Page 26 of You Deserve Good Things
The sign gleamed under the soft morning sun, bold, powerful, gleaming like a crown jewel on a city block. Silas’s Solace Counseling they marked a movement. They marked a revolution dressed in concrete and compassion. They were the bricks and mortar version of everything we’d bled, cried, prayed, and dreamed into existence.
The sunlight kissed the signs with reverence, as if God Himself was co-signing the mission. The gold-leaf lettering shimmered like it had a heartbeat of its own, reflecting purpose, protection, and peace.
When I looked over at my wife—my fine-ass, brilliant, spiritually stacked-up wife—standing next to me in a sleek slate-gray suit that hugged her curves like it was tailored by the heavens, skin glistening like caramel under that golden hour glow, I damn near forgot how to breathe.
Her hair was swept up in a crown of locs, and her presence, my baby’s presence, was preachin’ louder than the signs.
We really did this.
Inside Silas’s Solace, the vibe was everything we dreamed of and more.
It wasn’t cold. It wasn’t clinical. It didn’t smell like bleach and bad news like most therapy offices.
Nah. This place breathed warmth. The walls were soft hues—sandy taupes, sage greens, burnished ambers—like nature had pulled up a seat and said, “Let’s heal.
” It felt like a hug, like peace wrapped in paint and patience.
There were plush velvet couches that sat in a circle, each one with a cozy blanket folded over the arm.
Real ones. The type of blankets you grabbed when your chest was heavy and your soul cracked open.
There were no stiff-ass, metal-legged chairs that squeaked when you shifted.
Nah, not here. This was a sanctuary, not a session.
Books lined the shelves—there was everything from grief recovery to Black mental health literature, to journals filled with affirmations and guides for building yourself back brick by brick.
And in the center, there was a mural of Silas.
It was painted in deep indigos and soft silver accents, his smile was wide and real, like he was watching over us in every room. His chain caught the light in the painting, and his eyes, they followed you—warm, present, powerful.
Beneath the mural, in his own handwriting we’d pulled from one of his old notebooks, were the words:
You deserve to live, baby girl. And you gon’ change the world.
That shit hit me in the chest like a prayer.
The corridor connecting to Shaniya’s Sanctum was lined with black-and-white portraits—framed with photos of lives lost too soon. Each name was carved into the remembrance wall like a sacred altar. This was a space built from grief, molded in memory, and lifted through love.
But it wasn’t just about mourning—it was about mending.
There were healing circles gathered in soft-lit rooms with cushions on the floor and incense burning gently.
The scent of sandalwood mixed with lavender drifted through the air like peace itself was floating.
Support groups, therapy rooms, an industrial kitchen where meals were cooked by mamas who had once lost their appetite for life and found it again through service.
And the rec room? That was my favorite part.
It was filled with bright colors. Laughter.
There were basketballs bouncing and kids running free.
Smiles were big enough to break generational curses.
It was a sacred playground for babies who’d seen too much, too soon. This was truly a sanctum for them.
All of it—every inch of it—was for the community. For the culture. For the ones still bleeding and the ones who didn’t make it. And my woman, she built that. She built it with strength, grace, and them fire-ass edges laid to the gods.
I turned, taking her gorgeous ass in again, watching how her eyes locked on Silas’s mural. She was talking to him in her head—I could tell. I knew her like my favorite book. Her smile was soft, nostalgic, like a silent “thank you.”
I slid behind her, wrapping my arms around her waist, with my chin resting against her shoulder, my voice a breath.
“You did it, baby.”
She exhaled slowly. “We did it, Cory.”
I kissed her temple. Her skin was warm and soft, like cocoa butter mixed with blessings.
“Yeah. But this—this right here? This is your heart, baby. You manifested this through your healing. You made this sacred. This was your vision.”
She turned in my arms, pressing her forehead against mine, her hands tracing over my chest like she was making sure I was real.
“Are you proud of me?” she whispered.
I chuckled, low and sweet. “Proud? Baby, I’m in awe of you, your strength, heart, and resilience. You out here changing lives like you are the second coming.”
Her eyes got glossy.
“Damn, you ’bout to cry again?” I teased, grinning.
She rolled her eyes, shoved my chest. “Shut up, Jacory.”
But I could feel it. She was overwhelmed. We both were. This was a dream we built with our scars.
We’d barely stepped into her office when her face shifted. She froze, her hand flying to her stomach, her breath catching. Then she was gone. She took off running and headed straight to the bathroom. I stood there, blinking and trying to figure out what the fuck just happened.
Then I heard it. “Bleeehhhhhhgh.”
That unmistakable sound. She was definitely throwing up. She sounded sick as a dog, and I was concerned because she just seemed fine.
I knocked. “Baby?”
She didn’t respond to me. I heard the toilet flush and the water in the sink start to run. She opened the door, and she stepped out lookin’ like she just got slapped with a vision.
“You good, baby?”
She nodded too fast. “Yeah, yeah, just . . . bad shrimp.”
“Bad shrimp?” I repeated, eyebrows raised like they were tryna climb off my face. “Girl, when the hell did you eat some damn shrimp? You haven’t even been wantin’ any seafood lately, and that’s your absolute favorite.”
She waved me off. “Don’t start, Jacory.”
“Nah, ’cause you have been turning down lemon pepper wings and sour pickles lately, and now you ducking seafood? Uh-uh.”
She glared. “Let it go, Scooby Doo.”
I narrowed my eyes. “I’ma let it go . . . for now. But I got my eye on you, Mrs. James.”
That night, the whole block pulled up for our grand opening celebration.
We had soul food trays lined up from Shari’s kitchen to the sidewalk.
The music was bumping kids were dancing to them dumb ass TikTok dances that all fucking looked alike, and the uncles were talking about how they used to do real dances and moonwalk “back in the day.”
Chase pulled up in a loud-ass velvet blazer like he was hosting the BET Awards. He looked good but fuckin’ ridiculous as hell in this Texas ass weather with that shit on. I shook my head laughin’ at his clown ass.
“Aye, look at my sister and brother-in-law out here owning shit. I always knew y’all was bougie as hell.”
Daniale clapped back immediately. “Boy, shut up. You’re still sleeping on a futon.”
Chase gasped. “First of all, it’s a memory foam daybed. Respect it, gorgeous.”
I stepped in, deadpan. “Nigga, that’s a glorified pallet.”
Daniale raised her drink. “With no headboard.”
We all fell out.
But even through all the jokes, all the dancing, all the love, I kept peeping my wife.
The way she kept cradling her stomach like it had secrets.
The way she looked at me, eyes soft, like she was about to tell me something that would shift the whole damn Earth.
I didn’t know what it was yet. But something told me .
. . life was about to get real interesting.