One One month ago-September 2019, Harlem, a Saturday night Buzzed from her third glass of Roscato, Zahra slouches low in the back seat of an Uber headed east down 125th. She knows it''s impossible to hide from shame but doesn''t forsake the attempt. There are people who make a life of this, aren''t there? She''s people. A disaster headed to Kahlil''s apartment like an MLM victim selling knives or a door-to-door Bible-thumper. Her expectations are low. She''ll most likely find Kahlil reading one of his medical books or rolling a blunt. He''ll open the door and look at her like he''s nearly forgotten she was coming over. It''s not that he doesn''t like her; he''s just that kind of a player, mind games, a one-upper.
Even though the back-and-forth has always been their dysfunctional dynamic, she was surprised when he texted. Lately, she never wants his type of intimate fun. A finger maybe, but nothing more. She was practically in love with him when they were at Stanford together. He was always shooting her smiles across parties or probing her with nonstop questions, stuff like, "You always been this shy?" or "You think you''ll get everything you want out of life?" or "What was growing up in ATL like?" He''d follow that last question with something absurd like, "I bet all the girls were poppin'' on a headstand, no? You were different though? You barely dance now." Then he''d grab her waist, and the shock of his hands would send electricity up her spine, and she''d imagine a different version of herself, a looser version, someone who slow whines to Sean Paul, and maybe that''s what love was, being someone else for a short time. Kahlil was somewhat of the same, a nerd in class, his fuckboy alter ego part of a larger facade. Now, in the middle seat of a Nissan, Zahra smooths her hands along the nylon upholstery, then curls them into tight fists.
She''s looking to be unwound. It''s not about sex, but she mouths the words to Rihanna''s "Same Ol'' Mistakes" anyway. She almost doesn''t hear the driver ask, "Going out tonight?" She hates Uber small talk. "I''m already out, aren''t I?" Then feeling like a jerk, she adds, "Just to a friend''s house." "A friend?" he says incredulously, laughing, then, "Sorry, I didn''t mean it like that." However he meant it, it''s enough to shut her up. It''s not like she really wanted to talk anyway. She studies him now through the rearview mirror.
Skin the color of cedarwood. Scruffy beard that probably hasn''t been brushed in days. A backward baseball cap, similar to the way her brother, Derrick, used to wear his, but this guy''s has Stay Black on it. He''s cute, in a 1990s D''Angelo sort of way, sans straight-backs. She can''t help but think about Derrick and who he used to be. How he sang church hymns in absolute pitch while she leaned against his bedroom door writing sentences that sat comfortably one by one but never added up as a conglomerate, dreaming Black love stories, The Wood or Poetic Justice, come true. He was her only savior then, no matter how distant his eyes were, black pearls swarming in discontentment. She misses him now.
It''s not the same, though she hasn''t stopped trying to convince herself that he''ll get back to where he was, that time hasn''t weighed on him, hasn''t removed the dimple in his left cheek so she sometimes thinks it was never there to begin with. "Sorry," the driver says again. "I''m in my head about some other stuff, and I guess my manners just went out the window." "Consider it forgotten." He nods. She takes out her phone, sends Kahlil a text. Hungry. Should we order food? Food helps with this eerie feeling she''s been getting lately, of something gnawing at her, something trying to get in.
She''s doing everything in her power to keep shit out. If she thinks too hard about things, they''ll eat her alive. A brother who''s forgotten himself. A mother she can''t stand. It''s hard to measure over the phone, but she''s sure Gram''s voice has gotten . heavier. Cheeseburgers, medium skirt steaks, french fries dipped in a garlic aioli, help her forget it all. "What''s your name?" The driver again.
"Zahra." It''s in the app. He must have already seen it. "It''s in the app, you know. You''re"-she pauses to look-"Trey." "Right. Yeah," he says. He laughs a little.
"My niece says, ''So you know what you didn''t know you knew.'' You ever heard anyone say that before?" "No, but I work with kids, so I''ve heard a lot of other stuff." They say Gen Z''s got more answers than millennials, but she''s not so sure about that. "You''re a teacher?" "Not quite." "Counselor." "Not really." "Oh." The pause is so awkward that she just tells him.
