What's Done in The Dark Quotes

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What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction by Solae Dehvine
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What's Done in The Dark Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“She was my oldest, but she was still my baby. Yet, I couldn't believe my baby was pregnant and marrying James. Lord, I liked to have passed out when she told me. Rather, when she and James told me. They called him JB now, but I knew him as James and that's what I would call him”
Solae Devhine, What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction
“He has a one percent chance of survival” the doctors words made circles in my head. He showed no sympathy the day he told us that Terry probably wouldn’t make it. He read off the statistics of his survival like he was talking about an animal rather than a human being. I’m not sure when it happened, but I lost it. I tried to call him every cuss word and insult I could. Momma tried to calm me down, while Trisha began crying. Courtney sat in a daze all alone in the corner. I became irate thinking about losing Terry. Not only would I be losing a brother, but I will lose a part of me as well”
Solae Devhine, What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction
“I made my way up our concrete front porch steps and opened the screen door. I unlocked the numerous deadbolts we had in record time. Getting in the house, I turned off the alarm and made sure the door was locked after JB came in. After my habit of looking through the blinds I finally put the food down”
Solae Devhine, What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction
“She could have said anything but that. Tiffany and Terry were fucking twins and they had a lot of twins in their family. FUCK, I screamed in my head.She kept rambling but after hearing twins I stopped listening. Kids, clothes, and money, were spinning through my head. I was able to avoid having kids all these years and now I might be caught with not one, but two”
Solae Devhine, What's Done in The Dark: Season 1: African American Urban Fiction