Font Size:

“Okay, let’s get this over with.” She turned and then stopped when she realized that Mrs. Gathers hadn’t moved. “Aren’t you coming in too?”

“Why don’t you and Jutta do this part together. I imagine it will be healing for both of you.” Mrs. Gathers touched Jutta’s arm. “And I’m sorry about your sister. I bet she’s pleased that you are here for Sophia.”

Just then a flock of birds flew overhead, and Jutta smiled with her eyes on the sky.

“I’ll meet you back at the hotel. Good luck.” Mrs. Gathers turned toward her car, and Jutta gripped Sophia’s hand.

As Sophia walked across the sidewalk and up the limestone stairs, a warm feeling caressed her cheek. She heard gospel music and smelled the savory scent of fried fish.

CHAPTER 57Philadelphia, PA, May 1966

OZZIE

Ozzie dropped his Samsonite attaché case, heavy with the midterm papers, by the front door. For the past four years, he had worked as an assistant professor in the Economics Department at his alma mater, Lincoln University. This semester he had taught two sections, and as per usual, his students had waited until the eleventh hour to submit their final papers. One student had even cornered him in the faculty parking lot to hand over work.

Untying his wing tips, he slipped the pair into the shoe rack in the hall closet, as was Rita’s rule the moment they had purchased their new home on Twenty-Third Street. The beige carpet was soft under his tired feet as he padded around Maceo’sdjembedrums and past the reading corner down through to the kitchen at the rear of the house. Inside the refrigerator, he snapped up a cold cola, his after-work drink of choice.

Ozzie took his sobriety one day at a time, but sometimes, when he looked back, he was amazed at the progress he had made. The first two years had been like riding a bicycle with training wheels, and Joe and Earl had kept a steady hand on his back. By year three, Rita hadtrusted him to be involved with their finances again. Now, at eleven years, they had moved into an easy rhythm that only time could teach.

The telephone rang, and when he reached for the receiver hanging from the kitchen wall, he had a feeling that it was Rita, telling him that she was working on a brief and that she’d need him to pick up Maceo from baseball practice.

“Hello.”

“Ozzie?” It wasn’t Rita, it was his mother, Nettie.

“Hey, Mama. How you doing?”

“I need you to come on over here.”

He frowned. “Why your voice sounding like that? What’s wrong?”

“Ain’t nothing wrong. I just need you to do as I say. Now, come along.”

“Ma, just tell me what it is.”

“Shouldn’t take you but ten minutes to get here.” And with that, she hung up the telephone.

Nettie was getting mulish in her old age, and Ozzie knew he couldn’t do much but obey. After he scribbled a note for Rita, Ozzie changed into a 76ers T-shirt, sweats, and his Chuck Taylor All Stars. The weather was nice, and after teaching all day, it felt good to breathe in the fresh air. As he moved swiftly through the five blocks between his house and his mother’s home, he hoped she wasn’t summoning him for the bad news that someone was in the hospital or, worse, had died. Nettie was old-school-like, she never discussed anything of importance over the telephone.

The black-and-white front door to his childhood home was open, and the screen door scratched against the step, announcing his arrival. When he stepped into the living room, on the sofa sat a woman who looked familiar, and the sight of her made his mouth parch.

“Jelka?” he croaked, and in those few seconds, he could feel all the air drain from his lungs.

Nettie wore a red and yellow kaftan, and the material rustled as she lifted her arms and clasped her hands together. “Now, honey, I thought you said your name was Jutt-a.”

“It is Jutta,” she said to Nettie, then pushed herself up. “Hello, Osbourne.” Jutta crossed the room and threw her arms around his neck.

“Oh my God.” Ozzie hugged her back, unable to believe it. “You look just like your sister. How did you find me? It’s been so long.” He stepped back, taking in the woman before him but still seeing in her eyes the twelve-year-old girl he had left behind.

Before Jutta could answer, Ozzie saw a figure coming down the stairs. He released Jutta just as his knees started to buckle. Was it? Could it be?

“Katja?” he breathed.

The long-legged redheaded girl stopped at the bottom of the stairs, and the rest of the room disappeared. She was a combination of his mother and Jelka. Same pink lips with a sprinkle of freckles on her nose. The Philips nose.

“Hi, I go by Sophia,” she said softly. “I just found out that my real name is Katja.”

“And I just found out that my grandbaby goes to a hoity-toity boarding school in Maryland. Who would have thought it?” Nettie clapped her hands.