

โ€œWhen I was a boy, my father taught me to navigate by stars, just in

case,โ€ he murmurs. I hear a catch in his voice, and I think that of all he has told me tonight, the one thing he hasnโ€™t revealed is why he is a farmer, not a tour guide.ย Plans change,ย heโ€™d said.ย Shit happens.

โ€œHow bad was your sense of direction?โ€ I say, tryingโ€”and failingโ€”for lightness.

The fire hisses in the quiet between us. โ€œEverything youโ€™re seeing up in the night sky happened thousands of years ago, because the light takes so long to reach us,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œI always thought it was so strange โ€ฆ that sailors chart where theyโ€™re going in the future by looking at a map of the past.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s why I love art,โ€ I say. โ€œWhen you study the provenance of a piece, youโ€™re seeing history. You learn what people wanted future

generations to remember.โ€

The sky looks like an overturned bowl of glitter; I cannot remember ever seeing so many stars. I think of the ceiling at Grand Central Terminal, and how I restored it with my father. It is hard to piece out the constellations here, and I realize thatโ€™s because on the equator, you can see clusters from both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Thereโ€”I find the Big Dipper. But also the Southern Cross, which is normally hidden beneath the horizon for me.

It feels like a peek at a secret.

โ€œI canโ€™t usually see the Southern Cross,โ€ I say softly. It makes me a little disoriented, like the whole planet has shimmied off course.

I wonder if I had to come to this half of the world just to see it a whole different way.

After a moment, Gabriel asks, โ€œDid you have a good birthday?โ€

I glance at him. He has rolled to his side. While Iโ€™ve been looking at the sky, heโ€™s been looking at me.

โ€œThe best,โ€ I say.

To:ย [email protected] From: [email protected]

Sometimes I wonder if Iโ€™m ever going to do an appendectomy again. Iโ€™m a surgeon. I fix things. Your gallbladderโ€™s infected? I got it. Hernia repair? Iโ€™m your guy. If I have any

ICU patients, itโ€™s temporary, a complication from surgery that I know how to fix. But with Covid, I canโ€™t fix anything. Iโ€™m just maintaining the status quo, if Iโ€™m lucky.

Also, Iโ€™m a resident, which means Iโ€™m supposed to be learningโ€”but Iโ€™m learning nothing.

Iโ€™m good at my job. I just donโ€™t know if my job is still good for me.

Three days ago, when I left the hospital, 98% of the beds in the ICU were occupied, and all my patients were on oxygen and dying. On the way home, I called my dad to check in. You know he voted for Trumpโ€”so maybe I shouldnโ€™t have been surprised when he told me that the Covid numbers are inflated, and that the shutdown is a cure

thatโ€™s worse than the disease.

I get that not everyone is seeing this virus firsthand. Itโ€™s another thing entirely to disavow it.

I hung up on him.

Fuck. I just remembered your birthday.

My mother was often asked how she โ€œdid it allโ€โ€”juggled the roles of wife, mother, and one of the most renowned crisis photographers of the century. In real life, the answer was simpleโ€”sheย didnโ€™tย do it all. My father did most of it, and if there was a balance between motherhood and her career, it canted hard to the latter. In interviews, she would always tell the same story about the first time she took me to the pediatrician. She bundled me into my snowsuit, loaded her pocketbook and the collapsible stroller and the diaper bag into the car, and drove offโ€”leaving me buckled in my infant carrier on the floor of the kitchen. She was in the doctorโ€™s parking lot before she realized that sheโ€™d left her baby behind.

My mother never told me that story directly, but I had seen so many

interview clips on the internet that I knew where she paused for dramatic effect, the part where she smiled wryly, the bit where she rolled her eyes in self-deprecation. It was an act, and my mother never broke character. She and the interviewer would both laugh, in a charming, what-can-you-do way.

What about the baby,ย I used to think, as if it were not me, as if I were a mere observer.ย What about this is remotely funny?

Finnโ€”

Last night I had a supervivid dream of you. Someone had kidnapped me and drugged me and I was in a basement and there werenโ€™t any

doors or windows where I could escape. I was tied to somethingโ€”a pole, a chair? Then all of a sudden, you were there, wearing a costume. I couldnโ€™t see the bottom half of your face, but I knew it was you because of your eyes and because I could smell your shampoo.

You kept telling me to stay awake so you could get me out of there, but I couldnโ€™t keep my eyes open. Then I realized we werenโ€™t alone. There was another woman with you, and she was in costume, too.

I was the only one who hadnโ€™t been invited to the party.

Itโ€™s somewhere around the fourth hour of a seven-hour hike to the Sierra Negra volcano that I wonder why, exactly, Gabriel thought this was a birthday gift anyone would actually enjoy. I am hot and sweaty and sunburned when we reach a small tree with a black rock in a crotch of its

limbs. โ€œThis is the spot where tourists leave their overnight packs,โ€ Gabriel says, and he shrugs off the gear heโ€™s been shouldering. โ€œSome of them stay overnight before hiking down into the caldera. No oneโ€™s allowed up here without a ranger or guide.โ€

We are breaking curfew, Gabriel isnโ€™t really a guide anymore, and the volcano happens to be active. What could possibly go wrong?

Till this point, the climb has taken us along dirt paths, through lush, thick greenery. The trail begins 800 meters above sea level, Gabriel tells me, and by the time you reach the volcano, youโ€™re 1,000 meters up. From the pack heโ€™s carried, he takes out a lunch Abuela has made and spreads it between us. There are plastic bowls of rice and chicken, and a chocolate bar that is already soft with heat, which we share. I stretch my legs out in front of me, looking at the dust on my sneakers. โ€œHow much further?โ€ I ask him.

He grins at me, his eyes shaded by a baseball cap. โ€œYou sound like Beatriz, when she was little.โ€

I try to imagine Beatriz, smart and demanding, as a little girl. โ€œI bet she was a handful.โ€

Gabriel thinks for a moment. โ€œShe was just the right amount.โ€

I open my mouth to explain the idiom to him, but then realize his answer is already perfect. โ€œDonโ€™t think I didnโ€™t notice that you avoided my question

โ€ฆโ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll know,โ€ he says. โ€œTrust me.โ€ And, I realize, I do.

We gather up our trash and put it into Gabrielโ€™s pack, falling into an easy rhythm as we hike to the top of the caldera. โ€œWhat are the odds,โ€ I ask, โ€œthat this is going to go all Mount St. Helens on us?โ€

โ€œSlim to none,โ€ Gabriel assures me. โ€œThere are twelve geological

systems tracking its tremors, and it gives out plenty of hints before it erupts, which happens every fifteen years or so. I was here the last time. My father and I hiked in and we slept on ground that was warm, like it had heated

pipes underneath. He taught me how to gauge the wind and the slope, so that we wouldnโ€™t wind up in the path of the eruption. We took pictures, when it happened. I remember you could see the orange lava in the cracks

of the earth, just a foot or so below. My shoes stuck to the rocks, because the soles had melted.โ€

โ€œWhen was this?โ€

โ€œTwo thousand five. I was a teenager.โ€

I do the math. โ€œSo โ€ฆ this volcano isย overdueย to blow?โ€

โ€œIf it makes you feel better, the Galรกpagos are moving eastward on their tectonic plate, so even though the hot spot is in the same place, the lava

flows mostly to the west now โ€ฆ which means the eruptions arenโ€™t as dangerous to the people living here anymore.โ€

It does not make me feel better, but before I can tell him that, the caldera comes into view.

The crater stands out in stark relief to the lush green that cradles it. Itโ€™s black, six miles of it, sprawled beneath a cloud of mist. It looks desolate and barren, otherworldly. From where we hike along the precipice, I can see the ocean and the rich emerald of the highlands to the right, but also the ropy, frozen black swirls of the caldera to the left. It feels like standing on

the line between life and death.

We have to climb down into the caldera, trek across it, and then hike up to the fumarolesโ€”the active part of the volcano. As we walk across the scorched belly of the crater, with its melted eddies of charred lava, it feels like we are navigating a distant planet. I follow behind Gabriel, stepping where he steps, as if one wrong move might plummet me to the middle of the earth.

