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FRIDAY
08.11.1996
DORIAN


               The ocean swallows me whole. Me and my box.

Water flows in through the cracks between the door and window (so much is to be expected with British insulation). A box shouldn't have doors or windows if it's going to be safe. This box isn't safe. The water already reaches mid-calf. I'm going to drown in this box. It's too quiet.

I never thought I would complain about a lack of noise but all I can hear is my own laboured breathing and the gush of blood in my ears which imitate the ocean so well I become seasick. I grip the edge of the bed, sweat pearling at the back of my neck and between my shoulders. I can't stop shivering despite the sticky heat adhered to my skin.

The walls have crawled an inch closer every hour. The faded blue paper peels to reveal a dark grey paint beneath. The waves slosh from side to side and the room rocks. It's going to shrink until I run out of oxygen.

A car door slams. I jolt.

My head snaps to the covered window (There's a window! There is a window! I'm not locked in here!) of our motel room which returns to normal. No moving walls or curling paper. No ocean. Not that it calms me in the slightest.

I ease my weight onto my knees but they still nearly give in. Static reverberates from ankle to pelvis with every step I venture toward the window. (I haven't seen anyone today. Isaiah was gone when I woke up and isolation has become self-fulfilling insanity within a handful of scrambled hours.)

I opened and shut the curtains so many times that the bronze pole has new discolourations and the scrape of the rings still echoes in my spine. With the curtains shut, I'm stuck right back in Rav Eliraz. With them open, I'm terrified Ima is watching me, that she has a video camera aimed through the window and the moment she has confirmation of my location, she'll send troops to get me.

Before I reach the window to peek between the curtains, the door opens and my heart freezes like a mouse witnessing a predator, then takes off at the speed of a rabbit's.

Isaiah has only one foot over the threshold when he halts. His lips purse as he looks me over, hand still on the door handle. 'You're home...'

'Where else would I be?'

'Thought you'd be at temple.'

I stare at him. It's Friday? It's Friday. Of course, it's Friday. I've been so tangled in time, I didn't realise it still moves linearly for everyone else. I didn't remember it's Shabbat.

I turn away as tears bulk in the beds of my eyes. (How could I forget Shabbat?) If fear is strong enough to make me forget G-d, there's nothing it can't do. I have no power against it.

'My parents will be there.' I hope it sounds like it'll be awkward and not they might imprison me.

'Right...'

Isaiah steps inside. It's a heavy movement as though he's wading through water that reveals he regrets the choice even as he makes it. His own body screams at him to turn around.

Turn around, I try to telepathically shout at him. I think I'm going insane and I don't want you to see, which really means please hold me.

He does neither. Isaiah shuts the door so gently it makes no noise (knowing the click will be the equivalent of a gunshot — how do you know?) and turns to me. 'What's wrong?'

Is it possible to have nightmares while awake? That's what I've been doing all day.

Though I haven't dared to open my email since I saw hers yesterday, I remember it by heart: Odd that your own mother should have to hear of your return from someone else. I'd like you to come over for Shabbat dinner the following week, November 14.

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