moved out and sheâd lived here for quite a while. But you get the picture.â
They did get the picture. The picture was like a dream in which someone tries to convince you that the things youâre seeing really are those things that you want to see. This is the thing called âa backyardâ that you want to have so you can give your dog the thing called âhappiness,â and the whole time in the dream you walk around saying, âbut this doesnât seem like a backyardâ and âthis doesnât seem like happiness.â
Sammy and Theo exchanged skeptical glances.
âAre you still working on the backyard, too?â Theo asked Abraham, who didnât seem to see the backyard as a garbage dump.
He didnât say anything, so Theo continued, âLike, is all this garbage still going to be here?â
âWell, I can ask my handyman to clean this up a bit.â
The way he answered made Theo feel as if she was wrong for asking. Sammyâs face reflected what Theo felt: Of course she didnât want this shit hole but they would be forced to take it because this is where people like them could afford to live. Abraham fiddled with his enormous ring of jangling keys.
âWhat do you think, girl?â Theo asked. âDo you want to take it?â
âWhatever you want,â Sammy said.
Theo thought of Yonkers and Doralina and Meganâs stolen underwear and said, âOkay, weâll take it.â
Abraham said he only needed a check for the first monthâs rent and deposit and it was a deal.
âI donât really have any money on me,â Theo said, fingering the four dollars she had left after buying the lottery tickets.
âYou can pay me back,â Sammy said, pulling out her wad of fishing boat cash. She counted out $1,400 in hundred-
dollar bills and asked Abraham for a receipt, which he wrote out bent over the hood of his car.
âYou can come back Friday when the workâs done and Iâll give you the keys then,â he said. They watched his gray sedan screech off.
âGirl?â Sammy said.
âThat fucking backyard,â Theo said.
âThere are children buried back there, for sure,â Sammy said. âBut we can fix it upâget a picnic table and some lawn chairs.â
The farther they got away from the apartment the better they felt.
âWeâll make it nice,â Sammy said. âWeâll drive over the Verazzano Bridge and go to IKEA.â
â¢
Theo was determined to pay Sammy back as soon as possible; she wasnât used to letting anyone pay her way. She couldnât believe Sammy was going to be her roommate. They only knew each other from that short time in jail, but Sammy already felt like a long-lost sibling. They were both going to start new life chaptersâSammy in massage school and Theo in real New York.
The next day Theo went to the Kwik Stop before work to get a cup of coffee.
âDid you see me on TV?â Randy asked. He was putting up Christmas decorations in the windows.
âOh,â Theo said. âI forgot to watch.â
He looked disappointed.
âThe person with the winning ticket still hasnât come forward,â Randy said.
âReally?â
Theoâs stomach dropped. She imagined the winner somewhere working as a fast-food employee, covered in fry grease, oblivious to the fact that they were a millionaire.
âMaybe they lost it,â Randy said, setting down his decorations on a milk crate.
âThatâs so depressing,â Theo said, pausing. And then, âGuess what? Iâm moving to Brooklyn.â
She tried to keep her voice from sounding too excited. During the three months sheâd been in Yonkers sheâd made a point to visit him while he was working. The backbone of their friendship was that they were both miserable in Yonkers.
âReally?â
His eyes looked disappointed. For a split second, Theo thought
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