I watched a black women review on Sinners on YouTube from May (I know I know itâs July) but she was mainly talking about Pearline and Annie and how they both with the Mammy and the Jezebel stereotypes. And HONESTLY I donât know how to feel about it, but this does show me that many black women saw Sinners with a different lens because I never have I thought that Annie was written to be shown or seen like a Mammy from many reviewers. She also noted how Annie in her love scene with Smoke was shown as more masculine than Smoke which to me is crazy because wasnât Mary also shown as masculine at the juke joint when she was talking to Stack? I mean was both of them shown in way though? I really donât know.
I really donât understand why so many black women have a problem with Annie portrayed as she is or maybe that canât accept the fact that Ryan Coogler wrote THIS character the way that he wanted to, and it not his fault that you and everyone else didnât like or understand it. And this shows how people criticize everything without even taking a minute to think about, but no people wanna agree because to them they are making really good points without many evidence to back that up.
(Side Note some people in the comments were saying that they dress her like on purpose because everyone else included Mary and Pearline had better dress than her, and also someone stated that Annie looked old and unattractive.)
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Michaels Venus (in Capricorn) Conjuncts (transforms through) Wunmiâs Neptune (in Capricorn)
in his eyes Wunmi turns muse. She is an ideal. Her dreams and ideals are the perfect blend of compassionate and groundedness. She believes in working for oneâs highest dreams. This sends a lightning bolt up Michaelâs heart as this is his idealized vision of what a woman should be. There is a pedestal that Wunmi is placed on in Michaelâs eyes. She is the perfect type of woman. There is a risk of rose colored lenses but on a higher level there is such compassion between the two because they really bring out the best in each other.
Michael B Jordan and Hailee Steinfeld
Michaels Venus (in Capricorn) Conjuncts Haileeâs Moon (in Capricorn)
in his eyes Hailee is a grounded force of nature. With his love nature in Capricorn, He admires her emotional strength and steadiness without relying on it. He instead allows her to relax and come out of her shell with open arms of complete understanding. There is a warmth here that is exalted. Both of them feel totally understood by the other and this makes for a very sweet and anchoring bond.
"Oh, hold still baby." Annie tells you as you squirm while Annie puts your hair into a braided crown. You whined, complaining.
"Ow, mommy, that hurts!" You thought to yourself.
Annie sighs in satisfaction while smiling at your cute chubby face. Your hair was down in a braided crown and you were wearing a frilly lilac colored dress with shiny white shoes with flowers on the buckles.
"Like a cute lil' doll." Annie coo'ed while blowing raspberries against your cheek, making you laugh. Smoke walks in with his pipe in hand, which alerted Annie.
"Elijah!" She scolds. "I told you you can't be smokin' when they get here." Annie lectures Smoke, much to his dismay.
"Annie, y'know I'on smoke much in the house nor around Y/N." Smoke points out.
"Yeah, but I'on want my mama to be like I'm lettin' anyone smoke 'round our child." Annie defends, referring to her mother. Smoke flubs his lips.
"Do they really have to be here?" Smoke asked. "Y'know how they get when it comes to things." He recalls.
"I know but I've been plannin' Y/N's birthday for weeks, so they ain't gon' be able to change a thing." Annie announced proudly. Smoke chuckled at his wife's confidence.
"Today's gon' be a good day today for Y/N." Smoke states as he places a gentle kiss on Annie's forehead. You babble something to grab Smoke's attention.
"What, you want a kiss too?" Smoke asked before placing one on the apple of your cheek. You giggle in satisfaction as you grab Smoke's beard. Smoke chuckled blissfully at the sounds of his daughter's happiness. Annie couldn't help but be in awe.
"Why can't you stay lil' forever?" Smoke coo's at you. "That way you ain't gon' never leave my arms."
"Smoke, she's gon' grow up into a beautiful woman 'n it happens day by day." Annie points out.
"I know but I'm makin' the most of it every day, hour, minute, 'n second." Smoke acknowledged as he lifted you up. "Papa's lil' girl."
"I love papa." You thought to yourself as you placed your hands on Smoke's cheeks.
Once everything was set, Annie heard a knock on the door.
"Ah, that's them." She muttered out as she took two strides to the door to open it up.
On the other side of the door were two elderly folks: One short and plump woman with glasses and her hair done in a silver bun and one tall man, who has his face stolen by Annie, with short hair that was grey on the sides and a thick grey beard.
"Antonia! Bonjou!" The elderly woman greets as she engulfs Annie into a big hug.
"Bonjou papa and maman." Annie greets back in Creole. Smoke was sitting on the recliner with you in his lap. You looked up at the two elderly folks walking in, who locked eyes with you immediately.
"GranmĂŠ's baby!" The elderly woman squeals as she rushes over to you and picks you up out of Smoke's lap. She placed kisses all over your chubby face before getting a good look at you.
"Ohhh, you's just so cute I could just eat you up." Your granme commented. She then examines your hair. "Antonia, when was the last time you did this girl's hair?"
Confused, Annie replied,
"Just an hour ago." Annie replied, dumbfounded.
"Well, her scalp looks a lil' dry." Your granme critiques. "Use more grease in her hair."
Smoke watched as Annie frowned before getting up from the recliner.
"They startin' up already." He thought to himself while cleaning his pipe. "Just keep calm for Y/N 'n Annie, Elijah." He mentally tells himself.
When both of the parents walked in, Smoke cleared his throat before greeting them.
"Afternoon Antionette, Beauregard." He greets in a polite tone.
"Hey, it's sir to you boy." Beauregard lectures like he was a drill sergeant. "Thought you's a solider 'n soldiers always refer to the elderly as sir or ma'am."
Smoke's lip curled but he quickly fixed his face.
"'N y'know you ain't s'pposed to be smokin' around the baby." Antionette lectures while taking the pipe out of Smoke's hand.
"I wasn't even smokin'." Smoke defends.
"Still, don't be havin' no pipe around my grandbaby." Antionette tells Smoke, voice condescending.
Smoke grumbles but then his mood shifts when he sees you reaching out to him. Before Smoke could grab you out of Antionette's arms, she immediately turned away and walked into the kitchen with you in your arms still, making Smoke miss his chance to hold his babygirl.
"Hey, I wanna be with papa!" You thought to yourself as you reached out for Smoke. Due to you being an infant, you couldn't voice your request to your grandmother.
"Antonia, what food did you make for the party?" Antoinette asks Annie.
"Our usual dishes maman." Annie replied.
"Did you make it how me 'n grandmama made it?" Antionette asked as she examined one of the dishes.
"Yes ma I did." Annie replied.
Antionette takes a bite before turning towards Annie to give her critique.
"Well, the food's a lil' dry but it'll do." She commented.
"I spent the whole day yesterday cookin'." Annie pointed out. "Plus I still had to take care of Y/N as well so, o'course I'll have to be away from the kitchen for a spell." She reasoned.
"When I had you, I was able to cook with one arm while you were sleeping in my other arm." Antoinette recalls with a hand on her hip.
"Why you ain't have 'im watch her?" Beauregard jumped in while pointing at Smoke.
"He was workin' the other nigh' papa." Annie replied.
Beauregard scoffs.
"At that filthy ol' sawmill turned juke joint?" Antoinette asked. "That ain't a real workplace." She points out.
"Well where can you work when you've been nuthin' but a criminal for most of your life?" Beauregard wonders.
This angered Smoke as he balled up his fists but then did a deep exhale to release the anger that was building inside of him. Smoke didn't want to lash out in front of you.
"This is gon' be a long ass day." Smoke thought to himself.
When more guests started to come, Annie noticed her mother eyeballing everyone else.
"Where's lil' Y/N at?" Cornbread asked, excited to see your face. "I wanna see my lil' niece."
When Cornbread tries to reach out to pick you up, Antoinette pulls you away like Cornbread was trying to hurt you.
"Uh uh! You go wash your hands." Antoinette tells Cornbread like he was a grubby little child.
Cornbread frowns and makes another attempt, only for Antoinette to smack his hand. Cornbread snatched his hands back.
"I'on know you well enough for you to pick up my grandbaby." Antoinette tells Cornbread. Cornbread was dumbfounded.
"I'm one of her uncles." He points out.
"And? That don't mean nuthin', go wash your hands before you pick up my grandbaby." Antionette tells Cornbread.
Accepting defeat, Cornbread walked off to go wash his hands.
"But my hands are clean, I shower befo' I got here." Cornbread muttered out.
Therese was sitting on the couch, holding Cornbread Junior, right next to Mary. She sneered at Antoinette.
"I know this woman did not put her hands on Cornelius." She muttered to Mary.
"Righ', she treatin' him like he has diseases or sumthin'." Mary agreed. "I ain't wanna say anythin' 'cause that's Annie's mama but earlier, she tried to block me from comin' in 'n Annie had to tell her that I'm family too." She recalled.
"Mama or not, she bet' not touch Cornelius again." Therese grumbled as she continued to rock Junior.
Annie sighed, completely frustrated at her mother's behavior. She then looks over at her father to see him talking to the twins.
"So, y'all still work at that ol' juke joint huh?" He asks Stack. "What an interestin' example you're settin' for Y/N." Beauregard commented sarcastically.
"Only example we settin' is that as long as it pays, it's a job." Stack defends. "My brotha told me what you said befo' we got here." He tells Beauregard.
Beauregard shrugs his shoulders.
"What? Workin' at a juke joint or one that's made from an old sawmill ain't a real job." Beauregard states like it was a fact.
"Better than pickin' cotton in a hot ass sun." Stack rebuts.
"Y'all young men...y'all leave the Delta for a few years 'n y'all come back like y'all some classy folks." Beauregard insults.
"Least we here 'n we providin' for our families." Stack defends.
"Nah, he is." Beauregard rebuts while pointing at Smoke. "You just married to some white girl."
Stack sucked in his teeth as a smirk cracked on his face. Annie knew that smirk meant that he was gonna fight so she quickly hurried over to the twins and pulled them into the kitchen.
"Annie, I swear I'm 'bout to lose my shit 'f that nigga talks down to me one more time." Smoke growled out. "I'on care 'f he's your daddy at this point."
"Sayin' that we ain't settin' a good example for Y/N 'n shit." Stack adds in.
Annie sighs.
"I knew I shouldn't have told 'em about the party." Annie thought to herself before she spoke. "It's almost time for cake anyway, so once we get that out the way 'n open gifts, they'll be gone." She tells Smoke.
Smoke nods, acknowledging Annie's words.
Annie gathers everyone around for the cake. You were in Antoinette's arms when Annie set the cake down.
"Oh, I remember this." You thought to yourself. "Last time papa blew out the candle with me." You recalled.
You then reached out for Smoke so you two can do the candle blowing but Antoinette kept you in her arms.
"Hey, lemme be with papa." You thought as you began to squirm, trying to free yourself from your grandmother's grip.
Everyone began to sing Happy Birthday while you were still reaching out for Smoke. Smoke noticed you but held off, assuming that Antoinette will hand you to him after the song. However, he was completely wrong.
"C'mon baby, let's blow the candles out together." Antoinette tells you.
You began to whine.
"Antoinette, she wants to do it with her d-"
Before Annie could get the sentence out, it was too late.
Antoinette blew out the candles, thinking that she was doing it for you, then Beauregard clapped along with everyone else. Your lip trembled, upset that the moment wasn't with your dear ol' papa, then you began to cry. Smoke felt heartbroken and thought,
"I knew I should've taken her out her arms sooner."
Antoinette thought you were just being fussy, so she tried to soothe you, but to no avail.
"Mama, she wanted to blow the candle with Elijah." Annie calmly pointed out.
"Oh, well, I didn't know." Antoinette simply stated as if that statement will undo what she did. "'Sides, she has to learn that everyone will want a turn to help blow out her candles."
"Don't say it like she's incapable of doin' that in the future." Smoke tells Antoinette, a vein popping out of his forehead. "In this moment here, she wanted to do it with me since we did it last year."
"Well, some things aren't gon' be the same." Antoinette rebuts. "It ain't that big of a deal." She dismissed.
"Clearly it is to her." Annie pointed out, referring to you who was still crying.
"Well, we can relight the candle 'n y'all can have your moment." Antoinette offered.
But it wouldn't make a difference since the moment was already gone.
