Return to the Little Coffee Shop of Kabul

Home > Nonfiction > Return to the Little Coffee Shop of Kabul > Page 1
Return to the Little Coffee Shop of Kabul Page 1

by Deborah Rodriguez




  About the Book

  The spellbinding sequel to the international bestseller The Little Coffee Shop of Kabul. Six women, on opposite sides of the earth, yet forever joined by a café in Kabul.

  Sunny, its former proprietor and the new owner of the Screaming Peacock Vineyard in the Pacific Northwest. But can she handle the challenges of life on her own?

  Yazmina, the young mother who now runs the cafe, until a terrifying event strikes at the heart of her family, and business …

  Layla and Kat, two Afghan teenagers in America, both at war with the cultures that shaped them …

  Zara, a young woman about to be forced into a marriage with a man she despises, with devastating consequences for all …

  These five women are about to learn what Halajan, Yazmina’s rebellious mother-in-law, has known all along: that when the world as you know it disappears, you find a new way to survive …

  Reuniting us with many of the compelling characters from the international bestseller The Little Coffee Shop of Kabul, Deborah Rodriguez offers up a story of strength and courage in a world where happily-ever-afters aren’t as simple as they seem.

  Contents

  Cover

  About the Book

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Acknowledgments

  A Q&A with Deborah Rodriguez (contains spoilers)

  For Your Reading Group Party

  Reading Group Questions

  Some Delicious Dishes to Share

  About the Author

  Also by Deborah Rodriguez

  The Little Coffee Shop of Kabul

  Copyright Notice

  John Asahara, a wonderful man full of wisdom, love, and kindness.

  You are an inspiration to many.

  “Where there is ruin, there is hope for a treasure.”

  —RUMI

  Prologue

  “Are you blind, you stupid girl? Do you want to get me killed?”

  The boy picked his bike out of the gutter and shook his small fist at her, but she just kept running. Her sneakers grew heavy with the mud underfoot and she struggled to keep her pace as she hurried through the narrow streets of the city. Around her, everything seemed to be moving in slow motion—the men pushing their carts piled high with pomegranates and cantaloupes, the covered women walking in pairs, leading their children by the hand, the mass of fat-tailed sheep being urged along with a sharp stick—but inside, her heart was racing so fast she thought it might burst.

  She flew around a corner and elbowed her way through the crowds of people gathered near the outdoor food stalls, the smell of garbage and kabobs hitting her like an avalanche. All of her senses seemed to be turned up high—car horns blared, bicycle bells clanged, vendors shouted out their prices, generators whirred. How lucky she was that nobody seemed to bother with her, a frantic girl rushing through the streets with her hands covering her ears. But of course they wouldn’t. No man would dare to put a hand on her in public, and the women would all be too wary to get involved. Yet she continued to jerk her head around like a frightened bird, her eyes on the lookout for anyone who might be following.

  Past the shops with their sagging awnings and crumbling façades she fled, weaving in and out of the traffic that was becoming heavier the closer she got to the business center, where the glass and steel Kam Air building rose up from the sidewalk like a giant faceless robot. She grasped at the head scarf slipping back on her silky hair, and nearly tripped over a burqa’d beggar sitting in the middle of Qala-e-Musa Road, a baby resting on rags at her side, the only visible part of her body the one bare hand reaching out to the passing cars. But the girl had to keep going, had to move faster.

  As she approached Shaheed Square she quickened her pace, leaping over the potholes that made the roads nearly impassible. Suddenly she felt her left foot slide out from under her and heard a cry as her hip hit the ground. She sat stunned for a moment, the mud oozing through her fingers and soaking her long blouse and jeans through to her skin. Two men walked their bikes in a wide circle around her, and ahead she could see another man in a white cap getting a shave on the street corner. Neither he nor the street barber holding a razor in one hand, keeping the man’s face steady with the other, even blinked. It was as if she were invisible.

  She stood and, without bothering to wipe away the filth that covered half her body, continued to run. Now the streets had become a little wider, the traffic lighter, the high walls lining the roads making her picture herself as a rat in a giant maze. She moved as quickly as her feet would take her. She was almost there.

  But as she approached the guardhouse, her chest heaving with exhaustion, a small movement across the street attracted her eye. Through the window of a white Toyota, she saw a man pulling something black over his head. The chokidor must have noticed as well, for all at once the air was filled with activity. A car door slammed, the guard yelled and reached toward his gun, and the girl slipped through the gate and dashed toward the coffeehouse door.

  1

  The Starbucks latte she’d downed on shore an hour earlier threatened a comeback as Sunny gripped the metal rail of the seesawing ferry, her fingers turning an unnatural shade of blue against the peeling green paint. A boat? Really? Why on earth nobody had bothered to build a bridge between civilization and this godforsaken island was beyond her, as was the reasoning behind Jack’s decision to buy there. But, she could almost hear Jack saying, no passing judgment until you’ve seen it with your own eyes. That is, she thought, if you’re even able to see it through all this fucking fog and rain.

