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Baghdad Fixer

Page 36

by Prusher, Ilene


  Louis pushes his tongue out, blowing air to form a small, sugary bubble. In the pop, a speckling of spit lands on my cheek.

  “Some of the ladies here, they’re like, all covered and shit, and yet they’re wearing an inch-thick coating of makeup. And then the men go around in those man-dresses! Explain that to me.”

  “It’s called a dishdasha.”

  “A dish-whatta? A dishrag?”

  He’s trying to wind me up, I know. “A dish-dasha,” I say slowly. “Shall I spell it for you?”

  He laughs. “Now you’re talkin’. Just trying to see how much shit you’re prepared to take. Just bustin’ chops, Nabil.”

  “And sometimes it’s a thob. That’s more a like a robe.” At Maisun Square, he turns up Palestine Street, through Muthana. “Maybe I can draw a picture for you so you won’t confuse them.”

  “Hey, now, that would be useful. Maybe you can make up a whole picture-book you can sell to dumb Americans like me. ‘The Idiot’s Guide to Understanding the National Dress of Iraq.’ By Nabil, uh, what’s your last name?”

  “Al-Amari.”

  “By Nabil ‘Nerves-of-Steel’ al-Amari. But those women, with the big dark eyes? I’m down with that.”

  I listen to Louis yammer on for a while, that sort of polite listening which is only hearing the sound. Suddenly I feel homesick for the days when I had to listen hard to understand English. As a boy in Birmingham when, if I didn’t listen carefully, the language was like a hum in the background.

  “Have you thought of checking out the Tuesday Market as a place for counterfeiting? That’s just up on the right.”

  “Yes, I know that one. But we’re not looking for counterfeited goods, not exactly. That place is purses and watches, no?”

  “Hmm. Well, it’s just a suggestion. You also have Serai and Safafir. And Shorja.”

  I feel a laugh surfacing in my throat, and a quick instinct to suppress it. He sounds ridiculous trying to pronounce Iraqi names.

  “Just trying to let you know about some places to check out, in case you didn’t know,” he says. “Baylor said you needed some help in figuring out the black market scene.”

  “Well, most of those are regular markets.” Al-Shorja is one of my old favourites, with all the fresh spices piled high, mounds of orange cardamom next to dark-gold saffron and shrivelled green spices I never could quite place. I used to love going there as a boy.

  “Whatever,” he says, lowering his window. “But maybe if you rummage around the regular markets, you’ll find what you’re looking for.” Louis brusquely pulls the car over, reaches out and over the roof, and takes back his siren. “No need to look like pigs in this neighbourhood.”

  “Pigs?”

  He glances at me and pulls away again, as quickly as he pulled over. “Pigs. You know, cops? I guess that’s slang. They probably don’t teach you that when you learn English from the BB fucking C.”

  “I went to school in England.”

  “Really? Well then,” he says, trying to feign an English accent, but sounding like an Irish brogue instead. “Smashing, I’m sure.”

  I suppose every culture has some sort of unflattering name for the police. But pigs? I can’t think of a more insulting thing to call a human being. But then, maybe Americans don’t see pigs in the same way we do. When I came back from England and told my friends at school that kids in England eat pig-meat for breakfast, they didn’t believe me. Mum forbade us from eating bacon, but Baba let us have it a few times when he took Ziad and me out to see the football game at the St Andrew’s ground.

  The wide streets and large houses of Zayouna look pretty much the same as they did when I was last here. What’s different is the shops, many of them closed, and the sidestreet checkpoints and homemade roadblocks, which are almost everywhere.

  At the mosque, Louis makes a right and then another right, and then heads past a line of large houses, many of them just like the ones in my neighbourhood, only a little bigger.

  “Do you see this primary school on the right?” He uses his chin to point.

  “Al-Watheq School?”

  “I guess that’s the name. There’s an illegal gun market inside. I’m told you can get a single-action, semi-automatic there for as little as $75.”

  “There? In the school? I find that hard to believe.”

  “Well, I’m pretty sure of it. Do you want to go in and check?”

  “With you?”

  “Nah, I’ll just raise suspicions. Despite what that Waspy-assed Baylor says, I don’t pass for an Iraqi.”

  I move my hand towards the door handle, then use it instead to smooth my trousers. “Well, if I go in and there are people there, I’m sure I’d have to spend at least ten minutes shopping around. If I go and leave quickly, they’ll be suspicious of me.”

  “Take my word for it. They just want to make sales.”

  “Well,” I say, looking at my watch, “if you do have time...”

  “Go already!” he says. “Make it fast.”

  I’m out, pacing quickly towards the school entrance. I hate it when Americans think everything can be done quickly. There is no sense of appreciation that important things take time. I’m walking faster, and as I do the heat creeps up around me, moving across my skin, beneath my clothes. The lobby door is unlocked.

