“I’m sure you’ll talk them into hiring you to dust baseboards at Charter Village,” Barb adds, lowering herself into a chair at the kitchen table.
“Well, I’m not ruling it out,” Tova says, smiling. The percolator hisses as the coffee brews, and Tova stoops down to run her hand along Cat’s back as the animal strolls into the kitchen.
Janice regards Cat skeptically. “What’s happening with that fella?”
“Well, he can’t come with me,” Tova says. “I suppose he’ll go back to living outside full-time, unless one of you is in the market for a pet?”
Janice holds her hands up. “Peter’s allergic. Plus, Rolo is terrified of cats.”
Cat leaps up onto Barb’s lap, landing on light paws, and purrs loudly as he stretches upward and rams his furry head into her chin.
“I’m a dog person,” Barb says. She scratches behind Cat’s ears. “My, you’re soft, though, aren’t you? Did I tell you all about the cat Andie’s kids found last year? Lives in their bedrooms now, sleeps with them under the sheets and blankets. I told Andie she needed to make sure the thing was treated for fleas, because you never know what animals bring in from outside, do you? Anyway, then she said—”
“Look Barb, he’s totally into you.” Janice giggles. Cat is licking the back of Barb’s hand now, as if he’s grooming her, still purring like a buzz saw.
“I already treated him for fleas, of course,” Tova says pointedly.
Barb looks from Janice to Tova. “But I’m a dog person!”
Tova laughs. “People can change, Barbara.”
“Even old folks like us,” Janice adds.
“Oh, all right. I’ll think about it,” Barb mumbles, but she’s rubbing Cat on his gray belly now. His eyes are closed in bliss.
Tova pours everyone coffee. “Have you both had supper? I could heat something up . . .”
“Oh, you don’t need to do that.” Janice waves her off. “Not with everything else you’ve got going on here.”
A saucy smile curls Tova’s lips. “Let’s have cake for supper.”
TOVA CLEANS ALONE on her last shift at the aquarium. Her last time mopping the circular hallway. A final swipe of each pane of glass. As she finishes up, she takes extra care to scrub one last time under the sea lion statue’s tail. Who knows when it will be attended to again?
Funny how when she started this job, having only sea creatures for company was the thing she liked most about it. It was something to do, a way to keep busy while keeping to herself, no need to get her hands in anyone else’s business. But now, cleaning alone seems oddly wrong. Cameron should be here, without a doubt. The surety of this sentiment surprises her.
But he’s probably in California by now.
After finishing, she makes one last trip down the dim hallway. To the bluegills, she says, “Goodbye, dears.”
The Japanese crabs are next. “Farewell, my lovelies.”
“Take care,” she says to the sharp-nosed sculpin. “So long, friends,” to the wolf eels.
Next door, Marcellus’s enclosure seems calm and still. Tova leans in and scrutinizes the rocky den, looking for any sign of him, but there’s nothing. She hasn’t seen him all night.
She goes back into the pump room, but can’t see him from the rear, nor from the top looking down, either. She puts the stool back and hovers over the barrel, where through the screen she can see the new lady octopus still curled, compact, on the bottom, surrounded by a scattering of mussel shells. “Did you see anything? Is he gone?” She jams a hand over her mouth. “Did he—” A choking sob steals the word from her.
The new octopus curls up tighter.
Tova returns to the hallway and places a hand on the cool glass front of Marcellus’s tank. No point in saying goodbye to rocks and water. The single tear that leaks from her eye rolls down her wrinkled cheek and falls from her chin before landing on the freshly mopped floor.
TERRY’S DESK IS a disaster when Tova goes in to leave her key card there, as she had promised to do. With a defeated shrug, she leaves the plastic card on top of the mess.
Her sneakers squeak on the floor as she crosses the lobby. She’ll throw the sneakers out when she’s finished tonight. They’re battered from years of cleaning here; not even the secondhand shop would want them.
Short of the door, she stops in her tracks. There’s a crumpled brown object on the ground, right in front of the door, as if blocking her way. She squints through the dim blue light. A paper bag? How could she have walked right past it on her way in?
A tentacle flickers.
“Marcellus!” Tova gasps, rushing over and dropping to the hard tile floor beside him. Her back pops loudly, but she hardly notices. The old octopus is pale, and even his brilliant eye seems diminished, like a marble that’s gone cloudy. She places a gentle, searching hand on his mantle, the way one might touch a sick child’s forehead. His skin is sticky and dry. He reaches an arm up and winds it around her wrist, right over the silver-dollar scar, which has now faded to a ghostly ring. He blinks, giving her a weak squeeze.
“What are you doing out here?” she says, softly scolding. “Let’s get you back into your tank.” She unwinds his tentacle from her wrist and stands, then tries to lift him, but her back strains, an ominous pain shooting through her lower spine.
“Stay here,” she commands, then hurries off to the supply closet as quickly as her body will carry her. A few minutes later, she returns, wheeling her yellow mop bucket. Inside, several gallons of water slosh, moved there from his tank with the old milk jug Tova keeps in the supply closet. Relief washes over her when he blinks. He hasn’t gone yet. She sops her cloth in the tank water and wrings it over him, wetting his skin. He heaves one of his strange human-esque sighs.
This revives him enough to move, it seems. With effort, he lifts an arm. Tova pulls the bucket up right beside him, and she gives his bottom (or what she supposes might be the equivalent of his bottom) a little boost as he heaves himself up over the bucket’s plastic yellow rim and plops into the cold water inside.
“What are you doing out here?” she asks again. Then she sees it.
Something chunky and gold glimmers on the floor, right in the spot where Marcellus had lain crumpled. She crouches and picks it up. SOWELL BAY HIGH SCHOOL, CLASS OF 1989. She’d thought it looked like a class ring yesterday when Cameron mysteriously hurled it in with the wolf eels.
How did Marcellus get it out of there? And why?
And Sowell Bay, class of 1989? Is this Daphne Cassmore’s ring? But it’s a man’s ring. Cameron had believed it was his father’s . . .
It sits on her palm, cold and heavy. Like a memory. Erik had one just like it. She was so proud, as all parents are, of what it symbolized. She assumed he had been wearing it on that night. A ring also lost to the sea.
She turns the ring over, squinting at the letters engraved on the underside. Her heart starts to beat in her eardrums. She wipes the ring on the hem of her blouse and reads it again.
It cannot be.
It is.
EELS.
Erik Ernest Lindgren Sullivan.
The Very Low Tide
The revelatory bits swimming around in her mind crash into one another, begging to be linked together.
There was a girl.
Erik . . . and the girl.
Erik fathered a child.
A child that grew up, away, unknown. She can’t believe she never saw it before in so many of Cameron’s mannerisms. In that heart-shaped dimple on his left cheek, the one she always admired, although she could never put her finger on why.
“You knew, didn’t you?” she says to Marcellus in the bucket. “Of course you did.” She leans down and touches his mantle again. “You’re so much more intelligent than we humans give you credit for.”