"I''m a college prep coach. I help seniors with their college applications, mainly their essays." "Wow." "It''s no biggie." "My niece is a senior." She sees him eyeing her through the rearview mirror. He looks a beat too long and has to swerve around a car with its hazards on when he sees the road again. "Oh, really?" she asks.
"Senior year, huh?" "Yeah, she could probably use you." "Yeah," she says, thinking he couldn''t afford her. The thought in itself makes her feel like shit, and she unbuckles her seat belt and lies down. No need to look out the window when she already knows what''s there. Right about now, they''re headed under the Metro-North rail. This far uptown, Park Avenue always smells like piss and stale Wendy''s, and Lexington is sure to be poppin'' with teens and loud talk and blue-collar workers. When they turn on Third, they''ll pass Goodwill, and the projects. Kahlil''s isn''t too far off from there, a building that screams gentrification in one of the least gentrified parts of Manhattan, East Harlem.
Zahra was in for a rude awakening when she moved to this city, and the shock still hasn''t worn off; melting pot, her ass. New York is a place of numbers though. She leans up for a second, thinking of how many butts have been where her head rests now: Black butts, Latinx butts, white butts, Asian butts. Eventually, she convinces herself that her week-old twist-out is a buffer and resumes comfort. She thinks about how many Black women are in cars headed to see unequally yoked men, not knowing whether it''s better to be a solitary fuckup or part of the masses. Her mother calls this a form of selling out. Go figure the woman probably hasn''t been laid since the divorce in ''95. When the car gets there, Zahra wrestles herself up, then goes for the door in one smooth motion.
It locks, and she jumps back surprised. She turns to Trey, accusatory. "You locked it!" she says. "No," he says, playing with the buttons on his door. The back windows go down, then up again. A series of clicks, but when she goes for the handle, it''s still locked. "No, I didn''t. I don''t know what happened," he tries to convince her.
"If you don''t unlock the door right now, I''m calling the cops," she says, more distressed than demanding. Either way, it''s an eclipse of moths that do the job. She''s never been able to understand how they appear out of thin air. But here they are inside the car, on the door handle like spotted mold. They''re fucking with her again. They''ve been at it since she was a kid, always fluttering around like picnic flies, always singing their damned ditties-in moments of distress but in moments of calm too. While watching some shitty reality TV show. The night before she left for Stanford.
Once, on the dance floor of a nightclub-she was so drunk that it must have been minutes before she realized that she was singing "Dancing in the Streets" by Martha and the Vandellas while everyone else was mantra-ing, "Slob on my knob, like corn on the cob." Sometimes the songs made sense, like a survival spiritual or a nursey rhyme. Other times, they were more confusing than Deuteronomy or Revelations, like trying to decipher a mumbling man with an Atlanta accent, something she''d completely lost the ear for. Somewhere along the way she stopped listening. Because maybe the words, the songs, weren''t really for her. Because wasn''t she entitled to a sense of normalcy? Because who the fuck was listening to her? For two years in high school the moths convinced her that she was schizophrenic. Now it''s her brother who''s lost because of them, out of his skin and into someone''s she doesn''t even recognize. Now, she sighs and spots Trey coming around the back side of the car.
He opens the door from the outside. "I guess I should get that looked at," he says. "Don''t worry about it." She slings her purse across her body. "It''s me, not you." Trey brings his eyebrows together in a way that almost makes her laugh. The sincerity opens something inside of her, and she sees him now, in a different way than before. Notices that he can''t be much older than her, sees that he''s been doing the best he can with her poor back seat bedside.
She feels the worst for threatening to call the cops on him, a Black man. She knows better. Never good at apologizing, she takes off for Kahlil''s walk-up. But at the same moment that he offers a "Good night," she turns around. Ignoring his salutation, she says, "I could help your niece." He doesn''t say anything back, but his look of uncertainty deepens, so she adds, "Here, let me give you my number." A week later, the goons are already at work, even though it''s cold as shit out here. They rock from heel to heel, trying to stay warm, looking for their next sale, gre.