Her face was tight, unwelcoming.
“Yes, I have things to do. Thanks for the tea.”
“Thank you for the cream puffs,” Kiana replied politely.
Ms. Sterling nodded, adjusted her jacket, and headed for the door.
Right at the exit, she turned around.
“Kiki, think about what I said. Family is important. We have to help each other.”
Kiana looked her straight in the eye.
“Of course. I’ll be sure to think about it.”
The door closed.
Darius went back to the living room, turned on the TV, and sat on the couch.
Kiana followed him, picked up the dirty mugs from the coffee table, and carried them to the sink.
“Listen,” Darius started without turning his head, “Mom is really in a difficult spot. Maybe we should help her out after all. Just a little, like five thousand.”
Kiana washed the mug and placed it on the drying rack.
“Why does she need five thousand?”
He shrugged.
“To live on. To have some peace of mind.”
“Darius, your mother has Social Security and she has her condo. If she truly needs money, she can sell her condo like she said herself, or find a part‑time job.”
“At her age?”
Kiana turned around, wiping her hands on a towel.
“She’s sixty‑two. Plenty of women her age are working.”
Darius frowned.
“You’ve gotten so cold.”
“Not cold. Realistic.”
He didn’t answer.
They spent the rest of the evening in strained silence.
Kiana read a book.
Darius watched some reality show on TV, laughing a little too loudly at nothing.
Before bed, he went into the bathroom, splashed around for a while, then came out, lay down, and buried his face in his phone.
Kiana closed her book and lay down next to him.
The darkness was thick.
The wind rustled outside the window.
She heard Darius fidgeting under the blanket, typing something on his phone.
He was probably texting his mother, planning.
Kiana turned onto her side, facing the wall.
Inside, she was surprisingly calm, almost indifferent.
Five years of marriage, it turned out, could be wiped out by one conversation in the kitchen, one decision to steal a wife’s money, and a conspiracy with his mother.
She remembered how they met.
A typical story: mutual friends, a party, talking until morning.
Darius seemed interesting then, vibrant.
He joked, told stories, and knew how to listen.
Then came the flowers, the walks, the first kiss in the rain on a downtown corner.
Romance.
The wedding was modest.