From the banks of Texas's Buffalo Bayou to the blue waters of Hawaii, this powerful novel from acclaimed author Anita Bunkley tells the story of one resilient woman's fight to save a family legacy--and create a future for herself and her daughter. . . When tropical storm Allison hits Houston's historic black community, it nearly wipes out Camille and Max Granville's hard-earned home and restaurant, Vendora. But it is just a foreshadowing of the disasters to come. Without flood insurance, the Granvilles' bills pile up, while their savings dwindle. Desperate to save Vendora and pay their daughter Jaiden's college tuition, Max takes a risk that involves turning over control of Vendora to a slick Los Angeles businessman with a shady past. Miraculously, the move pays off. Once again, the Granvilles' future looks bright--until a celebratory cruise turns tragic. When a fire on board separates the couple and takes Max's life, it rests with a grieving Camille to regain Vendora--and deal with a rebellious daughter who blames her for her father's death. Yet just when all seems lost, astonishing information about Max's last act surfaces from the depths of the catastrophe. The details of what happened in Max's final moments could change everything for Camille, for Jaiden, and for Vendora--if Camille can find out exactly what happened and how. But Camille's good fortune may mean someone else's ruin. Someone desperate enough to do anything to stop her from getting to the truth. . . Praise for Anita Bunkley and Mirrored Life "A breakout. . .Anita Bunkley's believable characters and absorbing story will take you through a journey of mistakes and second chances you won't be able to put down." --Tananarive Due "So well crafted are Bunkley's characters. . .that their appeal is universal." -- Booklist "Entertaining, fulfilling and a joy to read." –Connie Briscoe Anita R. Bunkley has spent more than a decade writing fiction and nonfiction, while lecturing on topics related to career advancement, personal promotion, attitude adjustment, and making dreams come true. She is the author of eight novels, two novellas, two nonfiction books, and a short story written exclusively for the Internet. She is also an NAACP Image Award (2000) nominee for her contribution to the anthology, Girlfriends.
Release date:
March 1, 2011
Publisher:
Dafina
Print pages:
336
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Pewter gray clouds clutched the Houston skyline, blocking the sun completely. Dark and mean, they stretched from the rooftop of the Enron building to the Fox Television satellite tower far beyond the Galleria. At street level, swirling pools of dark water swamped underpasses and low-lying neighborhoods, forcing morning commuters to abandon their cars and climb onto the hoods of their vehicles to wait for the water to recede. After three soggy days of nonstop rain, the storm showed no signs of easing.
Camille Granville studied the grim tableau from the rain-splattered, third floor window of Vendora, the mansion-turned-supper club that she and her husband, Max, were trying to protect. Three inches of rain an hour, she recalled the weather report, drumming her fingers on the windowsill, distressed to see that the sandbags stacked along the southern edge of the property had already been breached. Muddy brown water spewed over the makeshift barrier and slapped hard at the double French doors at the rear of the house. She thought about the ancient hardwood floors downstairs, the heirloom tapestry wall coverings, and the wood carvings done by Max’s great-grandfather that embellished the solid oak windowsills and doorframes: Overcome by a sense of helplessness, all would be ruined, she realized.
During her forty-two years of living in both Florida and Texas, Camille had experienced hurricanes, floods, and tropical storms before, but none as emotionally devastating as this. While growing up in Bayport, a tiny town on the western coast of the Florida peninsula, she and her sister, Rochelle, had loved to sit at the end of the rickety old pier that connected the Gulf to the front of their house and wait for the approaching storm, unafraid of the fury it was determined to unleash. The furious winds would buffet their faces, whip their clothing tight against their small bodies, and threaten to lift them high into the sky. Remaining on the pier until the first huge drops of rain began to fall had been a wondrous challenge, filled with risk and liberation—a game of waiting that never failed to entertain Camille when dark clouds gathered over the water.