โ€œYou know,โ€ he says over his shoulder. โ€œYouโ€™re different from when you first came.โ€

I glance down at myself. I know, from looking in the mirror in the apartment bathroom, that my hair is streaked blonder from the sun. My shorts hang on my hips, likely because Iโ€™m not eating every day at Sant Ambroeus, the cafรฉ in the Sothebyโ€™s building, and because Iโ€™ve been running and hiking instead of just briskly walking to work. Gabriel has slowed, so that we are shoulder to shoulder, and he sees me doing a self- inventory. โ€œNot like that,โ€ he says. โ€œInย here.โ€ He puts his hand over his heart.

He starts walking again, and I fall into pace with him. โ€œYou came here

like every other tourist. Wound up supertight, with your checklist, to take a picture of a tortoise and a sea lion and a booby and put them on Instagram.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t have aย list,โ€ I argue.

He raises a brow. โ€œDidnโ€™t you?โ€

Maybe not literally, but sure, there were things I had wanted to do on Isabela. Touristy things, because whatโ€™s the point of crossing off something on your bucket list ifโ€”

Shit. I did have a list.

โ€œVisitors come here saying they want to see Galรกpagos, but they donโ€™t, not really. They want to see what they can already see in guidebooks or on the internet. The real Isabela is made up of stuff most people donโ€™t care about. Like the feria, and how trading a pair of rubber wading boots can get you a meal of fresh lobster. Or how people who live here mark a pathโ€”not with a wooden sign, but with a lava rock set in the notch of a tree. Or what dinner tastes like, when youโ€™ve grown it yourself.โ€ He glances at me.

โ€œTourists come with an itinerary. Locals just โ€ฆ live.โ€ โ€œGabriel Fernandez,โ€ I say. โ€œWas that a compliment?โ€ He laughs. โ€œThisย isย your birthday present,โ€ he admits.

โ€œYou must have seen a lot of ugly Americans,โ€ I say. โ€œNot physically ugly. I mean the spoiled, entitled kind.โ€

โ€œNot too many. There were way moreย turistasย who came here and saw what nature looks like when itโ€™s wild, when you havenโ€™t contained it and confined it into twelve square city blocks or an exhibit at a zoo, and they were just โ€ฆ humbled. You could see the gears turning:ย How do we make

sure these beautiful things are here for other people to see? How can I keep my corner of the planet alive, to help?ย The best part of being a tour guide was planting a little seed in someoneโ€™s mind, and knowing you wouldnโ€™t be there to see it, but that it would grow and grow.โ€

Given how prickly heโ€™d been about me being a tourist when we first met and the fact that he isnโ€™t a tour guide any longer, I wonder what changed.

My nose pricklesโ€”the first clue that we have reached the fumaroles. The ground bleaches from black to white and yellow. All I can smell is sulfur.

Instead of the melted ice cream whirls of cooled lava, there are endless small light rocks that shift under my sneakers with a light, tinkling noise, and steam belching from thermal vents.

โ€œThere,โ€ Gabriel says, pointing to a spot where lime-green smoke oozes out of a pore in the earth.

I am six feet away from an active volcano. โ€œWhy did you stop?โ€ I ask.

He turns to me. โ€œBecause swimming in magma is overrated.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I say. โ€œWhy did you stop being a tour guide?โ€

He doesnโ€™t answer, and I assume that he is going to ignore me, like he

has before. But maybe there is something about the primeval landscape and our proximity to the beating heart of the planet, because Gabriel sinks down to the jaundiced ground, and starts from the beginning.

โ€œWe were taking out a scuba tour to Gordon Rocks,โ€ Gabriel says, as I settle across from him, our knees nearly touching. โ€œIt was a live-aboard boat, with twelve divers. It was a gig weโ€™d done hundreds of times. My

father and I went out early to check the conditions, because thatโ€™s what you do. I was the one who went into the water, while he stayed in the boat.

There was a slight current near the surface, no big deal.โ€

He looks at me. โ€œGordon Rocks, itโ€™s a cliff under the water, where just a little triangle of rock peeks out above the surface. We went back to the clientsโ€™ boat and we did the safety briefing. Because there were so many divers, we took two pangas. Everyone was given the same instructions for deboarding: get down twenty feet as quickly as possible, and bear to the right. But as soon as we were under the water it was clear that conditions werenโ€™t what Iโ€™d thought they were. The current was swift, and it was

deep.โ€

Gabriel stares out at the flat horizon, but I know heโ€™s not seeing whatโ€™s in front of us. โ€œTen divers got spread out to the right of the cliff wall. But one, who wasnโ€™t quite as experienced at scuba, got sucked into the current to the left, and dragged down deep. My father, he pointed to the ten other divers and then he did thisโ€โ€”Gabriel touches his index fingers togetherโ€”โ€œhe wanted me to stay close to them. I knew he was going to go after the other diver. I saw him swim into the current, and then when I couldnโ€™t see him anymore, I went after the others.โ€

He shakes his head. โ€œThere was a clump of divers clinging to the rock face, together. After I got to them, I led them to the surface and set off a float so that the panga driver could get them. The boat was already a half

mile north, picking up others who had surfaced a distance away. It went like that for a whileโ€”me treading water and trying to see the heads of the other divers and make sure the panga rounded them up. By the time that was done, I counted eleven divers and me, but my father and the last diver hadnโ€™t come up.

โ€œWe zoomed out to the left of the rock. I had binoculars, from the panga driver, and I was staring so hard at the surface of the water looking for a

bobbing head or anything that moved, but the ocean โ€ฆโ€ Gabrielโ€™s voice caught. โ€œItโ€™s just so goddamn big.โ€

He fell silent, and I reached into his lap and squeezed his hand. I rested our fists on my knee.

โ€œAfter an hour, I knew he couldnโ€™t have survived. At the depths he was at, he could have been dragged by the current a hundred feet or more. The percentage of oxygen in the tanks was meant for a shallow dive, and he

knew going deeper would mess with his brain and his ability to function. He would only have had enough air for ten or fifteen minutes, that far down. Between swimming hard to catch up to the lost diver and inflating

the diverโ€™s BC and unhooking his weight belt, my dad likely had even less time than that.โ€

I think about my own fatherโ€™s death. I was not with him, and it happened too fast, but at the hospital, I was able to see his body. I remember holding his cold hand and not wanting to let it go, because I knew it would be the last time I ever got to touch him. โ€œDid your father โ€ฆโ€ I start. โ€œDid he ever

โ€ฆโ€ But I canโ€™t seem to finish.

Gabriel shakes his head. โ€œBodies that drown in the ocean donโ€™t surface,โ€ he says quietly.

โ€œIโ€™m so sorry. What a terrible accident.โ€

His gaze snaps up. โ€œAccident? It was all my fault.โ€ Dumbfounded, I stare at him. โ€œHow?โ€

โ€œI was the one who tested the conditions. Clearly I got them wrongโ€”โ€ โ€œOr they changedโ€”โ€

โ€œThen I should have been the one to go after the diver,โ€ Gabriel insists. โ€œSo my father would still be alive.โ€

And you wouldnโ€™t,ย I think.

He turns his head away from me. โ€œI canโ€™t lead tours anymore, not without thinking about how bad I fucked up. I canโ€™t scuba-dive without thinking his body is going to drift in front of me. The reason Iโ€™m building the house and farming is because I have to be goddamn exhausted at the end of the day, or I have nightmares about what he must have been thinking in those last few minutes.โ€

Iโ€™m quiet for a moment. โ€œWhat he was thinking,โ€ I say finally, โ€œis that his son would be safe.โ€

Gabriel dashes a palm across his eyes, and I pretend not to notice. He

stands up, using his weight to pull me to my feet. โ€œWeโ€™d better get back,โ€ he

says. โ€œThe return tripโ€™s not any shorter.โ€

All around us, fumes rise from little pockets in the ground, as if we stand in a crucible. It is prehistoric and dystopian, but if you look closely, here and there are tiny green shoots and stalks. Something, growing out of nothing.

As we walk back across the fumaroles and the dark yawn of the caldera, Gabriel doesnโ€™t let go of my hand.