"It ain't gon' be the same for her." Smoke argued back.
"Well, don't get mad at me." Antoinette argues back. "I ain't know that was y'all thing since we didn't come to the 1st one last year."
"'N this is why." Stack thought to himself.
Beauregard jumps in to defend his wife.
"Righ', so I'd advise you to lower that voice when you speakin' to her." Beauregard warns.
This was when Smoke was at his breaking point.
"Y'know what? Let's take this outside then." Smoke challenged.
Annie, Antoinette, and Stack's eyes grew wide.
"Oh shit..." Stack muttered out.
Smoke and Beauregard walked out of the house and there was just complete silence. Antoinette looks at Annie for her aid.
"You really gon' let your husband figh' your father?" She asked Annie.
"Damn straight." Stack answered.
"I wasn't talkin' to you." Antoinette scolds Stack.
"But I answered for her." Stack replied back.
Antoinette finally sets you down as she hurries outside to try to diffuse the situation. Finally free from your grandmother's hold, you waddled outside behind Annie and Stack to see your papa and grandfather going toe-to-toe with each other.
"Wow, what a scene." You thought to yourself, somewhat used to the violence that Smoke always brings.
You began to waddle around a bit before stopping to see your grandparents' truck, which looked similar to Smoke's blue truck.
"Papa's truck..." You thought to yourself as you began to waddle to the back and climbed into the truck, thinking it was Smoke's truck. You sat there happily since this was yours and Smoke's favorite spot to be in whenever the weather was nice, so you sat here and waited for Smoke thinking that you'll be able to spend time with him after the fight.
However...trouble came afoot.
"Y'see that truck righ' there?" One robber whispered to his sidekick.
"Yeah, it's a nice one too." The sidekick agreed.
The leader looked over the truck to see if Smoke and the others were still distracted then nods to his sidekick.
"Move! Go!" The leader whispered to his sidekick as they both left the bushes and ran towards the truck. The leader picked the lock and opened the truck door then began to hotwire the electric circuits to get it to work. You heard the truck starting up, which surprised you as you looked to see Smoke and the others still by the porch, yelling and fighting.
"Hey, who's drivin' the truck?" You thought to yourself.
When the engine started up, this caught Stack's attention as he turned around to see the truck pulling off.
"Hey!" He yelled out as he ran after the truck.
Annie gasped once she caught a glimpse of you in the back of the truck as the truck continued to drive off.
"MY BABY!!!!" Annie shrieked out.
Smoke let's Beauregard go.
"Was that..." He begins, unsure if it was his truck that got stolen.
"That was my truck!" Beauregard yelled out.
Smoke sighs in relief that it wasn't his truck, however, everyone else began to come outside to see what was going on.
"The hell's goin on?" Bo asked.
"We heard Annie scream." Grace adds in.
"Smoke, what happened?" Sammie asked.
"Some bastards boosted my truck!" Beauregard yelled out.
"'N Y/N was in the back of it!" Annie screamed out.
Everyone gasped, but Smoke's eyes grew wide.
"Y-Y/N was in the back?" He stammered out.
"I ain't stuttered boy!" Annie yelled back, heart racing rapidly.
Smoke saw red!
He stormed back in the house along with Annie who was equally blinded with red fury.
"W-what's gon' happen?" Sammie stammered out.
"Smoke's 'bout to bring the fire." Stack replied.
The two robbers laughed as they continued to drive the truck into town while you were in the back, completely scared.
"I want my papa!" You thought to yourself. "I want my mama!"
You began to cry and scream in fear, which got into the ears of the leader as he looked into the rearview mirror to see you. He hit the brakes quick.
"Hey, what 'chu doi-"
"There's a baby in the back!" The leader yells as he quickly gets out of the truck and runs to the back. You looked at the leader with tears in your eyes.
"W-who is this man? Where's mama 'n papa!?" You thought as you continued to cry.
"Where the hell did a baby come from?" The sidekick asked.
"I'on know!" The leader yelled back.
"Should we return it to the parents?" The sidekick asked.
"No stupid 'cause they gon' get the truck back as well!" The leader reasoned.
"But takin' the baby with us is kidnappin'!" The sidekick yelled back.
All the yelling was making you completely distressed, which angered the leader.
"Shut up! Stop cryin'!" He yells at you.
This makes you begin to scream at the top of your lungs then the leader covers your mouth.
"Someone help!" You thought to yourself as you squirmed.
This began to attract people as everyone began to pop their heads out from the shops.
"The hell y'all lookin' at!?" The leader yelled out. "Can't a man discipline his child!?" He lies.
Your screams grew muffled against his hand.
"'F you don't shut up I wi-"
Before he could finish his sentence, the leader hears a gun cock and whirled around to see Smoke holding his pistol.
"Put...her...down." Smoke growled out.
The leader didn't want to accept defeat as he backs away with you still in his arms.
"You ain't gon' do nuthin'." He teases Smoke. "One wrong shoot 'n you'll end up hurtin' this lil' girl." The leader points out.
The sidekick chuckles as he pulls out a gun and aims it at Smoke to protect his leader.
Smoke felt his heart drumming against his ribcage as you looked at him with tears in your eyes, pleading for help. If Smoke did try to shoot the leader then he might hit you in the process and get shot as well by the sidekick.
"Fuck..." Smoke grunted out.
However, the leader watched as Smoke's eyes grew wide like he had seen a ghost. The leader thought that Smoke was afraid of him.
"What? Ya scared now nigga?" He chuckled out. "Scared that you'll shoot ya babygirl?" He taunts Smoke.
"Don't make...any movements at all..." Smoke warns the two robbers.
"Or what?" The sidekick asked.
However, the sound of a shotgun cocking was the answer to the sidekick's question.
The two robbers turned around to see Annie--eyes black as coal-- welding a double barrel shotgun. She had a perfect aim at both of their heads if they even so much as laid a scratch on you or Smoke.
The leader's confidence depleted as he stared into the eyes of a scorned mother whose child was in danger. All of a sudden, there was the sound of another gun cocking as the two robbers turned to the side to see Stack aiming a pistol at them as well along with Cornbread cracking his knuckles ready for a brawl.
They were outnumbered 4 to 2!
"Drop the girl 'n leave the truck...befo' your brains end up paintin' that truck red." Stack threatened.
"Y-you really think I'm scared of some guns?" The leader's voice cracked. The sidekick felt like he was gonna piss himself.
"Oh...I never saw Uncle Stack this mad along with Uncle Cornbread." You thought to yourself since this was the very first time to see your two happy and goofy uncles looking dead serious.
Annie's voice roaring out enough to scare the two robbers into complying.
"HURRY UP 'N GIVE ME BACK MY DAUGHTER!"
The robbers admit defeat as they quickly set you down and run off. Not before Stack shot them both in the legs, causing them to fall over.
"Gah damn what 'chu do that for!?" The leader yelled out.
"This nigga thought we was gon' let 'im walk out in one piece?" Stack scoffed.
Smoke ran up to you and picked you up.
"Are you okay!? Did they hurt you!?" Smoke asked while checking your body for any injuries. Once it was confirmed that you were okay, Smoke dropped to his knees and hugged you tight. You felt Smoke trembling then you heard him sobbing.
"Papa's here baby, papa's here." He sobbed out.
Annie kneels down to Smoke then presses a kiss on the top of your head. Smoke then lifts his head up to Stack and Cornbread.
"Stack, drive the truck back to the house." He instructs his younger twin before getting up.
"What were you thinkin'!?"
"She could've gotten hurt!"
"Or gone for good!"
"This shouldn't have happened 'f you hadn't picked a fight!"
"SA ESE!" Annie yelled out, silencing her parents.
The house went silent and all everyone could hear was Annie's heavy breathing.
"Both of you, out." Annie tells her parents while pointing at the door.
"Beg ya pardon young lady?" Beauregard asks.
"You heard what she said." Smoke chimed in. "Both of y'all get the hell out our house."
"Antonia! We're your parents! You can't kick us out!" Antoinette tells Annie.
"Who acts like y'all were the ones who invented parentin'!" Annie fires back. "This was s'pposed to be a nice day to celebrate Y/N turnin' 2 but y'all just had to critique everythin' like y'all were the ones who planned this party for weeks!" She lashes out. "None of this would've happened 'f y'all just accept that every parent is different!"
Once Annie was done, her parents were silent.
"Now, I ain't the type to tell ya twice but 'f you don't leave voluntarily, I'll have Uncle Cornbread escort you out." Smoke warns the parents as Cornbread stands up.
"Y'know he's the tosser at our juke joint so he has no problem gettin' physical." Stack adds in.
Admitting defeat, Antoinette and Beauregard left the house without another complaint.
Once they were gone, the atmosphere grew still and silent.
"'F any of y'all got any gifts for Y/N, just leave 'em on the table." Annie sighs out.
Everyone left the house one by one after leaving your gifts on the table and once the house was empty, it was just Annie, Stack, and Smoke.
"Ohhh, I probably shouldn't have yelled at 'em." Annie groaned out.
"Hell nah, they deserved that shit." Stack assures Annie. "They actin' like they know Y/N more than you do."
Annie sighs.
"I'm just...I just want what's best for Y/N 'n today was s'pposed to be a happy birthday for her 'n she almost got kidnapped." Annie explained.
Smoke presses his forehead against hers in a loving manner.
"I'll say this...God is good, God is good." Smoke muttered. "I'm glad they didn't get too far."
"You did a nice job protectin' her too." Stack adds in. "This is my first time ever seein' you hold a gun."
"Smoke taught me how to shoot." Annie explained. "Didn't think I was gon' ever hold a gun in my life but after today..." She adds in.
Smoke grabs Annie's hand and squeezes it before getting up to check on you. He walked upstairs to the nursery room to see you fast asleep in your crib--tuckered out from the crying and screaming.
The sounds of his footsteps creaking against the floorboard woke you up as you turned your head and see Smoke.
"Papa..." You rasped out reaching out to him. Smoke scoops you up into his bulky arms.
"Happy birthday Y/N..." Smoke begins. "Always remember that me 'n ya mama loves you so much."
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Summary: At the cookout, Annie discovers that memory is a dangerous thing. Old photographs surface. Family members tell stories nobody realized they remembered. Smoke and Annie spend an entire afternoon remembering each other. Unfortunately, the present eventually shows up.
A/N: This chapter did NOT go as I planned. But I hope ya'll still like it!
W/C: 14+
The summer before junior year felt endless. It was hot enough for the air to still stick to your skin long after the sun went down. Everybody knew who was having people over. Sometimes it was a cousin home from college. Sometimes a classmate whose mama was working the night shift. Music played way too loud in somebody's backyard while the neighborhood kids wandered in and out the gate like they lived there.
This one sat behind a small brick house a few streets over from the Mooresâ. Cars lined both sides of the curb. Music rattled the chain-link fence while people crowded around folding tables covered in chips, soda, beer bottles, and half-melted ice. Smoke from the little charcoal grill drifted thick through the yard along with the smell of lighter fluid and somebodyâs cheap cologne.
Stack stood near the speakers arguing with two boys over what song to play next.
âNah, yâall killinâ the vibe.â
âYou always say that, bruh.â
âCause yâall music trash.â
An older boy near the grill yelled for Stack to bring more charcoal and he finally wandered off still talking shit the entire way.
Pearline rolled her eyes from her lawn chair nearby. âStack, shut up.â
He grinned immediately. âYou so fine.â
âBoy.â
Annie laughed softly beside her, knees tucked up against the chair while she sipped from a warm Sprite Smoke handed her twenty minutes earlier. Her curls were pulled back loosely, thick around the edges from the heat and humidity. The silver hoops in her ears glinted in the afternoon sun.
Across the yard, Smoke leaned against the fence talking to one of the older boys from the neighborhood. Black tee. Long shorts. White Air Forces already dirty around the edges from summer. One hand hooked inside his pocket while the other held a sweating cup low near his thigh.
Jada watched him from across the yard.
Annie noticed first. âMhm,â she muttered, nudging Pearline.
Pearline glanced over. âWhat?â
Annie tilted her head slightly toward the drinks table.
Pearlineâs eyes moved automatically.