But now, she prayed for the rain to stop and for the water to drain away, as the heavy downpour pounded the aging urban neighborhood without mercy, peeling shingles off the roofs and slashing limbs from the sturdy pin oaks that had lined the streets for decades.
Narrowing her dark gray eyes at the curtain of water, Camille caught her reflection in the wet pane of glass, and was not happy at what she saw. Mud was streaked across her buff-colored cheeks, her eyelids were puffy from lack of sleep, and her jet-black hair, usually a mass of shiny ringlets, hung in an unruly, ragged ponytail. Quickly, Camille removed the blue scarf that was holding her hair off her neck and shook out her black curls, then used the scrap of fabric to wipe at the grit and perspiration on her face.
Turning from the window, she hurried down the narrow attic stairs and into the wide upstairs hallway, feeling the strain of the last twelve hours in her legs, her arms, and her back. It had been a long, grueling night, and she was beyond tired. Working frantically, she and Max had stripped the lower rooms of everything they could carry upstairs: rugs, chairs, books, perishable supplies, and the numerous gilt-framed paintings of Max’s ancestors that had been prominently displayed on the dining room walls. With great difficulty, they had managed to raise the heavy rosewood tables and sideboards onto cement blocks, but not the baby grand piano, which would be sacrificed to the flood if water continued to rise inside the house.
Though it was eight o’clock in the morning, the house was dark. Moving along the hallway, Camille raced past the bedroom where she and Max had spent last night, and glanced fleetingly at the boxes of food, water, and candles she had shoved into the room. They would most likely have to spend a second night at the supper club. And with no electricity since late yesterday afternoon, Camille had prepared as best she could for the long vigil that lay ahead.
At the top of the grand staircase, Camille leaned over the banister and scanned the muggy rooms below, sighing with relief to see Max come out of the library holding a rare African teak statue and a stack of leather bound books. Water that had been seeping under the front door all night now covered the tops of his boots.
“The sandbags have been breached,” she called down to him. “A wave of water is at the back door right now.”
“I know. I know,” he shouted back, racing up the stairs to dump the statue and the books onto the floor. “We don’t have much time. I’m grabbing whatever is easy to carry. The books on the lower shelves and the rugs in the library are gone.”
“I’m coming down,” Camille decided, falling in behind Max as he turned to head back down the stairs.
“Wait!” he ordered brusquely, reaching out to stop Camille.
She stepped from behind Max and looked down—a long, black snake cut through the muddy water at the foot of the stairs and slithered into the shadows.
“Shit! A snake!” she muttered, watching the reptile disappear, then gripping Max’s arm. “Don’t go back down there!”
“I have to,” he threw back. “Don’t worry. That snake is not interested in me. He’s looking for higher ground just like everyone else. But you stay put. That back door is gonna cave in any minute.”
“Oh, please, be careful,” Camille warned, her words spilling out as the sound of breaking glass suddenly echoed through the house.
Immediately, Max took the steps two at a time, plunged back into the floodwaters and sloshed his way toward the source of the noise, dodging broken glass, tree limbs, and garbage that had burst into the room along with a great deal of the bayou. Holding onto abandoned pieces of furniture, he inched his way into the dark recesses of the house.
Camille hugged her arms around her waist and waited, terrified for Max. What other creatures had floated in from the bayou? What additional dangers lurked downstairs? Clasping her hands, she waited for Max to return, wishing she were safe at home, in her clean dry house in the suburbs.
“Both patio doors are shattered and we’re taking in water like crazy,” Max finally shouted up to her. “Damn. It’s a real mess down here. Rats, dead birds, and even a few bullfrogs are swirling around with an awful lot of garbage.”
“What? Rats? Dead birds? Max, get back up here, now!” Camille ordered. “You’re going to get an infection … a disease. You can’t …”
“Hold on. Hold on,” he interrupted in a calmer, more controlled tone. “I’ve got to try to block this hole and slow the water.”
