Bruce had to run from the office to make his train. He arrived just before the doors closed, and sat down at a table as his heavy breaths slowed. From his bag he took out an unopened envelope, a paper cup, and a bottle of wine. He filled the cup and opened the envelope. Inside it was a Peterborough-to-London train ticket, unused, but dated to 2006: it was more than three years old.

Bruce cast a furtive look around the vacant carriage. He turned over the empty envelope, addressed to the Housing, Neighbourhoods and Planning Department at Peterborough City Council, and looked for several seconds at his own name. The handwriting on the envelope was Katharine’s.

On the facing seat, where Katharine used to sit, another passenger had left a free newspaper. Bruce reached for it. The front page showed a celebrity couple with their new baby. He flipped distractedly through it until he reached the center spread, where he paused. A fun news story: “Heroes Save Beached Shark.”

Two men on a Norwegian island had come across a Greenland shark, stranded onshore and choking on a piece of decaying meat that had somehow floated into its path. The men reached into its jaws to pull out the stuck meat, then hauled the shark back into the ocean, where it swam away. This type of shark was rarely glimpsed by human beings. Scientists believed that they had an extraordinarily long lifespan; the individual on the beach had likely been alive for centuries.

Bruce rested his head on the seat-back and closed his eyes. He could feel the heating vents blowing dusty air on his ankles and the glow from the lights in the red space beneath his eyelids. He sensed the motion of the train and his mind speeding away from it, back to that morning’s consultation on the proposed gypsy-and-traveler transit site. He had been persuaded to lead the session by his boss, Yohanna⁠—nobody in the office would volunteer. The proposals were a touchy subject in the area. Residents were strongly opposed.

When he arrived that morning, a younger planning officer was standing by the table at the front of the room, waiting to introduce herself. Her name was Kaia. She asked Bruce whether he might have time for a coffee. Not today, necessarily, but whenever he could fit her in. She wanted to talk about career progression in local government. If he could spare … ?

She came around the table to stand next to him. Bruce edged away and said, evasively, “Sure.” He was quite busy today, though.

“No problem. Let’s swap numbers and we can set it up?”

“Sure,” Bruce said again. “Or you can write to my work email?”