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it. “Yeah, me, too.”

      “This has been great,” I say. He picks up the check, which the bartender must have laid in front of him at some point.

      I take my wallet out.

      “Let’s split it,” I say. I prefer to pay or split in these circumstances; I like the feel of equal ground beneath my feet.

      “No,” he says. His tone has gone a little flat. “I’ve got it.”

      It’s not just the nails. There’s a sniff of arrogance, something cold beneath the flirting. I can see the glint of it, now that he knows he’s not going to get what he came for. Or maybe it’s not any of those things. Maybe there’s nothing wrong with him at all. Very likely it’s that something is wrong with me.

      Or most likely of all, it’s just that he’s not Jack.

      Until you let your husband go, no one else will measure up. That’s what my shrink said.

       I’m trying. I’m dating.

       Setting them up to knock them down isn’t dating.

      Is that what I’m doing? Just killing time with men who can’t help but to ultimately reveal themselves as not-Jack. They won’t be as funny as he was, or know just where to rub my shoulders. They won’t run out at any hour for anything I need, without being asked. I’ll go grab it for you. They won’t have his laugh, or that serious set to his face when he’s concentrating. They won’t bite on the inside of their cheeks when annoyed. They won’t feel like him, or smell like him. Not-Jack.

      Until one day, says Dr. Nash, there’s someone else who you love for all new reasons. You’ll build a new life. I don’t bother telling her that it’s not going to happen. In fact, there are a lot of things I don’t bother telling Dr. Nash.

      On the street, though I reach out for his hand, he tries for a kiss. I let his lips touch mine, but then I pull back a little, something repelling me. He jerks back, too. It’s awkward. No heat. Nothing. I shouldn’t be disappointed, should have long ago lost the capacity for disappointment. I suspected (knew) that it wouldn’t be there. But I thought maybe if there was heat, some physical spark, I wouldn’t need the sleeping pills tonight. Maybe we’d go back to his place and I’d have a reprieve from putting back the pieces of my fractured life.

      Now I must decide where I will go tonight—back to an apartment I was supposed to share with my husband but where I now live alone and no longer feel safe, back to Layla’s penthouse, maybe to a hotel.

      A police car whips up Lexington. Whoop. Whoop.

      “Maybe we could run this weekend?” He’s still working it, though I can’t imagine why. “Ever try the trails up in Van Cortlandt Park? Short but pretty—you feel miles away from the city.”

      “Nice,” I say.

      Unless there’s someone lurking in the shadows, and no one can hear you call for help.

      “Should I text you?”

      He’ll never text me, of course.

      “That sounds great.”

      Even if he does text me, I won’t answer him. Or I’ll put him off until he gets the hint. It’s easy like that, this dating thing in the age of technology. You can dangle someone off the edge of your life until they just float away, confused. Ghosting, I think the millennials call it.

      “Can I see you home?” he asks.

      “No,” I say. “I’m fine. Thanks.”

      I feel wobbly, suddenly. It’s after nine, and those two vodka sodas are sloshing around in an empty stomach, not to mention the other chemicals floating in my bloodstream. I haven’t eaten anything since—when?

      “You okay?” he asks. His concern seems exaggerated, his tone almost mocking. There are other people on the street, a couple laughing, intimate, close, a kid with his headphones on, a homeless guy sitting on the stoop.

      “I’m fine,” I say again, feeling defensive. I didn’t have that much to drink.

      But then he has his arm looped through mine, too tight, and I find myself tipping into him. I try to pull away from him. But he doesn’t allow it. He’s strong and I can’t free my arm.

      “Hey,” I say.

      “Hey,” he says, a nasty little mimic. “You’re okay.”

      Of course I’m okay, I want to snap. But the words won’t come. There’s just this bone-crushing fatigue, this wobbly, foggy, vague feeling. Something’s not right. The world starts to brown around the edges. Oh, no. Not now.

      “She’s okay,” he says, laughing. His voice sounds distant and strange. “Just one too many I guess.”

      Who’s he talking to?

      “Let go of me,” I manage, my voice an angry hiss.

      He laughs; it’s echoing and strange. “Take it easy, sweetie.”

      He’s moving me too fast up the street, his grip too tight. I stumble and he roughly keeps me from falling.

      “What the hell are you doing?” I ask.

      Fear claws at the back of my throat. I can’t wait to get away from this guy. He pulls me onto a side street; there’s no one around.

      “Hey.” A voice behind us. He spins, taking me with him. There’s someone standing there. He looks distantly familiar as the world tips. Somewhere inside me there’s a jangle of alarm. He has a dark hood on, his face not visible.

       It’s him.

      He’s big, bigger than—what’s his name? Reg, or something. Rex? The big man blocks our path up the sidewalk.

      “Hey, seriously, dude,” says Rick. Yes, Rick, that was it. “Step aside. I’ve got this.”

      But the world is fading fast, going soft and blurry, tilting. There’s a flash, quick-fire movement. Then a girlish scream, a river of blood. Black red on lavender.

      Then arms on me.

      Falling.

      Nothing.

       PART ONE

      Hypnagogia

      Between the dreams of night and day there is not so great a difference.

      —Carl Jung, Psychology of the Unconscious

       1

      “I think someone’s following me.”

      I almost kept this to myself, but toward the end of our session it just tumbles out.

      Dr. Nash wrinkles her brow with concern. “Oh?”

      Her office is a cozy living room, all big furniture and fluffy throw pillows. There are shelves and shelves of books and pictures, and trinkets, small art objects from her travels. It’s exactly the kind of office you’d want your shrink to have. Warm, enveloping. I sink deeper into my usual corner on her plush couch, leaning heavily on the overstuffed armrest. I resist the urge to curl up in a ball and cover myself with the cashmere blanket that’s tossed artfully over the back. A grouping of those faux candles flicker on the coffee table; she made me some tea when I arrived. It sits in front of me, untouched.

      “The other night when I left the gym, there was someone standing across the street. I think I saw him again this morning on a park bench near my office.”

      Even

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