Jada stood near the coolers laughing loudly at something another girl said, honey-brown curls bouncing around her shoulders while her attention kept drifting back toward Smoke every few seconds. She was pretty. Everyone thought so. Curvy already, tube top, and tiny shorts showing off thick thighs every boy talked about when she walked passed.Â
Except Smokeâhe barely looked over there at all. Jada was pretty. He mostly remembered she laughed loud.
That shouldâve made Annie feel better. Instead something still irritated her.
Pearline caught the look on her face instantly. âGirlâŚâ
âI ainât sayinâ shit.â
âYou donât gotta.â
Annie rolled her eyes hard and looked away first.
Across the yard Stack suddenly yelledââANNIE.â
He pointed dramatically toward the folding table. âBring me a bag of chips.â
âYou got two hands.â
âPlease! You love me.â
âI actually donât.â
Stack clutched his chest while everybody around him laughed.
Smoke looked over then and immediately found Annie. Every time. Didnât matter how many people stood around her either. His eyes always landed there first. The look on his face changed too. Softer. Like seeing her settled something in him automatically.
Pearline saw that part and snorted quietly beside her. âGirl that boy obsessed with you.â
Annie tried not to smile. Failed a little anyway. She stood and headed toward the chips table near the drinks before Stack could start yelling again.
Pearline grabbed her cup and followed behind slower, already watching Jada out the corner of her eye.
Halfway there, Smoke peeled away from the fence and met Annie without saying much.
âYou ate?â
Annie blinked at him. âYes, Elijah.â
âYou lyinâ.â
She laughed immediately. âI had chips.â
âThat ainât food.â
He grabbed a paper plate off the table and started piling food onto it before she could argue again.
Annie leaned lightly against the table watching him move around the grill. âWhy you keep makinâ me plates?â
Smoke shrugged once without looking up. âCause you need to eat.â
âI eat.â
âNot enough.â
Annie rolled her eyes softly. âSmoke, I promise the world not gonâ end if I miss one plate.â
That finally made him look at her. His eyes moved over her once before settling back on her face again.
âNah,â he said quietly. âBut I might.â
Annieâs breath caught before she could stop it.
And right on cueâStack gagged loud as hell behind them. âMane, if yâall donât leave each other alone for five minutesââ
âShut the fuck up,â Smoke muttered.
Everybody near them laughed.
Smoke ignored all of it. That was the thing. He ignored everything when Annie stood close enough.
Jada came over to where they were a minute later with Mary and two other girls trailing behind her, all loud laughs and glossy lips beneath the fading summer light.
Pearline stood up straighter immediately. âThis bitchâŚ,â she muttered under her breath.
Mary waved dramatically the second she spotted Stack. âThere go my man.â
Pearline rolled her eyes so hard Annie almost laughed. âYour man?â Pearline muttered. âGirl please. Stack flirt witâ everybody.â
âJealousy ugly on you, Pearl,â Mary called back instantly.
Pearline looked up slow and smiled. âBitch, I canât be jealous of community dick.â
Stack barked out laughing before Mary walked over smacking his arm. Jada drifted easily toward the grill instead.
âDamn,â she said, looking down at the plate in Smokeâs hand before glancing toward her friends. âSmoke donât do nothinâ but feed Annie.â
Stack barked out laughing instantly. âCause thatâs his girl.â
Smoke frowned slightly. âWhat?â
Jada smiled. âNothinâ.â But her eyes slid briefly toward Annie before looking back at Stack.
âIâm serious,â She continued. âHe act like she the only girl out here.â
Stack opened his mouth immediately. âCause to him she is.â
Smoke finally handed Annie her plate. âMove before Stack fat ass steal yoâ food.â
âWow nigga,â Stack said. âYou rude.â
Annie was focused very hard on balancing the paper plate in her hands even while warmth kept crawling up the back of her neck. Beside her, Pearline sucked her teeth quietly into her cup.
Jada laughed softly and reached for Smokeâs cup sitting on the table, taking a sip without asking.
Annie noticed immediately. So did Pearline.
Annieâs fingers tightened slightly beneath the paper plate, before she could stop herself, her body was leaning forward a fraction towards Jada. Pearline caught the reaction instantly, one hand touching Annieâs wrist beneath the excuse of reaching for a chip. Subtle. Quick enough nobody else seemed to notice.
Except Jada.
Smoke barely reactedâmostly because he was already looking at Annie again. âYou want somethinâ else to drink?â
Jada lowered the cup slowly.
Annie saw that too, and suddenly the heat outside felt heavier than before. âIâm good,â she answered quietly.
âI been tellinâ yâall Smoke donât talk to nobody but Annie,â Jada said, laughing lightly as she nudged Stack with her shoulder. âItâs weird.â
Mary snorted softly beside Stack, already watching the whole interaction unfold. âOne hundred percent true,â Mary jumped in immediately.
Smoke looked genuinely confused. âI talk to yâall.â
Stack barked out laughing instantly. âNigga no you donât.â
Mary laughed harder. âYou barely even looked over here.â
Annie looked away immediately before Smoke could catch her laughing.
Pearline covered her mouth instantly trying not to laugh because there it was. Exactly what sheâd been saying. Smoke really did miss half the shit girls tried to do around him.
Jada looked thrown off for maybe half a second before recovering smoothly. âIâm sayinâ you act different with Annie.â
Smoke frowned like he genuinely didnât understand the point. âThatâs my girl.â
Simple. Certain.
Mary made a loud fake throwing-up noise while Stack nearly folded over laughing beside her.
Annie felt warmth crawl straight up her neck.
Jada laughed too, but this time it sounded tighter. Her eyes met Annieâs.
A small smile pulled at Annieâs mouth before she could stop it. Bitch.
Jadaâs smile stayed in place.
But barely.
Present Day
The memory faded slowly beneath the low hum of Smokeâs truck engine.
Sunlight flashed through the windshield in uneven patterns as he drove, one hand loose against the steering wheel while warm air moved steadily through the cracked window beside him. His other hand tapped once against his thigh before going still again.
Then the truck speakers crackled softly.
Incoming call. Jada.
Her name spread bright across the dashboard. Smoke stared at it for a long second. Long enough for the phone to ring twice.
Three times. Then he hit ignore. Silence settled back inside the truck immediately afterward. Ever since Annie walked back into town, his thoughts hadnât stayed where he put them. Eight years goneâand somehow seeing her again still felt too close to touching a live wire.
Aunt Cherylâs house already smelled like seasoning and heat by the time Annie and Pearline finished getting dressed.
Music drifted through nearly every room. BeyoncĂŠâs II Hands II Heaven played low from the Bluetooth speaker sitting on the guest bathroom counter. Outside, somewhere deep in the backyard, a blues guitar rolled through the open windows mixed with the sound of laughter, dominoes slamming against folding tables, and Aunt Cherylâs husband Lewis loudly arguing with somebody over whether Bobby Womack was better than Marvin Gaye.
Pearlineâs auntâher mama Maxineâs younger sister, had always been the kind of woman whose house never really belonged to just her. Doors stayed unlocked more than they should. People were always sleeping over. Some needed a hot meal. Someone always got fussed at and fed in the same breath. Growing up, Annie had spent enough weekends there that people stopped asking whose child she was and started assuming she belonged to Cheryl.
Which, in a lot of ways, she had.Â
Annie loved her mother. She did, but Aunt Cheryl had become the adult she ran to for things she didnât know how to explain at home. The conversations that felt too embarrassing, too confusing, too complicated to say out loud to her own mama somehow came out easier sitting at Cherylâs kitchen counter while she cut onions, folded laundry or fried fish. Crushes. Friend drama. College fears. Questions she couldnât even ask properly yet.
Aunt Cheryl never pushed. She just listened. Then eventually sheâd say something annoyingly simple that made Annie realize she already knew the answer.
Pearlineâs family became Annieâs family so gradually she never noticed it happening. Holidays. Sleepovers. Last-minute rides. Summer afternoons. Somewhere along the way Aunt Cheryl stopped introducing her as Pearlineâs friend and started introducing her as one of hers.
Right on cue her voice cut through the house. âAND WHO ATE MY DAMN DEVILED EGGS?â
âThere go Cheryl,â Pearline muttered calmly.
âAnd turn that sad shit down!â another older voice yelled from somewhere outside.
Pearline rolled her eyes immediately. ââŚand there go mama.â
Annie laughed despite herself.
The whole house felt alive. They ended up staying the night at Cherylâs after grocery shopping the evening before. Pearline originally planned to drop the food off and leave, but Cheryl took one look at the amount of prep still sitting untouched across the kitchen counters and shut that shit down immediately.
âLeave if you want to,â sheâd said, snapping green beans into a bowl without looking up. âBut yoâ mama gonâ talk so much shit about you tomorrow I might join in.â
Pearline groaned while Annie laughed.
So they stayed. Annie even ended up helping too despite Pearline repeatedly telling her to sit down because the cookout was technically for her. Cheryl ignored all of that. âGirl please,â she said, sliding a cutting board toward Annie. âYou back home now. Slice them onions.â
And she did. Standing barefoot in Cherylâs kitchen at nearly midnight while old school R&B drifted low through the house and women arguing lovingly over recipes felt strangely familiar. Like being dropped back into another version of herself she hadnât touched in years.
By one in the morning, half the food was prepped. Uncle Lewis was asleep in the recliner in the family room with the TV still blasting low. Annie and Pearline ended up stretched across a queen size bed in the guest bedroom laughing quietly in the dark like they were teenagers again. For a few hours, it almost felt like no time had passed at all.
Currently, coolers crowded the hallway near the front door packed with beer, juice, bottled water, soda, and foil pans waiting to be carried outside. Younger cousins ran through the living room screaming before another auntie immediately yelled at them to stop running in the damn house. The kitchen smelled like barbecue sauce, fried fish, onions, and sweet baked beans while women moved around each other shoulder to shoulder arguing over seasoning.
Upstairs inside the guest bedroom, Annie had changed clothes four times.
Pearline sat stretched across the bed eating hot chips while watching the latest outfit reveal with growing amusement.
First it had been denim shorts and a tank top. Too casual. Then a black sundress. Too obvious. Then jeans. Absolutely not. Now half the room looked like a tornado touched down inside it while Annie stood in front of the mirror quietly questioning every decision sheâd made since coming back home.
Pearline watched her for a little while before reaching toward the tequila bottle sitting beside Annieâs makeup bag.
âAight,â she muttered. âCome here.â
Annie looked over immediately. âWhat?â
âYou nervous as hell.â
âNot.â
Pearline snorted, already pouring two shots into plastic cups. âSure.â
Annie laughed softly despite herself before walking over. The cups clinked together lightly.
Annie laughed again before both of them tipped the shots back. The tequila burned all the way down, warm and sharp enough to make Annie squeeze her eyes shut briefly afterward.
âShiiit.â
Pearline coughed once immediately after. âSee? Thatâs why I donât do dark liquor.â
âYou literally bought it.â
âAnd?â
Annie shook her head laughing while Pearline shoved the open chip bag toward her.
âEat somethinâ.â
âIâm fine.â
âAight. You gonâ be sweatinâ tequila and fucked up in Cheryl backyard if you donât eat somethinâ.â
âI won't.â
Pearline pointed at her immediately. âThatâs exactly what drunk people say.â
Annie rolled her eyes smiling despite herself before turning back toward the mirror again.
After another ten minutes of changing her mind twice more, Annie finally settled on the striped halter dress mostly because Pearline threatened to physically pick something for her if she kept standing in front of the mirror sighing.
The dress was a soft knit material striped in deep blue, green, white, and pale lavender, the colors bright enough to feel summery without trying too hard. The halter neckline dipped low across her chest while the open back left most of her skin bare except for the tie sitting neatly behind her neck. Unfortunately or fortunately, the dress hugged her body tighter than she remembered when she bought it. The material curved around her hips, her thighs, the softness of her stomach. Her breasts sat high beneath the neckline, enough cleavage showing to make her immediately fold her arms the second she caught herself staring too long in the mirror.
Pearline crunched another chip slowly. âGirl.â
Annie didnât look away from the mirror. âWhat?â
âYou know what.â
âItâs hot outside.â
âMhm.â
âIt is.â
Pearlineâs mouth twitched. âAnd apparently you tryna make Elijah Moore lose consciousness beside Cherylâs potato salad.â
Annie groaned instantly. âPlease shut up.â
âIâm serious.â Pearline pointed dramatically with another chip. âThat man already looked halfway dead in Stack apartment yesterday.â
Annie narrowed her eyes finally turning away from the mirror. âOh, so we not gonâ talk about YOU?â
Pearline blinked innocently. âWhat about me?â
Annie looked her up and down slowly.