An hour later, the sun is skulking lower in the sky and we reach the crotched tree with the black lava rock where Gabriel left behind his heavier pack. We can see the huddled shape of it, propped against a tree, but thereโ€™s another shadow as well, and as we get closer, it is clear that itโ€™s a person. I scramble in my pocket for the mask I havenโ€™t worn when it was just me and Gabriel, only to realize that it is Beatriz. She breaks into a run as soon as

she sees us.

โ€œYou need to comeย now,โ€ she says, and she pushes a piece of paper into my hand.

It is an email, printed out on stationery from the hotel.ย For immediate

delivery to guest Diana Oโ€™Toole,ย it reads. From: The Greens. We have been trying to reach you. Please contact ASAP. Your mother is dying.

On the way back to Gabrielโ€™s house, we sprintโ€”and yet somehow, the distance seems even further than it did this morning. Distantly I hear Beatriz explain to Gabriel how the message arrivedโ€”something about

Elena and an electrical short that caused a small fire in the hotelโ€™s utility room; how when she went to the hotel with her cousin so he could rewire and fix the circuits, and to make sure everything was in working order, she had powered up the front office computers and seen a series of emails, each more urgent, trying to get in touch with me. I hear Gabriel tell Beatriz to call Elena, to have the Wi-Fi up and running by the time we get there.

Still, itโ€™s two hours before we drop Beatriz at the farm and continue in Gabrielโ€™s rusty Jeep into Puerto Villamil, to the hotel. This time, there is no flirting from Elena. She meets us at the door, her eyes dark and concerned.

My phone buzzes, automatically connecting to the network. I ignore the flood of emails and texts bursting through this tiny crack in the dam of Isabelaโ€™s radio silence. I pull up FaceTime, the last call I made to the memory care facility, and dial.

A different nurse answers this time, one I donโ€™t recognize. She is wearing a mask and a face shield. โ€œIโ€™m Hannah Oโ€™Tooleโ€™s daughter,โ€ I say. All the breath seizes in my throat. โ€œIs my mother โ€ฆ?โ€

Those eyes soften. โ€œIโ€™ll bring you in to her,โ€ the nurse says.

Thereโ€™s a lurching spin of scenery as whatever device she is holding is moved in transit. I close my eyes against a dizzy wave, expecting to see the familiar confines of my motherโ€™s apartment, but instead, the nurseโ€™s face

appears again. โ€œYou should be preparedโ€”sheโ€™s decompensated very fast.

She has pneumonia, brought on by Covid,โ€ the nurse says. โ€œBut at this point itโ€™s not just her lungs that are failing. Her kidneys, her heart โ€ฆโ€

I swallow. It has been a couple of weeks since I saw her on video chat. I had used Abuelaโ€™s phone to call The Greens twice. Just days ago, they told me she was stable. How could so much have gone wrong since then?

โ€œIs she โ€ฆ awake?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ the nurse says. โ€œSheโ€™s sedated heavily. But you can still talk to her.

Hearing is the last sense to go.โ€ She pauses. โ€œNow is the time to say your goodbyes.โ€

A moment later, I am looking at a wraith in a hospital bed, the covers pulled up to her chin. She is hollow-cheeked, faded, taking tiny sips of air. I try to reconcile this image of my mother with the woman who hid in

bunkers in active war zones, so that she could chronicle the terrible things humans do to each other.

Anger washes over meโ€”why isnโ€™t anyoneย doingย anything to help her? If she canโ€™t breathe, there are machines for that. If her heart stopsโ€”

If her heart stops, they will do nothing, because I signed a do not

resuscitate order when she became a resident at The Greens. With dementia, there was no point in prolonging her life with any extenuating measures.

I am uncomfortably aware that the nurse is holding up the iPad or phone and waiting for me to speak. But what am I supposed to say to a woman who doesnโ€™t remember me now, and actively forgot about me in the past?

When she reappeared in my life, already in the throes of dementia, I convinced myself that putting my mother in a care facility was more

compassionate than any consideration sheโ€™d ever givenย me. She couldnโ€™t

move into my tiny apartment, nor would she have wanted to, when we were little more than strangers. Instead, I had figured out a way to use her own work to fund her living expenses; I had done the research and found the best memory care facility; I had gotten her settled and had patted myself on

the back for my good deeds. I was so busy being self-congratulatory for being more of a daughter to her than she was a mother to me that I failed to see I had really just underscored the distance between us. I hadnโ€™t used the time to get to know her better, or to become someone she trusted. I had protected myself from being disappointed again by not cultivating our relationship.

Just like Beatriz, I think.

I clear my throat. โ€œMom,โ€ I say. โ€œItโ€™s me, Diana.โ€ I hesitate and then add, โ€œYour daughter.โ€

I wait, but there is absolutely no indication she can hear me. โ€œIโ€™m sorry Iโ€™m not there โ€ฆโ€

Am I?

โ€œI just want you to know โ€ฆโ€

I swallow down the hurt that roars inside me, the wash of memories. I see my father hanging a giant map on the wall of my bedroom, helping me

press thumbtacks into each of the countries where my mother was when she wasnโ€™t with us. I think of how, when her returns were inevitably delayed, he would distract me by letting me pick a color and then heโ€™d cook entire

meals in that monochrome. The heat of my blush at age thirteen when I had to explain to my father that Iโ€™d gotten my period. Scratchy phone

connections where I pretended my mother was saying something other thanย You know Iโ€™d be there for your birthday/recital/Christmas if I could.ย Nights Iโ€™d lie in bed, ashamed for wanting her to just be my mother, when what she was doing was so much more important.

Feeling forgotten.

And in that second, staring through a screen at someone I never knew, I cannot trust myself to speak, because Iโ€™m afraid of what I might actually say.

You werenโ€™t there for me when it counted, either. Quid pro quo.

Just then, the connection dies.

Elena tries rebooting the modem three times. One of those times, the video call is picked up, but the image freezes immediately and goes black. It is when Gabriel and I climb back into his Jeep and we are driving down the main street of Puerto Villamil with its tiny sliver of cell service that the text comes in.

Your mother passed tonight at 6:35. Our deepest condolences for your loss.

Gabriel glances toward me. โ€œIs thatโ€”โ€ I nod.

โ€œCan I do anything?โ€ he asks.

I shake my head. โ€œI just want to go home,โ€ I tell him.

He walks me to the door of the apartment, and I can see he is trying to find the words to ask if he should stay. Before he can, though, I thank him and tell him I just want to lie down. I wait until I hear his footsteps on the ceiling above, and I imagine him telling Abuela and Beatriz that my mother has died.

I hold my breath, waiting for the words to beat through my blood.

I pick up my phone and stare at the text from The Greens, and then swipe my thumb to delete it.

Thatโ€™s how easy it is to remove someone from your life.

I realize, even as I think it, that this is not necessarily true.

This is nothing like when I lost my father. Back then, it felt like a rip in the fabric of my world, and no matter how hard I tried, I couldnโ€™t hold the edges together. Even now, four years later, when I am going about my day, sometimes I brush up against that seam and it hurts like hell.

I find a bottle of caรฑa in the cupboardโ€”Gabriel gave me my own supply after our campout, along with a box full of fresh vegetables for meals this week. Since I donโ€™t have a shot glass, I pour a little into a juice cup, and thenโ€”shruggingโ€”fill it to the top. I take a healthy swig, letting the fire run through me.

Right now, I just want to get fucking drunk.

I peel off my clothes, the ones in which I had hiked to the volcano (was thatย today?) and run the shower. Standing in the stream of water, needles pelting at my skin, I say the word out loud:ย orphan. I am nobodyโ€™s child

now. Iโ€™m an isolated island, just like the one Iโ€™m stuck on.

There are logistics that will have to be sorted out: burial, funeral, liquidating her apartment at the facility. Right now even thinking about it is exhausting.

I pull on clean underwear and one of Gabrielโ€™s old T-shirts, which hangs down to my thighs. I braid my hair to get it out of my face. Then I sit down at the table with the bottle of caรฑa and pour my second full glass.

โ€œWell, Mom,โ€ I say, tasting the bitterness of that title. โ€œHereโ€™s to you.โ€ I take another gulp of the liquor.

By tomorrow, the media worldwide will be reporting on her death. The obituaries will be retrospectives of her careerโ€”from her first embedding in a war zone to the Pulitzer she won in 2008 for photos of a street demonstration in Myanmar that turned violent.

