melancholy. She closes her eyes as the warm formula touches her skin. Miss Ruby works her way to Thandiâs chest. The circular motion of a strangerâs hands on her breasts makes Thandi blush. She has never been touched this way. She opens her eyes and searches for somethingâanythingâthat can take her mind off the sensation of this strange womanâs fingers. She imagines herself as a fish Miss Ruby rubs down with salt and vinegar before frying. Her eyes find the ceiling. Had she been able to lift her arm, she would trace the things she sees projected from her mind.
âLuckily yuh âave good hair already,â Miss Ruby says. âGood, coolie hair. Yuh daddy is a Indian?â
âI donât know,â Thandi says, still staring up at the planks in the ceiling. âNever met him.â
â Tsk, tsk . Well, God played a cruel joke on you. Because, chile, if yuh skin was as pretty as yuh hair, youâd be one gorgeous woman.â
Miss Ruby isnât saying anything Thandi hasnât heard before. Her mother says the same thing, often shaking her head the way she does over burned food that has to go to waste. â Itâs a pity yuh neva have skin like yuh daddy. âThandi is neither the nutmeg-brown that makes Margot an honorable mistressâa rung lower than a bright-skinned wifeânor is she black like Delores, whose skin makes people sympathetic when they see her. â Who want to be black like dat in dis place? âMiss Ruby once said to Thandi about her mother.
Miss Ruby gives Thandi the homemade mixture in the jar for her to apply as needed. âOnly as needed,â she stresses. âThese are very strong chemicals that could kill yuh.â She then reaches for the Saran Wrap and begins to wrap Thandiâs arms and torso. A mummified Thandi sits and listens to Miss Rubyâs instructions:
âIf yuh waan come quicker, leave on the plastic. Donât wash. Donât go in the sun. If yuh haffi go in the sun fah whateva reason, mek sure seh yuh covah up at all times from head to toe. If yuh start to feel like yuh gâwan faint, jusâ drink wata. It mek yuh sweat more. Whatevah yuh do, nuh tek off the plastic. Anâ remembah, stay outta that sun!â
Miss Ruby repeats these words like an ominous warning, her eyes pouring into Thandiâs. Thandi listens and nods, though she wants to rip the Saran Wrap off and jump in the river. She imagines her skin boiling, becoming molten liquid underneath the plastic wrap.
âDo I have to wear this all the time?â Thandi asks.
âHeat anâ sweat is yuh advantage. Jusâ bear it,âMiss Ruby says, stamping her with a look.
Thandi regrets saying anything, sensing her complaint might be interpreted as her wanting less out of life. Less opportunity. Less chance of attracting the type of boys her mother and sister want her to attract (the type who will be at the party for sure). Less chance of acceptance in school. Less chance to flunk schoolâthe only ship on which black girls like her could float, given that their looks will never do it for them.Her mother tells her this too. â Di only thing yuh have going for you is yuh education. Donât ruin it. âMeanwhile, the unintelligent âbrowninsâin school end up with modeling contracts, or with boyfriends with money they can spend on them.The less attractive ones get good jobs in their family businesses. What else does she have to fall back on if she fails the exam, besides her drawings?But no one wants those. No one respects an artist.So when Thandi puts her clothes on, she pretends to ignore the crinkling of the plastic under her uniform and the nausea that comes over her.
Miss Ruby examines her skin, her eyes like a sharp razor raking over Thandiâs body as though looking for areas she might have missedâdark patches that need to be rubbed, scrubbed down with the rigor of someone scouring the