Pearlineâs red-and-white striped maxi dress clung to every curve she had, the soft material hugging her hips and thighs while the slit climbed just high enough along one leg to show smooth brown skin every time she moved. The open back exposed nearly her entire spine beneath her sleek ponytail, and somehow the dress still looked casual enough for a cookout despite the fact it was absolutely ruining the peace.
Annie folded her arms. âYou look like summertime temptation.â
Pearline barked out laughing instantly. âBut you got the nerve to talk about me?â
âThis?â Pearline looked down at herself pretending to be confused. âGirl this comfortable.â
âComfortable where?â Annie stared. âAt a cookout or on somebody's son's prayer list?â
Pearline nearly choked on her chips laughing.
Annie shook her head. âYou absolutely tryna make Elias act stupid outside.â
âChileâŚ,â Pearline continued, waving another chip dramatically, âElias been stupid since tenth grade. That ainât got nothinâ to do witâ me.â
Annie laughed softly despite herself.
Pearline pointed immediately. âThere it is again.â
âWhat?â
âThat little happy-ass laugh.â
Annieâs face fell instantly. âLineâŚâ
âIâm just sayinâ.â Pearlineâs expression softened slightly afterward. âI ainât seen you like this in a long time.â
Annieâs face dropped instantly. Somehow that felt worse. She turned back toward the mirror too quickly afterward pretending to adjust the side of the dress while heat crawled slowly up her neck.
Pearline watched her quietly. That tiny hopeful look on Annieâs face hit harder than expected, because yesterday had been the first time Pearline saw her genuinely excited about something in a very long time. Hopeful. Pearline hated what she knew might ruin it. Her eyes flicked briefly toward her phone laying beside her on the comforter. Towards the memory of Smoke sitting beside Jada inside that restaurant booth. Towards Stack sayingâHe not bringinâ her. Pearline wanted to believe that.
StillâŚ
Annie sighed. âI donât even know why I care this much.â
Pearline knew why. Both of them did. But she let Annie keep pretending.
Annie sat near the foot of the bed smoothing nervous hands over the dress before glancing casually toward the open bedroom door. âYou said Elijah came by already this morninâ?â
Pearline looked up. âUh huh. Him and Uncle Lewis set the speakers up outside.â
Annie nodded slowly like that information didnât matter nearly as much as it actually did.Â
âOh.â
Pearline watched her for a little too long.
Annie reached over stealing one of her chips casually. âHe stay long?â
There it was.
Pearline smiled immediately. âYou fishinâ.â
âIâm not.â
âYou are.â
Annie rolled her eyes. âIâm askinâ a question.â
âYeah, okay,â Pearlineâs grin widened.
Annie threw the chip at her. Pearline laughed harder dodging it while Annie shook her head trying unsuccessfully not to smile too.
âSoâŚis he?â Annie asked a second later, quieter this time.
Pearlineâs laughter softened slightly. âHe said he was cominâ back.â
Annie looked down too fast afterward, like she didnât want her face caught reacting.Â
Pearline watched the small smile trying to pull at Annieâs mouth before it disappeared again.
There it was again. Soft. Careful. Still alive somehow after all these years, and suddenly Pearlineâs chest tightened, because now Jada pushed back into the front of her mind immediately afterward. Laughing. Too comfortable. Too familiar.
Pearline swallowed slowly. âAnnieâŚâ
Annie looked up immediately. âHm?â
Pearline hesitated. She almost said it. Almost told her everything. That she saw Smoke with Jada. That nobody really knew what was going on between them. She didnât want Annie walking outside blind, but then she smiled again. TinyâŚnervous.
Suddenly Pearline couldnât say it. Couldnât bring herself to throw Jada between this fragile little piece of happiness Annie somehow found again. So instead she stood tossing the chip bag aside.
âNothinâ,â she muttered instead, standing too fast afterward. âCome on before Aunt Cheryl start cussinâ everybody out for standinâ around useless.â
Annie looked at her strangely for a second but stood anyway, smoothing her hands down the front of the dress one last time before glancing toward the mirror again.
The smile appeared again. Quick. Almost shy.
Hope looked strange on her now. Older. More careful. But still there. The realization unsettled her immediately. She had not come back to Mississippi expecting this. Didnât come back expecting her stomach to flip every time Elijah looked at her. Or expect one awkward afternoon inside Stackâs apartment to crack open something she spent years forcing shut.
Outside, a car horn blared. Then another. Music swelled louder beneath a burst of laughter somewhere near the backyard.
Pearline groaned instantly. âThat better not be Stack blowinâ that fuckinâ horn.â
As if summoned, her phone rang immediately afterward.
STACK.
Pearline answered, already irritated. âWhat?â
âBring yâall asses outside,â Stack shouted loudly over music and voices in the background. âEverybody arrivinâ.â
Annieâs stomach flipped hard enough to make her regret every sip of tequila sheâd had while getting dressed.
Now it was real.
The second Annie stepped outside, the sound hit her first.
Music layered over more music. A blues record played somewhere deeper in the backyard while Frankie Beverly and Maze floated from another speaker closer to the patio. Laughter cracked through the humid air in bursts. Dominoes slammed hard enough against tables to sound competitive. People yelled for more ice. Kids tore across the grass shrieking while an older cousin threatened to spray them with the water hose if they knocked over another chair.
Aunt Cherylâs property stretched wide behind the house, big enough for generations to spread out across it comfortably. Cars lined both sides of the road outside the gate already, more pulling up every few minutes. Folding tables covered in aluminum trays sat beneath two huge pecan trees while smoke rolled thick from the grill pits farther back near the fence line.
The smell nearly overwhelmed her immediatelyâcharcoal, barbecue sauce, hot grease, sweet liquor, and fresh-cut grass baking beneath the Mississippi heat. Underneath all of it was that familiar Delta smell she never figured out how to describe properly after moving away. Warm earth. Humidity. River air somewhere nearby.
Home.
Her chest tightened unexpectedly.
âANNIE BABY!â
Before she could process anything else, one of Pearlineâs older cousins, Geneva, was already crossing the yard toward her.
Geneva had always occupied that strange space growing up where she never quite felt like a cousin. Five years older than Annie and Pearline, sheâd been old enough to seem impossibly cool but young enough to still let them into her world. She was the cousin whose room they wanted to sit in when they were kids, whose clothes they wanted to borrow before they were old enough, who knew everybody and always had the gossip before anybody else. She gave them the best advice, defended them when adults got too loud, and slipped easily between big sister, best friend, and professional instigator depending on the day. If Geneva was going somewhere, they wanted to go too.
She looked exactly the same nowâjust grown into herself.
A striped maxi dress moved around her legs as she crossed the yard, the fabric light enough to catch every bit of warm Mississippi air. The colors softened against her caramel skinâcream with narrow lines of rust, black, and muted gold running vertically from neckline to hem. Thin straps framed her shoulders while the neckline dipped low. Big tassel earrings brushed her neck every time she moved, and a woven straw bag hung from one arm despite the fact she absolutely did not need a purse for a backyard cookout. Long straight hair fell over one shoulder and sunglasses rested on top of her head like she had somewhere more important to be later.
She reached Annie and immediately grabbed her face with both hands. âLawd, look at my Annie.â
Before Annie could answer Geneva pulled her into a tight hug that smelled faintly of perfume, body oil, and summer heat before leaning back again to inspect her dramatically. âBitchhhâŚyou done got finer sittinâ up there in North Carolina.â
Pearline barked out laughing immediately. ââNeva.â
Geneva ignored her completely, looking Annie up and down. âNah, for realâlook at all this ass.â
âGENEVA.â
âWhat?â She shrugged. âI got eyes.â
Annie laughed so hard she almost snorted, and just like that, some of the tightness in her chest loosened. For a second. Then others started calling her name. Then another.
âOh shitâAnnie?!âÂ
âWhen you get back?â
âGirl, look at you!â
Suddenly she was being pulled into hugs from every direction. More relatives. Old classmates. Women she hadnât seen since before high school kissing her cheek and telling her she looked beautiful. Questions came rapid-fire before she could even answer the last one.
How long you staying?You still in Charlotte?Yoâ mama good?You remember so-and-so?You workinâ?
Annie smiled through all of it. Laughed through all of it. Answered each question. But underneath every conversation, every hug, every jokeâshe was looking for him. It happened automatically. Every car or truck door slamming outside the gate made her glance up. Every deep laugh somewhere across the yard tightened something low in her stomach before she realized it belonged to somebody else. Every time people moved around near the grills, her eyes moved there instinctively.
Pearline noticed every single time. âYou look so nervous, friend,â Pearline muttered low beside her while accepting a beer her cousin handed her.
âIâm not nervous.â
âRight.â
Annie ignored her. Or tried to.
Outside, the heat wrapped around her immediately, making the halter dress cling softer against her skin the longer she stood there. Her long braids brushed warm against the open skin of her back every time she moved, humidity already settling along the base of her neck while sweat gathered slowly between her breasts beneath the neckline. Still somehow she became even more aware of her body because of him. Even without seeing him yet.
The music changed suddenly. Blues faded lower beneath newer bass while voices rose louder near the grill pits. Then a familiar voice carried across the yard.
âMove, nigga. Damn.â
Laughter erupted near the driveway immediately afterward. Annie froze. Her stomach dropped so fast it almost hurt because she knew that voice. Knew it down to muscle memory.
Annie turned before she could stop herself. Dark oversized shirt hanging loose over his frame, the deep brown fabric softening against the width of his shoulders and chest. Tattoos disappeared beneath the loose sleeves. Black shorts hung low against narrow hips, white and black Nike Dunks scuffing lightly against the pavement. A black cap sat low over his eyes, single gold chain glinting faintly against his throat.
âSmoke!â Stack exclaimed as he turned around from where he stood near the grill pit. âBout time yoâ muthafuckin ass got here!â
âThere he go,â a classmate named Mike laughed, already moving toward him.
Smoke lifted one hand in acknowledgment before pulling Stack into a quick dap and shoulder bump that looked practiced from years of repetition. Mike stepped in after that. Then another. Hands grabbing at him. Voices overlapping. Smoke laughed at something another said, head dipping slightly while one of his homeboys slapped his shoulder.
Laughter carried through the music.
Yesterday, inside Stackâs apartment, he felt almost unreal. Too close. Too quiet. Too heavy with history. But standing outside now beneath fading sunlight and backyard music with everybody surrounding himâElijah looked dangerous again. Familiar. Beautiful. Like every version of the boy she used to love had grown all the way into a man.
Maybe it was the tequila talking, the heat, or eight years refusing to stay buried. But for one terrifying moment, Annie forgot how to breathe because Elijah Moore looked up and found her immediately. Like some part of him had already known exactly where she was.
Smoke forgot what Mike was saying halfway through the sentence. Something about a fight that happened outside Club Fusion last month. Cornbread laughed loud as hell beside him, while Isoo kept interrupting every five seconds adding details nobody asked for. Stack stood near the grill pit drinking beer and talking shit like always while Bo argued with Uncle Lewis over whether the ribs needed more sauce. The kind of evening Smoke usually moved through without thinking too hard. Then something shifted. Like pressure changing in the air. His eyes lifted automatically and found Annie. And everything in him suddenly went very still.
She stood near the patio beside Pearline surrounded by women talking over each other while music rolled through the yard behind them. The dress she had on wrapped around her body soft and close, pulling against curves he absolutely did not remember being that dangerous.
Jesus Christ.
Smokeâs jaw flexed once. Because yesterday inside Stackâs apartment had been too sudden. Too crowded with history and shock and confusion for him to really look at her the way he wanted to. But now? He could see everything.
The long braids falling down her back. The neckline dipping low enough to show the soft swell of her breasts beneath the summer light. Hips fuller than they used to be. Thicker through the thighs too. Ass sitting heavy beneath that dress in a way that made something low in his stomach pull tight immediately.Â
Grown.
Annie had always been beautiful. But this? This felt unfair.