  Two young guys holding Kalashnikovs look up. One of them puts his hands into place on his rifle.

  “Salaam aleikum,” I say.

  “W-aleikum is-salaam,” mumbles the one without his hands ready to shoot.

  “I was looking for a place to buy some...defence.” Stuck between weapons, silah, and defense, difa’, the latter sounds more dignified.

  “They’re not here today. Try coming back tomorrow.”

  “Not here?”

  The quieter man, wearing a stubbly beard that looks like it is based on lethargy more than piety, puts a cigarette in his mouth and lights it. “They went to sell in Aadhamiye today,” he says. “They’ll be back tomorrow.”

  “Oh, well maybe I’ll come back then,” I say.

  He takes his cigarette out. “Looking for something in particular?”

  “Nothing special. lust something small...maybe a Beretta.”

  He puts his cigarette back in and leaves it there. “Well, the Zayouna Brotherhood has the best prices. If we’re not here, ask for Mazen at the pharmacy across from the mosque. He’ll tell you where to find us.”

  “Thanks a lot.”

  “Fi m’Allah” the smoker says, raising his head in a gesture of goodbye. I nod at the other and take off, back through the courtyard. Fi m’Allah. A shortened form of fi iman Allah — with faith in God. May God see to it that we see each other again. Though religious people say fi m’Allah often, it seems strange coming from them. If you have faith in God, why do you need to rely on weapons? I suddenly remember a line by the Indian poet Kabir: “But when deep inside you there is a loaded gun, how can you have God?”

  ~ * ~

  Louis is not where he dropped me off. What if someone shot him and stole his car? What if they’re waiting for me, ready to shoot me for working with the Americans?

  The sound of a car horn, and with it, the sight of Louis’s car, just down the road, closer to the mosque. When I see him, he blinks his lights at me. I walk over, trying not to look too rushed, too obvious, to people on the street. It’s so much better travelling with Rizgar. Even though I often worry about Rizgar looking or sounding Kurdish, at least he is Iraqi.

  “So?”

  “Just two guys with guns.”

  “Really?” Louis looks surprised.

  “But usually they’re there, I guess. It sounds like they took their goods over to Aadhamiye for the day. They might be back tomorrow.”

  “Aha! So it’s a mobile market. Well, that’s good to know.” Louis puts the car into gear and takes off, making too much noise as he does. For someone who is not supposed to be conspicuous, I feel like
we may as well have spray-painted news of our visit across the mosque walls.

  “D’you price anything?” Louis puts his chewed red blob into one of the wrappers and dumps it in the ashtray.

  “You mean to buy a gun?”

  “No, I was hoping you’d buy me a fresh fucking pack of chewing gum.”

  In the wardrobe in my parents’ bedroom, I know there’s a small revolver. I was fascinated with this fact when I was a teenager, wondering how Baba could work on saving lives while arming himself for the possibility of taking them as well.

  “I wouldn’t want to carry a gun.” I turn to face him. “If I did, I might end up having to blow the heads off assholes like you.”

  Louis guffaws. “Ka-ping!” He rasps through the rest of his laugh, which ends in a sigh. “That’s the spirit, my man. Can’t lose your sense of humour in all this. You won’t survive without it.”

  I can almost feel the cold metal moving into my temple, the pressing of the gun against my head. We suggest you stop working with all foreigners. Particularly the Americans.

  I’d get one to protect Sam, though. She’ll go back to America in a pretty coffin.

  “So they only cost $75?” I ask. “I mean, for a basic one?”

  “About that,” he says. “That’s what I’ve heard. Can you afford one?”

  Getting $100 a day to work with Sam, I can afford a whole arsenal. But that’s not the point. I watch as he turns onto the Khalid bin al-Walid Expressway, reaching again for his removable siren to navigate us through the traffic.

  “Don’t worry, I’m not turning on the siren for now,” he says. “Just us getting ready.”

  “I’m not worried.”

  “Sure you are, man. It’s been written all over your face from the moment you got in the car!”

  I feel the urge to pull the visor down, the way Sam always does when she’s sitting in the front in Rizgar’s car, to check myself in the mirror. Instead, I weave my fingers together and turn them out, sending out a rip of cracks.

  “No problem, dude. I can imagine what it must be like. Our guys don’t go out nearly as much as your reporters do. Your people do some crazy shit!”

  My people. As in journalists? Or Iraqis?

  “So how do you get information if your guys don’t go out much?” I ask.

  “Well, from people like you, Nerves-of-Steel. Not every Iraqi who can speaka da English is lucky enough to land a job like you did.” Louis turns the siren on again and weaves through the cars that let him pass. The unsettling rise and fall makes my heart accelerate. I let him talk for a while, feeling my coiled spine loosen a little when he turns the siren off again to get back on the local road, leading to the beautiful Masbah, with its huge houses right along the riverfront. We never drove through here before the war because most of it was closed off to the public, protecting the mansions of government ministers and senior Ba’ath party people. It’s one of the few things I like better about Baghdad ba’id than qabil — driving through the Masbah. I can only imagine how much more beautiful it must be from inside the houses, on the balconies, perched high and proud along the Tigris.

