Chapter 1 The Way It Shouldn’t Be Done

If my calculations are correct, I’ll be alone in the shop for at least ten minutes before my mom comes back from the bakery, which is plenty of time to take a sexy picture. I sit in a chair at the break table in the back room and slide my pants down. Not all the way, just enough to expose my soft belly and the black panties creased between my hips and thighs. I take a few shots and stare at them, positive that they’re sexy enough to entice someone and leave them wanting for more. The someone is a guy I’ve been on five really good dates with but have only slipped some tongue before we said good night. His patience with me not wanting to rush sex is attractive, but this morning he asked if I’d send him a little something, and I’ve been distracted all day thinking of taking risks. I pick one, take a breath, hit Send.

Darius looks at the picture immediately but doesn’t answer back with the same energy. My heart races in my chest while I wait. And wait.

Read. Read two minutes ago.

The bubbles finally pop up. Darius is typing. He stops. Starts again. And then…

“Laniah Leigh Thompson, why in the world are your pants at your knees?”

I startle, drop my phone onto the table, and scramble to my feet. I’m twenty-five years old and the tone of my mother’s voice can still strike fear in my heart. “I…uh.”

She takes a step forward, a paper bag and cup tray in her hands, dark penciled-in eyebrows low on her face. “Were you taking a…a nude photograph?”

The back of my neck burns while I pull up my pants and button them. A heartbeat. Two. “I was…checking for swelling, actually,” I say.

“Swelling?” she repeats.

“Mm-hmm. Yeah. Just thinking of my doctor’s appointment in a couple of days.”

I’ve been having headaches, and I think it’s from elevated blood pressure, so this seems like a believable lie. Still, we stare at each other for the longest thirty seconds of my life—her top lip curling a little, suspicion in her eyes, a small smile on my face, convincing enough I hope. So much for Seven Stars Bakery being lunchtime-rush busy. She finally sighs and places the cups on the table. I hurry to snatch my phone and pocket it, even though she’s not wearing her bifocals to see anything that might be waiting on my screen.

“You swear I was born yesterday,” she says. “I just hope you’re not being stupid, but whatever.”

Whateverhas been her general mood lately, and I briefly wonder how she would have reacted to me sending dirty texts if things were different. My mom and dad were always openly flirtatious, which was awarded with many eyerolls from me as a kid. But my dad died nine years ago, and I sometimes wonder if her playfulness died with him.

She takes a cookie out of the bag, her coffee from the tray, then leaves me. I know better than to stay in the back, she’ll think I’m looking at my phone, and though I’m tempted to do just that, I grab my cup of tea and follow her. As soon as I’m in the front of the shop with its half-empty shelves, I feel the same whatever mood my mom does. We opened Wildly Green three years ago, giddy to have a storefront for the natural body butters and hair oils Mom had been mixing in our kitchen since I was a little girl. We’d had big plans, but reality struck, and instead of building our dream, we’ve pulled in serious debt.

Only a week ago this place was teeming with the smell of coconut and fresh flowers, there was art on the walls and a neon sign that blinked hello, gorgeous in bright green letters. But we’ve been packing for a few days to close its doors—plants in boxes and all the cardboard at our feet—and we haven’t even played music over the Bluetooth speaker to do it. The once colorful space has been leached of life. Most days, I prefer coming after working my second job at the hotel, when my mom’s not here, so we don’t have to pack in misery together.

My phone dings in my pocket and I bite back a smile, anticipating sweet words that Darius seems to have a knack for, but I begin clearing off the conditioner shelf as a distraction.

“You can check your messages, you know,” Mom says from behind me. She’s sitting on the floor, looking through old paperwork to see what we should keep, and I can hear the curiosity hiding in her voice. This is a trick. If I look at my phone now, she’ll know I’m anxious because a response to a nude is on it. But if I don’t look at my phone, she’ll know I was avoiding it because she’s here. It’s a lose-lose. So I do what any reasonable, anxious, and sweaty person would do: put the products in my hands down and pull out my phone.

