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âChristy?â Darnell asked.
âWhy not? Sheâs thin and an athlete.â
âPlus sheâs a girl, so she probably knows how to cook,â Darnell gave voice to what Iâd also been thinking but hadnât wanted to say.
I tried her cell phone. Christy laughed when I told her why weâd called. âHappy to help. You guys have both been there for me. Iâm just leaving swim practice now. Iâll come meet you.â
When she arrived, Christy took one look at our cart and balked. âYouâre not expecting to lose weight on this stuff, are you?â
Darnell explained about his mom and her shopping list. âWe really donât know what to buy for dinner.â
âOr how to cook it,â I added.
âI want to get something low calorie,â Darnell said, âbut my uncle says that carbs are bad for losing weight, and we think too much meat sounds unhealthy. So we just froze.â
Christy squeezed in her cheeks to keep herself from breaking into giggles. âIf you want to go with one of those fad diets, youâre on your own. All I can tell you is that my family eats tons of carbs. My mom cooks just like her mom and her mom before that. And weâre definitely not fat.â
âWhereâs your mom from, anyway?â Darnell asked. âMexico?â
Christy rolled her eyes. âNot everyone who speaks Spanish is from Mexico, you gringo!â
âIâm not a gringo. Iâm black, in case you hadnât noticed.â
âYou donât have to be white to be a gringo, Darnell. Youâre just a black gringo.â
âSo where are you from?â Darnell asked,
âColombia. We moved here when I was three.â
âAnd what do you eat?â
âFood, Black Gringo. Real food. Rice and beans and potatoes and corn. We love avocado, mango, salads, and berries.â
Christy grabbed an empty shopping cart and led us around the supermarket. We practically had to run to keep up as she piled in black beans, rice, yucca (whatever that was), and dozens of other vegetables.
âKelvin, grab a plantain.â She pointed down a vegetable aisle.
The plantains looked like giant bananas and came in two equally unappetizing varieties, green and hard, or a soft yellowish-brown with black splotches.
I must have stood debating which ones to get for some time, since Christy came up behind me and chose a green one.
âGood choice,â I said. âIâll take unripe over rotten any day.â
âWhite Gringo, this is how theyâre supposed to look. The brown ones are sweet, the green ones savory. And before you make another gringo remark, you eat them cooked, not raw.â
She stormed off, but I caught her grinning to herself. Far from being upset, she was thoroughly enjoying bossing us around.
By the time we checked out, we had two full shopping carts worth of food, and the price at the register was astronomical. Yet, the items Christy picked out came in at a tiny fraction of the cost of what we bought for Darnellâs mom.
When we reached Darnellâs, Christy had us put all the groceries away and clear the countertops before we began. âI canât work in chaos,â she said. Cooking brought out her Latin side. She pulled up a Carlos Vives album on her phone and swayed her hips in rhythm as she set the rice to cook, adding some spice that turned it orange. It took all Darnellâs focus to stick to his assigned tasks rather than watch Christy at work.
Darnell chopped onions, which got him all teary-eyed, and I peeled and cut the plantain into chunks, but neither of us performed to Christyâs standards. âDidnât anyone ever teach you Gringos how to use a knife?â She didnât wait for an answer. âFirst off, get rid of these puny little things. Havenât you got a chefâs knife?â
âWhatâs a chefâs knife?â Darnell asked.
Christy groaned. âJust get me the biggest knife you have.â
Darnell pulled out a monstrous knife that looked brand new. Christy took one look at it and said, âoh good, you do have a chefâs knife. Now pay attention.â She took Darnellâs cutting board and put the tip of the knife near one edge, leaving the back near the pile of onions. âNow, see where the knife is curved? Thatâs the pivot. Place your left hand there, and rock the knife back and forth.â Her right hand rose and fell like lightning, leaving the onion diced into a hundred tiny pieces. She lifted the cutting board over a pot and, with a flick of her wrist, pushed the onions in with the back of the knife. Christy handed me the knife, âNow you try it with the plantains.â
I tried to duplicate her motions with little success, though, awkward as I was, I still cut up the plantain far faster than I had with my âpunyâ knife. When I finished, she pushed the chunks into the pot with the black beans (we used canned, even though Christy said you should always buy dried beans and soak them overnight. She acted like a cappuccino lover forced to drink instant coffee). She sprinkled spices into the pot and brought it to a boil.
Darnell looked around at all we were preparing. âWait, donât we need a protein?â
Christy smacked him on the forehead. âBeans and rice have tons of protein. You donât know anything about food, do you?â
Darnellâs shoulders rose to his ears.
âItâs time you got yourself an education, Darnell.â She used his real name rather than calling him Black GringoâChristy was no longer joking around. She looked him square in the eyes. âHow else are you going to lose weight while staying healthy?â
âYouâre right.â Darnell nodded. âSmarter, not harder.â
âSmarter, not harder.â
âI guess getting an education should be the first step on my card. Iâm just not sure where to start.â
âIâm going to call my mom and tell her Iâm staying for dinner,â I said. âIt smells like Colombian food might not taste so bad after all. Then what do you say we all sit down and brainstorm ways you can learn what you need to know?â
âSounds good,â Darnell said.
