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A gun drawn on you will bring you out of a blackout.

People comply with a gun. In movies we don’t think about the mechanics of it; in real life, the automaticity is total. It bypasses consciousness, as if the body recognizes guns at an instinctual level. I wasn’t weighing options or calculating risk. I was responding to electrical impulses originating in the amygdala.

“Freeze. Put your hands up.”

I realized my hands were up before I decided to put them there. One moment I was drunkenly trying to find a way through the bushes or trees, I wasn’t quite sure; the next, everything was organized around the singular fact that there was a gun drawn on me.

I was not particularly afraid. But I understood with precision that if I miscalculated this interaction, I could actually die.

“Higher.”

My hands went higher. Of course cactus wasn’t going to cut it. The word did not need to be spoken forcefully to have force.

“Turn around slowly.”

I did not want to get shot. That was the only principle. I pivoted carefully and asked, “Like this?”

It was an honest question. The timid sound of my voice must have de-escalated something; whatever the worst case he had prepared himself for did not happen. I heard him exhale.

“Yes. Like that.”

The efficiency with which he apprehended me was stunning. He cuffed both hands in what seemed to be a single motion. I glided across the yard and he dropped me off in the backseat without friction. At the station I was removed with the same elegance.

But then, no one else in my entire life has ever been as kind and hospitable to me as the Warden of the jail on that night. He was warm, charismatic, and personable. He chatted me up with the enthusiasm of an uncle and child. He asked me about my hometown, education, and job. He praised everything he could find. For not driving my rental car. For maintaining friendships. For having gone to college.

It struck me how good he was at customer service in a role that didn’t require it.

“This mugshot is actually badass.”

He wasn’t being ironic, I saw it. My hair was a wild mane. My tattoo stood out. It was, objectively, a strong mugshot.

When they had finished processing me, I drunkenly began a speech to thank the officers for their assistance.

There at some point I drifted away in my cell.

A few years later I reached out to Anna.

I don’t know what I expected. She had said the thing she said and I had picked up my wine and left and that had been the end of it. But she was still in my head in the way unresolved things stay there, taking up space. So I messaged her. We made plans.

I taught her to drive a stick shift. She had never learned and I had a car and somehow this seemed like the right activity. We drove to an empty parking lot and I talked her through the clutch. She stalled it four times and didn’t apologize once. She just tried again with the same flat composure she had always had about everything. By the end she was doing it. She seemed neither pleased nor surprised. This was simply a thing she had decided to learn and now she had learned it.

She got a call. I could see it occur behind her eyes, the moment she went against her better judgment and included me in her plans. “Andy is with me. He is driving now.” The car really might have had something to do with it.

Her friends were not what I expected. She had always struck me as a socially average person. But the people she had somehow found herself living with were electric. His name was something like Emilio, and he seemed like an Emilio. He was a charismatic frontman from a band that didn’t exist. His girlfriend, whose name was something like Janinah, moved through a room the way his girlfriend would. They lived together, the three of them, in a studio near the old viaduct.

At the bar we stood in the crowded middle of it and socialized. When I turned my head, she was right there.

Carly. A year below me in high school. She was in the same general tier as me without ever quite converging. But she wasn’t that girl anymore. She was a woman. She had aged in a specific way that looked good. I recognized her and she recognized me and for a moment neither of us said anything.

I went first. We know each other. The conversation quickly found its footing.

Somehow, Carly and my groups merged. The rest of the night we moved from bar to bar, her group and mine folded in one. Anna was receding. Not dramatically. Not with any visible hostility. She was just slowly making clear that whatever tonight was, it was not going to include me in the way I had hoped. Carly was clearly uninterested in the direction her boy wanted the night to go. He was openly annoyed about it. She was unconcerned.

Eventually we split off and ended up back at Emilio’s place. Anna had completely frozen me out by this point. Just a temperature change that had been happening all night and was now complete. Emilio and Janinah were very warm toward me. They said they hoped to see me again.

I took an Uber home. They would not see me again because Anna did not like me, and it was Anna who had brought me there.

On my way home I added Carly on Facebook and sent her a message.

I have never had a stronger opening in my life.

When Anna and I matched, the app still felt like something people were wary of, so I gave her my full name and even my license plate number. It felt like the normal precaution you took when you were about to meet a stranger from the internet. She got in my car and the connection was immediate. She was a Russian student with a heavy accent, glasses, blond hair, a slightly awkward posture, and a directness that bypassed every American social rule I had ever learned. Nothing about her felt shaped by trying to be a certain type of woman. That made it easier to relax around her than I had ever experienced.

Our first dates were straightforward. Bars, restaurants, the usual places people chose without imagination. The hostess always seated us in the predictable part of the dining room where early Tinder couples were clustered together, all of them stiff and polite and trying too hard. We would sit there watching the slow collapses around us while our conversations never stalled. There was something steady between us from the beginning. She laughed easily. She asked simple questions. She didn’t act like she was auditioning for anything. I didn’t either.

After a few dates she came to my apartment. I had assumed she would look around and quietly recalibrate her interest downward. The place looked like it belonged to someone still in the process of becoming an adult. But she walked in and said she liked it. She didn’t mean she liked me despite the apartment. She liked the apartment. She said she wanted to live that way. Her tone never shifted to suggest she was trying to flatter me or make a point. She spoke in straightforward observations, always. I smoked Parliament Lights then. A week or two later she started smoking them too, not as a gesture or a flirtation, but as if it was simply the logical next step.

She needed to move apartments and I volunteered to help. Her place barely had anything in it. No mattress, no packed boxes, no evidence that she had prepared. I moved her things to the car and she worked beside me without apology or explanation. She didn’t thank me. It didn’t register as rude. It felt like she assumed I already understood the situation and didn’t need the interaction padded with ceremony. I found it refreshing. There was nothing performative between us.

The night it ended didn’t feel like a turning point until the very last minutes of it. I brought a bottle of wine because at that time I brought alcohol to every interaction. Earlier in the evening she had asked why I did that. I didn’t give her a real answer. She then told me stories about Russia, showed me photos of her hometown, played music she grew up with. We had sex. Everything about the night felt warm and steady. There was nothing tense or unsettled. When we were getting ready for bed, she said, in the same tone she used for everything else, “You’re only into me because you have no other options.” I didn’t register it at first. I asked her what she meant. She repeated it, worded more plainly, but with the same neutral delivery.

I didn’t argue. I didn’t explain anything. I didn’t feel insulted in the traditional sense. It was just true. The wine was still sitting on her table, untouched. I picked it up because it was mine. I walked out. She didn’t protest or ask for clarification. The whole thing ended in silence.

Years later, at thirty, I typed her name into Facebook out of nowhere. Her profile hadn’t changed since the last time I’d seen it. Same photos, same posts, same faint trace of a life that had never fully transitioned into adulthood. I sent her a message explaining why I had moved back to Seattle, mentioned the bipolar episode, and gave a brief account of what had happened to me. She didn’t respond. That night I removed her from my friends list. The next day she liked a picture of my cat on Instagram. It wasn’t a re-opening of anything. It was a small sign that she had noticed the change and that was the extent of it.