  She remembered the time Jack had first told her about the place, back when they were both living in Kabul. He had just returned from one of his missions to the south, one in a string of many Sunny couldn’t seem to get a handle on. All he had really told her about his job was that he was a skilled negotiator, but she already knew that from personal experience, as he always seemed to get his way with everything before she even realized what was happening. It was a Wednesday night, the night when all of Kabul, at least the UN, embassy and NGO workers, the missionaries and journalists who were still bold enough to venture out that late, would gather at her coffeehouse to hear one of the speakers she’d brought in to draw business. The place was buzzing with Dari, English, French, and Italian, filled to the rafters despite the bitter cold that refused to stay outside where it belonged seeping through the windows and barging in full force every time the door opened.

  And then in came Jack, all chin and smile, plopping himself down in his usual spot like he was the one who owned the joint
instead of her. “Salaam dost e man,” he warmly greeted Bashir Hadi, her barista, cook, and self-proclaimed protector. “Two glasses of your finest, kind sir!” he added. Bashir Hadi smiled and gave the nod to Yazmina, who ducked behind the counter and returned with a ceramic teapot concealing what he had to know was the usual crappy Chianti Sunny managed to dig up only by scouring the Chinese brothels—the last places in town to have even a drop, thanks to the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice committee. Yazmina greeted Jack shyly, lowering her piercing green eyes as she poured the watery red liquid into the two demitasse cups she had hooked over her slender fingers. As Sunny rushed past his table, anxious to get everyone settled in time for the talk, she felt a tug on the back of her jeans. “Sit, woman! It’s time to enjoy the fruits of your labor.” Sunny tried to swat Jack’s hand away, but his grasp on her belt loop was firm, and down she went.

  “Bully.”

  “Happy to see you too, baby.” She glowered at him in mock indignation. He knew how much she hated to be called baby. “Ah,” he said, rotating his cup in a circle until its contents had spun themselves into a tiny red whirlpool, then lifting it to his nose. “A fine vintage. Perhaps a ’97, or maybe something a bit more recent, like an ’05?” Jack took a slurp and swished the wine noisily around his mouth as if it were a swig of mouthwash. Sunny rolled her eyes.

  “It’ll do,” he said as he set the cup down with a thud. “But mine will be better.”

  “Yours? What, did you get your hands on some black market Merlot or something? Hand it over, mister.” Sunny stretched out her arm.

  “No. I mean mine. Really mine. Someday, I promise you, you’re gonna sit back and enjoy a bottle with the very name of yours truly slapped across the label.”

  “What, there’s gonna be a Jack’s Big-Mouth Red?”

  “Ha-ha. Very funny. You’ll be sorry. Now you’ll be lucky if I share any of it with you. And mark my words, it’s going to be a helluva lot better than this rotgut.”

  “Big deal. Even I could toss a bunch of grapes into that mop bucket over there and stomp around a little bit, and it would be an improvement on this crap.”

  “No, my dear,” he said, leaning back precariously in the heavy wooden chair, “I’m serious. You just happen to be talking to one of the proud new owners of Screaming Peacock Vineyards, Twimbly Island, Washington, USA.”

  Twimbly Island. There came a point in their relationship when she thought if she heard that name one more time she’d scream. You’d love it, Jack had told her over and over, going on and on about its golden sunrises, its miles of driftwood-strewn beaches, the snow geese, the eagles, the great blue herons, the orcas heading inland for the winter, so close you could almost touch them from shore, as he tried his damnedest to work his magic on her. She remembered how relaxed he had seemed each time he returned from a visit to the island, and could just see how his steely blue eyes had warmed up whenever he fantasized about making a life there. So she’d force herself to smile politely and just listen, summoning up any latent traces of a skill she’d struggled to master throughout her entire lifetime.

  It wasn’t until after they finally packed their bags and sadly left Kabul behind that Jack’s fantasy became a possibility, one that freaked Sunny out as much as everything else was freaking her out at that point. For her, oddly enough, Kabul had been the only place that felt like home, and she had planned never to leave. But things had changed over the six years she’d been living there. Friends were gone, places were shuttered, and the deadly missives launched by the increasing number of returning Taliban were now becoming too frequent, and too close to home, to ignore. Jack had his concerns about foreigners becoming targets, but beyond that, he felt strongly that it was high time to give Afghanistan back to the Afghans. We treat them like idiots, he had said. And you know, and I know, that Halajan, Yazmina, Bashir Hadi, even Ahmet are not idiots, he added, speaking of those who worked with her, those who had become as close to family as it got for Sunny. We Americans infantilize everyone not like us. You’ve got to love a guy like that, who sees a world beyond his own concerns, who will do the right thing just because it’s the right thing to do.

