Vladimir felt the hair on his arms rise. He’d seen drowned men. He’d seen bodies bloated by three days in the summer sun. But this was different. This was a memory that had refused to sink.

Vladimir was mending a net in his lantern room, the old Fresnel lens (long deactivated, but polished daily) casting a ghostly amber glow around him. His fingers, gnarled as olive roots, worked the twine by memory. He was thinking of 1959. He was seventeen. A night just like this. A gajeta fishing boat had cracked against the reef below, and he’d swum into the blackness with a rope between his teeth. He’d pulled three men out. One of them, a fat butcher from Rijeka, had kissed his hands and wept.

A small boat. No, not a boat. A lifeboat. One of the old ones, wooden, clinker-built, the kind they stopped making forty years ago. It was wedged between two fangs of rock, listing badly. And in it, a figure.