records, but they’re mostly all classical.”
 
 “This is vinyl?” Cassia knew that was the cool thing now,
 
 that everyone liked to listen to vinyl again, but she’d never had
 
 any of her own.
 
 “It is. If you listen, you can hear the crackle. I just have a
 
 cheap turntable and speakers. When I moved here, someone
 
 was having a garage sale. I had a lot of vinyl, but no turntable.
 
 I’ve always been partial to it. I don’t know why. I hardly ever
 
 got a chance to listen to them. Mostly I just kept them in crates
 
 in storage. I travelled too much to take anything with me, but
 
 there was a tiny apartment in Paris and some storage units
 
 there that got paid for every month. I guess that was my home
 
 base.”
 
 “Paris?” Cassia’s mouth dropped. “Wow. And you ended up
 
 here?”
 
 Adalynn had a special talent for not taking things too
 
 seriously, including herself or the questions Cassia asked. “I
 
 liked the turret,” she said. She leaned against the counter and
 
 turned her eyes down to the soapy water.
 
 As the music rose to its crescendo, Cassia could hear the
 
 slight static and whine of the record player. She liked that too.
 
 How it wasn’t perfect. Maybe that’s what everyone meant
 
 when they said that vinyl was more authentic.
 
 “I like the turret too. And I guess you couldn’t beat the
 
 price. Or the location. I mean, maybe not the fact that it’s
 
 South Carolina and not Paris, but you have a massive yard,
 
 and the privacy is nice. Then again, this is coming from
 
 someone who used to live in New York. I guess I can
 
 understand why you might not have wanted to stay in Paris,
 
 even if it’s Paris.”