The award ceremony for that was held at a swanky luncheon in New York City in late May. My mother attended. My father did not.

He was in the bleachers at my high school graduation, cheering as I crossed the stage to get my diploma.

I put my head down on my crossed forearms and sift through my mind for one pure pearl of a memory of my mother. Surely thereโ€™s one.

I discard one after another as they start off positiveโ€”a work trip I tagged along for; an image of her opening a Motherโ€™s Day gift Iโ€™d made in preschool; a moment where she stood in front of my canvas at a student exhibition and canted her head, absorbing it. But each of those recollections devolves quickly, pricked by a thorn of self-interest: a sightseeing promise broken when something came up; a phone call from her agent that interrupted the gift giving; a blunt and brutal criticism of proportion in my painting, instead of a crumb of praise.

Did you really hate me that much?ย I wonder.

But I already know the answer:ย No. To hate someone, youโ€™d have to consider them worthy of notice.

Then something drips into my consciousness.

I am little, and my mother is putting film into her camera. It is a magical black box and I know I am not supposed to touch it, just like Iโ€™m not supposed to go into her darkroom, with its nightmare glow and chemical scent. She balances the little machine on her knees and gently winds the slippery film until the teeth catch. It makes soft clicking noises.

Do you want to help?ย she asks.

My hands are tiny and clumsy, so she covers my fingers with her own, to circle the little lever until the film is taut. She closes the body of the camera, then lifts it and focuses on my face. She snaps a picture.

Here,ย she says.ย You try.

She helps me lift it and positions my finger on the shutter. Iโ€™ve seen her do it a thousand times. Except I donโ€™t know to frame the shot through the viewfinder. I donโ€™t really know what to look at, at all.

My mother is laughing as I push down on the shutter so hard it takes a flurry of photos, the sound like a pounding heart.

It occurs to me that I never saw those images. For all I know she developed them and got a crazy collage of blurry wall and ceiling and rug. Maybe I didnโ€™t capture her at all.

But maybe that doesnโ€™t really matter. For one second, itย hadย been my turn.

New memories are sharp, and I wait for this one to draw blood. But โ€ฆ nothing happens. If anything itโ€™s even more depressing to be sitting here half a world away, clinging to five seconds of motherhood, and wishing

there had been more. โ€œDiana?โ€

I lift my head up from the table to find Gabriel standing in front of me. I blink at him as he turns on the light. I hadnโ€™t even noticed that it had gotten dark.

โ€œI was headed back to the house,โ€ he says, โ€œbut wanted to see how you were.โ€

โ€œStill sober, thatโ€™s how I am.โ€ I push the bottle across the table. โ€œJoin

me.โ€ When he doesnโ€™t at first, I refill my glass. โ€œI suppose youโ€™re going to tell me I shouldnโ€™t get wasted.โ€

Gabriel takes a juice glass out of the cabinet and pours his own shot. He sits down across from me. โ€œIf ever there was a time to get wasted, itโ€™s when youโ€™re toasting someone youโ€™ve loved and lost. Iโ€™m so sorry, Diana.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not,โ€ I whisper. His gaze flies to mine.

โ€œThere,โ€ I say. โ€œNow you know my terrible secret. Iโ€™m an awful, broken person. My mother died and I feel โ€ฆ nothing.โ€ I clink my glass to his. โ€œThatย is why Iโ€™m drinking.โ€

I gulp the alcohol, but it goes down wrong. Coughing and sputtering, I fold forward in the chair, tryingโ€”and failingโ€”to catch my breath. It is like aspirating fire.

When I start to see stars at the edges of my vision, I feel a hand on the flat of my back, moving in circles. โ€œBreathe,โ€ Gabriel soothes. โ€œEasy.โ€

My throat is burning and my eyes are streaming and I donโ€™t know if itโ€™s because I was choking or because Iโ€™m crying, and Iโ€™m not sure it matters.

Gabriel is crouched down next to me. He hands me a bandanna from his pocket so that I can wipe my face, but the tears donโ€™t stop. A moment later,

with a soft curse, he wraps his arms around me. I sob into the curve of his neck.

I donโ€™t know when the air starts moving in and out of my lungs again, or when I stop crying. But I start noticing the rhythmic sweep of Gabrielโ€™s hand from the crown of my head to the tail of my braid. His lips against my temple. His breath falling in time to mine.

โ€œYouโ€™re not broken,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œYou can feel.โ€

When he kisses me, it feels like the most natural thing in the world. My fingers push through his hair as I fight to get closer. Iโ€™m struggling for breath again, but now I want to be.

Gabriel is still kneeling beside me. In one motion he picks me up and sets me on top of the table, standing between my legs. โ€œIโ€™m so glad I fixed this damn thing,โ€ he murmurs against my lips, and we both start to laugh. My

hands slide up his forearms to his shoulders and my ankles hook behind his knees. He kisses like he is pouring himself into me. Like this is his last moment on earth, and he needs to leave his mark.

His palms move from my knees to my thighs, bunching the soft T-shirt. The whole time, we kiss. We kiss. When his fingers reach the elastic of my underwear, he stops and pulls back. He looks at me, his eyes so dark that I cannot see how far Iโ€™ve fallen. I nod, and he drags the T-shirt over my head. I feel his teeth scrape against my throat, against the chain of the miraculous medal, and then he paints words onto me with his tongue, moving between my breasts, down my belly, lower.ย โ€œPienso en ti todo el tiempo,โ€ย he says, hiking me to the edge of the table before kneeling again on the floor. His mouth is wet and hot through cotton. He feasts.

I am a lightning storm, gathering energy. I pull on Gabrielโ€™s hair, dragging him up, affixing myself to him like a second skin. The room spins as he picks me up and carries me into the bedroom, following me down onto the mattress in a tangle of limbs. He immediately rolls to his side so I donโ€™t bear his weight, and without him covering me I shiver beneath the ceiling fan. My hair has unraveled; he pushes it back from my face and waits. โ€œYes?โ€ he asks.

โ€œYes,โ€ I say, and this time I crawl on top, pushing at Gabrielโ€™s clothes until they are gone; until I can sink onto him and into him and lose myself.

It isnโ€™t until afterward, when he has fallen asleep holding me tight, that I think maybe Iโ€™ve been found.

When I wake up, Gabriel is staring at me. I feel his hand flex on my shoulder, as if I am sand that might slip out of his grasp.

My head hurts and my mouth is dry but I know I cannot blame last night on the caรฑa. I went into this with my mind clear, even if my heart was hurting.

Now, itโ€™s an anchor sinking in me.

Just one more second,ย I think.

I flatten my palm against Gabrielโ€™s warm chest, and I open my mouth to speak.

โ€œDonโ€™t,โ€ he begs. โ€œNot yet.โ€

Because we both know whatโ€™s coming. The slow untangling, the extraction. The excuses and the apologies and the veneer of friendship we will slap over this and never peek beneath.

He kisses me so sweetly, like it is a song in a different language. Even after he pulls back, I am still humming it. โ€œBefore you say anything,โ€ he begins.

But he doesnโ€™t finish. Because neither of us has heard the knock or the door opening, but we cannot miss the sound of breaking glass and china as Beatriz finds us knotted together, drops the breakfast sheโ€™s kindly made me, and runs away.

By the time we have sorted out our clothes and hurried up to Abuelaโ€™s, Beatriz is gone.

By unspoken agreement, I climb into Gabrielโ€™s Jeep with him. He is silent as he drives through town, scanning the empty streets for her. At the dock, he reverses direction, and heads for the highlands. โ€œShe could be back at the farm,โ€ he says, and I nod, because thinking of the alternative is too terrifying.

But I know that, like me, he saw the look on Beatrizโ€™s face. It wasnโ€™t just embarrassment at finding us. It was โ€ฆ betrayal. It was the expression of

someone who realized she was well and truly alone.

It was a look I hadnโ€™t seen on her face since the very first time I saw her on the dock at Concha de Perla, watching her own blood drip from her fingertips.

In the time Iโ€™d been on Isabela, Beatriz had moved from desperation to resignation. If she hadnโ€™t been exactly joyous about this homecoming, at

least now she seemed to be less tormented. She hadnโ€™t been cutting herself. Her old wounds were silver scars.