“How? What do you think you can do to stop it?” Camille called back, irritated by her husband’s stubborn insistence on trying to fix an unfixable mess.
“Don’t know. But I gotta try something.” Max tossed back, his voice barely audible now.
Shaking her head, Camille picked up the African statue and the books that Max had dropped and placed them on a credenza, then she sat down on the top step and listened to the sound of rain pummeling the rooftop and Max sloshing around downstairs.
She breathed in the musty humid air, certain she could taste the smelly debris that filled the rooms below. Using her blue scarf, she wiped perspiration from her brow while wondering what Max could possibly do to fix the shattered doors. Ten minutes passed before he emerged once more, looking soggy and extremely irritated. Now, the water was thigh-high, and rising.
“No luck,” he reported to Camille, mounting the steps as he spoke. “I tried to cover the doors with some heavy sheets of plastic, but it didn’t work. Nothing is going to stop the water now. We’ll have to wait this out and hope the rain stops soon.”
“I think we should try to leave,” Camille decided, more anxious to get out than she had been last night. With the bayou pouring in, and no way to stop it, who knew what problems they might have to face? She studied Max, whose muscled arms were shiny with floodwater and splattered with mud. He was soaking wet from his leather cowboy boots to his blue, short-sleeved knit shirt, and his tattered baseball cap was plastered to his head.
“No, I think we’re better off staying put,” Max replied, removing his red cap to wring it out. “Might get trapped in high water outside. Besides, I don’t want to leave the place vulnerable to looters … that could be a problem, you know?”
Though not what Camille wanted to think about, she understood his concern. The neighborhood where Vendora was located had once been a place where wealthy Houstonians lived, but urban flight and city sprawl had forced the area into a downward spiral many years ago. Now, it was not the safest of neighborhoods on a clear, sunny day, and occasional vagrants did roam the streets.
“All right, we’ll stay,” Camille agreed. “We have drinking water, canned food, and candles. I guess we can stick it out one more night.” She paused, and then added, “I’d better call Jaiden. Tell her what’s going on and see what’s happening at home.”
“I’m sure she’s fine,” Max replied, swinging his head from side to side to work out the tight muscles in his neck. “Kingwood never floods, and it’s not raining hard in the suburbs.”
“But that could change.”
“Maybe, but Jaiden will be fine. She’s nineteen years old …”
“Eighteen,” Camille corrected, concerned about her daughter, whom she had left alone last night. “Not nineteen ‘til August.”
“Well, she’s old enough to manage on her own,” Max stated, running a hand over his damp shirt.
“Sometimes I wonder,” Camille mumbled, placing two fingers to her lips in a moment of thought before adding, with a slight edge of resignation, “She thinks she’s an adult. Did you know she’s smoking again?”
“Really? But not in her room?” Max replied, clearly unhappy with the news.
“No, I think she got our message about that. But her car smells awful. I had to move it out of the driveway yesterday, and not only did I find cigarette butts in the ashtray, but another speeding ticket stuck under the visor. Her third this year. Texas State is going to cancel our auto insurance if she keeps this up. I don’t know what she’s thinking.”
“That she’s grown.”
“Then she can pay for her ticket, this time.”
“How much is it?”
“Doesn’t matter. Max, don’t you dare give her a cent toward it. She needs to realize that there are consequences to her actions. You can’t keep bailing her out of her messes. She’s got money put away that she can use.”
“Okay, I’ll stay out of it. Anyway, she’s leaving for college in a few weeks, and won’t have a car on campus, so let’s not worry about our insurance right now. But I will talk to her.”
“Thank you,” Camille said. “She rarely listens to me anymore.”
“Well … Go ahead and give her a call,” Max went on. “Let her know we have to stay put, that we’re fine and we’ll get home as soon as we can.”
Max’s calm, decisive tone settled the question of what to do next, but left Camille thinking about her only daughter, Jaiden, whose irresponsible behavior had become more than irritating.
