Authors: Gemma Weekes
âThat's nice,' I say.
âYou think so?'
âYeah, definitely.'
âHear hear!' yells Jay from the other side of the store where he's arranging the handbags.
âThis would look really good for my shows,' she says to herself and then goes back to a colourful rail. âYou gotta try this on,' she says, bundling an eighties prom dress into my limp arms. âIt's gonna look majestic on you!'
âI don't know . . .'
âTry these on too.'
I just stand there.
âEden, step into my office,' she says, hustling me into a purple-curtained fitting room. âNow look, I'm not trying to tell you what to do, or how to think. But one thing chicks like
me
,' she places a hand to her padded chest, ârecognise, is that being a chick takes work. That's the problem with you guys. Getting all depressed 'cause you don't look like a supermodel first thing in the morning? Damn! At least ya'll ain't gotta deal with a five o'clock shadow!'
I laugh. âI'm being serious, chica! To get a little bit deep, you gotta look at femininity as a
construct
, you know what I'm saying? I'm writing a paper on it right now! Femininity takes work and it takes maintenance. And don't waste my time saying you don't care, 'cause it's damn obvious that you do! Otherwise you wouldn't be coming around like, “Oh Brandy! Help me pleeease! Save me from myself!”'
âShut up! I don't sound like that!'
âI am telling you the damn truth, girl, and you can't take it!'
âLook, I'll try on the bloody things, OK? Are you happy now?'
âI got you smiling, though,' she tickles me. âI got you smiling!'
The lacy and sequinned prom dress cheers me up despite myself, and I can't help but laugh at the riotous applause from Jay and Brandy when I strike a pose.
âYou need to put on a fly pair of sneakers with that and you are good to
go
!' says Jay, looking me up and down. âDunks maybe. Or even some Chucks like what you got on.'
âYou don't think I need to wear heels?'
âNah! You ever hear that song by Prince, when he sings,' Jay adopts a startling falsetto, â
I've never seen a pret-ty girl look so tough, baby! You got that LOOK!
'
I laugh. âYeah . . .'
âWell that's you, baby. Born to do it!' he snaps his fingers. âHey! I'm gonna put that album on right now!'
Brandy tells me to try the peasant dress, all billowy and romantic. She takes a belt and pulls it tight around my waist. âI love waist belts!' she says. âIsn't that a sexy feeling?' She takes a step back and studies my body. âJay! Come check out this
ridiculous
hourglass figure!'
âBitch, I am
jealous
!' Jay says, bopping his head to eighties Prince, âLittle Red Corvette'.
âYou said you take pictures, right?' she asks me.
âYeah . . . um . . . I do.'
âWell, I know some of the vainest bitches in the Western hemisphere, so I think I can get you some photography work if you want. Help finance this little fashion injection of yours. What you think, mami?'
I strike a muscle man pose, Jay snaps his fingers again, Brandy giggles and for the first time in ages I feel some distance from all the things that make me sad.
âI think that'd be just fine, actually,' I say.
âAnd Eden . . .'
âYeah?'
âLook, I ain't trying to be all up in your business,' she says, lowering her voice, âbut I know a thing or two about getting hurt, how it feels to be in pain.' She takes my shoulder and smiles, shiny-eyed. âBut don't flaunt your scars, girlfriend. OK? You are not your scars.'
âHEY, VIOLET.' ON
my way back from the bodega for snacks, I spot her outside the house with the baby buggy and shopping. âYou need some help?'
âOh! Yeah. Thanks, girl!' she says. Her skin is the colour of a rich gravy and equally wholesome. She wears a simple baseball cap and beneath it, her eyes and smile are serene. I feel young, lanky and bruised in comparison. âHow you doing?'
âI'm good,' I tell her, wiping sweat off my face. âWhat should I grab?'
âIf you take the bags,' she says, âI'll take baby. I can come back for the stroller.'
âNo, it's cool, I can manage.'
She unstraps her boy and lifts him out of the buggy. His little sleeping body, clothed in a bright outfit and tiny sandals, moulds itself around her neck.