And now weโ€™d ripped them open again.

I know that cutting does not always precede suicide. But I also know that sometimes, it does. Beatriz let her guard down with me; she trusted me to

be her person. And then I gave myself to someone else.

A small sinkhole forms in me, filled with guilt.ย Finn. My mother.

There is so much wrong with what I did last night. But I push all that out of my head because right now nothing matters but finding Beatriz and talking her down from her ledge.

A whisper in my bones:ย Coward.

โ€œThis is a small island,โ€ Gabriel says tightly. โ€œUntil it isnโ€™t.โ€

I know what he means. There are endless trails and furrows through

Isabela that arenโ€™t accessible by car; there are poisonous plants and spined cacti in some places and thick greenery you canโ€™t see through in others.

There are countless ways you can hurt yourselfโ€”unintentionally, or on purpose.

โ€œWeโ€™ll find her,โ€ I tell him. I lift my hand, planning to cover his on the stick shift, but on second thought, put it back in my lap.

I stare out the passenger-side window, scanning every flutter of movement to see if it might be a girl on the run. Thereโ€™s no way she could have outpaced us on foot. But maybe she took a bicycle from Abuelaโ€™s.

Maybe she got a head start on us when we made a false start by turning toward town.

When we finally reach the farm, I open the Jeepโ€™s door before we even come to a complete stop. I run into Gabrielโ€™s house, yelling for Beatriz. He is on my heels, wildly looking around the living room and throwing open

the door to her bedroom to find it empty.

I stand in the doorway as he sinks down onto the mattress. โ€œShit,โ€ he mutters.

โ€œMaybe she just needs time alone,โ€ I say quietly, hopefully. โ€œMaybe sheโ€™s on her way back right now.โ€

His haunted gaze meets mine, and I realize this is not the first time heโ€™s searched far and wide for someone he loved whoโ€™d gone missing.

Suddenly he grabs Beatrizโ€™s backpack from beside the bed and dumps the contents on the mattress.

โ€œWhat are you looking for?โ€ I ask.

โ€œSomething she took? Something she didnโ€™t?โ€ He unzips an inner pocket and stuffs his hand inside. โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€

A clue. A hint to where, on this island, she would have gone to disappear.

I open the top drawer of the bureau, letting my hand sift through panties and bras, when my fingers brush against something that feels like a diary.

I dig deeper into the recesses of the drawer. Itโ€™s not a diary or a journal or a book at all. Itโ€™s a stack of postcards, banded together with a hair elastic.

Itโ€™s all of the postcards I wrote Finn. The ones that Beatriz told me she mailed.

I feel like Iโ€™ve been run through with a sword. I pull off the elastic and shuffle through the cards, allย G2 TOURSย on one side, and my cramped handwriting on the other. This was the one connection I had to Finn. Even if I couldnโ€™t reliably speak to him or get his emails, I was hopeful that he was hearing every now and then from me.

Except โ€ฆ he wasnโ€™t.

Finn is thousands of miles away, without any word from me. Given our last abortive phone call, he must assume Iโ€™m pissed at him. At the very least heโ€™ll think Iโ€™ve put him out of my mind.

I look at Gabriel and realize that, last night, this was true.

The contents of Beatrizโ€™s backpackโ€”textbooks and a phone charger and earbuds and some granola barsโ€”are littered around him. But Gabriel is holding a Polaroid and frowning slightly. A line of tape runs down the middle, carefully piecing together something that was previously sliced apart.

On one side of the photograph is a pretty girl, with corkscrews of blond hair. She has her arm around Beatriz, her other hand extended to take the photo. Their eyes are closed, as they kiss.

Ana Maria.

The expression on Beatrizโ€™s face is one Iโ€™ve never seen: pure joy. โ€œWho is this girl?โ€ Gabriel murmurs.

I wonder what he is thinking. โ€œHer host sister, a friend from Santa Cruz.โ€ โ€œAย friend,โ€ he mutters, and at first I think he is reacting to Beatriz kissing

a girl. But when he touches a fingertip to the Scotch tape down the center of the photograph, I realize heโ€™s angry at whoever broke Beatrizโ€™s heart so cleanly that she would tear apart this picture, and then regretfully patch it back together. โ€œWhen her school closed, Beatriz begged to come back here. Is this why?โ€

I love that Gabriel has shoved aside the unimportant detailsโ€”his daughter falling for a girl is inconsequential; what matters is that she was hurt. That sheย stillย is. That we are just the latest in a line of people she cared for who let her down.

I think of what Beatriz said to me when we were in the trillizos.

Truth or dare. Unconditional love is bullshit. She loved me, but not like that.

I wanted to know what it would be like to just let go.

โ€œGabriel,โ€ I breathe. โ€œI think I know where she is.โ€

The three volcanic tunnels are not that far from Gabrielโ€™s farm. We get as close as we can by truck and then Gabriel slings ropes and a rappelling

harness over his shoulder. As we tramp through the thick ground cover, I call out Beatrizโ€™s name, but there is no answer.

I think about how far the ladder went into the shaft, how black it was below that. I wonder how much further she would have had to fall.

Curling my hand around Abuelaโ€™s miraculous medal, I pray. โ€œBeatriz,โ€ I scream again.

The wind whispers through the brush and whips my hair around my face. Gabriel finds a sturdy tree and wraps one end of the rope around it, tying a series of impossible knots. It is an unfairly beautiful day, with puffy white

clouds dancing across the sky and birdsong like a symphony. I stand in front of the three volcanic tunnels. If sheโ€™s even here, she could be in any of them.

At the bottomย of any of them. โ€œIโ€™m going down,โ€ I tell Gabriel.

โ€œWhat?โ€ His head snaps up in the middle of securing the rope. โ€œDiana, waitโ€”โ€

But I canโ€™t. I start descending the ladder of the tunnel beside the one Beatriz and I climbed into, waiting for my eyes to adjust to the darkness. The distant sun bounces off minerals in the rock walls, glowing gold. I climb deeper, swallowed by this stone throat.

The only sound is the rhythmic drip of water on rock.ย Plink. Plink.

And then a choked sob.

โ€œBeatriz?โ€ I cry, moving faster. โ€œGabriel!โ€ I yell. โ€œIn here!โ€ I lose my footing on the slick ladder in my hurry. โ€œHang on. Iโ€™m coming.โ€

A beat, and then her voice threads toward me. โ€œJust go away,โ€ Beatriz sobs.

Her words are disembodied, floating like ghosts. I canโ€™t see her anywhere below me. โ€œI know youโ€™re upset about what you saw,โ€ I say, climbing down and down and down, until I reach the end of the ladder, and still sheโ€™s not there. Wildly, I look between my feet on the bottom rung, wondering if I will see her broken body below me.

โ€œI should never have talked to you,โ€ Beatriz says. I cannot see her; I go still and listen for the bounce of sound. I follow the soft hitch of her crying andโ€”thereโ€”a shadow moving in a shadow. She clings to another ladder on the far side of the lava tube. There are a few straggling ropes left behind by others.

โ€œI thought โ€ฆ you cared. I thought you meant what you said. But youโ€™re just like everyone else who says that and then leaves.โ€

โ€œYouย doย matter to me, Beatriz,โ€ I say gently. โ€œBut I was always going to leave.โ€

โ€œDid you tell my dad that before or after you fucked him?โ€ I wince. โ€œI didnโ€™t mean for that to happen.โ€

โ€œYeah, sure. Keep digging that hole โ€ฆโ€

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about him. This is aboutย you,โ€ I say. โ€œAnd I do care about you, Bea. I do.โ€

Her sobs get louder. โ€œStop lying. Just fucking stop saying that.โ€

The ladder shudders as booted feet strike the wall beside me. โ€œSheโ€™s not lying, Beatriz,โ€ Gabriel says, falling into view in the space between me and his daughter. He has the rappelling rope wrapped around him, a link to the world above. It is taut and seems too thin to support his weight. If it snaps, he is too far to grab either of the ladders Beatriz and I stand on. โ€œWhen you care about someone, it just โ€ฆ happens,โ€ he says quietly. โ€œNone of us get to choose who we love.โ€

I hold my breath. Is he talking about the two of us? About Beatriz and Ana Maria? About his ex?

