The Safety of Others by Joanna Friedman
Meg reminisces about her summer vacations growing up, reflecting on her friendship with Charlie and her interest in Henry. Image generated with OpenAI When the three of us were eight, I saw Henry for the first time. He painted on the rocky pier above the tidepools where Charlie and I hunted for hermit crabs. Even back then, Henry wore a tan fedora hat like an old man, and I knew from the serious way he studied the easel that he was on a whole other level from us regular eight-year-olds. His presence made me notice the world more: the cove with its fishing boats bobbing near the cliffs, the dogs with their salted fur stealing sandwiches from unguarded blankets, the tourist women lying face down with their bikini-tops untied. I tried to keep Mom's word about them, slutty , squashed down in my mind. But whenever I saw hints of skin, the word slutty popped back up again. Even the twelve side-by-side cabins of the Seaside Motel where Charlie's family and mine stayed, seemed more...