giggled.
âWant some? Sorry to say it wonât be one of your Macchiato Skinny Latte Almond Split-Shots, and you might accidentally swallow some grounds, but itâs not half-bad free coffee, if I do say so myself.â She picked up a steaming cup from the floor next to her and held it out to me.
I popped off the top to inspect the contentsâbrownish water with a few floating bits and a swirl of creamâand took a cautious sip. Hot, bitter, with a hint of grit.
âNot bad,â I said.
âNot bad? Thatâs some quality brew, âBurbs.â
Joy, I nearly blurted out. âHow did you get it?â
âSecrets of the trade,â May answered languidly, stretching her toes out against Creedâs stomach.
He snorted. âUsed coffee groundsâany café has bags and bags of it they just give away. Then you get a cupââ
âThat reminds me,â interjected May, âdonât wreck the cupâthatâs your cup now.â
ââand the hot water and cream are free,â Creed finished.
May opened up a waxy brown bag and took out a chunk of what looked like blueberry scone. âWant one?â She tossed me a brown bag of my own, and I opened it to find a bran muffin.
âSorry,â she said, âthatâs always the one they have left. Always bran muffins. Like we need any more shit around here . . .â
Creed tilted his head and glared, which, I realized more and more, was part of their routine. Part of becoming a family was finding your place in it. And despite the terrible air, I hoped there would be room to breathe in this one.
Suddenly, with a wild spiral of legs, May was off the couch and in my face. Iâd thought we were about the same height, but now I realized I towered over her by a good three or four inches. How she made herself seem taller was one of the deep mysteries of May. âThat reminds me,â she mumbled with a mouthful of scone, âweâve got to do something about your hair.â
I tried to tuck it behind my ear, like I would have when it was long, but the ragged ends slipped through my fingers.
âOh, no,â said Creed. He got up from the sagging couch, a tweedy brown in the dappled light. âIâm outta here, before this gets ugly.â He picked up his guitar. âMay, youâll take care of her today?â It was more of a statement than a question.
âHmmph,â May grunted. She scrutinized me, picking up locks of hair and letting them fall limply. Other than the occasional quick scrub in a public bathroom, I hadnât bathed since Iâd left. Two weeks ago? Iâd lost track.
Finally she sighed testily. âCould you . . . sit down or something, so I can get a better look at you?â
âUm, okay,â I said, feeling like the matter had already been settled long before I came on scene.
Creed disappeared around the corner. âIâll be back later,â he shouted, then pounded down the stairs with his guitar.
I sat up straight on the couch as May ran her fingers through my scalp, still tender from my Manic bleach job.
âOh my God. No wonder. Did you do this yourself?â
I nodded.
âOh. Ouch. You totally burned your scalp.â She combed through my hair with surprising tenderness. âWell, thereâs nothing I can do about the color until it heals, but at least I can give you a decent haircut. Donât tell meâyou did that yourself, too.â
I nodded again.
âWell, whatever it was you ran from, it had to be bad if you were gonna give yourself the fucking worst haircut Iâve ever seen. Wait here.â A second later, she appeared with a pair of shears.
âDonât tell the boys I have these, or theyâll use them to pull nails out of their boots or some stupid shit like that.â She brandished the scissors in front of my face to emphasize the point.
âNo problem,â I said.
âGood.
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