She climbed the three steps to the stage. The chatter died. A few people recognized her—the tall girl with the furafura (wobbly) identity.
A cherry blossom petal, carried by an unlikely wind, landed on her Afro. She left it there.
She was stunning in a way that made people do a double-take. Her skin was the color of dark honey, and her hair—a crown of dense, springy curls—was gathered in a bright yellow scarf. Her eyes, large and tilted like her father’s, scanned the crowd of salarymen and schoolgirls. To the Japanese, she was gaijin —foreign. To the few Africans she’d met in Tokyo, she was too Japanese—her bow too precise, her keigo too flawless.
Sakura laughed, the sound echoing off the wet pavement. She stopped at a vending machine and bought a warm can of matcha latte—her favorite. For the first time, she didn’t see her reflection in the dark glass of a closed shop window and think split . She saw a girl with a samurai’s spine and a lioness’s heart.
She wasn’t a bridge anymore. She was the destination.
Sakura’s eyes welled up. She hadn’t realized she was crying until a tear dropped onto her knuckles, still clutching the paper.
“Just be yourself,” her mother always said on video calls from Lagos, where the sun seemed to yell. “You are not a fraction. You are a whole.”
Today, however, she had a plan. It was a reckless, secret plan.