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Twilight Night
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>we've run through all the names to invite.
Actually, we still haven’t gone over Ori, Shopona, or the others. But that can wait for a moment.
“You’re inviting me back.” I tense slightly, wondering how the rest of the family might receive me. “Nyame would only alter the drama level, not create it.”
“I guess. Different kinds of drama, I suppose.” Mbweha thinks about it for a moment, then shrugs. “With you it’s like one big burst of drama over, uh… that one thing, but with him it’s just a constant.”
“Well, can I hear where all this drama is coming from, then?” I try to hold my curiosity in check, but it’s there. “What’s wrong with Nyame?”
“Nothing’s wrong with him, exactly. Or… I don’t know, maybe there is, but only a little.” Mbweha sighs, sitting up in her chair. Her hair falls over her eyes, and she doesn’t bother to move it. “He changed, is all. After… well, it began after you left, actually.”
“What happened?” I put the pen and paper down. “Did he start acting like a creep? A crook?”
“Not exactly. He became a control freak, is all. He started telling people what they should and shouldn’t do, tried to get curfews going, even ordered us to all get individual GPS locators so he and Bibi would always be able to find us. I think he felt like he had to watch over us, being the oldest.”
“Did you? Get a locator, I mean.”
“Are you kidding? No way. Most of us ignored him. The more he tried to order us around, the more we rebelled, and the more ridiculous he got.” Mbweha pauses for a moment, as if remembering something. “Ori, the Ollies, and Yemoja did do what he wanted, but they barely ever left the house anyway.”
“I’m surprised he’s not still at the house, if he’s so controlling.”
“When Bibi… after Bibi was gone, he got more distant. He started going on all these mystery trips, leaving the house and then showing up at random. In some ways, seeing him less makes him more bearable, but he’s become even more micromanage-y when he’s here. In really weird ways, too.”
“Like what?”
“Like puppeting people.” Mbweha rubs her wrists, oddly. “Literally.”
“Huh.” I notice her discomfort. “What, like, he can possess other people?”
“No, he puppets. Like, with strings. Invisible magic strings.” She shivers. “It sort of looks like you’re possessed, from the outside, but it feels more like someone’s tugging on your skeleton to make you do things. He usually asks first, thankfully.”
“Is that what Asase Ya was talking about, earlier?”
Mbweha blinks, then narrows her eyes, looking unhappy. “I don’t really want to talk about this anymore.”
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