As he is speaking, he has shifted his weight, canting his feet for balance on the slick wall. Incrementally, heโ€™s trying to make his way to Beatriz without startling her into doing something rash.

โ€œYouโ€™d be better off without me,โ€ Beatriz sobs, the sentence torn from her throat. โ€œEveryone else is.โ€

Gabriel shakes his head. โ€œYouโ€™re not alone, even if you feel like you are.

And I donโ€™tย wantย to be alone.โ€ His breath catches. โ€œI canโ€™t lose you, too.โ€ He stretches out his hand toward her.

Beatriz doesnโ€™t move. โ€œYou donโ€™t even know who I really am,โ€ she says, her voice hushed in shame.

Their breathing circles, echoes.

โ€œYes I do,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œYouโ€™re my baby. I donโ€™t care what else you are

โ€ฆ or arenโ€™t. Thatโ€™s the only thing that matters.โ€ His fingertips reach further through the void.

Beatriz meets him halfway. In the next moment, Gabriel has gathered her into his arms and lashed her tight against him with the ropes. He whispers to her in Spanish; she clings to his shoulders, drawing shuddering breaths.

Slowly, the three of us inch toward the light.

The next few hours pass in a blur. We take Beatriz down to Abuelaโ€™s,

because Gabriel doesnโ€™t want to leave her alone in the farmhouse while he ferries me back to the apartment. Abuela bursts into tears when she sees

Beatriz and starts fussing over her. Beatriz is still weepy and silent and embarrassed, and Gabriel focuses all his attention and energy on her, as he should.

At some point, I slip out of Abuelaโ€™s home and walk down to my basement apartment, sitting on the short retaining wall that separates it from the beach. With all the healing that has to happen in that family, I donโ€™t belong there.

But.

Iโ€™m starting to wonder where Iย doย belong.

I think about the postcards in Beatrizโ€™s drawer that werenโ€™t sent. The things I wanted Finn to know. The things I will never tell him.

I donโ€™t know how long I sit on the little wall, but the sun staggers lower in the sky and the tide goes out, leaving a long line of treasure on the sand: sea stars and pearled shells and seaweed tangled like the hair of mermaids.

I can sense Gabriel walking up behind me even before he speaks. Space is different when he is in it. Charged, electrical. He stops just short of the spot where I sit, staring at the orange line of the horizon. I turn my chin, acknowledging him. โ€œHow is she?โ€

โ€œAsleep,โ€ he says, and he steps forward. His hair is mussed by the breeze, as if it, too, sighs to see him.

He sits down next to me, one leg drawn up, his arm resting on his knee. โ€œI thought youโ€™d want to know sheโ€™s all right,โ€ he says.

โ€œI did,โ€ I tell him. โ€œI do.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve been talking,โ€ Gabriel says hesitantly. โ€œAbout โ€ฆ school?โ€ย About Ana Maria.

โ€œAbout all of it.โ€ He looks at me. โ€œIโ€™m going to stay with her tonight.โ€ A faint blush stripes his cheekbones. โ€œI didnโ€™t want you to think thatโ€”โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t expecting you toโ€”โ€ โ€œItโ€™s not that I donโ€™tโ€”โ€

We both stop talking. โ€œYouโ€™re a good father, Gabriel,โ€ I say quietly. โ€œYou

doย protect the people you love. Donโ€™t second-guess that.โ€

He takes the compliment awkwardly, his eyes sliding away from mine. โ€œYou know, I named her. Luz wanted something from a telenovela she was obsessed with at the timeโ€”but I insisted on Beatriz. Maybe I knew what was coming.โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œBeatriz is the one who kept Dante going when he walked through hell.

And every time Iโ€™ve found myself suffering, my Beatriz is the one who pulls me back.โ€

This pushes on something so tender and bruised inside me, and instead of examining that reaction, I try to make light of it. โ€œIโ€™m shocked.โ€

โ€œThat I named her Beatriz?โ€

โ€œThat youโ€™ve readย The Divine Comedy.โ€

He smiles faintly. โ€œThereโ€™s so much about me you have yet to learn,โ€ he says, but there is a thread of sadness in the words, because we both know I never will.

He stands, blocking my view of the ocean. He holds my face in his palms and kisses my forehead. โ€œGood night, Diana,โ€ Gabriel says, and he leaves me alone with the stars and the surf.

I pull the night around me like a coat. I think of New York City and Finn and my mother. Of commuter sneakers and Sunday brunch at our favorite

cafรฉ when Finn wasnโ€™t working and the blue Tiffany box hidden in the back of his underwear drawer. I think of the rush of relief when I manage to catch the subway car before it pulls out of the station and the taste of

cheesecake I craved and bought at threeย A.M.ย and the hours I spent on Zillow dreaming of houses in Westchester we could not afford. I think of the smell of chestnuts from street vendors in the winter and asphalt sinking under my

heels in the summer. I think of Manhattanโ€”an island full of diverse, determined people hustling toward something better; a populace that doesnโ€™t sleepwalk through their days. But it all feels a lifetime away.

Then I think aboutย thisย island, where there is nothing but time. Where change comes slowly, and inevitably.

Here, I canโ€™t lose myself in errands and work assignments; I canโ€™t disappear in a crowd. I am forced to walk instead of run, and as a result,

Iโ€™ve seen things I would have sped past beforeโ€”the fuss of a crab trading up for a new shell, the miracle of a sunrise, the garish burst of a cactus flower.

Busyย is just a euphemism for being so focused on what youย donโ€™tย have that you never notice what youย do.

Itโ€™s a defense mechanism. Because if you stop hustlingโ€”if you pauseโ€” you start wondering why you ever thought you wanted all those things.

I can no longer tell the sky from the sea, but I can hear the waves. A loss of sight; a gain of insight.

When Finn and I booked a trip to the Galรกpagos, the travel agent told us it would be life-changing.

Little did she know.

To:ย [email protected] From: [email protected]

Whenever someone gets extubated in the Covid ICU, โ€œHere Comes the Sunโ€ plays on the loudspeakers. Itโ€™s like in the Hunger Games movie, when someone dies, but the reverse. We all look up and stop what weโ€™re doing. But then again, days go by when we donโ€™t hear it at all.

Today, when I left the hospital for the first time in 36 hours, there was a refrigerated truck parked outside for the bodies we canโ€™t stuff into the morgue.

I bet every single one of those people came into the ER, thinking: it will only be a day or two.

I do not see Beatriz or Gabriel for five days. Even Abuela seems to be missing, and I assume that they are all up at the farmhouse together. I

convince myself very easily that the reason I feel relieved has everything to do with Beatriz getting help and nothing to do with me being able to avoid Gabriel. The truth is, I donโ€™t know what to say to him.ย This was a mistakeย is what sits bitter on my tongue, but Iโ€™m not sure what it refers to: the night with Gabriel, or all the years that led up to it.

So every time I leave my apartment and do not see him, it is a reprieve. If I donโ€™t see him I can pretend it didnโ€™t happen, and postpone grappling with the consequences.

One day, I hiked to the Wall of Tears, hoping to find another miracle of cell service. When those bars appeared on my phone, I called The Greens first, arranging for my motherโ€™s cremation and explaining that I was still stuck outside the country. Then I called Finn, only to be put through directly to his voicemail.ย Itโ€™s me,ย I said.ย I wrote you postcards, but they โ€ฆ didnโ€™t

make it there. I just wanted to let you know Iโ€™m thinking of you. And then I didnโ€™t trust myself to say anything else.

On another sunny, perfect day on Isabela, I pull on my bathing suit, take the snorkel and mask from Gabrielโ€™s apartment, and walk through the

streets of Puerto Villamil, headed to Concha de Perla one more time. A

couple of storekeepersโ€”who, like everyone else, have become less strict with the rule about curfewโ€”recognize me and wave, or call out hellos through their masks. A few have come up to me at the feria, trading me sunblock and cereal and fresh tortillas for portraits that they then hang in their establishments.

When I get to the dock at Concha de Perla, there is a massive sea lion lolling on one of the benches. It raises its head at my approach, twitches its whiskers, and then flings itself back into its nap. I strip to my bathing suit and walk down the stairway into the ocean, fitting the mask to my face and swimming with strong strokes into the heart of the lagoon.