âAnd then this nigga gonâ sayââ Cornbread stopped mid-sentence laughing at his own story while everybody around Smoke reacted.
Smoke barely heard any of it, but Annie looked up and there it was again. That feeling. Like the rest of the yard dimmed slightly every time their eyes locked. Want. Yearning. Recognition. All tangled together so tight it almost made his chest ache.
She looked away first. Not by much. Just enough to smile at Grace and Therise as they walked over toward her carrying babies, diaper bags and chaos with them. Smokeâs attention followed automatically.Â
Grace balanced little Lisa against her hip while Therise waddled carefully beside her, one hand rubbing absentmindedly across her stomach while her boys ran circles around her legs screaming at each other. Annieâs entire face changed when she saw them, brightening instantly. Grace pulled her into a one-armed hug while Lisa immediately started reaching for Annie with grabby little hands.
âLook at her!â Grace laughed. âThis girl doesnât go to just anybody.â
Annie laughed softly, taking Lisa against her hip without hesitation. Natural. Easy. Like sheâd done it a hundred times before.
Something inside Smoke twisted painfully, because for one stupid dangerous secondâhe saw it. Saw Annie standing in a kitchen holding his baby while music played low in another room. Saw little brown babies with her eyes and his attitude running through a backyard somewhere. Saw years he never let himself think too hard about. The image hit hard enough to steal the air from his lungs.
Stack noticed immediately. His eyes slid toward Smoke before following his line of sight across the yard. Then back again. Stack cleared his throat loudly. Sharp enough to snap Smoke partly out of his head.
âYou hear this nigga, bruh?â Stack asked suddenly, shoving a beer into Boâs chest hard enough to spill some. âTalkinâ bout he could beat me one-on-one right now.â
Bo frowned immediately. âMan, when I say that?â
But before Stack could keep the distraction goingâIsoo looked up.
âHold up.â
Everybody went still automatically because Isoo always talked the loudest right before saying something stupid.
âWhere Jada at?â
Stackâs entire body stiffened instantly. âShut the fuck up,â he muttered fast.
Too late.
Isoo blinked. âWhat?â
Stack cut his eyes sharply toward Annie across the yard before lowering his voice. âNigga damn.â
Smoke didnât say anything immediately. Instead he reached into his pocket. Pulled out his cigarettes. Tapped one loose. Stuck it between his lips. The lighter clicked once. Twice. Then caught. Smoke took a slow drag while the group went quiet around him. His jaw ticked once as smoke rolled out low through his nose.
Jada heard him talking to Uncle Lewis a few days earlier about borrowing speakers. She started asking questionsâ
âYâall havinâ somethinâ?â
âWho all gonna be there?â
Small smile.
âSounds fun.â
Smoke didnât think much of it. At the time, it was just a cookout. People came. People brought people. That was normal. So when she casually mentioned coming tooâŚhe never corrected the assumption.
Then yesterday happened.
He opened Stackâs apartment door and Annie was standing there.
By the time Smoke realized she was stayingârealized sheâd be at the cookout, something selfish inside him tilted immediately. Not because he was doing anything wrong or he owed Annie anything. But suddenly the idea of Jada coming with him to the cookout and standing beside him all day felt wrong in a way he didnât wanna examine too hard.
He hated himself a little for how quick that feeling came.
Then this morning Jada left a voicemail. Soft. Apologetic.Â
âHeyâŚI wonât be able to come to the cookout. Danielle called out sick and I gotta cover a showing.â She laughed. âBad timing.â
Smoke remembered listening. Waiting to feel disappointed. Instead his chest loosened. That bothered him more than anything.Â
Another drag. Then finallyââShe had to work.â His voice came out flat. Smoke flicked ash into the grass. âShe ainât cominâ.â
Bo looked at Cornbread. Cornbread looked at Stack. Stack looked at Smoke.
Everybody knew.
Only Isoo stayed oblivious. His eyes drifted toward the patio. His eyes widened dramatically. âAw hell nah.â
Smoke already felt irritation crawling up his spine.
âBruh, I know that ainât fine ass Annie over there.â
Stack closed his eyes briefly like he already knew where this was going.
âShe back back?â Isoo asked. âLike for real?â
Nobody answered fast enough. Which was apparently answer enough for him. Isoo straightened immediately, adjusting his shirt. âShiiit then. Lemme go say whatâs up.â
Cornbread muttered, âHere this nigga go.â
Isoo started moving. Actually moving. Straight towards Annie and suddenly Smoke understood very clearly how easy it would be to hit somebody with a folding chair.
The thought arrived calm. Instant. Violent enough to make his jaw tighten hard. Annie wasnât his anymore. He knew that. Understood it. But watching another man walk toward her still felt wrong enough to make something ugly rise low in his chest anyway.
Stack saw it happen in real time. Saw Smokeâs posture change. Saw his grip tighten slightly around the cigarette.Â
âAye,â Stack said, quickly stepping sideways into Smokeâs path just enough to interrupt whatever terrible decision was forming. âRelax.â
Smokeâs eyes stayed fixed on the back of Isooâs head.
âHe grown,â Stack continued lower. âDonât start actinâ crazy in Cheryl yard.â
Mike snorted immediately beside them. âToo late. That nigga already look homicidal.â
Cornbread started laughing into his cup.
But Smoke didnât laugh. Didnât move either, because across the yard Annie looked up just as Isoo reached her. Isoo hugged Annie. Too long. Then said something and Annie laughed. Easy. Warm. The way she laughed with everybody. Smoke felt something pull low in his chest anyway. He watched another a little longer. Took one last drag. Then held the cigarette away from himself and exhaled.
âSomebody pour me somethinâ.â
Stack looked over immediately.
Boâs mouth started twitching.
Cornbread snorted into his cup.
Smoke kept watching Annie. âStrong.â
Stack blinked once. Looked toward Isoo. Then back at Smoke. His eyebrows lifted slowly.Â
ââŚOh niggaaaa.â
âANNIE?â
The voice pulled her attention away from Lisa tugging at one of her braids. She turned and immediately laughed. She recognized him instantly.
Isaac Carter aka Isoo.
Older now, broader. Still handsome in that easy unfair way heâd always been. Dark skin glowing beneath the late afternoon sun, close-cut beard filling in where a baby face used to be, smile still stupidly nice. Tall too. Taller than she remembered. Athletic without trying too hard. He was always laughing, always flirting, and somehow there was always at least one girl claiming she was done with him before ending up right back beside him the next weekend.
But somehowânever hers.Â
Heâd always been sweet to Annie. Never flirtyâŚjust easy to be around. Annie remembered he carried her backpack once in sixth grade because she had too many books. By freshman year heâd gotten taller and louder and started football with Smoke and Stack. She remembered him telling some boy to leave her alone at a game once before wandering off like it wasnât a big deal.
Pretty. Friendly. Community-approved. Terrible for relationships. Her mama loved him. Smoke tolerated him. Which honestly shouldâve been her first clue. Isoo reached her and immediately pulled her into a hug. Long enough to feel familiar. Not long enough to feel weird.
She laughed against his shoulder. âWell damn.â
He pulled back looking at her fully. âLook at you.â
Annie rolled her eyes immediately. âBoy bye.â
âNo seriously.â He looked offended. âYou been in North Carolina eatinâ money?â
She laughed. âHi to you too.â
Isoo smiled bigger. âNah for real though.â His eyes moved over her once. Respectful. Surprised. Then landed back on her face. âYou good?â
Something softened in her chest. She nodded. âYeah.â
He smiled, then immediately started talking asking questions, and catching her up on old classmates who moved where, who got married and even who got arrested. Stories. People. Names.
Annie laughed, answered and nodded, but she wasnât really listening. Her eyes kept drifting back towards Smoke.
Smoke leaned near Stack now. Cup in one hand, cigarette in the other. He talked less than everybody else. Watching more, then he tipped the cup back. One swallow.
Finished.
Her stomach tightened immediately and her eyes narrowed.That seemedâŚintentional.
He lowered the cup and looked directly at her.
Annie blinked and looked away back to Isoo. ââŚand remember Mary used to swear Stack wanted her?â
Annie nodded automatically. âYes, yes I do.â
Isoo kept talking. ââŚand Sarita got four kids now.â
âUh huh.â
ââŚand you still owe me for them chips.â
She blinked. âWait, what?â
Isoo laughed immediately. âSee. You not listeninâ.â
Her eyes widened. âNo I am!â
His smile softened. His eyes drifted past her. He smirked slightly. âOh.â
Annie frowned. âWhat?â
Isoo laughed under his breath. âNothinâ.â
She turned automatically and saw movement, Pearline, Grace, Therise, little Lisa, and the boys, all slowly migrating toward the grill pits where Stack, Smoke, and the other men were.
Annie immediately straightened. There it wasâher out. She looked back at Isoo, smiled and pointed. âOh they movinâ.â
Isoo looked over then back at her. His smile widened immediately. âAw damn.â
Annie laughed. âWhat?â
He shoved his hands in his pockets. âNothinâ.â But his eyes flicked onceâpast her. Towards Smoke, then back again.
Suddenly Annie had the strange feeling she wasnât the only person pretending not to notice things today.
Stack noticed Pearline before she noticed him, though he told himself he was only looking because Grace and Therise had started making their way toward the grill pit with the kids. That was almost believable for a minute. Grace had Lisa balanced on one hip, the babyâs fat hand reaching for every dangling necklace and plastic cup she passed, while Therise moved slower beside her, heavily pregnant and already threatening her boys through clenched teeth whenever they got too close to the food tables. But then Pearline stepped around a folding chair and Stackâs attention went straight to her.Â
The red-and-white striped dress hugged her body in a way that made him forget whatever Cornbread had been saying about ribs, the slit opening with every other step to show the smooth brown line of her leg. Her ponytail brushed the open skin of her back, and the sunlight caught her hoops each time she laughed at something Grace said.Â
Stack stared too long. He knew he had because Pearline caught him before she even reached the group, her eyes narrowing with that familiar warning that usually meant he was already in trouble.
âWhat?â she asked once she got close enough to be heard over the music.Â
Stack took a sip from his beer and tried to look innocent. âNothinâ.âÂ
Pearline folded her arms, which only made the dress worse on him. âThat was a look.âÂ
Grace immediately made a noise under her breath, delighted to have caught something. Stack ignored her and let his eyes move over Pearline one more time, slower than he meant to, before he shrugged.Â
âYou look good. Thatâs all.âÂ
Pearlineâs face changed for barely a second, the smallest softening around her mouth before she rolled her eyes to cover it.Â
âYou drunk?âÂ
âNot yet,â he said, and that pulled a laugh out of her despite herself.
The laugh didnât last long. Pearlineâs gaze drifted past his shoulder towards Annie and Isoo, then towards Smoke, and the lightness left her face almost immediately.Â
Stack saw it happen and sighed through his nose, already knowing where her mind had gone. She stepped closer so the music and voices around them swallowed the conversation.Â
âShe really ainât cominâ?âÂ
Stack didnât ask who. He glanced at Smoke, who had been pretending to listen to the men for the last several minutes while watching Annie every chance he got, then looked back at Pearline.Â
âShe ainât cominâ.âÂ
Pearline looked away, but her exhale didnât sound relieved enough. âI should tell Annie.âÂ
Stack frowned. âTell her what?âÂ
The look she gave him answered before she did.Â
Stack followed Pearlineâs gaze toward Annie, who was still smiling at Isoo and pretending she wasnât checking Smokeâs location every few breaths.Â
âYou worried for no reason,â Stack said quietly.
Pearline folded her arms tighter. âShe deserves to know.âÂ
Stack studied her face, then shook his head. âIf them two stop beinâ scary and actually talk, Jada gonâ become a memory real quick.âÂ
Pearline looked at him long enough for her expression to soften, but the guilt didnât leave her face completely. ââŚI hope you right.âÂ
Stack hated how small she sounded when she said it, so he reached out and hooked an arm around her shoulders, pulling her against his side before she could decide whether she wanted comfort or not.Â
Pearline shoved at his chest immediately, but there was no force behind it. âStack.âÂ
He only held on tighter, which was exactly when Grace saw them.
