free ruby


Every day there are more protesters, and cameras with bright lights. Sometimes the people carrying signs shout, “Free Ruby! Free Ruby!”


“Ivan,” Ruby asks, “why are those people yelling my name? Are they mad at me?”


“They’re mad,” I say, “but not at you.”


A week later, the inspecting man comes back with a friend, a woman with smart, dark eyes like my mother’s. She has a white coat on, and she smells like lobelia blossoms. Her hair is thick and brown, the color of a rotten branch teeming with luscious ants.


She watches me for a long time. Then she watches Ruby.


She talks to the man. They both talk to Mack. The man gives Mack a sheet of paper.


Mack covers his face.


He goes to his office and slams the door.

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