Tiffany Sly Lives Here Now. Dana L. Davis

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annoying music. Did you talk to him?”

      “No. He only waved at me.”

      “Seriously? Creepy. He never talks. I think he’s half-mute or something. One of his moms won the lottery. That’s the only reason they can afford to live here and send him to Curington. Curington’s expensive. I mean, now that Heaven, Nevaeh and you are at Curington—”

      “Heaven and Nevaeh? They go to Curington, too?”

      “It’s sixth through twelfth grade. You didn’t know that?”

      “I didn’t.”

      “Anyway. Now that you’re going, too, Mom and Dad are under a financial strain.”

      “That makes me feel really bad.”

      “I didn’t mean to make you feel bad,” she says with a half smile that gives me the feeling she really did mean to make me feel bad. She turns and unhooks her bra, tossing it onto the bed with a simple flip of the wrist as she heads toward a door under the spiral staircase and emerges a moment later wearing a fluffy white robe. “I’m gonna take a quick shower. Apparently, we have to dress up for this thing.”

      I take another sip from my sand water.

      “And some of the boxes you had shipped are in the closet. Could you unpack them? It’s giving me claustrophobia to be in there. So cluttered.”

      “As soon as I can. Sorry to invade your room this way.”

      “That’s life.”

      She quickly pushes through another door in the room. I imagine it’s a bathroom because within seconds I hear the shower running.

      If Mom were alive and I told her about my first run-in with London Stone, she would probably say, “At least she’s honest, Tiff. It’s the people who are always smiling. Those are the ones with all the problems. Give her some time. She’ll come around.”

      I glance at our matching beds, an area rug separating the space between them.

      Time. Perhaps we’ll have plenty of that.

      Or maybe just seven days.

       4

      He’s here. Omigosh, he’s here. My hands are trembling as I swipe across my phone and scroll through my favorites list. I press the icon for Keelah Bo Beelah.

      “Thank you for calling the Center for Disease Control. What horrible disease do you think you’ve contracted?”

      “Akeelah!” I whisper. “Help me.”

      “Why you whisperin’? Your new dad lock you in the basement?”

      “I’m in my closet. I’m hiding.” I nervously flip my braids over my shoulder and yank on them.

      “Weird. Did you forget to take your anxiety medication today or something?”

      “No. I took it.”

      “Then why you hiding in the closet?”

      “I’m scared. Talk me through this. He’s home. He’s downstairs. I can hear him with the other kids. I hear him!”

      “What other kids?”

      “I have siblings. I think.”

      “The fuck? What do you mean, you think?”

      “Keelah. Help me out of the closet!”

      “Girls or boys?”

      “Four girls.”

      “Dang! How come nobody told you that you had sisters?”

      “Keelah, focus!”

      “But I’m sayin’. Four sisters and nobody told you? That’s so lame.”

      “Keelah! I’m crouched in a closet hiding from this man! Help me.”

      “Oh! Okay, I got something that can help. Remember that episode of Maury Povich where the girl thought her baby-daddy was between her cousin, her boyfriend’s brother and her boyfriend? And remember how happy the boyfriend was when he found out the baby was his?”

      “Are you serious?”

      “Yes, girl! I love that one. That’s how happy your dad is gonna be when he sees you for the first time. He’s gonna be like that baby-daddy. He danced all over the stage and did a backflip.”

      Unless he’s not the father. And suddenly all I can picture is the episode of Maury Povich I remember very clearly. Not the one Keelah’s talking about. In this one, Maury opened up a manila envelope and said, “Lula-Mae. Jim Bob is not the father.” And then Lula-Mae fell on the floor and started crying and Jim Bob screamed, “Fuck all y’all!” and ran off the stage.

      “Keelah, I’m hanging up now.”

      “Wait!” Akeelah exclaims. “What do your sisters look like?”

      “They’re mixed.”

      “Mixed? With what?”

      “White.”

      “Does that mean you have a white stepmom?”

      “I guess so.”

      There’s a long pause.

      “Hello?” I whisper.

      “Sorry. I’m, like, trippin’. White stepmom? What if she hates black people?”

      “She has black kids!”

      “Half. Not the same thing. You’re all black. She might hate fully black people. She might Cinderella you, Tiff. Be careful. You’ll be sleeping in the attic with the rats.”

      “Her husband’s all black! Uggh. You’re not helping. I’m hanging up on you!”

      And I do, angrily tossing the phone into the opposite corner of the closet. I scratch my back. This stupid Anthropologie dress is making me itch like crazy. I do not like Anthropologie. I look like Suri Cruise in this getup. I almost passed out cold when I saw the price tag Margaret must’ve mistakenly left on it. Four hundred and fifty dollars. For one dress?

      I hear a knock coming from the bedroom. I stand, smooth out my study-of-humans dress and push through the closet door and back into the Pottery Barn room. Another soft knock and I’m stuck in an Edgar Allan Poe poem with someone faintly tap-tap-tapping gently at my chamber door. ’Tis maybe my dad and nothing more.

      I clear my throat. “Come in.”

      The door opens and suddenly he’s here. He doesn’t do a backflip or anything. He only stands there looking at me. He’s really tall and thin but sadly the similarities

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