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You Were Always Mine: A Novel
You Were Always Mine: A Novel
You Were Always Mine: A Novel
Ebook464 pages9 hours

You Were Always Mine: A Novel

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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  • Friendship

  • Family

  • Motherhood

  • Identity

  • Self-Discovery

  • Found Family

  • Fish Out of Water

  • Secret Baby

  • Class Differences

  • Love Triangle

  • Power of Friendship

  • Redemption

  • Reluctant Hero

  • Hidden Past

  • Secret Past

  • Race

  • Love

  • Adoption

  • Personal Growth

  • Trust

About this ebook

The acclaimed authors of the “emotional literary roller coaster” (The Washington Post) and Good Morning America book club pick We Are Not Like Them return with this moving and provocative novel about a Black woman who finds an abandoned white baby, sending her on a collision course with her past, her family, and a birth mother who doesn’t want to be found.

Cinnamon Haynes has fought hard for a life she never thought was possible—a good man by her side, a steady job as a career counselor at a local community college, and a cozy house in a quaint little beach town. It may not look like much, but it’s more than she ever dreamed of or what her difficult childhood promised. Her life’s mantra is to be good, quiet, grateful. Until something shifts and Cinnamon is suddenly haunted by a terrifying question: “Is this all there is?”

Daisy Dunlap has had her own share of problems in her nineteen years on earth—she also has her own big dreams for a life that’s barely begun. Her hopes for her future are threatened when she gets unexpectedly pregnant. Desperate, broke, and alone, she hides this development from everyone close to her and then makes a drastic decision with devastating consequences.

Daisy isn’t the only one with something to hide. When Cinnamon finds an abandoned baby in a park and takes the blonde-haired, blue-eyed newborn into her home, the ripple effects of this decision risk exposing the truth about Cinnamon’s own past, which she’s gone to great pains to portray as idyllic to everyone…even herself.

As Cinnamon struggles to contain old demons, navigate the fault lines that erupt in her marriage, and deal with the shocking judgments from friends and strangers alike about why a woman like her has a baby like this, her one goal is to do right by the child she grows more attached to with each passing day. It’s the exact same conviction that drives Daisy as she tries to outrun her heartache and reckon with her choices.

These two women, unlikely friends and kindred spirits must face down their secrets and trauma and unite for the sake of the baby they both love in their own unique way when Daisy’s grandparents, who would rather die than see one of their own raised by a Black woman, threaten to take custody.

Once again, these authors bring their “empathetic, riveting, and authentic” (Laura Dave, New York Times bestselling author) storytelling to an unforgettable novel that revolves around provocative and timely questions about race, class, and motherhood. Is being a mother a right, an obligation, or a privilege? Who gets to be a mother? And to whom? And what are we willing to sacrifice for the sake of marriage, friendship, and our dreams?
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAtria Books
Release dateJun 13, 2023
ISBN9781668005545
Author

Christine Pride

Christine Pride is a writer, editor, and longtime publishing veteran. She’s held editorial posts at many different trade imprints, including Doubleday, Broadway, Crown, Hyperion, and Simon & Schuster. As an editor, Christine has published a range of books, with a special emphasis on inspirational stories and memoirs, including numerous New York Times bestsellers. As a freelance editorial consultant, she does select editing and proposal/content development, as well as teaching and coaching, and pens a regular column—“Race Matters”—for Cup of Jo. She lives in New York City.

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Reviews for You Were Always Mine

Rating: 3.5769230615384613 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

26 ratings12 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Sep 13, 2024

    A chance meeting between two women changes their lives forever. Cinnamon's marriage is crumbling due to her husband's dishonesty and mishandling of funds. She is sitting on a park bench when Daisy sits and speaks to her. Daisy and Cinnamon meet weekly, but then Daisy doesn't show. That is when Cinnamon hears a baby's cry. She reads a note that Daisy left the baby and wants Cinnamon to raise the child.
    This causes Cinnamon to examine her life as she fights to care for the baby and fight to keep her. Since the baby is white and Cinnamon is black, she wonders if this will matter to her chances of keeping the child.
    A story that looks at race, class, and family. Well done.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Nov 23, 2024

    This novel is filled with flawed characters who you will be yelling at and rooting for at the same time.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Jul 4, 2023

    Excellent book. Maybe not as in your face as the first book. Lovely story. Interesting people and a story about change.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5

    Oct 19, 2023

    I read these authors previous book (We Are Not Like Them) and disliked it thoroughly. But since I checked out both books from the library at the same time, I decided to go ahead and read this one as well.

    The writing improved a little in this book from their first book. This book was easier to read. Their first book lagged a lot and was boring in many places. But this book is not without many, many issues.

