Page 38 of Chaos


Font Size:

“Yes, I have,” I counter, placing the basket on the table beside the grill.

“I’ve never seen you.”

“I come up late at night when you’re sleeping.”

“What do you do here?”

I point in the corner to the plants.

“Are those marijuana plants?”

“Yeah. This is my chill spot.”

My rooftop deck has patio furniture, an outdoor kitchen area, complete with a grill and refrigerator, and an outdoor herb and vegetable garden.

I reach inside the cabinet of the grill and remove the pans that I need along with some foil, a cutting board, and some cutlery. I take it to the table on the other side of the roof and set everything out.

“You’ve got everything up here,” she proclaims as she fingers a pepper that’s still on the vine.

I grab a pepper and an onion before I also pluck some basil and thyme from their pots.

“You wanna chop the veggies while I season the meat, corn, and potatoes?”

“Yeah,” she replies, smiling and taking the knife that I hand her.

I watch as she sets the herbs and vegetables on the chopping board and sets to work.

“There was a time when I imagined you and me just like this,” she happily confesses.

“Yeah?”

“Mm-hmm. I used to think about us cooking dinner together in the evenings after work.”

“Humph.”

“What’s wrong?”

“Nothing. I guess I used to think about a lot of things we would do together too. Still having a hard time accepting that we lost all these years because of a misunderstanding.”

She smiles shyly back at me. “Yeah, but we’re here now.”

I bob my head, but I go silent.

“Do you think we would still be together if things hadn’t gone the way they had?” I ask.

“I would like to think so. Wouldn’t you?”

“I don’t know, Charisma. My daddy used to say that shit happened the way it was supposed to. That’s how I was able to accept his murder.”

“I know he was killed when you were sixteen. That’s the year that I was battling my mama’s boyfriends, but you never told me what went down. I only knew that he was shot, and you were there. Is that still hard for you to talk about after all this time?”

I sigh. “I don’t know, really. I haven’t talked about it in so long.”

“You can always talk to me. I mean, if you feel like it. One day, CJ will want to know the story.”

She’s got a point, and if I could ever talk to anyone, it was always Charisma. I only told my mother and sister the story because they deserved to know, but I hadn’t shared it with anyone else.

“You remember how I used to be in the streets with my old man all the time?”