Shard of Glass | Page 2

Alaya Dawn Johnson
pronouncing the second word only
after careful deliberation. "What is it?"
"It's a present. One of your father's books. There's something inside. . . .
Why don't you look, Leah, before I lose all my nerve?"
My stomach clenched, but I flipped through the pages. Somewhere in
the center, I realized, part of the book had been hollowed out. Within a
bed of cut-off words and ragged paper edges nestled the strangest piece
of glass I had ever seen. Its beveled surface was pitch black--but unlike
any other glass I had known, it didn't reflect light at all. In fact, it
seemed to suck it in, so the page right beside the glass was so dark I
could hardly read the print. The shard was shaped like an isosceles

triangle with a chipped top--so lopsided it could only have been broken
off from a larger piece. But someone had melted copper along the
edges so they wouldn't cut. I looked at my mom, but she was staring
doggedly at the road and wouldn't meet my gaze.
I picked up the glass and held it in front of my right eye.
"Ma!" I screamed, "Look out! You're going to hit her!"
The car swerved violently and my head knocked against the side
window. Momentary pain lanced through my skull, exacerbated by
screeching tires and a chorus of car horns. We pulled out of it seconds
later. I looked frantically out the back window to see if she had
managed to avoid hitting the woman sitting in the middle of the
highway.
There was no one there.
I turned back to Mom. Her hands were trembling so badly she had
dropped her cigarette, but she didn't seem angry with me. "Don't
believe what you see through the glass," she said softly. "That's what he
always said to me. I should have told you, but I never saw anything. . . .
I didn't realize that you would."
"This is Dad's?" I asked.
"It's yours now, Leah, but . . . promise me you'll never show it to
anyone else. It's our secret, okay?"
I stared at my mother. The worn copper on the outside of the shard was
biting into my sweat-slicked palm. I didn't know what else to do but
agree.
"I promise. Ma . . . are we going on the trip now?"
She nodded.
"When are we coming back?" I was almost too afraid to ask the
question.

"I don't know. Not for a very long time."
Very carefully, I put the shard back inside the book and shut the cover.
"Where are we going?"
"I bought tickets to Rome this morning," she said, "but that was just to
lead them off. Is there anywhere in the world you want to go, Leah?"
I thought about the geography presentation I would never have the
chance to give. We were each supposed to do it on a different
country. I didn't really know much about mine--I had only picked it
because it was cute and small.
"Luxembourg," I said.
My mom just nodded. She never asked me where it was. To this day, I
still don't know if she had ever heard of it, but she nodded just the
same.
At the airport, she went into the bathroom alone. When she came out,
she was no longer an anomaly, a black movie queen in a white woman's
clothes. The woman who left that bathroom was not my mother--she
was one of the invisible thousands, a black woman in gray, serviceable
housekeeping clothes and a scuffed but sturdy pair of white tennis
shoes. She had pulled her nappy hair back in a bun, washed her makeup
off of her face. Now, her bloodshot eyes just looked like part of the
uniform.
"Your dress . . ." I said, struggling to keep myself from panicking,
breaking down. I had always known my mother used to be a
housekeeper, but I had never understood what it meant until now.
"Charles . . . gave it to you, didn't he? Where . . . ?"
My mom's eyes were hard, but I knew she wanted to cry too. "I threw it
out," she said.
And when I followed behind her, carrying along the bit of luggage she

had dared to bring, I was no longer the daughter of a woman who
looked like a dark Lena Horne, I was just a nappy-headed brat of
uncertain paternity, whose possessions had suddenly been reduced to
three sets of clothing, a book, and a shard of glass.
I was twelve years old.
We were careless in Luxembourg--too obviously secretive or
suspiciously casual. We hadn't yet learned that fundamental lesson of
disappearing: it's not enough to just vanish, even to a place thousands
of miles away; to truly disappear, you must
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