âChristy?â
âIâm in, Gringos.â
* * *
The Sunday after Christmas started out clear, then snow started falling in late afternoon and didnât stop.
By the time I woke on Monday, December 28, we had eighteen inches of new snow, and guess who was assigned to go clear the driveway so Dad could get out?
I bundled up against the cold, which kept me snug for the first few minutes on the snow blower, but soon enough I was wiping sweat off my forehead.
After about twenty minutes, Iâd made minimal progress on the driveway and had already pulled off my jacket to keep from overheating. I turned off the plow for a quick breakâthe noise of that thing is enough to set you on edgeâand I heard a honk. A truck pushed through the slushy streets, flashing its lights.
Jarod pulled up in his pickup, now outfitted with the snowplow on front. âGet out of the way,â he told me.
I hauled the snow blower back to the safety of the garage. Jarod lowered his plow and drove right up the driveway, pushing a mountain of snow off to the side. It took him three passesâand no more than five minutesâto clear the entire driveway.
âThanks,â I said.
âHey, I owe you.â Jarod shook my hand. âYou wonât believe whatâs going on.â
Before he could tell me, my neighbor from across the street opened her front door and came out with a jacket pulled on over her robe. She waved, and I waved back, a little confused, until I realized she wasnât waving at me; she was frantically trying to get Jarodâs attention. He signaled to her that he would be over in a minute, then said, âThereâs another one. Itâs been like this all morning.â
âHow many have you done?â
âIâve lost count. Hey, why donât you grab your jacket and come with me? I could use the help. Iâll give you $20 an hour.â
âI canât drive your truck.â
âYou wonât need to. Iâll do all of the driving.â
I had nothing else to do, and Jarod had already saved me an hourâs worth of work on the driveway. I ran into the house, told my father that the driveway was all clear, grabbed a bagel from the breadbox, and was back out by the time Jarod had finished the neighborâs driveway.
She handed him $40 and said, âAre you sure you canât do the walks?â
âThe driveways have to take priority for now, but once the snow stops and the driveways are all clear, Iâd be happy to come back and do the walks for you. Here, take my number and call me the day after the snow stops.â
When we got back into the truck, Jarod said, âDealing with her took me almost as long as plowing the drive. From now on, thatâs your job. That, and answering my phone.â
âWho will be calling?â
âI honestly have no idea who most of them are or how they got my number.â
The phone rang, and I stared at itâJarod hadnât told me what to say.
âJust put it on speaker for now,â he said, and then called out, âHi, Dr. McCauley.â
âJarod, I heard youâve gotten yourself a plow.â
âThatâs right, how can I help you?â
âAny chance you can come by and do my parking lot?â
âAbsolutely. You have what, 12 spaces?â
â18.â
âThatâs not a problem. Itâll run $200 if youâre interested.â
âThat much?â
âI can do it for $100 tomorrow if the snow stops. But today itâs all emergencies.â
Dr. McCauley hesitated, then said, âall right.â
âWonderful. I should be in your part of town early this afternoon.â Jarod shot me a wink, clearly thinking back to the advice Bill had given him. I knew the location, which was less than two miles away.
There was silence on the line. Finally, Dr. McCauley said, âIâll make it $300 if you can come right now.â
Jarod shot me a huge grin. âOn my way.â
Before we finished Dr. McCauleyâs parking lot, two adjoining business managers came over and asked us to do theirs. The snow didnât stop falling until 3 pm, and we didnât stop plowing until nearly 10 pm. The phone hardly stopped ringing all day, and by the time Jarod dropped me off at home, Iâd left him with a list of bookings for the following day. About half of them were driveways or parking lots, the rest were walkways that he hadnât gotten to today. I made a couple of hundred dollars for a day of light work. But my earnings were nothing next to Jarodâs. He hit his entire monthly earning goal and managed to cover most of the cost of his new plow all in one day.
* * *
I babysat Megan again on New Yearâs Eve while our parents went out with friends. âYou seem different,â she said to me.
âDifferent from who?â I asked as I stirred a bowl of brownie batter.
âFrom how you used to be.â She looked into the bowl and winced. âThose are going to be totally disgusting by the way.â
âDarnell told me about the recipe. He said he tried it last week and it turned out pretty good.â
âBrownies out of black beans? That sounds so nasty.â
âI know. Can I let you in on a secret?â
Megan leaned in. âWhatâs that?â
âI wanted to try it because Darnell said they were good. But I also bought a junky chocolate chip cookie mix in case these turn out as revolting as they sound.â
Megan laughed. âHow come you changed so much?â
âOh come on, I havenât changed that much.â
âYou have. You barely talked to me
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