Ryan spent an entire afternoon at the medical school searching for what his inventory sheet described as a “stereotaxic with dog-monkey adapters.” Secretaries and doctors kept referring him to second-floor laboratories, fifth-floor offices, subterranean corridors. At last, in the basement carpentry shop the carpenters told him that they had just built a platform for the device, which was on order. The sawdust on the shop floor reminded Ryan of gerbil cages. Although it was against department policy, he put his numbered sticker on the platform and bicycled home, clipboard balanced on the handlebars, inventory sheets waving in the wind.

This was a Tuesday in June, and here, along the New England coast, the air was taking on its usual damp summer feel. Unable to sublet his half of the apartment, he could not leave until summer’s end. He felt he knew precisely what he wanted to do next with his life: move to Chicago, spend weekends at blues clubs and the Art Institute, apply to chiropract…