Refugee 87

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Refugee 87 Page 1

by Ele Fountain




  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 by Ele Fountain

  Quotation from Sean O’Casey Plays 1 by Sean O’Casey ã Faber and Faber Ltd.; Ebook rights granted by kind permission of the Estate of Sean O’Casey.

  Cover design by Sammy Yuen. Texture photograph © Coffee krai/iStock.com

  Ship photograph © B-D-S Piotr Marcinski/Shutterstock.com

  Ocean photograph © Andrey Polivanov/Shutterstock.com

  Boy photograph © Ronald Summers/Shutterstock.com

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

  1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104

  Visit us at LBYR.com

  Originally published in 2018 by Pushkin Press in Great Britain

  First U.S. Edition: June 2019

  Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Fountain, Ele, author.

  Title: Refugee 87 / Ele Fountain.

  Other titles: Boy 87 | Refugee eighty-seven

  Description: First U.S. edition. | New York; Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 2019. | “Originally published in 2018 by Pushkin Press in Great Britain.” | Summary: In the Middle East, fourteen-year-old Shif and his best friend Bini embark on a continent-crossing journey of survival after they are imprisoned and become refugees.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2018029973| ISBN 9780316423038 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780316423014 (pbk.) | ISBN 9780316423007 (ebk.) | ISBN 9780316423021 (library edition ebk.)

  Subjects: | CYAC: Prisoners—Fiction. | Refugees—Fiction. | Survival—Fiction. | Best friends—Fiction. | Friendship—Fiction. | Middle East—Fiction.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.F6785 Re 2019 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018029973

  ISBNs: 978-0-316-42303-8 (hardcover), 978-0-316-42300-7 (ebook)

  E3-20190424-JV-NF-ORI

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Boat

  Before

  Best Friend

  Normal Day

  Something Weird

  Police

  Test

  Secret

  Truth

  Leave

  Snatch

  Journey

  Hell

  Hell 2

  Hell 3

  Hell 4

  Courage

  Fear

  Border

  Desert

  Riddle

  Help

  Numb

  Hope

  Friend

  Wait

  Hunted

  Hiding

  Desert 2

  Desert 3

  Near and Far

  Boat

  Author’s note

  About the Author

  For Lily and Scarlet

  When it was dark,

  you always carried the sun

  in your hand for me.

  —Sean O’Casey, Red Roses for Me

  Boat

  Cold salty water stings my eyes and soaks my T-shirt. I cling to the clammy wooden edge of the boat as a huge wave swells toward me. The boat tips, and I gasp as people slide against me and the air is pressed from my chest.

  The sky is turning from light to dark gray; white foam tops the waves. The wind pushes relentlessly against my face, and with the next rolling wave the boat dips so low that buckets of water gush in over the side, soaking me again with freezing water. I feel it creeping above my ankles. No one cries out. Even the baby strapped to the mother beside me is quiet.

  Green-gray waves make a wall around us. We rise to the top of another but there is nothing to see except spray blowing like rain in the icy wind. Europe is sprawled somewhere in front of us but I can’t see land. As we slide into the trough, more water rushes over the side of the boat. It’s up to my knees. My feet are numb but I can tell that my shoes are heavy with water. I look up again and see a swirling wave bigger than the others rolling toward us in fury. The boat tips. This time we keep on tipping. The wave crashes over us as if we are on the shore, only we’re in the middle of the sea. I hear screaming and then nothing as water rushes over my head.

  I can’t tell which way is up to sky and wind, and which way is down toward the depths of sea beneath. I open my eyes. They sting but show me nothing more than cloudy bubbling water and the legs of someone just out of reach. I kick up once, my chest burning. I kick up again, knowing that in a second I’ll no longer be able to fight the desperate urge to breathe in. I kick one last time, my legs tingling. I am about to pass out just as wind blasts my face; I suck in air and some spray.

  Choking, I pant and gasp; the currents tug me left and right as the swell lifts me up and down. I cannot swim but instinct makes me kick my feet to stay afloat. The shoes my mother bought with three weeks’ wages are so heavy. I try to push them off without going under.

  I know I can’t kick water for long. Already my thighs and arms feel tired. I see four, maybe five, other heads swirling in the waves. How can three hundred people disappear so quickly?

  A yellow plastic bag washes toward me. There are clothes inside. The knot has been tied tightly so the bag is like a floating pocket of air. I cling to it.

  A boy appears next to me, bobbing up from under the waves like I did seconds before. I reach out my hand to him. He looks at me. His eyes are big and oval-shaped and he reminds me of Bini, my best friend at home. I reach my hand out to him again and he tries to grab it but instead sinks beneath the waves. He doesn’t come back up.

  Who will come to save me? Who knows where I am apart from the others tossing and bobbing in the waves like me? What would Bini do now?

  Before

  Best Friend

  The square root can also be written as a fractional exponent.”