A huge, dark shape rises in my peripheral vision. I turn to see a giant marble stingray moving in tandem with me. Its wings ruffle past, a hem

sweeping the dance floor. It brushes my fingers gently, deliberately, as if to convince me thereโ€™s no threat. It feels like stroking the soft, wet velvet underskirt of a mushroom.

Six weeks ago this would have sent me into a conniption. Now, itโ€™s just another living creature sharing space with me. I smile, watching it veer away from me underwater, until it becomes a dot in the deep blue field and then vanishes.

I float on my back for a while, feeling the sun warm my face, and then lazily breaststroke back toward the dock.

Once again, Beatriz is sitting on it.

She isnโ€™t wearing her ubiquitous sweatshirt. Her arms are bare, crossed with silver lines. She hugs her knees to her chest as I climb the stairs, drop

my mask and snorkel, and wring my ponytail dry. I sink down beside her. โ€œAre you okay?โ€ I ask quietly, the same words I first spoke to her on Isabela, a bookend.

โ€œYeah,โ€ she says, and she looks into her lap.

We fall into a strained silence. Of all the time Iโ€™ve spent with Beatriz, weโ€™ve never had nothing to say.

โ€œWhat you saw โ€ฆ with me and your father โ€ฆโ€ I shake my head. โ€œYou know I have someone waiting at home for me. It shouldnโ€™t have happened. Iโ€™m sorry.โ€

Beatriz rubs her thumbnail along a groove in the wood. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, too.

About not sending your postcards.โ€

Iโ€™ve thought a lot about what might have made her lie to me about mailing them. I donโ€™t think it was malicious โ€ฆ more like she wanted to keep me to herself, once sheโ€™d made me a confidante. All the more reason, of course, that she would have been shocked to find me in bed with her father.

She trusted me. Just like Finn had trusted me.

Suddenly I feel like Iโ€™m going to be sick. Because as much as I donโ€™t want to face Gabriel to discuss what happened between us, I want even less to confess to Finn.

Beatriz looks at me. โ€œI talked to my dad about Ana Maria.โ€ โ€œHowโ€™d that go?โ€

โ€œNot as bad as I made it out in my head to be,โ€ she says ruefully. โ€œThe mind is an amazing thing,โ€ I reply.

She considers this. โ€œWell, itโ€™s not like I didnโ€™t have a good reason to worry,โ€ she adds. โ€œThere are a lot of people in the world whoโ€™d hate me

because I โ€ฆ like girls. But my father isnโ€™t one of them.โ€ Beatriz ducks her chin. โ€œI kind of feel bad for Ana Maria. She doesnโ€™t have parents like him, so she has to pretend all the time. Even to herself.โ€

I donโ€™t know what to say to her. Sheโ€™s right. The world can be a fucked- up place, and I suppose youโ€™re never too young to learn that.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to go back to school,โ€ Beatriz tells me. โ€œMy father said heโ€™ll let me do online courses here. But I had to promise to talk to a therapist, in return. We Zoomed for the first time, yesterday.โ€ She grimaces. โ€œSomething else that wasnโ€™t as bad as I thought it would be.โ€

โ€œOnlineย school?โ€ I repeat. โ€œAndย Zoom?โ€

โ€œMy dad paid Elena to open the stupid hotel and turn on the Wi-Fi so I could get a decent signal,โ€ Beatriz explains.

I raise an eyebrow. โ€œWhatโ€™s he paying her with?โ€

Beatriz cracks a smile, and then I do, too, and we both laugh. I put my arm around her, and she lays her head on my shoulder. We watch a sea lion playing in the distance.

โ€œYou know,โ€ Beatriz says, โ€œyou could stay. With us.โ€

I feel myself soften against her. โ€œI have to go back to real life sometime.โ€ She pulls away, a wistful expression on her face. โ€œFor a while,โ€ she says,

โ€œdidnโ€™t this feel real?โ€

Dear Finn,

Itโ€™s possible you wonโ€™t get this postcard until I come home and hand it to you myself. But there are things I need to say, and it canโ€™t wait.

Iโ€™ve been thinking a lot about the things we do that are simply

unforgivable. Like me not being with my mother when she died, or my mother not being around when I was growing up. Leaving you alone during a pandemic. You encouraging me to go.

Iโ€™ve thought a lot about that last one. When you told me you were trying to keep me safe โ€ฆ you might just have been convincing yourself it was the smartest course of action. Did you really not think I could

manage to stay healthy? Did you actually believe that when the world is falling to pieces, itโ€™s better to be apart from the person you love, instead of together?

I am overthinking this, of course, but these days I have a lot of time to think. And I canโ€™t even blame you. Iโ€™ve said and done things, too, that I shouldnโ€™t have.

I know everyone makes mistakesโ€”but until recently I have held everyone to a standard where making mistakes is a weakness. Me

includedโ€”I havenโ€™t given myself the grace to screw up, to do better next time. It is exhausting, trying to never step off the path, worrying that if I do, Iโ€™ll never get back on track.

So here is what Iโ€™ve learned: if, in hindsight, you realize youโ€™ve messed upโ€”if you have done the unforgivableโ€”that does not mean that the terrible thing wasnโ€™t meant to happen. Sure, we may wish otherwise, but when things donโ€™t happen according to plan, it may be

because the plan was faulty. Iโ€™m not explaining this well. For example,

take my missing suitcase: I wonder if the person who found it needed clothes more than I did. I wonder how Beatriz would have fared if I had never come to Isabela. I imagine Kitomi having her painting for

company all these weeks, instead of it being crated up in a warehouse. I picture all the people youโ€™ve saved at the hospital and the ones you couldnโ€™t, who you still walked with all the way to the edge of death.

And thatโ€™s when I realize: Maybe things didnโ€™t get fucked up. Maybe I

have been wrong all along, and this is where I was always meant to be.

Diana

To:ย [email protected] From: [email protected]

Iโ€™m really too tired to rehash everything that happened at the hospital today.

I hope youโ€™re okay. One of us needs to be.

Two and a half weeks after Gabriel and I sleep together, I come home from a run to find a note slipped under the door of my apartment, inviting me to join him on a hike to a place called Playa Barahona. He says heโ€™ll be waiting at the apartment at nineย A.M.ย tomorrow, in case I decide to come.

Although it would be easier to hide forever, I know I canโ€™t. It is May 9.

Iโ€™ve been here for almost two months. One day, that ferry will start running again. I canโ€™t avoid Gabriel on an island this small. And I owe him the

grace of a conversation.

The next morning, I slip out the sliding glass doors and find him waiting with two rusty bicycles and a thermos of coffee. โ€œHi,โ€ I say.

His eyes drink me in. โ€œHi.โ€

I wonder how it is that you can be so shy with someone youโ€™ve felt moving inside you.

At that, a blush rushes over me, and I cover it with conversation. โ€œBikes?

How far are we going?โ€

He rubs the back of his neck. โ€œFurther than El Muro de las Lรกgrimas, closer than Sierra Negra,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œItโ€™s a secret spot. Itโ€™s closed to touristsย andย localsโ€”I havenโ€™t been since I was a kid.โ€

โ€œBreaking more laws,โ€ I say lightly. โ€œYouโ€™re a bad influence.โ€ At that, his eyes fly to mine.

I turn away, grabbing one of the bikes, and clear my throat. โ€œI saw Beatriz,โ€ I say. โ€œShe says things are โ€ฆ good.โ€

Gabriel looks at me for a long moment before he grabs the handlebars of the second bike. โ€œOkay,โ€ he says softly, nodding to himself, as if he

recognizes that I am signaling what we will talk about and what we wonโ€™t. He starts walking the bike toward the main road, telling me how Beatriz schooled him on the 123 baby tortoises that were stolen from the breeding center in 2018, and how heโ€™s fighting a losing battle trying to explain to

Abuela that she canโ€™t go playย loterรญaย at church, even if she wears a mask. As we pedal down dusty dirt paths, he tells me that heโ€™s almost finished building the second bedroom at his houseโ€”which is good, because Beatriz will be staying with him even after her school on Santa Cruz reopens.

For a half hour or so, we bike in silence.