âOooooh,â Grace said, loud enough to drag Boâs attention from his cup and Cornbreadâs from the grill. Therise smiled immediately, one hand on her stomach rubbing it in circles.Â
âLook at the lovebirds,â Grace sang, pointing like she had discovered something scandalous instead of two people who had been circling each other since high school.Â
Pearline groaned and tried harder to push Stack away while he grinned beside her.Â
Bo nodded like he was witnessing history. âYou finally wore her down, huh?âÂ
Pearline gasped. âExcuse me?âÂ
Stack, because he had no sense of self-preservation, nodded solemnly. âPersistence.âÂ
She shoved him again, and this time he actually laughed.Â
Before Pearline could cuss him out properly, Aunt Cherylâs voice cut across the backyard loud enough to make several conversations stop at once.Â
âAIGHT! FOOD IS READY! OLD FOLKS FIRST, THEN KIDS, THEN EVERYBODY ELSEâS GREEDY ASSES!âÂ
The yard rearranged itself immediately. Chairs scraped across grass, kids ran toward the tables, aunties started directing traffic, and Cornbread stood up with an enthusiasm that made Therise stare at him in disgust.Â
âBoys,â he called, and both of his sons appeared like he had summoned them.Â
He pointed at himself proudly. âThatâs us.âÂ
The crowd moved in that strange, ordinary way people always did once food got announced. Conversations broke apart mid-story. Somebodyâs aunt called for kids that pretended not to hear. People started drifting toward the tables in loose groups with paper plates already in hand while others migrated toward shade and folding chairs to claim seats before the older folks took the good ones.
Pearline noticed Annie.
She looked up and caught her standing a few yards away with Isoo still beside her. Grace had already moved off toward the food with Bo and Lisa while Therise followed after Cornbread and the boys, one hand rubbing her stomach while fussing at her youngest to stop running. Mike had disappeared toward a group of women near the fence and somebody else called Isooâs name from across the yard.
Pearline watched the moment happen in real time. Isoo looked toward whoever called him. Annie looked toward the grill. Isoo said something. Annie laughed politely. Then they split. Isoo peeled off into another conversation without much thought and Annie kept walking.
Stack followed Pearlineâs line of sight and immediately understood.
Smoke hadnât moved, but his attention already had.
Stack looked between them once before leaning slightly toward Pearline. âOh.â
Pearline folded her arms. ââŚyeah.â
Annie slowed near the grill pit.
Smoke looked up. Nobody had orchestrated it or moved out the way on purpose. But somehow when everything settledâkids, plates, conversations, chairsâthere wasnât anybody left standing between them.
Stack looked over at Pearline. Pearline looked at him. Neither said anything. Stack smiled first. Quiet.
âTold you.â
Smoke looked at her first. Annie looked up a heartbeat later. The backyard stayed loud around them, all music and laughter and children whining for juice, but the space between them seemed to quiet anyway.
Annie smiled first, too quick and nervous, her fingers brushing one of her braids behind her ear.Â
Smoke cleared his throat like the simplest word required effort. ââŚhey.âÂ
Her smile softened. âHi.âÂ
The silence after that stretched just long enough for everybody close enough to notice and pretend they werenât watching.Â
Smokeâs eyes moved over her once, brief and controlled, but not brief enough. âYou look nice,â he said, voice lower than it had been with anybody else.Â
Annie blinked, surprised by the directness, then looked at him with a warmth that made Stack glance away out of respect for what felt like an intimate moment between them. âThank you, so do you.â
For a moment neither of them moved. Then Smoke leaned in for a hug, careful in a way that made the gesture hurt more than it should have. His hand touched the bare skin of her back for less than a second before he seemed to remember himself and pulled away. Annie stepped back too quickly, smoothing her dress even though nothing had moved out of place.Â
Smoke looked toward the grill. Annie looked toward the tables.Â
Stack looked at Pearline, and Pearline looked right back at him. Neither of them said it out loud, but they both understood the same thingâÂ
If Smoke and Annie were going to survive the rest of this cookout, everybody else needed to get out of the way.
As they moved toward the food tables, the crowd gradually absorbed and rearranged around them in the familiar rhythm family gatherings always settled into once food got announced.Â
An auntie passed by balancing a stack of paper plates against her stomach while still carrying on a conversation over her shoulder. Children threaded between folding chairs until their mother finally caught one by the arm and redirected him toward the drinks cooler. The buffet stretched beneath two long folding tables pushed end to end and covered in white plastic tablecloths already wrinkled from heat and elbows.Â
Aluminum pans ran nearly the entire length of it, some covered in foil folded back halfway, others already opened and steaming into the humid air. Ribs sat dark and glossy beneath sauce collecting in the corners of the tray. Fried catfish rested in paper towel-lined pans beside golden chicken wings dusted with seasoning. Hot dogs rolled against each other near hamburgers wrapped loosely in foil to keep warm. Baked beans glistened thick with brown sugar and pieces of smoked meat, while macaroni and cheese sat heavy and golden around the edges where it had baked too long in the best way. Someone brought green beans cooked down soft with onions and turkey necks. And corn that sat shining looking like sunlight slathered in butter.Â
The potato salad disappeared the fastest.
A pan of deviled eggs already looked picked over. Coolers lined the ground underneath, packed with bottled water, canned soda, wine coolers, beer, Capri Suns, and ice melting faster than people could replace it.
Annie found herself walking beside Smoke simply because everybody else had drifted off somewhere and neither of them seemed interested in making a thing out of separating.
The heat had settled differently now that the sun was lowering. It still sat heavy against her skin, but the sharpness had worn off and left everything softer around the edges. Her braids brushed against her back every time she moved, and she became hyper aware of things she hadnât meant to notice.
Smoke still shortened his pace slightly whenever people crowded too close. He still moved to the outside of pathways without thinking. When one of Cornbreadâs boys nearly collided with her carrying a dripping popsicle, Smoke placed a light hand at the center of her back and guided her around him before continuing forward. He didnât seem aware heâd done it.
Uncle Lewis passed carrying another folding table under one arm and slowed long enough to nod toward Smoke.
âSmoke, appreciate you bringinâ them speakers and tables over.â
Smoke shrugged without looking up. âAinât nothinâ.â
Lewis laughed and kept moving. âEasy for you to say. You got more room out there than all of us.â
Smoke shook his head once but didnât answer and Lewis kept walking.
Annie watched him go before looking over.
ââŚmore room?â
Smoke glanced at her. âAt my house.â
She looked at him and waited for the rest of the sentence. When none came, she frowned slightly. âYour house?â
His expression switched immediately into confusion.
ââŚyeah.â
She stared at him long enough that he finally looked over fully. âWhat?â
Her eyebrows lifted, âyou got a house?â
Now he looked confused that she was confused. Assuming she knew already. âYeah.â
She looked at him harder. âWhat you mean âyeahâ?â
His shoulders moved lightly. âI been there a few years.â Then after a secondâ âBuilt it.â
Her steps slowed enough for him to notice, just enough for something in his expression to soften as he looked over at her again.
She stared for another second. âYou built it?â
He nodded once.
Her mouth opened slightly.âOh my God.â
Smoke frowned. âWhat?â
She looked at him again, then laughed quietly. âYou said that.â
His eyebrows pulled together. âSaid what?â
She smiled and looked toward the food line ahead of them, but she wasnât really seeing it anymore. The memory came back whole in the strange way old things sometimes did when one detail unlocked another. It had been junior year. Football season. Everybody sitting outside Mikeâs house after practice because nobody wanted to go home yet. Stack had been arguing loudly about something nobody cared about and Smoke had been sitting back quieter than everybody else. Mike asked what they wanted to do when they got older and everybody gave normal answers first. But not Smoke.
She looked back at him. âYou said if you ever had enough money you wanted your own place.â
His face stayed still.
She kept walking. âYou said you wanted a house nobody could tell you to leave.â
His eyes stayed on her now.
She smiled. âYou wanted land too.â Her smile widened slightly. âYou said enough land that if you wanted to walk outside in your drawers and yell at people, nobody could stop you.â
That got an actual laugh out of him.
She noticed immediately. Then she continued. âYou said you wanted a porch.â
Her voice softened naturally as more of it came back. âYou said you wanted somewhere that felt yours.â
Smoke looked at her for a long moment before speaking.Â
ââŚyou remember that?â
The question surprised her enough that she looked at him fully.
She smiled. âYeah.â Then she shrugged lightly. âI remember stuff people tell me.â Her eyes moved away briefly before returning. âEspecially people I care about.â
She heard herself as soon as she said it. Her expression changed before she could stop it. Not because she regretted saying it. More because she realized she hadnât filtered herself before speaking.
Smoke looked at her. It wasnât the polite kind of looking people do while waiting for their turn to talk. He looked at her in a way that made her suddenly aware of how many things she still remembered that she had never meant to keep. Not birthdays or milestones or dramatic moments. She remembered conversations. Things said in passing. Dreams he admitted before they became real. The version of him that still existed before life hardened around them.
The feeling settled strangely in her chest.
Before either of them could sit inside it too long, a cousin farther back the buffet line shouted asking whether they planned on eating or standing there flirting all damn day while everybody else starved.
Everyone in the vicinity laughed immediately.
Annie smiled and looked away.
Smoke shook his head and stepped forward reaching for the plates and silverware, handing Annie hers first.
Annie grabbed rice first, then baked beans, one rib, and macaroni before lowering the spoon.
Smoke looked down at her plate. âThatâs all?â
She looked over. âWhat?â
His eyes stayed on the food. âThat ainât enough..â
Before she could answer, he reached over and took the plate from her hands with a familiarity that surprised both of them. He added another rib, another spoonful of macaroni and baked beans, then a piece of chicken before handing it back.
Annie laughed. âElijah.â
His hand paused for a second after she said his name. Then he nodded once. âAight, aight.â
He didnât remove anything.
She looked down at the plate, then back at him. Her smile stayed.
Together they moved down the line while someone behind them accused Cornbread of taking too many deviled eggs while Aunt Cheryl threatened to start assigning portions if people didnât stop acting greedy.
The line moved slower than it looked from far away. Every plate became a conversation. A family friend wanted to know who made the potato salad. Another was trying to negotiate for corner pieces of macaroni before Aunt Cheryl caught them digging. An uncle argued loudly that people always forget the hot sauce until another aunt pointed at the bottle directly in front of him and called him an âold senile ass.â
By the time Annie and Smoke reached the end of the buffet, the noise had settled into that familiar cookout rhythm where nobody stayed in one place long but somehow everybody still knew where everybody else was.
Smoke took a step aside to let a man squeeze past carrying three overloaded plates and looked around while Annie adjusted her grip on hers. Every table seemed occupied. Not full exactlyâthere were open seats scattered around, but occupied in the way family gatherings always worked where every chair belonged to someone else whether they were sitting in it or not. Kids had abandoned half-eaten plates to run through the yard. Older people spread purses and keys across tables like territory markers. A guest had even turned a cooler into a seat. Another was eating standing up beside the fence.
Without saying anything, Smoke angled toward one of the folding tables beneath the pecan trees.
Annie followed automatically.
The table sat just far enough from the speakers that conversation didnât require yelling but close enough that the music still carried. Empty paper plates and sweating drink cans crowded one end where people had clearly already eaten and moved on. Two chairs sat open.
Smoke reached the table first and pulled one out with his foot before sitting in the other.
The movement was small. Easy. So easy she almost missed it, but she didnât. Her chest tightened unexpectedly. Not because he pulled out her chair. He didnât. It was the assumption of it. The same quiet way he used to make room for her without asking.
She adjusted her dress beneath her legs before settling into the folding chair. Annie picked up her fork.
Smoke looked at her, looked at the plate, and then back up. His eyebrows lifted slightly.
She blinked. âWhat?â
Something flickered across his faceâjust enough.
She stared at him for another second. Then immediately laughed. âOh my GoâI mean, forgive me Jesus.â She shook her head smiling. âSorry.â She put her fork back down.
He watched her for a second before reaching across the table and taking one of her hands. Natural, like heâd done it yesterday instead of years ago.
His hand was warm. Calloused. Her breath caught for reasons she chose not to examine.
Smoke lowered his head slightly.