    As in their previous book, the writing is racist. The N-word is thrown around all the time, by both black and white characters. They characters are stereotypical and not well developed. The white characters hate all black people and the black characters hate all white people. Hello! Not all people are like that in the real world.

    Comments such as “White dudes and their boats” by Jayson implies all white people are privileged and have a two car garage with a boat taking up one side. One white character states, “You’re the first colored friend I ever had.” Jayson also calls a white lady a “crusty cracker,” and even Cinnamon thinks that since the adopted baby is white, perhaps she should take her to a “Cracker” Barrel restaurant. These comments were over the top racist and I found them offensive. I thought we were to judge people by their character, not their skin color.

    As previously mentioned, the characters were poorly developed and underdeveloped. Several characters suddenly acted out of character, especially at the end, with no motivation to do so. Tell us why they suddenly changed, please. And speaking of characters, as in their previous book, there were too many characters. This book named 76 distinct characters (yes, I counted). That is a new character every four to five pages, way too many. Many of the characters made a single appearance, never to return. We do not need to know the name of every barista at the local coffee shop or the lady who worked the drive thru window at Wendy’s on the day Cinnamon happened to be there.

    The dialogue was unoriginal and dependent upon stereotypical speech patterns. This is an example of lazy writing. All black people do not talk like these characters do, nor do all white people speak polished and perfect English.

    The book contained too many flashbacks. Just as a story was developing, suddenly a character would reminisce back to their childhood and take us completely out of the story. This occurred repeatedly and was annoying.

    Also there were a couple of loose ends. We are never told what happened to Daisy? Did she go to jail for abandoning her baby? This information should have been provided to the reader. Also the ending was not satisfying at all. It was not only wrapped up too quickly, but highly predictable. I knew exactly how the story would end as soon as Cinnamon found the baby.

    While the book was an easy and quick read, there are so many issues going on and the book contains so many craft issues, it is only deserving of one star and I cannot recommend it to anyone to read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Nov 21, 2023

    A great mystery/suspense novel about adoption, the deep love of a mother...no matter if she gave birth to the child or not, and it's a story about trusting those we know and love. It will keep you guessing as to what really happened, and the "who" behind it!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    Nov 20, 2021

    This book started out with promise. At first, I liked the characters and I liked the mystery that it began with. I should mention that I listened to the audiobook. I'm not sure if it would have made much of a difference if I'd read it instead. By about half-way through I found I was skipping ahead a lot. I was drowning in the interminable minutiae about Jess's family life, and I was getting tired of all the parenting details, and tired of her misbehaved children. About half-way through I had figured out most of the underlying plot, but then it took forever to get to the reveal, and then even that was drawn out. I was mightily sick of Jess by then as well, as she just didn't seem to make a decision and stick with it, let alone do anything or pursue anything to try to find out what happened to her husband. It was so frustrating. And the cops were totally out to lunch throughout. I don't think that in the real world, the police would take things at face value, and not even attempt to try to figure out what actually happened after a crime has been committed. I did finish the book, so I have given it 2 stars. I still think that the premise of the book was a good one. It touched on the world of adoption and it's many pitfalls and uncertainties. That topic is an important one, and in the hands of a better writer, the topic could have had much more of an impact. For me, I was glad to finally get to the end.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Feb 15, 2023

    So many complications in this adoption story---and so cleverly handled by Baart as she leads the reader through all the possible ramifications that can happen with such an unusual mystery mixed into it all. Wonderful book to read about so many issues that can arise in adoption and as Baart explains...she, too, is a mother of adopted children.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Jan 3, 2019

    What I like about this book is its unpredictability. It's about the dissolution of a marriage due to secrets and unresolved issues. It's about the dark side of adoption and a mother's fierce love for her children. And it's about the friends we keep. With a heart-wrenching yet hopeful ending, this is one of those books that will stay with you long after you turn the last page. Thank you to Atria books for my review copy.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 24, 2018

    A powerful opening that draws the reader right into the story segues into a well done domestic thriller. Jess and her husband, separated for six months, both love their two children, the youngest Gabe adopted. A school teacher, trying to maintain a secure and comfortable home life for her boys, she is devastated when something terrible happens. Now the question is, How well did she know her husband? What was he searching for?

    Baarts last book I found too dramatic, but in this one though the situation is dramatic, the writing style is not. As far as domestic thrillers go, this is one of the better ones. Would make a great book discussion, because adoption and the rights of mothers are the main themes here. Also, the black side of adoption and the different motives involved. For the longest time I couldn't figure out what was going on, where this was going. Little descriptive entries of women, preceded each chapter. Had no clue what they meant, but they were effective in keeping me engaged.

    A mother's love and what they will do for their child. Universal theme that will appeal to many.