โ€œThe first girl I fell for was Luz,โ€ Gabriel says suddenly. โ€œShe sat in front of me in class, alphabetically, and I stared at three freckles on her neck for months before I got the courage to speak to her.โ€ He glances at me. โ€œDo you remember your first crush?โ€

โ€œOf course. His name was Jared and he was a vegetarian, and I didnโ€™t eat meat for a month so that heโ€™d notice me.โ€

Gabriel laughs. โ€œDo you rememberย beforeย that, when you made the decision to like boys?โ€

I look at him quizzically. โ€œNo โ€ฆโ€

โ€œExactly,โ€ he says, and his jaw sets. โ€œNo one gets to break her heart again.โ€

Oh, this man. โ€œWho would dare, with you in her corner?โ€

His gaze catches mine and I canโ€™t look away and I nearly crash into a tree, but Gabriel hops off his bike and interrupts the moment. โ€œWe have to hide these,โ€ he tells me. โ€œIf the rangers see them, theyโ€™ll come after us.โ€

He drags his bike into a tangle of brush and rearranges the leaves to cover the rusty metal, then takes my bike and does the same. โ€œNow what?โ€

โ€œNow we walk the rest of the way,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s another forty-five minutes.โ€

As we hike, he retreats into safe spaceโ€”telling me about his childhood. His father used to readย Moby-Dickย to him before he went to bed, because Melville learned about whaling while on a ship in the Galรกpagos. He says

Melville called the Galรกpagos โ€œThe Enchanted Islands.โ€ He tells me that the last time he was at Barahona, he was with a group called Amigos de las

Tortugasโ€”Friends of the Tortoisesโ€”a bunch of kids who went with the

Charles Darwin Research Station to count sea turtle nests there. There were

volunteers from all over the world who came to help, and oneโ€”a tourist from the United Statesโ€”taught Gabriel how to surf.

When we finally crest a dune and see the beach spread below us, I catch my breath. It is beautiful in the way wild things are beautifulโ€”with roaring sea and ungroomed sand, bordered by cacti and brush. Gabriel offers his hand, and after only a moment of hesitation I take it so that he can help me scuffle my way through the hillock to land on the beach. โ€œCareful,โ€ he says, tugging me to the left so that I do not step on a tiny hole in the sand, like a bubble caught underground. โ€œThere,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œThatโ€™s a sea turtle

nest.โ€

I look around, and with careful eyes spy another twenty little divots in the sand. โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œYeah. And no matter how far they swim in the ocean, turtles come back to the same beach to lay their eggs.โ€

โ€œHow do they find it?โ€

โ€œMagnetic field. Each part of the coast has its own special fingerprint, basically, and the babies learn it and use memory as a compass.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s really cool,โ€ I say.

โ€œThatโ€™s not why I wanted you to see it,โ€ Gabriel says. He points to a wriggling line in the sand that tracks down to the water. โ€œAfter the female

turtles lay their eggsโ€”around a hundred at a timeโ€”they leave.โ€ He looks at me. โ€œThey never come back to take care of those eggs.โ€

I think of how the strongest memory I have of my mother is watching her pull a small carry-on out of our house.

โ€œHereโ€™s the incredible thing,โ€ Gabriel says. โ€œTwo months later, those sea turtle babies hatch at night. Theyโ€™ve got to get to the ocean before hawks and crabs and frigate birds can get to them. The only guide they have is the reflection of the moon on the water.โ€ I feel him standing behind me, a wall of heat. โ€œNot all of them make it. But, Diana โ€ฆ the strongest ones do.โ€

When my eyes sting with tears, I turn away, stumbling forward only to have Gabriel yank me back by my arm.ย โ€œCuidado,โ€ย he says, and I follow

his gaze to the tree I nearly crashed into, a manchineel laden with poisoned apples.

I laugh, but it may just be a sob.

Gabrielโ€™s hand gentles on my arm. โ€œAre we ever going to talk about it?โ€ โ€œI canโ€™t,โ€ I say, and I leave it to him to dissect all the possible meanings.

He nods, letting go of me. He scuffs at the sand, careful to avoid the sea turtle nests. โ€œThenย Iโ€™llย talk about it,โ€ he says quietly. โ€œThere have been a

few times in my life when I thought all the stars had aligned, and I was exactly where I was meant to be. Once, when Beatriz was born. Once when I was diving near Kicker Rock on San Cristรณbal and saw fifty hammerhead sharks. Once when the volcano came alive under my feet.โ€ He meets my gaze. โ€œAnd once, with you.โ€

If only these were normal times. If only I were an ordinary tourist. If only I didnโ€™t have a life and a love waiting for me at home. I draw in a breath.

โ€œGabriel,โ€ I begin, but he shakes his head. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to say anything.โ€

I reach out my hand and catch his. I let myself look down at my fingers, curled in his. โ€œSwim with me?โ€ I ask.

He nods, and we pick our way back down the beach. I shuck off my shirt and shorts and wade into the surf in my bathing suit. Gabriel runs past me, splashing on purpose, and making me laugh. He dives shallowly, comes up shaking droplets off his hair, and shears a spray of water my way to soak me.

โ€œYouโ€™re gonna be sorry you did that,โ€ I tell him, and I dive under the water.

It is a baptism, and we both know it. A way to clean the slate and start fresh as friends, because thatโ€™s the only path thatโ€™s open to us.

The water is just cool enough to be refreshing. My eyes burn from the salt and my hair tangles in ropes down my back. Every so often Gabriel

free-dives to the bottom and brings up a sea star or a piece of coral for me to admire, before letting it settle again.

Iโ€™m not sure when I realize Iโ€™ve lost sight of Gabriel. One moment his head is bobbing, like a sealโ€™s, and then heโ€™s gone. I turn in a circle, and try to swim closer to shore, but realize Iโ€™m getting nowhere. No matter how hard I paddle my arms, I am being pulled further out to sea.

โ€œGabriel?โ€ I call, and swallow water.ย โ€œGabriel!โ€

โ€œDiana?โ€ I hear him before I see himโ€”a tiny pinprick, so distant I cannot imagine how he got that far away. Or maybe Iโ€™m the one who has.

โ€œI canโ€™t get back,โ€ I yell out.

He cups his hands so his voice carries. โ€œSwim with the current, on the diagonal,โ€ he cries. โ€œDonโ€™t try to fight it.โ€

Somewhere in my consciousness I realize this must be a riptideโ€” carrying me rapidly away from shore. I think of Gabrielโ€™s friends, the fishermen who never came back. I think of his father, swept away in a racing current under the surface of the ocean. My heart starts pounding harder.

I take a deep breath and start windmilling my arms in a strong crawl stroke, but when I lift my head Iโ€™m no closer to the beach. The only

difference is that Gabriel is speeding toward me, swimming with the riptide, in the middle of its current, seemingly approaching at superhuman speed.

Heโ€™s trying to save me.

It feels like forever, but in minutes, he reaches me. He grabs for me and snags his finger on the chain of the miraculous medal, but it snaps off and I drift further away from him. โ€œGabriel!โ€ I scream, thrashing out as he floats closer. As soon as he is within reach I grab him and climb him like a vine, panicking. He shoves me under the water, and then jerks me back up.

I am sputtering, blinking. Now that he has my attention, Gabriel grabs my shoulders. โ€œHold on. Look at me. You are going to make it,โ€ he commands.

He slings one arm around me, swimming for both of us, but I can feel his strokes slowing and his body getting heavier.

My God. This canโ€™t happen to him again.

His fingers flex on my waist, trying to hike me closer to him. But I can tell heโ€™s losing steam. Alone, he might be able to get himself out of this hellish current, but my additional weight is sapping him of energy. If he keeps trying to save me, we will both drown. So I do the only thing I can.

I slip out of his hold.

The current immediately yanks me away from him, so fast it makes me dizzy. He treads water, desperately calling my name.

The waves are so big this far out that they crash over my head. Every time I try to answer him, I swallow water.

I think of what he told me as he touched my throat. Of the airway

humans have evolved, of the promises we can speak to each other, of the compromises we suffer for that.

I have heard that the hardest part of drowning is the moment just before

โ€”when your lungs seize, about to burst; when you gasp for oxygen and find only water.

Our bodies try to fight the inevitable.

Iโ€™ve heard that all you have to do to be at peace, is give in.

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