  “Yes, Bini. Next time raise your hand first.”

  I’m pretty smart, but Bini is smarter. I can’t tell if our math teacher is proud of us or just irritated by us. Maybe both. We know as much as he does now. Ato Hayat keeps a university textbook in his drawer and copies homework questions for us from it. It came with a sheet of answers, and it’s fine if we get the solutions right, but if we get them wrong, he snaps at us that knowledge is a gift and we should study harder. He doesn’t understand the questions or the answers.

  I’m going to be an engineer. Bini has wanted to be a doctor for as long as I can remember. When we were really small, he would make me lie on the floor so he could listen to my heart beating, or my liver—he wasn’t quite sure back then. As we got older, he started asking random questions, like “Where does sweat come from?” Or “Why does your heart keep on beating and not just stop when you go to sleep?” I didn’t know the answers and I didn’t really care.

  He
would say, “Just think of all those things your body does that you don’t understand, but you want to go and learn about how to build a bridge.” Usually, I’m not fast enough to think of a clever reply until it’s too late to sound clever anymore. Saying “Yeah, but how would a doctor reach a patient if there was no bridge to drive over?” seems a bit lame twenty-four hours later. Still, we are best friends. Maybe because we like to argue with each other.

  Normal Day

  The school bell rings, and even though I’m only heading to the market we race to the gate.

  “See if you can get there first for once, squirt,” Bini yells over his shoulder.

  All the boys in our class were a similar height until summer term, then suddenly Bini was a bit taller, and now his body can’t seem to stop shooting upward. I fix my eyes on his back, dodging the other kids in their blue uniforms, hopping on and off the dusty curb as I weave around bodies and jump clear of oncoming cars. I see the market up ahead. People and small piles of vegetables spill from the sidewalk onto the street. Next to some open sacks of cinnamon, Bini is leaning against a jacaranda tree, mouth closed, pretending that he isn’t out of breath even though I can see his chest heaving up and down.

  “Not bad,” he says, smiling, “for a squirt.”

  I punch him on his skinny arm.

  We wander home beneath a solid blue sky, the hot sun baking everything it touches. Our houses are next door to each other, in the middle of a low, flat-roofed terrace on the edge of the city. Inside there is no upstairs, just two rooms crammed with everything we need. We sleep, eat, cook, and do homework in these two rooms. Quite often it feels as if we spend so much time in each other’s houses we might as well just knock a big hole through the wall and put a door there. When I was seven, we were going to move somewhere bigger, but then my father died and we had no more money—only what Mom earns mending and making clothes at the workshop two streets away.

  I don’t remember Dad being ill. Apparently there was nothing the doctors could do. One day he went into the hospital, and he never came back. Bini’s dad moved out at around the same time. He went to find a better job on the other side of the city. Our moms became very close. Mom says that money isn’t everything. We are lucky to have a roof over our heads and it doesn’t matter what that roof is made of or how big the house is underneath it. Sometimes I wish I had my own room, though.

  We step around the little kids sitting on the curb. Too young for school, but not too young to look after the five goats eating grass at the shady edge of the road.

  Bini and I sprint the last few yards to our front doors. I hurry to the wooden cupboard in the corner of the living room, take out a faded red T-shirt and jeans, and change out of my uniform.

  Seconds later, I hear Bini knocking. How does he get changed so fast? Before I’ve properly opened the door, he pushes in, schoolbooks piled in his arms.

  “Let’s get this done quickly, then we’ll have more time for me to beat you at chess.”

  “Is time all you need? You should have said so before,” I tease.

  The only gift I have from my father is the chess set he made for my sixth birthday. The board is a tin tray and the pieces are carved out of wood—carved by him. It’s my most precious possession. Not least because chess is the one thing I can always beat Bini at and it drives him crazy. We will keep playing until one day he wins, and I will never be able to beat him again after that.

  Something Weird

  The next morning, Mom leaves before I do. Work is busy right now, which is good and bad. My little sister, Lemlem, whines as she is bundled out of the house. I hear Mom promising her something nice as the door clicks shut behind them.

  Two minutes later, Bini knocks. I grab my bag and we walk down the road to school, Bini slowly, me at a normal pace to keep up with his giraffe strides. As we get closer to school, the roads are wider and the houses bigger. We’re about to turn the final corner when Bini slows down.

  An army truck is parked about a hundred yards from the school entrance. Four soldiers sit in the back, rifles on their knees, watching the schoolkids pass in front. I look ahead to the gates. No one is kicking a ball around outside. The other kids are filing into school without looking up. One mother turns around and starts walking back the other way, taking her sons with her.

  “What’s going on?” I ask Bini.

  “No idea,” he replies.

  We keep quiet as we pass the truck.

  Our first lesson is chemistry. Ato Dawit is my favorite teacher, but today I don’t enjoy the lesson. Ato Dawit seems tired. No one raises their hand to answer questions.