Jaiden had given her and Max little trouble while attending Wilton, the exclusive all-girls’ school she had graduated from in June. She had been a good student, popular, and actively involved in her teenage social scene, but had never resisted any of Max or Camille’s rules—until she became best friends with Nici Donald during her senior year. That was when everything seemed to change for the worse—and during Jaiden’s senior year she had been nearly impossible to live with. Attitude about everything.
The sound of rushing water broke into Camille’s thoughts and she hurried midway down the stairs, Max at her side. They stopped, jaws dropped open in horror to see a surge of water sweep through the downstairs like a rapidly filling riverbed during a thunderstorm.
“Oh God, Max. It’s really coming in. Fast. Look!”
Leaning over the banister, Max assessed the situation. “We’ve removed or secured all that we can. Nothing to do now but wait it out. When the water recedes, we’ll have to get right on the cleanup and try to salvage what is left.”
Camille glanced up at Max, whose dark brown face was tight with anxiety.
“Insurance will cover this, won’t it?” she prompted, trying to find a glimmer of hope in the messy situation.
Max lifted one shoulder in a shrug, and then eased down on the step at the top of the landing, both hands on his knees. “We’ll see,” was all he said.
Camille remained silent, focusing on her husband of twenty-one years. A big-boned man of forty-six, he spent his days and most evenings at Vendora. His smooth brown face was still unlined and his hair was not yet flecked with gray. The furrows of frown lines on Max’s forehead and the grim set of his still-firm jaw told Camille how anxious he was.
With a sigh of resignation, she sat down beside Max, slipped her arm through his, and settled in to keep vigil over the lower rooms of their mansion-turned-supper club on Buffalo Bayou.
How high will the water rise? How long will we be trapped? she silently fretted, massaging her neck while turning Max’s comments over in her mind. He’s right about staying. We’ve put too much into this place to go home and simply hope for the best. We have to fight this through together. She squeezed his hand, knowing she would always stick by Max. I left him once, she reminded herself. And when I returned, I swore I would never leave him again.
One shrill giggle, followed by another, jolted Jaiden from a numbing black sleep. For a moment, she was not sure what she had heard or where she was, but soon her mind cleared and she recognized the voice as that of her best friend, Nici—whose distinctive laughter could not be mistaken.
The room seemed stifling hot, and a fuzzy whirl of disjointed thoughts slipped through Jaiden’s mind: The ferocious rainstorm. Nici’s arrival. Shot after shot of tequila. Music. Laughter. She licked her dry lips and turned onto her side, silently cursing the dull ache that was drumming at the back of her head. What a night! She needed water. Aspirin. More sleep. But getting up would take too much effort, so she squeezed her eyes tightly shut and tried to force herself back to sleep. When Nici’s laughter erupted again, Jaiden sat up and scanned her dimly lit bedroom for the source. Frowning, she flopped over onto her stomach, leaned over the edge of the bed, and studied the mound of rumpled bedspread on the floor. It was moving up and down in a telling rhythmic manner. Jaiden shook her head, remembering: Nici and DeJon. They were still here, and still very much together, it seemed.
Jaiden slid her gaze from the action on her bedroom floor to the open pizza box on her dresser, the beer cans stacked on her desk, and the ashtrays overflowing with stubbed out cigarette butts and partially smoked joints. Black ashes had spilled onto her pale beige carpet, creating a nasty stain. Nici and DeJon’s clothes were scattered from the doorway to the moving bedspread, leaving no doubt in Jaiden’s mind about what her best friends had done last night and what they were doing right now.
Impulsively, Jaiden rolled onto her back and did a quick self-check, running her hands across her round, soft breasts, her flat stomach and slim hips, relieved to find that her tee shirt and bra were still intact, as were her jeans, her panties, and even one red sandal that was dangling from her right foot by its shiny ankle strap. Sitting up, she peeked over at Kevin, who was lying face-down on the other side of her queen-size bed, hugging a pillow, snoring loudly, and still fully dressed, too.