âLord, thank You for this food. Thank You for bringinâ everybody together and lettinâ us see another day. Bless the hands that prepared it. Watch over everybody here and everybody we still waitinâ on. Keep us grateful for what You give and open to receive what You send.â
His thumb brushed once lightly against the side of her hand. Thenâ âAnd let Aunt Cheryl stop threateninâ people over them damn deviled eggs.â
Annie laughed instantly.
Around them Aunt Cheryl yelledââI HEARD THAT.â
Smoke smiled faintly, then finished quietly. âAmen.â
âAmen.â
He let go of her hand. Too fast. Annie looked at her hand before looking back at him. Her smile softened. âYou still do that.â
Smoke frowned. âDo what?â
She looked down at her plate. âPray before you eat.â
He shrugged. âYou know who raised me.â
Annie smiled. No. That wasnât it. His mama did raise him, but Smoke had always prayed. Quietly. Consistently. Even back then. She realized she remembered that too.
Smoke unfolded his napkin and laid it across his lap before immediately reaching for the hot sauce.
Annie watched.
He caught her looking. âWhat?â
She smiled. âNothinâ.â
His eyes narrowed slightly.
She looked down at her plate. Then up at him again. âYou still put hot sauce on everything.â
Smoke looked at the bottle in his hand, then shrugged. âFood be needinâ help.â
She laughed. His mouth twitched. That surprised her more than it should have.
For a while they ate in silence. The kind of silence that wouldâve felt uncomfortable with anybody else, somehow didnât here. Around them people moved in wavesâsome yelling for more napkins. Children screamed somewhere near the water hose. Latimore had turned into GloRilla and half the older crowd immediately started complaining. Smoke ate slowly. Methodically. Annie realized she remembered that too.
She looked down at her own plate, and then reached for her fork.
Smoke looked over. âThat all you eatinâ?â
She looked up. His eyes were already on her plate again. She laughed. âYou already fixed my plate, Elijah.â
His eyebrows lifted. âYou eat around stuff.â
Her hand paused. âWhat?â
He nodded toward the plate. âYou ainât touch the beans.â
She blinked. Then looked down. He was right.Her fork had worked around the baked beans completely.
She stared. Then looked back at him. ââŚhow you know that?â
Smoke looked confused. âYou always did that.â
She laughed softly and shook her head.
That one got her. The fact he said it like it was obvious. Like eight years wasnât enough time to forget she hated baked beans touching other food.
She picked up her fork again. âYou remember weird stuff.â
He shrugged. âI remember regular stuff.â
Something about that landed heavier than she expected. She took another bite before smiling.Â
âYou still do that.â
His eyes lifted. âDo what?â
She nodded toward his plate. âEat like somebody gonâ grade you on it.â
One side of his mouth moved. âWhat that mean?â
She laughed softly. âYou eat real careful.â
His eyes dropped briefly to his plate. âThatâs normal.â
She smiled. âNo. Stack eat normal.â
Smoke glanced over automatically.
Stack stood near the grill eating the way he did everything elseâtoo fast, talking too much, and one distracted moment away from ruining his shirt.
Smoke looked back. ââŚaight.â
That made her laugh harder. His mouth moved again into an almost smile. She leaned back in her chair and looked around.
The yard felt different sitting down. Slower. The sunlight filtering through the pecan trees had softened now, turning everything warmer. Smoke from the grill drifted lazily overhead. Lisa ran by holding a juice pouch bigger than her arm while Grace chased behind her. Therise sat nearby rubbing her stomach while Cornbread argued with one of his boys about eating vegetables.
Annie looked back at Smoke. âYou really built it?âÂ
He looked up.
âThe house.â
His expression softened slightly. âOh.â He nodded. âYeah.â
She rested her elbow lightly against the table. âHow?â
He looked at her. Then looked out across the yard, like he had to decide where to start.
She realized she wanted to hear all of it. Not the short version people gave at reunions or the highlights. She wanted the real version.Â
The one she wouldâve gotten if she never left.
Smoke realized halfway through explaining it that he was talking more than he usually did.
At first he answered the way he answered everybody else when they asked about work. Short version. Practical version. He stabbed at his red velvet cake while he talked and kept his eyes mostly on his plate.
âStarted doinâ framing after high school.â
Annie looked up.
He kept going. âOne of Uncle Lewisâ friends needed people. Started residential first. Learned enough to move around.â
She nodded once, listening.
Smoke kept eating. âThen commercial work. Then started doinâ jobs myself.â
She tilted her head slightly. âHow old were you?â
He thought about it. âTwenty-two? Twenty-three.â
Her eyebrows lifted. âThat young?â
He shrugged. âDidnât feel young.â
She smiled a little at that.
He noticed. Then kept going.
Somewhere between another bite of food and folks across the yard yelling about cheating at dominoes, he realized he stopped giving the short version.
He told her about working in summer heat until his clothes stuck to him by noon. About learning measurements by messing things up first. About figuring out pretty quickly he liked being outside more than behind a desk. He told her how one house became two and then somehow there were people working under him before he ever felt ready for that part.
He expected her to eventually stop listening. People usually did. They asked questions because they thought houses sounded impressive, then lost interest halfway through answers.
Annie didnât. She kept asking strange questions. Questions nobody asked. âWhatâs your favorite part?â
Smoke looked up. âWhat?â
She shrugged and took a bite of her peach cobbler. âWhen you build.â
He stared at her, nobody ever asked that. He thought about it. Then answered honestly. âWhen it stop lookinâ like work.â
She smiled. âWhat that mean?â
He looked out toward the yard automatically. Trying to explain. âWhen you first start, it's just dirt.â
She watched him.
Then he continued. âThen wood and walls. Then eventually you standinâ in somethinâ that ainât exist six months ago.â
She nodded immediately, like she understood.
His eyes narrowed slightly.
She smiled. âYou always liked that part.â
Smoke looked at her.
Her fork paused halfway to her mouth. She blinked. âWhat?â
He stared.
âWhat?â
His voice came quieter. âHow you know that?â
She looked confused, then looked down and laughed. Her shoulders lifted. âYou used to draw houses.â
His eyebrows pulled together.
She kept talking. âBack of notebooks.â
His chest started tightening just enough to make breathing feel different.
She looked embarrassed suddenly. âI remember weird stuff.â
Smoke looked at her. Then shook his head. âNah.â
She looked up.
His mouth moved slightly. âYou remember regular stuff.â
Something changed in her face after that, something smaller than sadness. More careful. She looked down at her plate for a second before taking another bite.
He looked away first.
The yard kept moving around them.
Cornbread was chasing one of his boys holding a rib in each hand. The music somehow got louder. Aunt Cheryl yelled at people to throw their plates away. Little Lisa was crying somewhere and Grace sounded one second from laughing and losing patience at the same time.
Smoke looked back at Annie. She was eating slower now. She always did. Then he realized something. Heâd been talking almost the entire time.
He frowned slightly. âWhat about you?â
She looked up.
He nodded once. âWhat you been doinâ?â
Her expression changed immediately. He recognized that too. The small pause before she answered, like she was deciding what version to give.
She looked out at the yard, then back at him and started talking. Work first. Easy things. North Carolina. Her apartment. Her routine. People sheâd met.
Stories.
While she talked, Smoke realized something he wasnât prepared for. She still told stories the same way. Started in the middle. Circled back later. Used her hands when she got excited. Apologized when she thought she was talking too much.
He listened and somewhere between hearing about grocery stores, coworkers, apartment maintenance requests and how she still hated driving in Charlotte trafficâhe realized something that settled low in his chest and stayed there.
He didnât know this version of her. Not like before, but every few minutes sheâd laugh a certain way, tilt her head, or remember something small and heâd recognize her again.
By the time people started slowing down on third plates and settling into the familiar rhythm of a Southern cookoutâeating, arguing, walking, sitting back down just to stand up again five minutes laterâthe energy in the yard softened into something looser. The loud excitement of arrivals had worn off and settled into clusters. Older folks migrated toward shade and folding chairs, paper plates balanced on laps while conversations stretched across years and family trees. Kids had already abandoned actual meals in favor of popsicles, chips, and running themselves sick. The music changed again. Luther faded into Dru Hill for a minute before somebody protested and switched it back.
Geneva appeared carrying a clear plastic storage tub against her hip with the same expression she always wore before causing problems.
Nobody noticed at first, except Aunt Cheryl. She pointed immediately . âAh hell nah.â
Geneva ignored her and kept walking.
Stack spotted the tub next and groaned. âPut them fuckinâ pictures back, mane.â
That got everybodyâs attention. People started reacting before she even reached the tables.
âNot today.â
âWho got old pictures?â
âGeneva donât start.â
Geneva dropped the tub onto an empty section of the buffet table between the leftover buns and a sweating pitcher of sweet tea. âI was cleaninâ closets.â
Nobody believed that.
The pictures came out anyway.Â
It happened naturally after that. People stopped eating long enough to drift over and look. Hands started reaching. Some found an elementary school picture and immediately started roasting hairstyles. Someone else found old prom photos. A cousin started lying about ages and got corrected instantly. Kids kept trying to grab pictures and getting their hands smacked away before somebody else handed them disposable cameras from another pile to distract them.
Annie ended up near the table without meaning to. Smoke ended up there too beside her. Close enough, but nobody commented.
Geneva stood flipping through a stack while narrating to nobody in particular.âLord look at this.â
âOh this was ugly.â
âWho dressed us, the fuck?â
People leaned in and out around her shoulder. Grace had Lisa balanced against one hip while trying to steal bites off Boâs plate at the same time. Therise sat lower in her chair rubbing absent circles over her stomach while one of her boys climbed halfway into her lap. Pearline had somehow inserted herself directly into the center of everything and Stack kept appearing over her shoulder anytime she laughed.
Geneva flipped one more. Stopped. Looked again and her face changed. Her eyebrows climbed and her mouth opened slightly before she made a low noise in her throat.
âAww shit.â
That caught more attention than yelling would have. People turned.
âWhat?â
Geneva stared another second, and looked up. Her eyes moved once to Annie and Smoke, then back down. A sneaky ass smile started pulling at her mouth. She held the picture against her chest.
âOh yâall thought yâall was slick.â
Immediately everybody wanted to see. Pearline reached for the picture, but Geneva pulled away.Â
Stack tried to reach for it and again, Geneva pulled away.
Grace leaned forward laughing. âMove!â
Geneva laughed and finally handed the picture over.
Pearline took the photograph and immediately stopped smiling.
At first Annie thought she was joking, waiting for some exaggerated reaction or teasing comment, but Pearline just looked down at the picture for a long time. Her eyes moved once across the image, then lifted slowly toward Annie before drifting across the table toward Smoke and back down again. Something changed in her faceâit wasn't a shock exactly, more recognition mixed with the satisfaction of finally having evidence for something she already suspected.
Her mouth stretched into a grin. âOh yâall was bad.â
That was enough.
People started reaching automatically. Stack tried to take it and got smacked away. Bo leaned halfway across Grace to see. A cousin behind them started asking questions before theyâd even seen it. The picture moved from hand to hand through overlapping reactions and commentary until eventually it ended up in Annieâs hands.
The photograph looked older than it actually was. Printed on glossy paper that had picked up faint bends and fingerprints over the years, the colors had softened just enough to make the whole thing feel warmer than real life. Like memory had edited it.Â
Summer sunlight flattened everything into soft gold. Somebodyâs backyard stretched behind them in a blur of folding chairs, coolers, and people half-cut out of frame. Stack stood in the background throwing up signs with his hands. Smoke sat in one of those cheap ass woven lawn chairs that somehow survived every cookout, stretched out in a white t-shirt and basketball shorts, looking mildly irritated that a camera was pointed in his direction.
And AnnieâShe stared.Â
She was asleep, actually asleep.Her head rested against Smokeâs shoulder and her body had turned naturally toward him in the way people did when they trusted something enough to stop paying attention to it. One hand sat folded beneath her cheek. Her legs had curled in his direction.
But her attention kept returning to something she hadnât noticed immediately. Smokeâs arm.
It rested around her side.
Not wrapped tightly, but it looked absentminded almostâhis forearm curved behind her, hand resting lightly against her body as if steadying her had become automatic somewhere along the day and nobody thought enough of it to move. The thing that unsettled her most was that he wasnât even looking at her. Heâd been talking to somebody outside the frame. His expression looked normal. Like there was nothing unusual about any of it.
