He didn’t think. He just ran, not back to his towel, but straight into the sea. The shock of it stole his breath. The militiaman on the steps shouted, “Hey! You! Stop!” But Lev dove under a wave.

Lev froze. The cold returned, but it wasn't the honest cold of the sea. It was the cold of a police station waiting room. Of a fine. Of a record. Of having to explain to the library director why he was detained for “petty hooliganism.”

And Lev ran.

He first heard of the Run from a drunken poet who slept in the Rare Manuscripts section. “It’s not about flesh, Lev,” the poet had slurred, gesturing with a bottle of cheap port. “It’s about shedding. The shell. The visa stamp. The utility bill. Underneath, we’re all just Odessa—salty, sun-scorched, and slightly ridiculous.”

But for the first time in ten months, he wasn’t looking for the shore. He was just floating. Waiting for the trouble to pass. Waiting for the May sun to get a little higher.

They ran along the water’s edge, past the rusting hulks of old fishing trawlers. The violinist began to hum a tune—a jaunty, folkloric melody. The accountant stopped covering himself and started to laugh, a real, guttural laugh that echoed off the sea wall.

Then they heard the whistles.