Thank God, Jaiden sighed, unstrapping the lone red sandal, which she tossed to the floor. Nothing happened. She liked Kevin Hamilton a lot, but certainly not enough to do more than let him stick his tongue in her mouth and feel her breasts when they kissed. What a relief! She … or Kevin must have passed out before things got out of hand last night. She was not a prude, but she was a virgin—and had no intention of going all the way with Kevin, or anyone else for that matter. She was saving herself for that special man whom she hoped to meet at college. However, Nici and DeJon were different—they were engaged. DeJon had proposed to Nici the night of their senior prom and had put a half-carat round diamond ring on her finger. The two were disgustingly inseparable now.
Jaiden sucked in a long breath, anxious to clear her head, vaguely remembering that her mother had telephoned about 7:00 P.M. last night to say that she and her dad planned to stay at Vendora overnight. Her parents’ absence had created the tantalizing opportunity for Jaiden to invite Nici, DeJon, and Kevin over to play pool in her dad’s new game room. They had wound up drinking margaritas and watching DVDs on his fifty-two-inch high definition TV and smoking a few joints that DeJon had brought along. After that, Jaiden’s grasp on the evening’s events faded: her plan to kick it with her friends for a few hours had somehow turned into a full-blown celebration of Nici and DeJon’s engagement. Now, she was slightly annoyed with herself for having allowed the impromptu get-together to spin so far out of control. She had better haul ass and get the house cleaned up before her mom and dad got home.
Placing one hand on her nightstand to steady herself, she rubbed sleep from her eyes, checked the clock above her closet door, and then yelled at the mounded bedspread moving on the floor. “Get up, Nici. DeJon! Damn. It’s eight o’clock! You two have to help me get this place cleaned up.”
Slowly, Nici poked her head from beneath the bedspread, her rust-brown twists clinging to her forehead, covering her half-open eyes. She had a baby doll face with rounded cheeks, small even white teeth, huge dark eyes, and a sweet smile that made her look much more innocent than she was. “Okay. Okay. Chill, Jaiden,” Nici mumbled, brushing her feathered twists from her face. “I hear you.” Sitting up, she held the bedspread over her naked breasts and cocked her head to one side. “Damn. It’s still raining?”
“Yeah,” Jaiden confirmed, nodding.
“Well,” Nici said, drawing out the word. “No way are your parents getting home anytime soon. Not if it rained all night.” She shook her head and then lay back down, advising Jaiden to turn on the TV and check the weather. “See if I’m not right,” she added, and then giggled when DeJon reached over and grabbed her around the waist. Nici pulled the bedspread hard, exposing her bedmate’s smiling face. DeJon rose up on one elbow and squinted around. “What’s going on?” he wanted to know.
“What’s going on is the party’s over,” Jaiden told him. “Come on, DeJon. Get up. I’m in deep shit if you guys don’t help me clean up. You know my dad. He’ll be plenty pissed if he sees his media room like I know we left it.”
DeJon stared dully at Jaiden, then whispered in a hoarse voice, “Okay. Okay.” Yawning, he lifted his chin and scratched his neck, but did not budge.
Jaiden narrowed her eyes at her friends. If her mom and dad were to pull into the driveway right now, Jaiden knew she would be in for a serious lecture from her dad, the withering silent treatment from her mom, and most likely face the threat of some major deprivation—like no new laptop to take to college. And since this morning’s shopping trip with her free-spending Aunt Rochelle would probably not be happening, her mom might convince her aunt to cancel it altogether. That would never do. No, she couldn’t risk missing out on a new wardrobe to take to Brown.
Frowning, Jaiden decided to pull herself together before confronting her friends. Her head was pounding, her throat was raw, and she certainly was not capable of doing much in this condition. Water. Aspirin. A shower, she thought, pushing herself up off the bed, heading into the bathroom on shaky legs.
