know what.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” I said under my breath, but there he was, striding right toward me. Rennick. He had already spotted me, and he waved, walking all confident and breezy.

I didn’t trust myself with any more interactions. When your own body betrays you in such a violent and deadly way, how can you trust anything about yourself? And that was me now, teetering, unsure, the rug forever pulled out from under me. A constant state of disorientation.

I had knocked my head pretty badly once on the diving board at Chaney Pool during swim practice and went under, and there had been a five-second span of time when I panicked. Couldn’t tell up from down, front from back.

That was like my life now.

I hurried into the women’s restroom. Was it a coincidence that Rennick was here? Or had he been looking for me? Had he been at the funeral?

I took my sweet time in the restroom—washed my hands, fiddled with my hair, read all the graffiti on the wall—hoping against hope that he would get the hint.

He didn’t.

The train station had become bustling while I wasted time in the bathroom. Several groups of what looked like day-care children and their chaperones had entered the station, as well as a large knot of older kids, all wearing orange T-shirts, some kind of field trip.

I scanned the room and there he was. Standing right by my chair, arms crossed, waiting.

I tightened my posture, balled my hands at my sides, hunched my shoulders. It was crowded. Beyond crowded. And I couldn’t touch anyone. I swore under my breath.

I had to get away. I skirted toward the nearest exit and found myself outside on the concrete sidewalk in front of the station. A small crowd stood in line near a hot dog vendor; a mom with a half-dozen kids walking in line with linked hands passed in front of me. I didn’t want to cut through the children, so I moved laterally.

“Hey!” I heard from behind me. I knew it was him. I turned left, tried to pretend I didn’t hear him.

I balled my fists a little bit tighter, and my nails burrowed into my palms. When I was finally clear of the children, I walked quickly toward the makeshift farmer’s market set up on the large lawn in front of the station, hoping to get lost in the crowd.

I was in so much of a hurry, I narrowly missed running straight into an elderly man using a walker. As I worked my way more slowly through the throng of people, with my hands balled at my sides, close to my hips—my normal stance—someone grabbed my arm. Low, near the wrist.

I gasped, frozen. “Don’t touch!”

It was Rennick, of course, and he looked at me peculiarly, but he didn’t let go right away. Just for a moment, he held my wrist. Long enough to let me know that he was in charge. Then he dropped it, leaned in close to me.

“I’m not going to hurt you, Corrine. But you have to listen to me.”

“No, you don’t understand. You can’t talk to me. I can’t be the—”

“I see the blue—the indigo—when I look at you,” he said, and then it was like the noise, the commotion, the world around us faded to gray. The bass of a nearby car radio, the couple speaking French beside us, the traffic sounds—they ceased to exist. It was just him and me standing there on the lawn, his eyes locked on me. I remembered the blue, the blinding indigo light on the rocks with Sophie. I had no doubt that this was what he was referring to.

My body slackened. I saw the edges of my vision get swimmy, begin to tunnel, but I pushed it back as quickly as it came.

“What do you know?” I said in a voice that I had intended to sound in charge but instead came out as nothing more than a squeak.

“Follow me.”

“No,” I answered, but then I was following him.

He led me farther into the farmers’ market, through the aisles of stalls, each one spilling over with brightly colored merchandise. There were too many people, too close and too loud. Before I knew it, we were at a standstill in front of a quasi voodoo booth, bearing gifts of gris-gris and Mardi Gras beads, tourist junk.

He grabbed my arm again, low near the wrist. “Come here.”

“No! Please!”

He gave me a look but didn’t let go. I yanked my arm violently, but his grip didn’t loosen.

“Please,” I whispered, terrified, his hold so close to my hand. My hand. The source of it all.

His brow furrowed, and he shook his head at me. Whereas he had seemed so nonthreatening before, so laid-back and friendly, now he was serious, forceful. “I’m not going to hurt you, Corrine,” he said again. “But you have to listen to me before you get on that train and I never see you again.”

“No, you don’t understand.” I tried to get myself thinking straight, but the pressure of his hand on my wrist, that physical touch, felt like a bomb about to blow up. “I don’t want to hurt you,” I said, getting my wits back a little. There was no way this stranger could know about Sophie, about me. “You have to let me go. Please. It’s dangerous for you. I’m not—”

“I see things,” he said in a low, stern voice. He looked at me for a second, that playful, lackadaisical smile of the Crawdaddy Shack now gone. His deep blue eyes bored into me. “I see things about people, Corrine.”

I tried to yank my hand away, but he held it still, and I didn’t know if it was just because I hadn’t been touched in so many months, if it had always felt so hot, or if it was just his touch—this touch—but my skin under his hand was burning. It didn’t hurt, not in a harmful way, but like the sun on your face in a swimming pool.

“Please,” I begged. “Don’t make me scream. Because I will. You seem nice enough.” I was speaking quickly, trying desperately to ignore the unhinged note in my voice. “Just let me go before you regret this.”

“Here, here we go,” he said, pulling me across the aisle toward a fisherman’s stand. He drew a five-dollar bill out of the back pocket of his jeans and laid it on the woman’s metal table. “Do you have anything that’s really fresh?”

The woman eyed his hand around my wrist just for the briefest of beats, but then she looked at me. I could’ve said something. I didn’t. So the woman turned to Rennick, answered him. “Fresh and tasty, whatcha got a hankerin’ for? Gator nuggets?”

“No.” He shook his head, drew me closer to him, hid our hands behind him. “I need something that just came in, a fresh catch. Just been dead for minutes, maybe less than an hour.”

She turned and took a few steps back toward some crates, a great big tin wash bin. “Trust me,” he said low. “You can’t not know this, Corrine. It’ll change everything.”

“Crawdads came in just a few minutes ago, some of them still snapping they claws.” She gestured toward the white bucket she held up.

“Two, please. Dead ones, okay?”

She took her time wrapping two crawdads in butcher paper. My abductor reached for them with his free hand. I yanked hard just as his attention waned, but he was too strong for me.

He pulled me back; it was no use. He moved us away from the stand.

“No!” I screamed at him, not caring who heard me. “No, please!” Tears were coming down my face now. I kicked him hard, once, twice, in the shin, but he didn’t seem to notice. He pulled me through the crowd, toward an old stone bench in front of the train station. He sat down and sat me down too. He ripped open the butcher paper with his teeth and grabbed one of the crawdads in his hands.

He opened the palm of my hand that he had been holding, and I could feel my heart beating in my neck, in the thud of my eardrums. I wondered briefly, sadly, if the curse, the poison, the death of me had traveled into him already, had affected him. I wondered how he would die. Would it be soon? Would it take a long time? Would it be painful?

He placed one of the crawdads in my open palm and closed my other hand around it. I heard sobbing and was surprised when I realized that it was me. “What are you doing?”

“Just focus on your hand, Corrine. Think about it.”

I thought about the dead crawdad. I thought about dead Sophie, Granny Lucy, Mia-Joy. I thought about this

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