  A queue to buy petrol winds around the bend on the way to the Hamra. While Louis talks, I count. I’m already up to more than seventy cars waiting in line.

  “Hey,” Louis says. “When you start scouring the city for stuff in the illegal markets, can you give me a little briefing on what you find? You know, very off the record?”

  Maybe Sam would say sure, off the record, and say it’s all in the name of cultivating a source. Cultivating. She explained that idea at length the other day, as it applies to journalism. I thought it was for gardening.

  “I — might be able to help. I think I have to check with Sam first.”

  “You do that, buddy. I’d appreciate it.”

  Stop working with the Americans. “I don’t want to promise anything, though.”

  “No sweat. Here you are, Mr al-Amari. Next stop, Hamra Hotel,” he says, pulling into the car park. Some of the drivers who recognize me are watching us roll in, staring.

  “Thanks a lot, Louis.”

  “Hey, Nerves of Steel,” he says. “I’m sorry if I insulted you before with all of that nasty hajji-bashing. I really don’t have anything against the Iraqi people or Muslims at all. Just that I lost a good buddy here last week.”

  “I’m sorry to hear that.”

  He nods. “Yeah, poor guy was only twenty-eight years old. Got a wife and kid at home.”

  “That’s terrible.” I want to ask how and by whom, but instead I wait for him to offer more.

  He shakes his head. “Yeah, well. Look, Nerve-man, it’s been a real pleasure,” he says, thrusting his hand towards me, making me meet it halfway. “Come visit us anytime.”

  “Ahlan w-sahlan. In our country, you must allow us to welcome you,” I say, still feeling the force of his hand against mine, waiting for him to let go.

  ~ * ~

  37

  Waiting

  I’ve been sitting in the ugly orange-and-white café of the first tower lobby for hours, waiting for Sam to come back. I’ve skimmed through three newspapers and have run out of things to say to the few people hanging around. I’m avoiding Rafik in the second tower, in case he might expect some explanation of where Sam was last night, or resume his lecture about hiring a Shi’ite.

  Where is Sam? With Franklin Baylor, a man she hated only a week or so ago. A man who is posing as an expert in electricity, but presumably doesn’t know anything about it. A man who is cultivating her, a man who has access to information she wants so badly that she doesn’t do anything but roll her eyes when he calls her a media chick.

  Sam breezes in the door just after 4 p.m. She smiles and makes an exaggerated sigh. “How long have you been waiting?”

  “A while now.”

  “Good stuff?”

  “Not really. He got called back right away so we only went to one place.”

  “Really? Oh, I thought he was going to show you a lot more than that.” She scans the lobby, empty except for one fixer-and-driver team who have kept to themselves. “Let’s go up and talk.”

  I follow her past the pool and into the second tower, where Rafik meets our entry with a fake smile. He’s on the phone, asking for a room to be cleaned that was somehow overlooked, but as we round our way to the stairs, something about his tone seems artificial — to the point where I wonder if he’s pretending.

  In the room, Sam goes straight to her computer, taps around a bit. Her hands land on her face. “Oh, Jeez. Don’t do this to me. Shit!”

  “What?”

  “They’re telling me now that they want to run the story right away. Listen to this. ‘Sam, we feel we have all we need to run the story about the Jackson documents. Your interview with Akram all we needed. The ink-ageing is being confirmed by a second analyst. Call as soon as you get in.’ Jesus Christ. I have to call them right now.”

  “Didn’t they want you to find out who made the documents?” I ask. “We already knew that they were fake.”

  “Well, I thought so,” she says, “but apparently they don’t know what they want any more. They want the whole story, but they wanted it yesterday.” Sam stands and leans her forehead on the sliding glass door, where the view seems blurrier than it did before, as if we’re under water.

  “What happened to the windows?”

  “The security guy coated all the correspondents’ offices with mylar,” she says matter-of-factly, “in case we get bombed.”

  “You think the Hamra could get bombed?”

  Sam shrugs. “Everything’s possible.”

  “I don’t think you need to really worry. It’s not so famous like the Palestine or the Sheraton. I didn’t even know the Hamra existed until you wrote the name down on your card.”

  “That feels like ten years ago.” She goes back to her desk. “Baghdad years are like dog years.”

  “Like what
?”

  “Dog years. Have you ever heard of dog years?”

  “I’m not sure.”

  “They say each year is like seven years for a dog. So if you’re here for a month, it’s like you’ve been here seven months.”

  The maths of that doesn’t entirely make sense to me, but I get the idea. Is that good? Maybe it feels like seven months because she already feels at home here. Or maybe it means she is tired of it. Of us.

 

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