    ARC from Edelweiss.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Oct 21, 2018

    I love Nicole Baart's novels and this is her best one yet! It kept me reading long into the night with characters that I'm still thinking about days after the last page. I highly recommend that you add it to your reading list if you want to read a book that will keep you invested throughout.

    Jessica and Evan have two sons - Max at 13 is a typical unreachable teenager and Gabe at 5 who is adopted and a bright and shiny child loved by all. Jessica and Evan have just split up and both are hoping that it isn't permanent as they try to figure out how to share taking care of their children. Gabe was adopted under a closed adoption and there wasn't supposed to be any communication between the birth mother and the adopted family but it appears early on that she was communicating with Evan without Jessica knowing about it. A horrific tragedy happens in the family and they struggle to adjust to their new normal. At the same time, outside influences are making life even more difficult for the family. Will they be able to survive as a family and will love win out?

    This is a terrific page turner full of intrigue and suspense. It's a fantastic story about the love a mother has for her children and what lengths she will go to keep them safe.

    Thanks to the publisher for a copy of this book to read and review. All opinions are my own.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Sep 7, 2018

    You Were Always Mine from Nicole Baart is one of those mysteries that keep you turning pages even when you are fairly certain you have most of the mystery solved. It is about the characters and the how of the mystery being solved more than simply solving the mystery.

    Jessica, the protagonist in this novel, is a doting mother. Like all of us, she is less than perfect and makes some less than ideal decisions, but her heart is always in the right place. As things begin to unravel after her estranged husband's death a puzzle is presented and the pieces slowly fall into place. Fairly early there are indications of who might be behind it but the storytelling is what makes this a compelling read.

    In a book group setting I think there are many avenues for discussion. From adoptions and the justice system to finding the ever elusive balance within a domestic setting between family and work and, within the family, between children and spouse.

    The characters are well-developed and I felt invested in their well-being. Like any mystery there are a couple of "would that really happen" moments but, without those moments most mysteries would never be written, it is what causes the character's lives to jump tracks. All in all this is a believable and touching story.

    Reviewed from a copy made available through Goodreads First Reads.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Aug 18, 2018

    Jessica Chamberlain is estranged from her workaholic husband, Evan and lives with their two boys. Evan is supposed to pick up the boys one Friday and doesn’t show up. Jessica thinks he took off with is nurse but soon receives a call from an out of state Sherriff who tells her husband was killed in a hunting accident. Her world is shattered and as she is dealing with her grief, she learns that Evan had some secrets and involved their youngest son Gabe, who was adopted.

    This is an emotional roller coaster of a story. There was so much going through me as I read this heartbreaking story. Definitely heart-wrenching.

Book preview

You Were Always Mine - Christine Pride

PROLOGUE

Dear You,

I was desperate to make everything perfect when I left.

If you knew how many times I rearranged the quilt around you, tucking and untucking it over and over until I could get the little yellow duck in the corner lined up just so. Even with all my planning, it all came down to this one thing, this one stupid thing, and if I could get that right, then it would mean it would all be okay.

You were fast asleep so the duck didn’t make one bit of difference to you, much less the matching yellow knit cap on your teeny head, but I pulled it down until it grazed your barely there eyebrows. One last time, I let my fingers trace their soft arcs.

I leaned down to sniff you, the delicious scent of newborn breath, brand-new skin, and life itself. If I inhaled deeply enough, I thought I might keep that magical smell stored inside me forever. But when I exhaled, it was gone, and that panicked me, that feeling like I couldn’t hold on to anything. So I focused on memorizing your face, every detail, even though it was already imprinted in my brain, seared in my soul. I stared down at your translucent lids, blue veins showing through like little streams, and kept debating whether I wanted you to open your eyes or not. On the one hand, to see them just one more time. On the other hand, if you did flutter them open right then and looked at me, I knew I would never be able to leave.

Everyone thinks their baby is beautiful, even when they’re not. But you truly were, especially your eyes. They were these perfectly round blue pools, clear as glaciers, impossibly wide. Striking. I knew it would be your thing. All your life people would say, Oh but those eyes.

I squirmed down on my back next to you, ignoring the grass and dirt that wormed into my ponytail. The view above you was perfect, a hashtag of leafy branches crisscrossing a patch of fluffy clouds.

It was when I realized that the color of the sky at that very moment was the exact same color as your eyes that I truly lost it. It was then I knew I had to go, right that second before leaving became impossible. I bolted to my feet and slapped my cheek like I did when I was having a nightmare and I needed to wake myself up.

I made it two steps down the path and then two more, before I stumbled back. I tried not to beat myself up about returning to you since I’d known it would take more than one try to tear myself away. But I also knew time was running out. Like I said, I had planned everything so carefully. For weeks and weeks. And now I was risking it all by running late and lingering there, exposed. So I took off again, distracted momentarily by the damp circles on my knees where I had kneeled beside you saying I’m sorry, I’m sorry over and over. This time I made it a few feet farther before I remembered. The note! I wiggled it out of the pocket of my hoodie. The card I had labored over for so many nights.

