Prologue
Put the Jimmy Choo on the Other Foot
I know what you’re thinking: How does a fine, successful, educated sister find herself mixed up in a situation where she actually
believes she has to try to take her ex-boyfriend back from another
woman? Shoot, I’d be thinking the same thing if the Jimmy Choo
was on the other foot, so I can’t even blame you for initially judging me. I mean, if I would’ve heard any other sister even whisper
the words “Take her man,” I would’ve immediately asked her
what kind of ghetto situation she was involved in. What happened
to black sisterhood? We’ve come too far to be scratching each
other’s eyes out like there’s only one brother left on the plantation.
Trust me, there are plenty of fine fish in the sea—especially in the
sea known as New York City. In this city I call home, brothers
come in all shapes and sizes, colors and hues. They have multiple
degrees and talents that range from the boardroom to the bedroom
to the kitchen. So why would any sane sister be stuck on one?
Like most sisters caught up in this kind of love triangle, I didn’t
see it that way at the time. It didn’t just come to me all at once. It
was slow . . . gradual... like the damn fat that starts to grow on
top of your perfect abs after you turn twenty. You sisters who
broke down and bought the Ab Lounge know what I mean. Yep,
in the beginning, everything was going fine between me and Dr.
Julian James. I had “a man and a plan” and I was about to get my
“ring by spring.” Everything was perfect. Nothing could hold me
back.
But then something went stupid somewhere along the way and I
watched as my perfect world began to fall apart one tiny piece at a
time. I’m still not sure exactly when it all began, but if I really focus,
I’m pretty sure it was somewhere around the time I heard my future
groom utter four very ugly words we all hate to hear: “I need a break.”
Is it starting to sound familiar yet? I know I’m not the only sister
in the world whose heard that bull crap before. Well, it should’ve
been the end for me. But, again, like most sisters with even the tiniest bit of pride and ego—the other eight million Queens of Sheba, I
took those words as an inevitable bump on the road to marriage, a
temporary predicament, a moment of confusion, a blip. He’d wake
up. His ass had better wake up. And why wouldn’t he? Like I said in
the beginning: I’m a fine, successful, educated sister. A blind man
wearing black shades in a dark room could see that. I didn’t believe
that I had to “try” to take my man back from anyone. . . . He was
mine in the first place. It was quite simply a matter of reclamation.
An ego challenge. Like my best friend said, “It might take three days,
it might take three weeks or three months.” Either way, I would get
my man back.
So, there it is, and thus, here’s my little story—blow by devilish
blow. Read, weep, and rejoice, and never forget what you would do
if the old Jimmy Choo just happened to be on the other foot. And in
case you find yourself in the very same predicament and lack the
knowledge of the Queen of Sheba, I’ve provided little instructions
along the way. Warning: Things are about to get hot. This is definitely not for the faint of ego.*
*ego\‘ ¯e-(“)g ¯o also ‘e\n 1: the self especially as contrasted with another self or
the world. (Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary)
2: me against her. (The Ego Challenge)
I’m Not Crying . . . It’s the Wasabi in My Eyes
As I said, it all started with...
“Troy, I need a break.” That’s what the love of my life said to
me that sad March afternoon as we sipped sake over sushi in
midtown Manhattan. For a minute, for one moment in my life as
those dreadful words fell from my beloved’s lips, I forgot everything—who I was, where I was, and how I’d gotten there in the
first place. All I could see was his lips moving and the sad frown
he was obviously struggling hard to keep on his face. It was like
I was watching one of those sad breakup movies where some
gorgeous guy breaks the girl’s heart in slow motion . . . over and
over and over again.
“A break?” I managed, fighting my way back to reality.
“What do you mean, a break?”
“I think we need to not speak to each other for a while.” He
took a sip of his sake. I could hear him gulp it down in a struggle.
“Not speak?” What the hell was he talking about? How can
you be in a relationship and not speak to the person you’re in a relationship with? And did I say that out loud?
“That’s what I mean, Troy,” Julian said, confirming my Freudian
slip. “We’re not in a relationship. We never were. I told you I didn’t
want that when we first met. Not right now.”
The room went spinning. Raw fish was flying everywhere, waiters and customers were holding on to tables for dear life, and the
sake in the glass in front of me was spilling over into my lap. I
imagined that the world all around me was falling apart; the one
I’d tried so hard to create was slipping away from me like the
tears slipping down my cheeks.
“Oh, this is a fine time to bring that up. That was over a year
ago that you said that crap. You didn’t mention anything about
not wanting to be in a relationship when you introduced me to
your parents as your girlfriend. Hell, I don’t remember you saying
any of that when I was taking care of your ass last month when
you had the flu or when I picked up your damn laundry last week
or the week before that.” I was getting mad. I knew it because I
could hear my voice getting louder, feel my cheeks getting hotter,
and see the other people sprinkled around the restaurant beginning to turn around to sneak a peek at us. Normally this kind of
display wouldn’t be accepted in the circles Julian and I traveled in,
but I couldn’t help myself. I wasn’t about to just let my dream
man get up and walk away from me. Not over sushi!
