Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Domestic Fiction,
Love Stories,
Contemporary Women,
Adultery,
African American,
African American women,
Married Women,
Triangles (Interpersonal relations)
happy Iâd won the fight, but I assumed weâd make up and still be friends. I had fought with other girls before and still stayed friends with them but Denise never came around me again after our fight.
Denise had scratched my face and I still had some of the scars by the time New Yearâs Day rolled around. I coated my face with a lot of makeup to hide the fact that Iâd been fighting. But I got drunk at a New Yearâs Eve party at Mariaâs house and told everybody about the fight anyway. I had a good time dancing with Mariaâs brothers and some of their friends, but the only boy I really wanted to be with was Wade.
I was in love for the first time. Ever since Iâd fucked Wade in his mamaâs house, Iâd been on cloud nine, and I assumed that he was, too. I had gotten over that little stunt heâd pulled on me at Giovanniâs. Somehow I managed to convince myself that that white boy Iâd seen him with had something on him. Something that kept him from admitting that he was my man. I refused to believe that a boy who had fucked the daylights out of me had lost interest in me that fast.
I began to think otherwise because I hadnât seen or heard from Wade since Iâd cornered him at Giovanniâs. âI ought to go to his house and smash his windows!â I told Maria. âI ought to steal that mangy dog of his and drop him off in East Oakland somehere.â
âThen you wonât hear from him again for sure and you might get arrested,â she replied.
âHe could at least call me up and tell me he donât like me no more.â I pouted. âWhat am I supposed to think or do? I donât like this shit! He canât fuck with me like this and just forget about me!â
âI think he already did,â Maria said with a nod. âGive the boy another chance. There might even be a good reason why he hasnât called you up.â
I gave Maria a thoughtful look and then I rushed home.
We didnât have an answering machine, so I didnât know if heâd tried to call me during the day, when nobody was home at my house. But he didnât call in the evening or at night when I was home, either. And the evenings and nights that I was out lollygagging, there were never any messages left for me with my parents when I got home. But I always asked, anyway.
âDid a boy call for me?â I asked Mama. I had just come home from a party at a skating rink a few blocks from my house. I had had a few beers and a little tequila, and had taken a few hits off a joint, so I was a little tipsy. I didnât know if my parents knew about me drinking and getting high, because I never did it in front of them. I never looked or acted drunk or high, so they never knew when I was. I was the kind of girl who could get drunk as a skunk and as high as a flying monkey and still not stagger or slur my words. I had that much control over myself. That was one of the reasons I had such a hard time believing that Iâd been played by Wade.
Even though I missed him, and would have jumped at the chance to marry him and have his babies, his absence was beginning to get on my nerves. But I still wanted to see him again. If he didnât like me anymore and wanted nothing more to do with me, I wanted him to tell me so, to my face. âThis boy that Iâm expecting a call from, heâs a good friend,â I said, more to myself than to Mama. I wasnât convinced that that was true.
âA lot of boys call you,â Mama told me, not even looking up from the television. Daddy was stretched out on the sofa, snoozing like a cat. He was on his back, with his arms folded across his chest. He was already a dull and lackluster man. When he slept, he looked like a dead man. The only reason I knew he was still alive was because he snored like a freight train.
âDid any of them leave any messages?â I had to talk loud so that Mama could hear me
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