Quick as I could, I tucked it under you and then darted over to the edge of the pond where I pulled out my phone and threw it as far and hard as I could into the murky water. I was gone down the path before I even heard the splash, running faster and faster, despite my sore, swollen boobs and the fire between my legs, like I was a kid again, flying top speed through the soybean fields, my long auburn hair streaking behind me like a flag. Now I was nineteen and fat and slow, but in my mind, for one split second, I was that little girl. And if I ran fast and hard enough, I could outrun my problems. Or outrun what I’d done. I was heaving by the time I made it to the bus station, sweat and tears rolling every which way. I looked almost as wrecked as I felt. I remember catching my reflection in the bathroom mirror and thinking, This is it. This is your lowest point. And there was something freeing about that, just letting myself sink to rock bottom, nowhere lower to go.

Or so I thought.

Turns out there’s always another millimeter. As the Greyhound bus was lumbering out of the station, I realized I forgot the most important thing. I forgot to say I love you. My body jerked with a laugh and a sob, like it was all mixed up and didn’t know what to do with this realization. Like my soul itself skipped and twitched. It was all I could do to stay in my seat when an invisible force was making my legs twitch to run up the aisle and beg the driver to turn around. It’s the same force that haunts me to this day, the one that tugs at me to reach out to you despite my promises.

Most days, the good days at least, I can convince myself that you know this, how much I love you. Wherever you are, right now at this moment, you know deep in your bones that I loved you from the moment you came into the world. On days when I need more convincing, I say it aloud, sometimes a whisper, sometimes a scream in the wind: She knows you love her. Of course she knows that. You’re her mother.

CHAPTER

ONE

Cinnamon Haynes can’t remember when she stopped wanting things in life. When she was younger, she was filled with longing for silky straight hair that would slide around her shoulders, for bright-white Rollerblades with pink wheels, for her own room where she could paint her walls neon green or orange or whatever color she wanted and have one of those beds with a canopy over it and a slew of pictures in white frames made out of seashells. She would also have photos to put in those frames, pictures of her friends and family. She had none of that.

Perhaps her strongest longing was for her mother to come back from wherever she’d disappeared to when Cinnamon was barely out of diapers, leaving her with her sixty-two-year-old grandmother who passed away three years later. No, her strongest longing was actually for Grandma Thelma to return from the dead and save Cinnamon from everything that came after.

These yearnings used to be a roaring furnace deep within her, hot and constant and consuming. But at some point along the way the fire just burned itself out, slowly, little dying embers one by one, and what was left when the smoke cleared was acceptance: this was, and would always be, the life she got. It was almost liberating because with that resignation came the freedom of surrendering, come what may. It was pointless to pretend that she had any control over her circumstances, better to abandon herself to the current and let it carry her along while maintaining an almost detached curiosity about where she would eventually wash up, which turned out to be here: a pin dot of a town spitting distance from the Atlantic Ocean in a run-down but cozy cottage, listening to her husband snoring like a lawn mower in bed next to her.

Lucky and Cinnamon aren’t two words that rightfully belong in the same sentence, but some higher force had a hand somewhere along the way. Because if you’d told her twenty years ago that this future was waiting for her, she would have laughed out loud and asked what you must have been smoking to see this in the cards. The statistics promised a very different trajectory for a girl like her: she was supposed to be alone, homeless, dead, on drugs, or some combination of it all. But somehow—through a rare and brilliant twist of luck, or grace or fate—she’d found herself in this life and let herself settle into it like a warm bath. Granted, it’s not like her present circumstances are particularly opulent by any means—it’s a little gold band on her ring finger, a roof over her head, and a real job at the local community college, with a desk and benefits, where she gets to help kids and maybe make a difference in their lives. Wasn’t it something that that could feel like hitting the lottery?

This is why she’s constantly reminding herself to have the good sense to appreciate what she has and wish every day that it doesn’t get snatched away. Or more specifically, that no one discovers that she doesn’t deserve it after all. Good, quiet, grateful. That’s her mantra.

So why, then, is she being tormented by the same relentless dream night after night, the one that leaves her shaken and unsettled all day? Here she is now, blinking up at the ceiling, with a hammering heart and beads of sweat frizzing her edges before it’s even crossed the sun’s mind to make an appearance.

In the dream—nightmare, more accurately—she’s riding an elevator in some impossibly high skyscraper in a gleaming, fancy city she’s never been to. People get on and off as it climbs until Cinnamon finds herself all alone on the top floor. The doors refuse to open no matter what combination of buttons she jabs. Eventually the walls start to press in on her from all sides until the elevator shrinks to the size of a closet, then a coffin. It’s a good day when she wakes up before the ceiling starts pressing down on top of her thick braids. Today is not one of those days.

