She tried to process, to find the right words to explain herself—but the conversation was already racing off without her, a runaway train she’d never been fast enough to catch.
Ranti Fadilahhas quotedlast year
No pulling the parental punches today, then.
Dayahas quotedlast year
“Do you like my hair? Roller set. Twenty-four hours and seven different YouTube tutorials! I had to sleep on the rollers. What a nightmare.
Me
Dayahas quotedlast year
Imperfection is inevitable. That’s life. But it doesn’t sound to me like you’ve failed at all, Eve. It sounds like your dream broke, and you’ve been picking up shattered pieces and blaming yourself when your hands bleed
Dayahas quotedlast year
Imperfection is inevitable. That’s life. But it doesn’t sound to me like you’ve failed at all, Eve. It sounds like your dream broke, and you’ve been picking up shattered pieces and blaming yourself when your hands bleed.
Dayahas quotedlast year
“You look per fect,” he said again, each word falling like a petal onto a tranquil lake.
Dayahas quotedlast year
“Don’t,” he said.
“Don’t what?”
“Whatever you’re thinking. Don’t. There isn’t much that takes the smile out of you like this, so whatever’s on your mind can’t be good.”
Dayahas quotedlast year
“Eve,” he said, “everything about you matters.”
Dayahas quotedlast year
“And listening to music and eating crap,” she said firmly. “Basically a teenage girl sleepover.”
“Ah.” He nodded gravely. “Because no one knows how to have fun better than a group of teenage girls.”
he gets it
Dayahas quotedlast year
So he assumed she had bad relationships. She couldn’t feign outrage, since she’d once dated a white guy who’d said Wha gwan, rastaman? to her father.