“He’s leaving,” Layla says. Then she calls out, “Bye, Ainsley!”
I see him wave back from across the street, and I glance at the Darcys’ roof again, wondering if Darius was watching it all go down too.
In no time, Janae joins us with a big smile on her face.
“He offered to drive me up to school,” she says with a soft, sweet voice.
“What?” I ask, walking over to her.
“His school, Cornell, is about an hour away from Syracuse. So we can go up together. I’ll have to squeeze my stuff into his back seat, but . . .” She’s grinning hard, clasping her hands, and almost standing on her tippy-toes as if she’s a rocket ship about to be launched to the moon. She’s about to straight-up burst with happiness.
So I hug her. “Take it slow, okay?” I whisper.
“Z, I have a really good feeling about this,” she says, inhaling deep.
“Janae and Ainsley, sitting in a tree!” Kayla starts singing as she pulls out the blue tarp for all of us to sit on.
“K-I-S-S-I-N-G!” Layla adds. “First comes love, then comes marriage . . .”
Janae sits down on the tarp first, rests her chin in her hand, and with a big smile says, “Go on.”
“No, stop!” I say. “Don’t go on. No love, no marriage, and no baby, Janae! Okay, maybe a little bit of love. But no marriage and no baby.”
“It’s just a song!” she says, laughing.
I roll my eyes at her as we all squeeze onto the tarp one last time. I put my arm around Janae, and Marisol on the other side of me. We all squeeze in tight, resting our heads on each other’s shoulders as the late summer sun sets over Bushwick. The orange sky seems to stretch farther than it ever has. We stay quiet, even the chatty twins, saying our goodbyes like silent prayers.
Each of my sisters leaves one by one, leaving me and Janae to ourselves for the rest of the night. A full moon is out tonight, and this moment feels just as full—almost pregnant. Like our new life is about to be born as we move to Canarsie.
Ainsley is the first thing Janae brings up when we’re finally alone.
“Fine, okay, I do think you two make a cute couple,” I say, sighing.
“You and Darius look good together too,” she says, leaning her head on my shoulder.
“I don’t care if we look good together. I care if he’s a good person or not.”
“Well, is he?”
I look across the street. I close my eyes for a minute to see if I can feel Darius watching us from his roof. Madrina always said that love connects two people in ways that we can’t even see, but we feel it. I shake that thought from my head and open my eyes, because this isn’t love. Not yet, anyway. So I say to Janae, “I don’t know. We’ll see.”
“Well, how long are you giving him? A few days, months, years? A lifetime?”
“How long did you give Ainsley?”
“Long enough for him to come to his senses.”
“What if he never did? What if he never said a word to you before you left for Syracuse?”
She inhales deep and waits a long minute before she answers my question. “He would’ve. If not today, then I would’ve seen him again. Even if it took a few more months. Or years. I just . . . knew.”
Madrina would know.
It’s the middle of the night and our bedroom is almost emptied out, with only a few open boxes left. Our mattresses had to be wrapped in plastic and stacked in the living room for the movers in the morning. So we lie on blankets. But I can’t sleep.
I sneak down to Madrina’s apartment, where the door is unlocked and it’s completely empty, but her scent still lingers in the air—cigar and sage smoke, Florida water, incense, and cheap perfume. These smells are even stronger as I make my way down to the basement.
This is no longer Madrina’s temple for Ochún. It’s as if everything has been poured out into a flowing river.
But Madrina’s chair is still there. Stripped of its white fabric and yellow cushion, it’s more like a skeleton of itself. I sit in it and fold my hands over my belly, just like Madrina used to. I lean my head back and close my eyes to hear her voice one last time.
Ah, mija! There you go! Rivers flow. A body of water that remains stagnant is just a cesspool, mi amor! It’s time to move, flow, grow. That is the nature of rivers. That is the nature of love!
Thirty
EVERYONE IS DOWNSTAIRS waiting for the moving truck to pull off, and I’m the last to take a tour of the place before I say goodbye forever. I finger a layer of dust on my bedroom windowsill. Our apartment looks way bigger without all the furniture and stuff. And much more broken too. There’re cracks in the walls, mold, chipping paint—this crowded apartment probably wasn’t good for our health.
The kitchen looks even smaller, though. I can’t believe that Mama has cooked all those meals, enough to feed a whole block, in that tiny kitchen. The stove and countertops have been scrubbed clean, and I wonder if it will all be torn away to make room for a bigger kitchen like the one at Darius’s house.
I take another look at the whole apartment, inhale deeply, step outside, and close the door.
I did not want to cry, but the tears burst out of me like a newly opened fire hydrant in the summer. I hug myself and press my head against the closed door. All of me, everything I’ve ever known and loved, was once behind that door. I feel as if I’ve stepped outside my own body, and I’m leaving it behind.
“Zuri?” Someone says my name quietly.
I sniff and try to hold back my tears, but I can’t. I don’t turn around to see who it is, but I know the voice. I don’t dare move.
He touches my shoulder. Still I don’t move.
“Hey.” He gently turns me around.
I cross my arms and don’t look up at him.
He pulls me in, hugs me, and kisses my forehead. So I just let it all out again, in his chest, in his arms.
I pull away from him a little and look into his eyes. He wipes the tears from my cheeks with his thumbs and kisses me on the lips.
The very last thing I do in this building is kiss a boy—the boy who moved in across the street and changed everything. Maybe this is what Madrina wanted all along: for me to find love and take it with me when I leave this place.
So we walk down the steps and out of the building hand in hand. Half our block is out on the sidewalk, saying goodbye to my sisters, Mama, and Papi. They all turn to see me and Darius holding hands again. Of course they all have to comment all at once. Some whistle, others cheer, and the rest of them laugh as if we’re five-year-olds and this little thing is cute but won’t last.
I catch Papi’s eyes smiling. He quietly nods and turns away.
Manny from down the block has offered his minivan to drive Mama and my sisters out to our new place. I got dibs on riding with Papi in the moving truck.
Before I hop onto the middle seat between the mover and Papi, Darius pulls me aside again. “I can come pick you up. Take a long drive through Brooklyn. From Canarsie all the way to Brooklyn Heights.”
“Nah,” I say, shaking my head. “I am not your Brooklyn tour guide, Darius Darcy! You want to come pick me up, take the train.”
“How ’bout a cab?”
“No, Darius! The subway. Last stop on the L. You’re in Brooklyn now.”
“Last stop on the L,” he repeats, smiling, and takes the tips of my fingers until I climb into the truck.
Papi takes his hand and gives him a hard dap. “You take care, okay, buddy?”
Then Papi pulls Darius in and gives him one of those homie hugs. This is the thing that melts my heart the most. It’s as if my whole neighborhood has said yes to the boy who moved in across the street, to me and him.
Papi, I met this boy.
Even though he’s not old enough yet, I know you will
tell him to get a case of Presidente beer from Hernando’s
to share on the stoop one last time with this boy
who likes your daughter because you will hope that he
has a heart big enough to love me much more than you
because this is what you want for all of us, Papi.
You want your daughters’ boyfriends to have wisdom
as layered as pages in a book, memories as old
as slave ships at the shores of Hispaniola,