Annie stared harder. She remembered that cookout. She was fourteen at the time. She remembered being tired as hell. She remembered being hot and eating too much and probably complaining about something.
She did not remember this though.
Around her the conversation started unfolding the way family memories always didânot one person telling a story while everybody listened, but people remembering sideways together.
âOh I remember that.â
âThat was Barbara backyard. She done gone to Glory now.â
âShe had worked that morning.â
âShe fell asleep outside?â
Grace leaned farther in and laughed before pointing directly at Smoke.
âWait. Why she sleep on you?â
Smoke looked once at the picture. His shoulders moved. âShe was tired.â
That answer got a louder reaction than the picture itself.
Stack stared at him in disbelief. âThatâs your defense?â
Smoke looked confused. âWhat else was she supposed to do?â
People started laughing harder.
Aunt Cheryl wandered over carrying sweet tea and looked down at the picture. Her face changed immediately.Â
âOh yeah.â
Everybody turned.
She pointed with her cup. âShe passed out after she ate.â
Another auntie laughed. âHe carried her inside later.â
Smoke frowned. âNo I didnât.â
That got corrected immediately from three different directions. âYes you did.â
Geneva pointed at the picture. âYou carried her upstairs and put her in Barbara room.â
Another cousin jumped in. âYou wouldnât let nobody wake her.â
Smoke looked offended now. âThat is not what happened.â
Uncle Lewis finally looked over from where heâd been eating and didnât even pause before answering. âYou said she wake up irritated and you ainât want folks botherinâ her.â
The yard lost it.
Smoke looked personally betrayed. Geneva kept flipping. Another picture surfaced. Football game. Annie wearing a hoodie too big. Smokeâs. Smoke beside her. Another cookout. Smoke fixing her plate. Another. School event. A group photo. People spread out across the frame. Except somehow Annie and Smoke were always touching. Shoulders brushing, knees angled together. Standing too close. Leaning or looking enough that once people started noticing it became impossible to stop.
Grace took one and looked down for a long second before slowly lifting her eyes. Her smile faded slightly.Â
âOh.â
Nobody answered.
She looked again. Then back up. âOh yâall was together together.â
That quieted things more than the teasing had.
Aunt Cheryl looked over casually. âI always knew.â
People looked at her.
She shrugged. âWhat?â
Her eyes moved toward Smoke. âThat boy looked for her before he did anything.â
Another auntie nodded immediately. âIf Annie wasnât outside he wasnât stayinâ outside long.â
Someone laughed. Another addedââShe sat beside him everywhere.â
Lewis pointed with his fork. âThat boy built his whole schedule around her.â
Smoke immediately objected. âMane, Uncââ
Stack started laughing immediately and pointed toward Uncle Lewis. âNah, Uncâyou right. You right.â
Smoke turned instantly. âShut the fuck up, mane.â
Stack ignored him completely. âPractice over?â He nodded dramatically. âWhere Annie.â
People started laughing harder.
Stack kept going. âWeekend?â Another nod. âWhere Annie.â
He pointed toward Smoke with his cup. âLunch?â Shrug. âDid Annie eat?â
Cornbread barked out laughing.
Stack looked around the group like heâd just solved a mystery. âDamn. This nigga ainât have no hobbies.â
Annie looked over at Smoke. Smoke refused eye contact.
Aunt Cheryl took another sip and looked down at more photographs in front of her and began shaking her head. Her voice softened.Â
âI really thought yâall was gonâ get married.â
Nobody laughed, because it didnât shock them, she sounded sincere.
Her eyes moved between Annie and Smoke before settling back onto the pictures.
âYâall was serious.â She smiled faintly. âThen Annie moved.â
The conversation didnât stop after that. Somewhere behind them kids screamed over a water hose, others argued about ribs. Foil crinkled. But Annie looked back down at her fourteen-year-old self sleeping against Smoke and realized something she had never considered before.
They thought they had been private while everybody else had been watching them fall in love.
Aunt Cheryl took another sip of her sweet tea and continued casuallyââI told yoâ mama to let you stay with me.â
The noise around the table kept moving for another second before it stalled.
Annie looked up. âMaâam?â
Aunt Cheryl looked at her like sheâd forgotten Annie didnât know. âWhen yâall moved,â she shrugged lightly. âI told her leave you here with us so you could finish school.â
Smoke looked over, actually looked.
Pearline frowned. âYou did?â
Before Cheryl could answer another voice floated over.
âShe did.â
Everybody turned. Pearlineâs mother Maxine stepped out from the house carrying a wine glass and one of those paper plates bending under too much food.
She looked between them. âWe both did.â She sat down carefully. âWe told your mama movinâ you your senior year wasnât right if she didnât have to.â
Annie stared.
Maxine shrugged. âEspecially when you already basically lived over here.â She gave a small laugh. âYou andâŚâ she pointed toward Pearline. ââŚPea.â
Pearline groaned immediately. âMamaaa, please stop callinâ me that.â
And suddenly she remembered. The memory came back the way it always didâthrough feeling first and details second. Cardboard boxes stacked against her bedroom wall. Her mother kneeling beside an open suitcase folding shirts with the kind of quiet focus that usually meant her mind was already somewhere else. Annie standing in the doorway pretending she wasnât crying yet.
She remembered asking casually the first time. What if I stay with Pearline for the year?
Her mother hadnât even looked up. No.
Annie remembered trying again later. Different day. Different approach. What if I stay with Aunt Cheryl?
That time her mother paused long enough for hope to show up where it shouldnât have. Thenâ Baby, we already talked about this.
Annie remembered stepping farther into the room. Iâll come to North Carolina after graduation.
Her mother finally looked at her then. You cominâ with me.
Final.
Back then Annie thought that had been the whole conversation. She thought she asked, her mother said no, and life kept moving.
Sitting here now with a faded photograph in her hands and Aunt Cheryl looking at her over sweet tea, she realized there had been other conversations after she left the room. Adult conversations. Aunt Cheryl and Aunt Max offering. Them trying. People who saw her life here and tried to protect it in ways she never knew. And suddenly the ache sitting in her chest wasnât about moving anymore. It was realizing she hadnât imagined wanting to stay.Â
She looked back at Aunt Cheryl. ââŚyou asked?âÂ
Aunt Cheryl nodded.
Maxine took a sip. âShe wasnât hearinâ it.â
Nobody said anything more after that.
Annie looked down at the photograph again. Fourteen. Asleep on Smoke. Everybody thinking they had time. Her chest tightened worse. Not at her mother. Her mother had done what she thought was right, but suddenlyâfor the first timeâshe saw another version.
Senior year. One more year. Graduation. Prom. Football games. One more summer. One more year with him.
Her eyes lifted before she meant them to. Smoke was already looking at her. For the first time all afternoonâhe looked surprised as well, like this changed something for him too.
Annie swallowed and set the picture down carefully.
Pearline looked up immediately. âAnnie?â
Annie forced a small smile. ââŚI need a drink.â
She started walking away before she started mourning something she never realized she almost had.
Annie started moving before she fully decided to.
Her hand left the photograph and settled automatically against the edge of the table while her mind tried to reorganize itself around information she hadnât known existed five minutes earlier.Â
Around them the cookout continued uninterrupted. Mike asked where the hamburger buns went. Children ran past with wet shirts and popsicles staining their mouths. One of the older men near the domino table laughed so loudly the sound carried over the music.Â
Normal.
The whole yard stayed normal. Which somehow made the ache sitting low in Annieâs chest feel sharper.
She smiled automatically and leaned her weight backward.
âIâm finna go getââ
Her voice stopped from surprise. Smokeâs hand had closed loosely around hers. For a second she looked at their hands before she looked at him.
He hadnât moved otherwise. He was still standing near the table. Same expression mostly. But something had changed. The usual restraint she remembered in him had slipped somewhere while everybody talked. His face looked quieter now. Less guarded. Like heâd stopped paying attention to the people around them without realizing it.
When he finally spoke, his voice stayed low enough that she almost missed it beneath the noise.
âYou asked to stay?â
She looked at him and suddenly she understood that he wasnât asking for clarification. He was asking if what they said was true.
Her chest tightened.
She looked away first trying to find the right version of the answer. She gave a small laugh that disappeared almost immediately.
âYeah.â
Her thumb stirred once beneath his hand.
âI asked.â She swallowed. âThen I asked again.â A small smile pulled briefly at her mouth. âAnd again.âÂ
Her shoulders lifted slightly. âTill she finally had to tell me stop askinâ.â
Annie said it so lightly, like something sheâd made peace with a long time ago.
But Smokeâs face changed. His eyes stayed on her longer than before and she felt his thumb move once against the side of her hand before he seemed to realize what he was doing and went still again.
When he spoke again his voice sounded differentâhonest in a way she wasnât prepared for.Â
âI thought you wanted to leave.â
Her head turned immediately in confusion. âWhat?â
His eyes dropped briefly before coming back to her. His jaw flexed once, then his shoulders moved in the smallest shrug.Â
âI thought you was ready.â
Annie stared at himâsomething uncomfortable and sad opened inside her. Not because of what he said, but because she understood. She thought he knew. Thought he understood she didnât want to go. Thought he knew she cried every night. All this time he thought she left and learned how to live without him.
Her eyebrows pulled together. Her answer came before she could edit it.Â
âI never wanted to leave.â
Smoke looked at her the way people look when they realize theyâve been carrying the wrong version of a story for years and suddenly donât know where to put it.
Neither of them moved or acknowledged they were still holding hands.
The yard kept moving around them anyway. Music changed. Coolers opening. Aunt Cheryl started yelling about sweet tea.
But something had changed. Not outside.
Between them.
Annie looked at him and realized she had been carrying guilt she never examined. Smoke looked at her and realized heâd been carrying rejection that wasnât real. For one impossible second she wondered how many years they had both spent grieving two completely different versions of the same goodbye.
Then a voice came from in front of them.
Familiar.
Close enough that it belonged there.
âHey...â
The moment broke. Smoke turned. Annie turned too.
Jada stood a few feet away with an expensive handbag in her hand and sunglasses pushed up into her curls. She looked like somebody who had arrived late to something ordinary.
Her eyes landed on Smoke first. Then lowered⌠stopped.
Annie followed her gaze.
Their hands.
Jada looked up again. This time at Annie.
Annie turned back toward Smoke automatically and for the first time all day she couldnât read his face. He didnât pull away and he didnât tighten his grip either. If anything, he seemed to become aware of the moment at the exact same time she did.Â
His eyes moved to Jada and stayed there for a second before coming back to Annie. She watched something pass across his faceâsurprise first, then something she couldnât organize quickly enough to understand. His hand remained around hers for another second before his fingers eased away gradually, not dropping her hand, but releasing it carefully, almost reluctantly, like he had become aware of the touch at the same moment she had.
Annie looked down briefly before lifting her eyes again. The feeling that hit her wasnât embarrassment or even disappointment. It felt stranger than that. For one impossible second she had forgotten there was a world outside of this conversation, and now it had returned all at once with names, history and context attached to it.
But underneath all of that sat another realization arriving slower than the others.
Jada didnât look confused. She looked surprised to see Annie. Not surprised to see Smoke.
And suddenly Annie became aware of something. The ease in the way Jada approached them. The familiarity in her voice when she said his name. The way she stepped into his space without hesitation, like she already knew she had the right to be there.
Like she belonged there.
Nobody spoke. Then somewhere behind them at exactly the same timeâ
Stack said quietlyâ
ââŚoh shit.â
Pearline whisperedâ
ââŚfuck.â
End Note: Soooo....yeah. This chapter did NOT go as I planned. This was supposed to be the blow out, but I swear these characters have a mind of their own. They take me where THEY want to go. But I hope you liked this chapter and next chapter (I promise) is where it all goes down!
Wunmi Mosaku featured on ELLE Vanguard: A Power List Celebrating 50 Trailblazing Women In Film And Television
Becoming the first Black British performer to win the BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress, Wunmi Mosaku is the undisputed queen of dramatic gravitas. In 2026, she commands the global cultural vanguard following a historic awards season for her breathtaking turn as the Hoodoo priestess Annie in Ryan Coogler's horror-masterpiece Sinners.
'One of the best of our generation, who deserves recognition at all times for her ability to tap into the most vulnerable of cores in each of her portrayals' - Lashana Lynch
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