The phone in her parent’s bedroom began to ring the moment she reached to turn on the shower. Sighing, she crossed the hall and checked the caller ID, then pursed her lips. Just as she had suspected. The call was coming from her mom’s cell phone. Jaiden started to pick up the receiver, then hesitated. Did she really want to talk to her mother right now? Could she manage a coherent conversation before pulling herself together? While contemplating whether or not to answer, the voice mail kicked in and took over the call. Jaiden waited a few moments, and then checked the message:
Hi, Jaiden. Still here. Your dad and I won’t be coming home today. Probably have to stay here again tonight. There’s about four feet of water downstairs right now and it’s still rising. We’re stuck upstairs. Electricity is out, but we’ve got supplies. Call me back as soon as you get up. And do not go out in this weather for any reason. Okay? If Rochelle calls, cancel your shopping trip. No need to take any chances. Bye.
Jaiden was grateful for the reprieve, but not too happy to hear that her shopping trip was off or that Vendora was under water. Her dad must be totally upset. She’d call back as soon as she pulled herself together, but for now she needed silence. She took the phone off the hook, and then made her way back into her bathroom.
After a quick shower, Jaiden pulled her thick brown shoulder-length hair back from her face and anchored it in place with a bright red plastic hair clip. After smoothing moisturizer over her honey-tan face, she slipped into a pair of sweatpants and a tee shirt. Next, she gulped two aspirin and a big glass of water, returned to her bedroom and gave Kevin a hard shake. He grumbled an unintelligible response, shrugged, and then pulled his pillow tighter to his chest.
Damn. This was not going to be easy. Jaiden fumbled among the covers, found the remote control, and then zapped her television on. The weather report was grim:
“The storm that swept into Houston three days ago has stalled over the downtown area, causing heavy flooding along Buffalo Bayou. Traffic snarls and high water in freeway underpasses have paralyzed the morning commute, and some people are stranded in their cars. Flights out of Hobby Airport have been suspended, but Bush International remains open. Late yesterday afternoon, a woman drowned in the underground parking garage of the Bank of Houston building when the elevator doors opened and floodwaters rushed in. Conditions in the far western and northern suburbs are not as bad.”
Jaiden watched the report with dread, aware that Vendora lay at the center of the flooding and that her parents were among those stranded. At least, she was safely out of danger in Kingwood, where the huge houses had been built high above the low-lying creeks and bayous that could spill over and cause serious flooding.
Nothing to do but wait this out, Jaiden concluded, pressing the power button to silence the television. She leaned across Kevin, who was still snoring loudly; picked up the half-smoked joint he had placed on top of an empty beer can, and lit it. She inhaled deeply, and then blew a stream of smoke toward the ceiling. Lying back, she slumped against the headboard of her bed, curled her legs beneath her hips and took another hit, May as well chill out, she decided, taking Nici’s advice as she gazed idly at the droplets of rain sluicing over the bay window that faced the wooded area behind her home. Listening to the drum of the downpour on the roof made her headache begin to ease and her anxiety over her parents’ imminent return slipped to the back of her mind. I’ve really got all day to get this place together, she concluded, plumping up her pillow.
At eight o’clock in the morning, every seat at Gate 18 was taken. passengers were sipping coffee from Styro-foam cups, munching on sugary doughnuts, and talking on cell phones—passing time until Flight #693 from Las Vegas to Los Angeles was ready to board.
Davis Kepler slouched low in his hard plastic chair with his palms on his knees, his deep brown eyes following the progress of the ground crew as it loaded bags onto the plane that was waiting at the Jetway. He blinked a few times, easing the burning sensation in his eyes and ran a hand over the prickly stubble on his golden tan chin. He was exhausted from his twenty-four-hour marathon gambling session. He had been making quick trips like this to Vegas for several months and they were definitely beginning to take a toll on his thirty-nine-year-old body.
