house every night; a coaching job he quit afterdiscovering todayâs kids had no motivation; and a maddening month trying to become a financial advisor. In the end nothing made him happy, and in all cases his income was lower than Serenaâs, a humiliation his pride could only abide from overseas.
Jade interrupted Serenaâs litany of Jamieâs professional failures, abruptly getting her on track. â Why do you need him home full-time again? Youâve managed pretty well all these years.â
âWell, when your home turns into a war zone, you need a general to help restore order.â
âA war zone? Come on, Dawn canât possibly be that bad.â
Jadeâs immediate assumption that Dawn, Serenaâs fourteen-year-old, was the problem hurt only because Jade was exactly right. After Dawnâs freshman year at a magnet school, Serena had pulled the child out, if only out of respect for the other kids on the schoolâs waiting list. Dawn, for her part, had been too busy skipping class or falling asleep in it to appreciate her teachersâ efforts. âSheâs getting worse,â Serena said, tracing an absentminded pattern into the marble counter. âShe treats Sydney like they arenât even sisters.â
âWhat did she do now?â
Tears welling up in her eyes, Serena recounted the mean-spirited prank Dawn pulled recently on ten-year-old Sydney. Not only had she sneaked into her little sisterâs bedroom when the child was changing clothes, sheâd snapped embarrassing photos of her sisterâs naked behind and passed them around to kids in the neighborhood, several of whom attended Sydneyâs school. As a parent and as treasurer of Cincinnati Public Schools, Serena had been horrified by her own childâs actions.
âShe tried to say it was payback for Sydney telling on her for talking on the phone to certain boys whose calls Iâd forbidden,â Serena told Jade, shaking her head. âBut thereâs more to it. I swear, itâs like Dawn wants everyone else to be as miserable as she is.â
Jade peered at her friend sympathetically. âDoes any of this have to do with Brady?â BradyâSerenaâs high school sweetheart, first lover, and Dawnâs fatherâhad been a ruggedly handsome son of army officers whoâd enrolled in the corps straight out of highschool. In the two years that passed between Dawnâs birth and Bradyâs death by friendly fire in the first Gulf War, heâd been a devoted father and a faithful provider of child support. He was a good man, but at seventeen Serena hadnât been ready to be his wife, or anyone elseâs, for that matter.
âI know sheâs struggling with Bradyâs memory,â Serena replied. As she came of age in a time rocked by the current Iraq War, Dawn was constantly reminded of the âprequelâ war that took her fatherâs life. âI canât imagine what itâs like for her, but thatâs still no excuse for her to neglect school or treat her sister like an enemy.â
Jade leaned forward, her hands gripping the countertop. âIâm not trying to excuse Dawn, Serena, but you know societyâs also to blame for her behavior. Sheâs trying to cut Sydney down to size.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âSerena, letâs not play blind.â Jade was standing now, his intense gaze softened around the edges, a compensation for the frankness in her tone. âBoth your girls are beautiful, Serena, but if Dawn looks like a young Angela Bassett, Sydneyâs a miniature Halle Berry.â
Jadeâs polarizing imagery sent a bristling wave up Serenaâs back. âAnd?â She absolutely hated when people tried to divide black folk by focusing on complexion or hair texture. For years, Serena had experimented with ways to camouflage her own Halle-type looks to avoid being painted into the