  At lunchtime Bini and I head for our normal spot over by the shady trees in the corner of the yard.

  As we start to eat, I watch Kidane walk slowly in our direction with two of his friends. There isn’t any more space to sit down, so I wonder what he wants. My stomach does a little flip. Kidane had the same growth rush as Bini, only he grew wider as well as taller. Now he looks about four years older than the rest of our class. A class Bini and I have been moved up to only because of our good grades.

  “Why is the army hanging around outside our school today?” asks Kidane.

  “How should we know?” Bini answers.

  “Perhaps you should go home and ask your dad.” He looks first at Bini, then at me.

  Bini stares at him. “Why don’t you go and ask your dad? Or would you need to help him with a big word like army?”

  Kidane grabs Bini by the collar of his school shirt. “At least mine hasn’t run away. It’s people like you and your dad who make it dangerous for the rest of us,” he hisses.

  Bini stands up. Kidane is still holding his T-shirt, but now their eyes are level. Bini doesn’t flinch. Kidane shoves him backward and walks away with his friends, glancing back to give us both a death stare.

  My mouth feels dry when I speak. “What do you think he meant when he said we make it dangerous for the rest of them?”

  Bini is frowning at the ground, deep in thought. “I don’t know, but I feel like everyone else does.”

  “Have you heard anything from your dad?”

  “No. He hasn’t sent Mom any money, either. She says it takes time to find a job that earns enough.” He pauses. “Six years seems long enough, though.”

  “Kidane must know my dad died,” I say.

  “He’s an idiot,” says Bini. “That’s one thing I am sure about.”

  After school, we head home in silence, Bini kicking at stones. I almost feel like letting him win at chess but decide he’ll feel better soon enough. Instead I let him reach check.

  Police

  As dusk approaches, Bini heads home for dinner. Mom and Lemlem still aren’t back. This means Mom is finishing a big order. Maybe a wedding dress or something for a government official. Lemlem won’t start school for another year so she spends most days, or at least part of the day, at the tailor, too, playing in the scraps, picking cotton from the floor, and helping fold fabric.

  My stomach growls, but there is no bag of injera hanging from the cupboard door ready for dinner. I know that nearly everywhere will have sold out of it by now. The tsebhi won’t be enough on its own.

  I’m not supposed to leave the house after dark. I count to twenty, but there’s still no sound of footsteps approaching, so I decide that dusk doesn’t count and take five nakfa from the old milk-powder tin.

  I head down the empty road to the nearest shop. The light is still on.

  “Kemay amsikum, Solomon,” I call.

  He stops putting tins on the shelf and turns around. “Kemay amsika.”

  I point to the flat round basket on the counter containing whatever injera is left. Two pieces. Solomon takes my coins and stuffs the injera in a bag.

  The sudden rumble of a vehicle approaching startles me. There is hardly ever much traffic after dark, especially out of the city center. I turn but am momentarily blind to the dark road, an imprint of the shop’s lightbulb still white in my eyes. My visi
on clears and I see an army truck and the silhouettes of three soldiers with rifles jumping down from the back. Their heavy boots crunch in the sandy gravel of the road. I turn quickly back to the bright shop, not wanting to attract attention. I hear one of the soldiers knock on the door of a house next to the truck. The other two are at a house two or three doors farther away.

  I take the bag of injera and walk back in the direction of my house.

  I hear a raised voice from inside one of the houses, then a second deep voice shouting, “Hey. Hey!”

  I instinctively know this shout is directed at me. I haven’t done anything wrong, but everyone avoids the military. I break into a run, skidding as I turn the corner to my street. I can hear heavy boots crunching quickly down the road I just turned off. I fumble for a key in the folds of my pocket. Using two hands, I guide it into the lock, stumble inside, then push the green metal door back to click shut as quietly as my sweaty hands will allow.

  I sit very still. I realize that I’m holding my breath and try not to pant. Each breath sounds loud, like a betrayal. Outside the door it is silent.

  I’m not sure how long I sit like this. Perhaps twenty minutes later, there is a muffled thud as the front door eases open. I freeze. Then my mother’s voice filters through the panic.

  “Shif, what are you doing sitting there in the dark? What happened?”

  Lemlem runs over and hugs my knee. “What happened?” She mimics my mother.

  “I went to buy injera,” I say in a voice that doesn’t feel like my own. “Some soldiers went into the houses next to Solomon’s shop. I think they were looking for someone. Then they shouted after me, too, so I ran. I don’t know if they saw which house I went into—I didn’t turn around.”

  My mother’s hand has moved involuntarily to her mouth. She is completely still.

  Lemlem smiles up at me, then turns to look at my mother. “Mom?” she asks.

  As if emerging from a trance, my mother begins to issue instructions. “Lemlem, can you fetch some water, shikorina?” Then, looking back at me: “Why did you go out after dark? We have some bread in the tin, which would have been enough. Do you not listen to me?”

 

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