She knows getting back to sleep at this point is about as likely as the Mega Millions ticket on her bedside table being a winner. So she slinks out of bed and pads down the hall to the tiny spare room at the back of the house. In the corner, behind a clutter of old junk they never cleared out when they inherited the place from Jayson’s grandmother, there’s a saggy corduroy beanbag chair nestled under the window. A teetering pile of books flanks either side. She affectionately thinks of this little clearing she’s carved out for herself as her reading nook—emphasis on nook. If there were a place that embodied Cinnamon’s lifelong quest to feel safe, it would be this one right here. Dark, tucked away, and all hers.

The book is just where she left it—hidden under the beanbag she settles into. Old habits die hard, and hiding things is one of them. She digs out the stained, dog-eared copy of Charlotte’s Web, one of two possessions she’s had since childhood. The other, Grandma Thelma’s leather-bound Bible, she keeps in her bedside drawer like they do in hotels.

Reading is supposed to calm her. Books have always been her truest salvation and most constant companion. For some people it’s drugs or booze. Cinnamon has always steered clear of those, maybe out of an innate sense of self-preservation—losing herself to them would have been too easy. As far as addictions go, reading was at least one that couldn’t destroy her. And she’d bet good money it was as effective at soothing her as any of the drugs she’d never tried would be. Cheaper too. For as long as she had a book open in her lap, she had a portal to escape everything going on around her and in her mind. And so reading became her respite from the very first moment she made the wild discovery that she could string letters into words, words into sentences, and sentences into ideas. Since then she’s had to have a book within easy reach, like a life jacket or fire extinguisher. Every time she settles down in this beanbag chair she might as well be ten years old, tucked away in the corner of the Wooten Hills Regional Library, which is where she’d stolen the book in her hands from. After reading it through eight times crouched in the back of the stacks, she didn’t see how she had much of a choice. She simply couldn’t live without it, without knowing she could devour Charlotte’s Web at least a hundred more times, its pages warping with age. And it wasn’t like anyone was going to buy her a brand-new meticulously wrapped copy for her birthday. Any guilt that she’d felt slipping it into her bag was offset when Sarah the librarian smiled at her on the way out. Cinnamon swore Sarah could see the book burning a hole in her bag and knew her secret. So when Sarah nodded and let her go, she figured the librarian—her favorite—understood. There were so few mercies in Cinnamon’s young life—she couldn’t be shy about grabbing on to one or two.

The problem is, reading is bringing her zero comfort this morning. The words just dance around the page like waving hands, whispering, Girl, wait—is this all there is? What is she to make of this sudden restlessness that came on like an itch she’ll never be able to reach? This growing anxiety that even a book can’t quell.

Lucia has decided this is all just the birthday blues ahead of Cinnamon’s thirty-fifth birthday next week. Cinnamon had no intention of mentioning to her best friend how out of sorts she was feeling lately, but when Lucia caught her zoning out while sitting in her driveway a few weeks ago, some sort of explanation was required, so she admitted she was a little off. But Lucia’s theory doesn’t hold much water with Cinnamon. She’s never had the time or luxury for existential angst.

Lucia had hopped in the passenger seat while Cinnamon was still in Lucia’s circular driveway and had an immediate solution for her woes. You know what’ll break you out of this funk? A party! I’m going to throw you a big birthday bash. I’ll do it on Friday, the night before, so Jayson can still sweep you away for something on your actual birthday Saturday.

Lucia has more faith in Jayson’s planning than Cinnamon does. And her friend’s offer was less about Cinnamon and more about Lucia having an excuse to throw a party, but putting her hatred of being the center of attention aside, Cinnamon agreed with the hope that it would work to snap her out of these doldrums. It will also be the very first birthday party Cinnamon has ever had, and it’s fitting that it’s being thrown by the first real and true friend she’s ever had too. She can’t tell if any of that is sweet or sad, but that’s the case with so much, isn’t it? A murky mix of the two.

Cinnamon abandons Charlotte’s Web and gives herself fully over to the angst—it’s like trying to fight the current anyway; there’s really no point and ultimately it’s more exhausting than just giving in. Tracing its source is futile too, but she can identify at least one likely culprit: her husband. The anger and resentment sticks to her like the film of tomato sauce you can’t quite get out of the Tupperware no matter how hard you scrub. This, despite her best efforts to get past his shocking foolery. Cinnamon’s worked as hard to forgive him as she has at anything else in her life. There’s a stack of books in the recesses of her closet that’s a testament to that commitment. How to Improve Your Marriage without Talking about It; Be the Spouse YOU Want to Have; Forgiveness Is for You. The goal was to read herself to a better place. If books can save your life, maybe they can also save your marriage. It just isn’t working as fast or effectively as she hoped.