âWow. He's cute to the point of physical pain! You do good work!' I say and she laughs. âWhat's his name, again?'
âEko,' she strokes his head. His face is sweet, round and perfectly formed.
âIt suits him.'
Once we've finally made it up to her living room, she lays her son down in his play pen and offers me iced tea and banana cake.
âYes, please. Thanks.'
She goes down the hall to her kitchen and I brace myself against history. Try to be
right now
. It's just a room, after all.
Houses don't have minds, so neither can they have memories. Everything is different from how it was before, back in the days when this room was a library and her bedroom was mine. That summer. The space is now decorated in shades of cream and gold, with shining wooden floors. A toy chest is stored neatly in the corner next to the play pen. There's a bowl of fruit and a stack of magazines on the coffee table. A downy-looking blanket is folded on the arm of the sofa. Doesn't seem like anything bad could happen here.
Outside the door is the staircase that goes right the way to the top. Aunt K is either sick or mad to live there. I don't know which.
âHere.' She places a generous slice of cake and my drink on the coffee table. âHope you like it! Just tried a new recipe.'
We sit for a moment enjoying her latest creation. It deserves, and gets, a moment of silence.
âThis is really bloody good,' I say as enthusiastically as I can manage. âDon't want to be cheeky, but I think you're gonna have to give me some for later.'
She mutters something about my âcute' accent and laughs. âI'll see what I can do,' she says. Then she gives me a look that somehow manages to be both shy and accusatory. âI like your hair.'
âThanks.'
âIs it all yours?'
âYeah, 'course!' I exclaim, and pat my Afro, softened by mysterious oils and manoeuvred into a cascade of shining twists. âBrandy took me to this salon in Harlem. I think I'm her little project at the moment.'
Violet's eyes flicker down at the wooden floor and up. âI know the place. Hair and Now, right? You guys go down the street to the soul food restaurant after?'
âYeah,' I say, feeling a bit cheap. âYeah we did. She must do this with all the girls.' I laugh. âMaybe one day we should all hang out or something.'
âYeah. Yeah we should,' she says. Pause. âYou look really pretty. I wish some oils could do that to
my
hair.'
I cough. This is an alien feeling. âNah, trust me! My hair is a pain in the ass. I can barely get a comb through it! It was magic what they did.'
âThat's what chicks with good hair always say.'
âGood hair? What are you talking about?'
Violet smiles sadly, tugging at the peak of her baseball cap. âDon't worry about it, girl. Just say thank you. It's a compliment.'
âHave you been there? I'm telling you they can take any hair texture and . . .'
âThey said I should cut it all off.'
For a moment we say nothing.
âWhy?'
She shrugs. âIt's too damaged. I mean . . . I wanted to grow out my relaxer gradually but they said the best thing I could do was to just shave it off.'
âMaybe you should. You've definitely got the face for it.'
âThat's what Brandy said. But hell. I need my hair! I just want to look pretty, you know? Like a girl,' she says, and I'm undone by her simplicity. She's not afraid to want what she wants. âBut anyway,' she lets loose a smile, and I really want to tell her how she doesn't even need hair with a smile like that, but the moment has passed. âYou want some more cake? I'll still pack you some up for later too.'
âYes, please. Thanks.'
I'm too full for the cake she brings me but I eat it anyway, for something to do. âHow do you know my aunt?'
âWell, I met her a couple years ago at Bright Prospects, back when I was pregnant with Eko,' Violet says, seeming
relieved at the change of subject. âShe taught a workshop in life skills and really helped me out, you know? Helped me see things different. Like I had a future.' She pours me out some more iced tea. âI started doing singing workshops with the kids and stuff. I was living in a hostel at the time, and they were gonna house me. But when Umi saw the apartment, she said she couldn't let me live somewhere like that so she gave me a roof. She's a true blessing to me, the closest thing I've ever really had to a real family.' She takes a sip of her tea. âI'm gonna miss her while she's away!'
âAway?' I pause mid-bite. Put the cake back down on my plate. âWhere?'
âShe's going to Saint Lucia tomorrow!'
I'm not sure I heard right.
âExcuse me?'
