“Is this a full reenactment?”
 
 “Why? Are you planning on robbing me?”
 
 “Who says I haven’t already?” Remi challenges.
 
 “Me, because of my heavy?—”
 
 “Hand?”
 
 “I was going to say pocket.” I smile, giving her another spin. When she falls into me, her hand slides up my chest and removes the slim box from my dress shirt pocket.
 
 “Open it,” I tell her, releasing her other hand.
 
 She opens the velvet box, gasping at the gold necklace with a delicate butterfly charm made from diamonds. “It’s so pretty!”
 
 “There can be honor among thieves,papillon.”
 
 Removing the necklace from its cushioned box, I tell Remi, “Hold up your hair for me.” She does so, and I drape the necklace around her neck and fasten the tiny clasp. When I spin her around, she’s crying.
 
 “What’s wrong?” At a loss, my thumbs gently gather the tears from under her eyes.
 
 Remi looks as though she’s about to run, but I don’t want to play games right now. Scooping her up into my arms, I carry us to the couch, sitting her on my lap with my arms wrapped around her. “Tell me.”
 
 “You want to know how I got busted? It’s not that no man has ever taken care of me; it’s that every man has betrayed me!”
 
 Remi
 
 A few months ago…
 
 “Remi, there you are,” my dad calls, and I ignore him, picking up the pace. “Hold up. Is that a leopard?” He catches up with me, eyeing Nola.
 
 “She’s not a leopard. Or a bobcat. Or a cheetah. Or any other wild cat, alright?”
 
 “Alright.” He holds up his hands. “Can we talk?”
 
 “I’m working.”
 
 “You’re walking a damn cat on a leash.”
 
 Nola hisses at him.
 
 “I’m working.” I grit.
 
 “Look, baby girl, I’m sorry. I fucked up, alright? Please come home. I miss my partner in crime.” My dad’s so charismatic, every time I say I’m done with him, he pulls me back into his orbit.
 
 But not this time.
 
 “I bet you do. Let me guess, you’ve been evicted. Again.” I had more addresses growing up than a military brat.
 
 “It’s just a temporary setback.”
 
 I scoff. “It always is.”
 
 “Listen, I’ve got us a hustle lined up that’ll get you back your keyboard and then some. I’m talking big bucks.” He rubs his hands together.
 
 “Bye, Dad.”
 
 Nola and I shake him on the way back to the hotel. “Yeah, that’s my dad. He’s a real piece of work.”