  And love him she did, so much so that before she knew it she had followed Jack back to Ann Arbor, Michigan, where his son was just starting college, and where he had landed a job as an international security advisor for a large NGO.

  Worst. Decision. Ever. What had made Sunny think that she could go from Kabul hotshot to Michigan housewife just like that? Was she nuts? No, she was in love. And as the old woman Halajan, who owned the building where the coffeehouse stood, had once told her, reason is powerless in the expression of love. She—courtesy of her favorite poet, Rumi—sure got that one right, Sunny thought. But it wasn’t only Sunny who was having trouble adjusting. She knew that Jack felt like an overweight pet-store hamster trapped in a communal cage in his corner cubicle. The only missions he took now were down the hall to the break room for coffee and candy bars, which, in her opinion, he seemed to be doing way too often. He was miserable, and seeing as how his son was now so busy with his own life, between his classes and his new friends, after a year of sticking it out Jack proposed to Sunny that they hit the road. His destination of choice? Twimbly Island.

  But the winery was Jack’s dream, not Sunny’s. So they made a deal. They’d take a time-out to explore, to travel the world and try things on for size. No decisions for one year. They’d both keep an open mind. No pressure. And if nothing spoke to them after that one year, they’d give Twimbly a try.

  They spent twelve months hopscotching from country to country, city to city, house to house, taking advantage of all the friendships they had made during their years in Afghanistan. Jack saw tons of possibilities, but each and every opportunity Jack put forward, Sunny pushed back. A bar in some quaint seaside town in Maine? Too boring. An adventure travel company in Peru? No hiking, llamas or Sherpas for this girl. A civilian boot camp in South Africa? No dice. She’d sooner jump off a cliff blindfolded and naked than deal with the ticks and testosterone that would come with that job.

  Twelve months turned into thirteen, then fourteen. But being the gentleman that he was, Jack kept his word and continued to indulge Sunny’s restlessness, even though he felt it was crucial that they start living a normal life, and the sooner the better. He’d seen way too many friends and colleagues who had become so addicted to living in war zones that they were now painfully restless and uncomfortable living anywhere else, and Jack told her he feared he was starting to see inklings of that in both of them.

  After wearing out welcome mats from Cairo to Caracas, Sunny finally conceded to at least considering the winery, or so she told Jack. He’d been so patient that she felt it was only right to agree to take a look at the place. After one last fling, that is. Jack had been aching to go on a heli-skiing trip to Whistler with a bunch of his buddies, and graciously invited Sunny along. “I’m good,” she’d responded, opting instead for a solitary long weekend exploring Santa Fe. They would meet in Seattle, and from there it would be off to the island.

  Now she stood alone as the dock disappeared from view. For Jack’s dream had evaporated on the side of a mountain when his heart gave out at eight thousand feet, causing hers, upon receiving that devastating call in the desert below, to shatter into a million little pieces.

  Sunny swatted at the tiny rivulets of fog and rain dampening her cheeks, a gesture all too familiar from day after day of bawling at the drop of a hat. She felt like crying now, as the ferry barreled into the misty abyss. Would it have all looked better with him by her side? she wondered. “Damn you, Jack,” she said out loud as she pulled the tote holding the flimsy cardboard box containing his ashes a touch closer. She was almost grateful he wasn’t there to witness the stupid little hissy fit she was having with herself. The care he’d shown by placing her on the deed for the winery, despite his ex-wife’s legal maneuverings, now made her feel ashamed of her own selfishness. If only she had said yes
to the place earlier, Jack might have had a chance to live the life he had wanted so badly. How she hoped Jack’s spirit wasn’t watching over her at this moment, that he’d never have a clue about her plans to rid herself of the place as quickly as possible. She’d spent the months since his death in a fog, not unlike the one that was now wrapping its fingers around the approaching shoreline, and all she could hope for was that selling off her share to Jack’s partner, Rick Stark, might offer a shred of closure. And maybe even a scintilla of clarity.

  Sunny had never felt as lost as she did now, bobbing up and down in this dismal sea, as grey as the sky above. The path ahead seemed to be twisting into one giant question mark. Deep down she knew that, as much as she wanted to, she shouldn’t go back to Kabul. Jack’s predictions of escalating danger, particularly for foreigners, seemed to be coming disastrously true. She’d just read of yet another kidnapping, this time a French aid worker, and not long before that word had come of a US diplomat killed by a suicide bomber while delivering books to a local school. But none of that meant she might not still go back. She’d left the coffeehouse behind for Halajan, her son Ahmet and his wife Yazmina to run in partnership with Bashir Hadi, with wishes for their success and gratitude for their unflagging support, and for a friendship that meant more than anything in the world to her. Though it didn’t seem as though she was really needed, she had no doubt that they would all welcome her back with open arms, as was their way, should she ever decide to return.

 

‹ Prev