Violet looks at me. âDamn, she hasn't told you yet? That's so like her! Always just doing her own thing, you know?'
âBut I just got here! I thought I was coming here to spend time with her. It felt like,' I can barely get the words out, âshe needed me!'
âHoney, there's one thing you need to know about Umi. She don't need
no
one! We need her! If she's decided to leave you here for a while, then that's 'cause she thinks you'll do better without her.'
âI can't bloody believe it.'
âDon't worry, you got us! You need anything, you just let me know. Or Brandy, or Baba if he's around . . .'
âYeah. Thanks.'
I take my cake and go, purposely not seeking out Aunt K for more information. Who does she think she is, anyway? With all these people stacked around her like weird disciples in the Church of Katherine! I remember the first night going up to dinner with Violet. I faltered at the base of the steps, steps I'd thought I could never climb again. We weren't
going all the way to the top but still, we were close enough. She gave me this hard, unforgiving look, and she said, âEden. We are
not
the weak! We persevere, we survive.
Get
up those steps and stop making a fool of yourself!'
I was stunned, humiliated standing there. She had no right to judge me for being damaged. I'd earned it. I almost told her as much, but she was gone before I could open my mouth to say a word, leaving me to climb the stairs on my own.
And I'll make it through this summer on my own as well. I'm bloody used to it.
IT'S VERY DARK
. My dream is slippery. Gone. Sweaty sheets are tangled around my legs and something woke me up but I don't know what it was. It's a week now since Aunt K left for Saint Lucia, giving me a big, nonchalant hug as if inviting someone to stay and then going off without them is something she does as a matter of course. The house feels different without her in it, more dangerous by far. Before she left, I was living with Aunt K. Now I just live in Flatbush with a house full of near-strangers.
I'll lie here, very still and quiet. It will come back to me. There are snatches of conversation from passers-by on the street outside. Police sirens. Next door a radio playing tinny hip-hop. Cats are fighting. But none of those noises are what woke me up. I think there's someone upstairs, on the ground floor. And Brandy's gone for the weekend. I saw her pack up and leave for a pageant she's doing in Washington DC. That sound again.
Footsteps.
Blood is beating loud in my head and I don't know if I should get up because if it's a burglar he might hear me. But I would have known if something big woke me up, like shattering glass or a door being bashed in, wouldn't I? A door opens. Closes. Something is wheeled across the floor. I should go up there. If it's Brandy, if she's back early, or if it's Violet suffering from insomnia, or Baba on some inexplicable night-time mission, then I want to know right now so I can stop being scared.
In the dark my feet land silently. I leave the light off, sneak up the basement stairs without creaking, and push out into the hall. The light is on in the kitchen and there's a rustling sound. It has to be Brandy having a go at the tortilla chips. I could use a chat right now anyway, about ordinary things. About haircuts and celebrities and the weather. Anything.
âBrandy? I'm
so
happy youâ'
Then everything sticks in my throat because it's not her. It's not a
her
all. It's a
him
â a really big him, and I rear back and I'm listening to this loud, shrill sound that I realise is me screaming and who is this guy and how did he get in and why is he here?
Then the man jumps and spins around in shock and my body is shot through with fear, like sped-up traffic on film when you can only see the coloured lights streaking through the black and even if the sound is off the images are noisy and . . .
âZed?'
I keep trying to flick this hallucination out of my eyes because that's what this has to be.
âWhat the . . .?' he stares at me. âEden? Jesus Christ, girl! Stop screaming.'
âNo way!' I shout, still hopped up on adrenaline. Shock claws blackly at the edges of my vision. âZed? Oh my God.'
He closes his eyes and takes measured breaths for a moment, lashes thick against his cheeks. âSo Juliet wasn't yanking my chain. What, are you stalking me now?'
âI'm not stalking you. How could I be stalking you when I was here first? Damn, Zed. Damn. What are you
doing
here?' I say, but it's taking me a while to get all of this out because I'm starting to hyperventilate. Aunt K must have done this! What is she bloody playing at? âShit . . . I thought you were . . .' breathe, âa burglar! I thought . . . What are you doing here? You said you were going home!'