Cora often called to chat, so it wasn’t any big deal when I heard her voice on the phone in March. I was driving to work and we chatted for about five minutes. She reminded me that she wanted to take me out to dinner sometime.
As she was about to hang up, Cora said, “I love you. You’re such a good neighbor!” And I told her that I loved her, too.
Cora has been my neighbor for a bit more than five years. She’s a feisty and strong-willed black lady in her 70s who was a high school English teacher before she retired.
She’s always pestered me to find out about any women in my life. When she’s seen a woman at my house, she always wanted to know whether this is “the one,” and she was always disappointed when I told her otherwise. As she was about to leave my porch one time in May, she looked at me very seriously.
“I’m going to find a good-looking white girl for you,” she said. “I know a lot of rich and powerful white people, you know.”
She’s always seemed determined to find “a white girl” for me. But I found out tonight that this is very unlikely to ever happen. In fact, it’s unlikely I‘ll ever talk to Cora again.

There’s little unity to be found in our supposedly United States
A haunting question: ‘Where is love now, out here in the dark?’
We already know what’s right, but we choose our lusts instead
The goals we chase can become chains that hold us in bondage
Not having someone to hope for differs from pain of missing love
This is my new wife, Claire — but she doesn’t actually exist
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
Despite advantages to digital books, there’s still nothing like ‘real’ books
Where are Obama’s tears when he’s the one killing innocent children?