Well, the forgiveness book has helped a little. It could be the author’s wisdom, but it could also be because Cinnamon well knows she can’t afford to let herself stay angry at Jayson for any real length of time. Which is why it makes her laugh now to think just how mad she was after he dropped his bombshell last summer—mad enough to actually have packed her bags.

She’d also contemplated setting Jayson’s clothes on fire, Waiting to Exhale style, on her way out. But that was a bridge too far, and she only got as far as the front porch anyway. Not even to the car. Because where would she even go? Move in with Lucia and Adam and the twins? Hardly, even if they did have the space in their McMansion. Was Cinnamon going to call all the family she didn’t have? Was she going to call Reverend Rick and slink back to Atlanta and her attic apartment above All Souls Heavenly Fellowship storefront church? She’d come too far for that, and besides, the Rev had already done enough for her for several lifetimes. Her lack of options made her feel the same as when the elevator wall came pressing on her head in her nightmares, and she had a mighty headache to show for it.

So she’d set about the work of forgiveness, which was a new skill to Cinnamon. Given that the trail of people who’ve hurt and wronged her is longer than all the rivers in the world strung together, there was no way to muster enough energy for all the forgiving she would’ve had to do, so she’d never even bothered. But Jayson is a different story. With Jayson she doesn’t have a choice. That’s marriage, right? You have to keep on keeping on somehow? Or else… or else what?

Sometimes she tries to think of it this way: she should actually be grateful that Jayson messed up like he did. It balances the scales between them to be reminded that he isn’t Mr. Perfect, as much as he’d like everyone to believe that. He also isn’t the only one to have lied. In a way, it’s a silver lining that his infuriating antics soothed Cinnamon’s guilt about all the secrets she’s kept from her husband. Except he came clean. And that makes one of them.

A shadow passes outside the door and Jayson appears in the hallway, as if her very thoughts conjured him, as if he just knew he was winding through her brain at 6 a.m. She tries to get her mind to just hush up, a futile task if there ever was one.

Jayson stands there a moment, watching her pretend to read before he speaks. You good? A little early to have your nose in a book. Even for you.

Yeah, I’m okay. Just couldn’t sleep. She hasn’t told him about the nightmares. Or the lingering rage.

Is it early menopause?

JAYSON!

Girl, you know I’m just messing with you. We need to get you some melatonin tonight. You’ve been restless for a minute now.

Yeah, maybe that’d help. I got a lot on my mind.

Let me guess. Thinking about some drama with one of your students again?

Yeah, that’s it. Her students and their constant struggles are always an easy scapegoat for any stress.

He squeezes in next to her even though there isn’t room for two on this chair. Cece, you know what your problem is? Jayson doesn’t wait for her to respond before leveling his familiar accusation.

You care too much. About those kids. About their problems. You gotta learn to let go, to leave all that at work.

She scoots away from him, tucking Charlotte’s Web back under the beanbag. Yeah, you’re right, Jay, she agrees. Even though she’s lying—there’s no such thing as caring too much. And it isn’t the point anyway.

She swivels her head around, taking in the piles of boxes, the old yellow phone books, VHS tapes, and the scattered Styrofoam pellets that have leaked from the beanbag chair all over the floor. We need to do something about this room.

Too early for that too. Jayson yawns loud enough to wake the closest neighbors a mile down the road.

He promised he’d fix this place up as soon as they’d moved in three years ago. Jayson promises a lot of things. He has more plans and promises than most people have pants. His schemes and dreams are how they’d ended up back here in Sibley Bay, the little town where he was born and raised, where he got to be a big fish in a little pond instead of the goldfish in an ocean he’d been in Atlanta. Those schemes and dreams might also destroy them both, but she can’t think about it right now. She’s got to get to work—to the job that currently, and barely, supports them both, even though she doesn’t want to think about that either.

Well, it may be early, but I’m going to be late if I sit here too much longer.

She lets Jayson pull her up from the beanbag chair, if not out of this dreadful mood. It is nice to pause in his arms for a minute, breathing him in. Despite herself, the urge to stay nestled in the crook of his neck all day, warm morning breath on her face, comes on strong. But work awaits. She has an appointment with one of her students at 8 a.m. sharp, and Preeti is sure to be in her office fifteen minutes early, already in a tizzy about something or other.