When his cell phone rang, he calmly reached into the inside pocket of his Armani jacket and turned it off without checking the caller ID. He was not in the mood to talk to anyone, and though he felt as if he could drop off to sleep at any moment, he was also buzzed with the flush of success. The cards had been good to him this time, giving up one winning hand after another; not at all like last week when he had returned home with empty pockets and a hell of a hangover.
At seven o’clock yesterday evening, he had arrived at the same gate, gone directly to the Mirage Hotel, sat down at the blackjack table nearest to the bar, and stayed there until one hour ago, tripling the five thousand dollar stake he had converted into chips. Hopefully, this winning streak was going to hold for a while.
Now, he was ready to get on the plane, collapse into his seat, close his eyes, and totally shut down. In less than two hours he would be back in Los Angeles, in his shiny new Lexus, and on his way to Republic Bank to deposit the five thousand dollar stake that had fueled this lucky streak. Then he would go home and put his winnings into the wall safe inside his bedroom closet, where his secret stash was growing.
The gate attendant announced pre-boarding for his flight and everyone got up at once, forming a crowd at the entrance to the Jetway. As eager as any other passenger to be on his way, Davis grabbed his black Coach briefcase and stood, glancing idly at the television set suspended above the boarding area as he waited for the attendant to take his ticket. The CNN National News Update was on: A fiery car crash had shut down ten miles of freeway in Florida. The son of a local politician had been kidnapped in Detroit. A tropical storm had paralyzed a large section of Houston.
At that news, Davis shook his head, thinking: Houston. The word created an immediate flash of memories. How could he ever forget the long, hot, boring summers he had spent in the city while visiting his dad, Davis Sr., when he was a boy? His mother and father had never married, but his mother had made sure that Davis knew who his father was and had insisted he spend two months out of each year with him, too. From the age of five until Davis was a teenager, she faithfully packed five changes of clothing into a small square suitcase as soon as school let out for the summer, pinned a note of identification to Davis’s shirt and put him on a plane. The airplane ride had always been the most enjoyable part of Davis’s summer, because once he arrived in Houston, his dad would slap him on the back, tell him hello, urge him to eat anything in the refrigerator that he wanted, and then depart for work at the post office, leaving Davis to entertain himself. All day long, he would watch TV, play video games, sit on the porch and read comics or study the strangers passing by, and though he had been forbidden to leave the house, he often rode his rusty bicycle through the neighborhood while his dad was at work.
It had been a carefree time for Davis, whose father often worked a second job after leaving the post office—bartending private parties—so he rarely returned home before Davis was fast asleep. Davis Sr. died twelve years ago, and was buried in a small cemetery on the southeast side of Houston. After the funeral, Davis had never returned to the city on the bayou where his father had lived.
Now, he watched the news coverage with interest, surprised that he recognized many of the landmarks in the flooded area as definitely in the neighborhood where his father had lived. Davis sucked in a short breath when a pink brick, multi-columned house with a flat slate roof flashed onto the screen. He knew the mansion well, and had been inside it many times while his father had bartended lavish parties for the well-to-do black family that owned the property. Davis had fallen asleep on the floor of the cavernous old kitchen more than once while waiting for his dad to finish his work, and had often dreamt of living in such a beautiful place.
Film footage showed the once-elegant mansion sitting in the middle of a swirling pool of muddy water, which was lapping insistently at its windows, doors, and ornate exterior plasterwork. Davis shook his head in dismay as he listened to the reporter describe the disaster and the chaotic situation at Houston’s Hobby Airport where stranded passengers were wearily waiting out the storm.
Thank God, I’m not stuck at some airport waiting for floodwaters to go down, Davis thought. He had to get back to L.A. today.
Nothing prevented Rochelle Ivors Wyatt Lavoy from going shopping once she planned her excursion. Not a hangover, a bad hair day, an argument with an ex-husband or even a water emergency at her thirty-year-old patio home on the far west side of Houston. So, when she spotted the dark stain on her kitchen ceiling this morning, al
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