gave Jess a detailed accounting of how many college kids vaped on his front step while waiting for a table.
Home came into view. Juno had named their apartment complex âHarley Hallâ when she was four, and although it didnât have nearly the pretentious vibe required to be a capital- H Hall, the name stuck. Harley Hall was bright green and stood out like anemerald against the earth-tone stucco of the adjacent buildings. The street-facing side was decorated with a horizontal strip of pink and purple tiles forming a harlequin pattern; electric-pink window boxes spilled brightly colored mandevilla most of the year. Jessâs grandparents Ronald and Joanne Davis had bought the property the year Pops retired from the navy. Coincidentally this was the same year Jessâs long-term boyfriend decided he wasnât father material and wanted to retain the option to put his penis in other ladies. Jess finished school and then packed up two-month-old Juno, moving into the ground floor two-bedroom unit that faced Nana and Popsâs bungalow at the back end of the property. Given that theyâd raised Jess down the road in Mission Hills until sheâd gone to college at UCLA, the transition was basically zero. And now, her small and perfect village helped her raise her child.
The side gate opened with a tiny squeak, then latched closed behind her. Down a narrow path, Jess stepped into the courtyard that separated her apartment from Nana Jo and Popsâs bungalow. The space looked like a lush garden somewhere in Bali or Indonesia. A handful of stone fountains gurgled quietly, and the primary sensation was bright : magenta, coral, and brassy-purple bougainvillea dominated the walls and fences.
Immediately, a small, neatly French-braided child tackled Jess. âMom, I got a book about snakes from the library, did you know that snakes donât have eyelids?â
âIââ
âAlso, they eat their food whole, and their ears are only inside their heads. Guess where you canât find snakes?â Juno stared up at her, blue eyes unblinking. âGuess.â
âCanada!â
âNo! Antarctica!â
Jess led them inside, calling âNo way!â over her shoulder.
âWay. And remember that cobra in The Black Stallion ? Well, cobras are the only kind of snakes that build nests, and they can live to be twenty.â
That one actually shocked Jessica. âWait, seriously?â She dropped her bag on the couch just inside the door and moved to the pantry to dig around for dinner options. âThatâs insane.â
âYes. Seriously.â
Juno went quiet behind her, and understanding dropped like a weight in Jessâs chest. She turned to find her kid wearing the enormous-eyed expression of preemptive begging. âJuno, baby, no.â
âPlease, Mom?â
âNo.â
âPops said maybe a corn snake. The book says theyâre âvery docile.â Or a ball python?â
âA python?â Jess set a pot of water on the stove to boil. âAre you out of your mind, child?â She pointed to the cat, Pigeon, asleep in the dying stretch of daylight streaming through the window. âA python would eat that creature.â
âA ball python, and I wouldnât let it.â
âIf Pops is encouraging you to get a snake,â Jess said, âPops can keep it over at his house.â
âNana Jo already said no.â
âI bet she did.â
Juno growled, collapsing onto the couch. Jess walked over and sat down, drawing her in for a cuddle. She was seven but small; shestill had baby hands with dimples on the knuckles and smelled like baby shampoo and the woody fiber of books. When Juno wrapped her small arms around Jessâs neck, she breathed the little girl in. Juno had her own room now, but sheâd slept with her mom until she was four, and sometimes Jess would still wake up in the middle of the night and experience a