Back in the bedroom, she digs out a tired old black dress, which feels right on so many levels and is the only thing she can think to wear to the work party she does not want to go to tonight. She does have a brand-new dress tucked away in the back of the closet that she got on a whim for her birthday party next Friday, but every time her eye catches the price tag, she vows to return it. And anyway, she wouldn’t waste it on Vera’s retirement bash. The woman’s pale, pinched face and her string of different yappy therapy Yorkies have greeted visitors to the reception desk at Sibley Bay Community College since it opened its doors forty years ago, and now her reign is done and she’s moving closer to her son somewhere in Texas. To which Cinnamon thinks, Good riddance. This is a woman who announced out of nowhere one day, You know, Cinnamon, you’re the first colored friend I ever had, with the proudest look on her face like she’d earned the hardest Girl Scout badge tying knots or some other useless activity. Cinnamon was not the least bit surprised by this information, nor by Vera’s use of the term colored, nor by the fact that Vera obviously expected to be rewarded for this confession, judging by the eagerness with which she awaited a reply. Cinnamon’s Okay, cool, apparently fell short of whatever Vera was hoping for. She was clearly supposed to be congratulating her on her valiant open-mindedness. But it was a helluva lot nicer than what she wanted to say, which was, What on earth makes you think we’re friends?

Cinnamon slips the dress over her head and appraises herself in the wobbly full-length mirror leaning on the wall, twisting around to decide if she needs Spanx. Not that she would suffer Spanx for Vera, and anyway, her hips and butt are as narrow as they ever were. She takes in her perky breasts, smooth dark skin, and round doll-like eyes with highly batable lashes, if Cinnamon had ever mastered the art. Even the stray tooth that refused to fall in line somehow adds to the overall effect of her shy smile, which is good because braces weren’t in the cards. Cinnamon allows herself her vanity, beauty being one of those things like a trust fund or royal lineage—it doesn’t matter who’s deserving; it is the luck of the draw, a blessing bestowed by fate, which overall, has not been particularly kind to her. So who is she not to acknowledge and appreciate this one saving grace? She doesn’t take for granted the times it got her an extra kindness, or how it allowed people to assume things about her and her life. She’s no fool—she knows it got her husband too. She had easily marked Jayson as the sort to want a pretty wife to show off and complete his image. At least she had that to trade for love.

Suddenly, Jayson’s voice floats over the racket he’s making deep in the closet. You know where the medium suitcase is?

It’s nested in the larger one. Like always. Why do you need a suitcase?

He reminds her about the deep-sea fishing trip he’s going on this weekend that she’d fully blocked out after unsuccessfully trying to make the case that this was not the best use of the funds they didn’t have. Jayson claimed Alex, one of his buddies who just got a big bonus, was bankrolling the whole group and renting some ridiculous yacht, a move Jayson described with equal parts bitterness and reverence. You know how Alex loves to show off he’s ballin’ like that. White dudes and their boats, man. We make it far enough out there, it’s going to be some middle passage shit. Can’t wait to see Alex’s face when I bring that shit up to mess with him.

When he emerges from the closet clutching their faded gray American Tourister, he looks confused. Why you all dressed up? You usually wear those Oprah’s Favorite Things leggings on Fridays.

It’s her turn for reminders. I’m going to be home late tonight. Remember? I have Vera’s retirement thing.

Oh man, that crusty cracker.

Jay!

What? This is the woman who called you ‘colored’ to your face. If that doesn’t qualify her as an ole crusty cracker, I don’t know what does.

He gives her a playful tap on the butt. Jayson always jokes that he found the only Black girl with a flat ass in all of Atlanta.

Well, I’m just glad you have a reason to wear something other than those tired pants. Lookin’ all grown and sexy this morning. Actually, why don’t you get over here and let me remind you just how fine you are. He kicks the suitcase away and makes a show of falling onto the bed and patting the mattress beside him.

His hungry eyes send a surge of love through her that scatters all the angst hovering over her this morning. It occurs to her that the key to forgiveness could be simpler than she was allowing. Maybe the path to settling herself down once and for all is to remind herself as often as necessary how much she loves her husband. She truly does. With his slow drawl and easy charm and the way he can tell the same joke a hundred times and still make it funny. Also, good Lord he has the most beautiful smile she’s ever seen on a grown man, and damned if he isn’t always smiling like he doesn’t have a care in the world. Jayson is relentlessly upbeat, more than ought to be possible, given this world. He doesn’t have the stone-faced expressions most brothers wear—either an affected swagger or an aggressive stoicism, world-weary or too cool or both. It was the first thing she noticed about him—that Labrador puppy energy—when he’d sidled up next to her five years ago during a packed book reading in a too-hot Barnes & Noble in Buckhead. All those teeth lined up like shiny piano keys when he turned to her, looking down at her sweatshirt, clearly ready to spit out his best game. Spelman, huh? Smart and fine, I see. There was an honest-to-God actual sparkle in his eyes, along with a touch of hazel, or maybe the light was catching them just so, but Cinnamon felt that thing, a terrifying wooziness at the instant attraction and the shock that this good-looking man with his expensive-smelling cologne and Italian leather satchel was so interested in her. She’d looked down at the thrift store sweatshirt she’d forgotten she was wearing and nodded, only slightly, but her being a Spelman girl was still the first of many lies she’d let him believe about her life before they met.

