Hot tarmac scorches our eager feet as we scuttle down towards the sand. Me on one end and Mike on the other of his two-man rubber dinghy. Vinegar invades my nostrils as we nip past the kiosks. Negotiating the concrete steps with our ready-inflated vessel high above our heads, a gust knocks my salt-stained Air Jordan cap onto the ground. “Wait!” I say half-giggling and stooping awkwardly to get it still being pulled along by Mike.

Eventually, we get to the water. It’s August, but it still ain’t warm in there. We wade out and take some sharp breaths especially when the frigid liquid gets above our waistbands. When deep enough we clamber aboard and begin rowing out to sea using our arms as oars. We commit to reaching the yellow five-knot marker and make it no problem. Like that scene in Gattaca, we don’t save anything for the way back.

Somehow, we get a puncture. We’re going down. Slowly, but we’re definitely going down. We tease each other with imaginings of what lurks beneath. It’s like the final scene from Jaws when Brody and Hooper are making their way ashore. Mike is in the water pulling. I am in the boat clinging on as it slowly submerges.

We make it back in the end, but there were to be no more dinghy adventures that summer.