Except it’s not a message. It’s a thumbs-down reaction on my picture.

My stomach sinks slowly while my brain rushes to make sense of what I’m seeing. Did Darius just react to my sexy picture with a thumbs-down? He had to have hit that by accident. He definitely did. But then he texts, Wow. I waited all day long, and this is what you have to show me? I’m starting to think you’re playing games.

The jump from confusion to disappointment is immediate.

“You good, baby?” Mom says, cutting through the noise in my head.

I turn to face her and hope she can’t see my annoyance. “I’m fine, Mom. It’s nothing.”

She nods. “Well, come help me with these papers, then.”

While I’m sorting through receipts on the rug, my mind is working overtime. Darius is the first guy I’ve gone on more than a few dates with since a long relationship in college. It’s hard explaining that I’m mainly looking for companionship with the potential for more—in a sea of people on dating apps asking for sex or something serious straightaway. My best friend, Issac, calls me a hermit crab because I avoid social media, limiting my dating pool even further, but I was just bragging to him about how I met Darius the old-fashioned way: while buying samosas at Kabob and Curry downtown. Darius told me to cut him in line because I was in a rush to get back to work. On the way out, I wrote my number on a napkin and handed it to him.

As if reading my mind, Mom asks, “Have you told Issac we’re closing the shop yet?”

The question makes my throat thick. Before I can respond, my phone vibrates on the floor beside us and my eyes dart down to another message from Darius. The preview on my lock screen reveals a picture of his…Oh. My face burns hot. I hurry to tuck my phone under my leg and look at my mom, praying she didn’t see the photo I just saw. But she’s busy squinting at a utility bill. I laugh a little, selfishly relieved.

“You really should start wearing your glasses, Mom.”

She sulks and picks up another piece of paper, hating the reminder that her eyesight has changed in her midfifties. I sometimes tell her Dad would’ve thought she looked cute in glasses, and she’ll temporarily soften to them, but I’ll get sad inside that he’s not here to tell her himself, then days later she’ll be walking around without them. “Don’t ignore my question,” she says.

“I haven’t talked to Issac about it yet,” I say, “but I will.”

“Tell him before I do,” she orders. “I’m not going to keep lying to that boy.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Two hours later, I say bye to Mom and haul another box to my car. The early-June weather is perfect in Providence: high seventies with a breeze wafting through the treetops and sending a fresh scent of green and coffee and baked goods toward me while I walk. When I first found the space for Wildly Green, Mom was ecstatic. It’s in the heart of the city, between all the diverse neighborhoods that make up much of our clientele. The building sits on semi-busy Broadway Street, right beside shops we already loved. There’s Seven Stars Bakery and Julian’s for lunch and Schastea for tea and crepes. Columbus Theatre was renovated and recently reopened and has breathtaking old architecture inside. On the next street, there’s Heartleaf, a co-op bookstore with a beautiful shop cat named Penny, who I adore. Workers are always waving at me through glass windows, and there are at least four other pets that need petting each day.

I glance up at the Wildly Green sign, and a pit grows in my belly, a sad ache.

Inside the safety of my little Honda, crammed full of boxes, away from Mom, I open the text thread with Darius to find a picture of him in boxers with a visible outline of his asset, which is tame compared to the video he sent doing unspeakable things to himself (mainly because he doesn’t deserve the mention). Not only would Mom be traumatized if she were wearing her bifocals, but she’d be downright pissed at Darius’s audacity.

This is how it’s done, he wrote below the video. What might have had me clenching my thighs under better circumstances only leaves a sour taste in my mouth.

I take my time reacting to each of his messages with a thumbs-down, then silence our text thread before starting my car and recording a voice note for Issac.

“Remind me again why I still like men. Because some members of your kind make me wonder if decency among the general population actually exists. And don’t even say you told me Darius was a dud in waiting. I’m not in the mood, big head.”

I’m halfway home before I get a response from him. A single emoji. (:

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