Jayson’s interest, attraction, and eventual love felt like a gift. It did then and it still does.

But as she meets his gaze again in the mirror now, a familiar question nags her: Did she fall in love with Jayson, or with the version of herself that he evidently saw—someone worthy of love and commitment? Her love is all mixed up with so many other complicated emotions—namely, a white-hot gratitude. Being loved, she fears, is something she may never get used to, even after all these years. But no one has to know that, least of all her husband.

I don’t have time for all that this morning, Jay. She eases the rejection with a smile at him in the mirror. But how about I make you some eggs?

She doesn’t know how to account for this, but out of nowhere she wants to make her husband breakfast, even more so when he looks downright touched.

For real? It’s been a minute since you made me breakfast like you used to.

It’s been more than a minute—it’s been almost a whole year. Ever since the day he said those words, Cinnamon, I have to tell you something. It was Cinnamon not Cece, which stopped her cold. In the wake of his confession, she’d let up on her determined efforts to be some sort of perfect sitcom wife, television being her only real model of what marriage should look like. The desire to make her man eggs this morning is her vigilance returning to her. Swallowing her pride, being the dutiful wife, remembering to be grateful—these are the ingredients to make her feel safe. Good, quiet, grateful.

Oh stop, I can make my man a couple of eggs now and then.

Cool. I’ll be down in a minute. Before she can get to the bedroom door, he calls out. Unless… wanna come back and…?

The eggs are one thing, but he’s pushing it. She hesitates for a minute, trying to decide if she has it in her to peel off this dress, crawl back into bed, and give herself over to her husband. She knows Jayson’s invite is only half-hearted; he’s like a little kid finishing dessert—you always ask for extra even when you know the answer’ll be no. But she’s tempted. Tempted to lose herself under Jayson’s weight, have all these discomfiting feelings washed away with sweat-soaked skin, hide in her body so her mind can’t reach her.

As a consolation she goes back and kisses him. Jayson grabs her arm to hold her there. When he shoots her that lopsided grin, she knows a request is coming before his lips even fix to move. Any chance you can swing by Sandy’s on the way home after Vera’s thing? I’ve been craving creole catfish bad.

Yeah, yeah, no problem. She lets her tone sound all begrudging, but she means it. She could use a pile of creole catfish too. And they can watch an episode or two of Power they’ve been saving.

Cinnamon leans down and nestles her face in Jayson’s soft waves. He reaches for her and pulls her back to kiss her lips, mumbling, I love you. Though love was never really the problem. It almost never is.


The bird is an omen. Cinnamon will come to see that later, but for now she’s not one to believe in signs or magic, or spells, or even wishes on birthday candles. The bird though. That bird. Sitting right there in the kitchen, smack in the middle of the table, perched on the towering stack of past-due bills like it’s the most natural thing in the world. It is about the teeniest thing she’s ever seen, bright neon yellow as a highlighter and as still as a ceramic figurine. In fact, she assumes it’s a strange little statue until it suddenly cocks its head.

Cinnamon’s eyes dart around their kitchen. The bird squawks, loud and urgent.

How in the world did this creature get in here and what does it want?

One of her foster dads, Doc Parker, had been an amateur ornithologist. That’s how she learned the word ornithologist, which she eagerly added to her mental vocabulary collection that would eventually lead her to a near perfect verbal score on the PSATs, useless as being in the 98th percentile would prove to be. That new word was the best thing about living with the Parkers. It was the first time she’d ever lived with white people—Doc and his wife and their two blond children who stared at Cinnamon like she was a rare bird in a tree—and amateur bird-watching was nothing if not peak whiteness. It seemed crazy to take long drives to the middle of nowhere and try to spot birds in trees before they flew away. Somehow Doc Parker always took her out in his wood-paneled station wagon on days that were hotter than the devil’s breath. Doc delighted in exposing her to a new hobby. White people were always very big on exposing you to things, as if they held a passport to a different world, which they basically did. The bird-watching grew on her in the six months she lived with the Parkers before Doc got relocated to a job in Portland and they left her behind like an old piece of furniture too unwieldy and impractical to bother to move. But those first few times they went bird-watching, she hated it. She felt like she was going to die of heat stroke or boredom, whichever got her first. There were a thousand things she’d rather be doing (namely, reading), but whenever he looked at her expectantly and asked if she was having fun, she beamed. I am! The lie came easily, a reflex and a survival instinct, for Doc Parker and everyone else. The lies were second

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