“And what about Pookie?” I asked, bringing up the cotton ball
colored Chihuahua we’d picked up one day strolling in the Village.
“The dog is yours, Troy. You bought it. I was just there,” he
said. “Stop making this hard. Neither one of us wants to be embarrassed.”
I pushed back from the table and exhaled. I was losing control.
I tried to remember a passage, a line, a chapter title, anything
from one of those Iyanala Vazant “self-help for sister girls” books
to help me from making a complete ass of myself at my favorite
sushi bar, but it was too late. Tears were chasing each other like
track stars down my cheeks and so many people were looking at
us that Julian was covering his forehead to hide his identity. I
wanted to disappear my damn self.
“Stop crying,” Julian said. “This is not about you. I just can’t
do you, and the hospital, and myself right now. Why can’t you see
that?” He reached over and snatched the last piece of dragon roll
off of my plate. Eating at a time like this? Just then I realized that
there was some kind of invisible wall between us. A wall between
me and the man who had filled my apartment with nine bouquets
of magnolias on my last birthday—one for each month we’d
known each other. And I didn’t know where the wall had come
from or who’d put it up. I could only be sad that it was so obviously there.
I wanted to pick up a big chunk of wasabi and rub it in his
eyes... make his ass cry, cry like I’d been doing over the last
three months each time he got frustrated with other areas of his
life and asked for more and more space to figure things out. I
wanted him to feel my pain and realize how much I loved him and
that we could work through all of this stuff together if he would
stop being so damn selfish. Sitting across from me with the wall
between us, Julian seemed like a mean, coldhearted person, but I
knew that he had the perfect heart. He treated me better than any
man I’d ever dated in the past. During the year that we’d been together, he’d taken care of me when I was sick, helped me through
my first year of law school at NYU, and remained a perpetual
shoulder for me to lean on when I needed it. He was kind, and
strong, and smart, and successful, and fine as all hell. And he listened to me. No matter how difficult I was being—and I could
definitely be difficult—he always listened to what I had to say.
Sometimes we’d sit up for hours on the roof at my apartment just
talking about nothing at all. He was my best friend, my lover, and
my confidant.
He was just going through a rough spot. It wasn’t easy being a
third-year resident at the hospital, and his family offered little
more than stress. Sometimes it seemed that since he couldn’t do
anything about either of those things, I got all of the heat. But I
was understanding, and like Julian did for me, I tried to be by his
side and simply listen. Couples had ups and downs. It was a fact
of life. They just had to see them through. As my pastor always
says, as surely as we see good days, we’ll see bad days—we just
have to be willing to work through the bad ones to see the good
ones. I mean, the only truly bad day we ever had, the only time Julian did something that would even potentially ruin our relationship, was when I caught him with that girl, Miata (yes, the trick is
named after a damn car). She was some brain from Queens with
no class and even less looks who Julian fooled around with a
month ago. Julian came clean about the whole thing—the man
shed tears—and we worked through it. Our bad day. So surely we
had some good days coming. One, big, white-laced, good day.
“But we were doing so good,” I said, sounding completely pathetic—I’d regret I said that later as I lay in bed crying to my Mary J. Blige CD. “We got over that girl you were seeing from the hospital. We can get through this, too. I know the hospital expects a
lot from you and you need to be there around the clock. We can
just see each other less.”
I was beginning to feel guilty for all the complaining I’d been
doing about not seeing him enough lately. I even felt bad for making him come meet me for sushi. He’d been awake for three days
straight. What was I thinking? He was a damn doctor. He didn’t
have time for my drama. As one of my girls who had been married
to a doctor for five years put it, if I wanted a man of that caliber, I
had to find a way to live with him and his demanding job.
I needed to calm down. I was pushing him away. Julian was a
good man and he was out working hard for a good cause. He was
worth waiting for. I just had to be patient and more creative.
There’s nothing wrong with bringing the sushi and sake to the
hospital.
I reached under the table and patted his leg to assure him that
I was ready and willing to change.
“I love you, Dr. Julian James,” I said with all of my heart inside
those words. “And I am not willing to lose you. I mean, just
think”—I cracked an uneasy, well-intentioned smile—“we just
exchanged keys to each other’s places. We’re official.” I batted my
eyes like my grandmother taught me and blew him a kiss.
Julian looked down at his lap and slid a little silver key onto the
table. It was apparent that it had already been taken off of his key
ring. Had he planned all of this?
“What about my keys to your place?” I asked, realizing that I’d
put my foot in my mouth as soon as the last word came out.
“Hand them over.” He didn’t even pause. His voice was so
cold and distant that I felt as if I didn’t even know him anymore,
like he was someone else, a ghost of himself who had caught ebola
or the bird flu during his last stint in the emergency room. The
wall between us was growing.
“What do you mean, hand them over?” I was in complete disbelief. I sat back in my seat and looked around the restaurant.
Everyone seemed to be having such a great time. There was the
couple in the corner cooing at each other, and the sister with long
blond dreadlocks feeding her baby sticky rice. Everyone, even the
damn waitress who couldn’t speak a word of English, seemed
happy, except for me . . . and I was sitting across from the man I
loved.
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