Unsettled

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Unsettled Page 1

by Reem Faruqi




  Dedication

  For Amma and Abba . . . and Nana, of course

  In memory of Nana Abu, Pyarijan, Dada, and Dulhan Chachi

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Part One

  Escape

  Best Friends

  Beach Food

  Teatime

  The Perfect Day

  Home

  The Worst Day

  Tangle

  Math Class

  My Family’s Outsides

  Visiting Grandmothers

  Dadi

  Seeds of Hope

  Nana

  Nana

  Nana

  My Grandmother Nana’s Hands

  Blue Cocoon

  Motia and Mehndi

  Part Two

  On Land

  Settle

  Nurah Haqq

  My Mother

  Language Barrier

  Language

  Which Land Is Mine?

  Hotel

  Little

  Stop

  My Family

  Ammi Says

  Where?

  Part Three

  The Rec Center

  Warm Welcome

  Blue Cocoon

  Trophy Case

  TV

  School Morning

  The First Day of School

  Language Arts

  Science Class

  Hands

  Math Class Decisions

  Coloring 101

  Lunchtime

  Second Day of School

  Aidan

  Lab Partner

  Clothes

  Autumn

  Sweet in Comfort Suites

  Comfort in Comfort Suites

  The Ways of Rice

  House Hunting

  A New House

  Lunchtime

  Skype Calls

  Walking to the Rec Center

  Rec Center

  Cold

  Karachi

  American Winter

  Baba’s Patience

  Birds

  After School

  Bright-Yellow Flyer

  Teatime

  Skin

  Dollop of Hope

  Pep Talk

  Stahr

  Camouflage

  Imagine

  Difference

  Swim Tryouts

  Strokes

  Alyson

  Owais

  Masjid

  Junaid

  Hair

  School

  Stand Out

  Fall Parent Conferences

  Amphibian

  On the Way Home

  Swim Team

  Part Four

  My Mother’s Belly

  Back Home

  Doubts

  Before Bed

  My Father’s Answer

  Anger

  Swimming

  The Moment

  Teatime

  Part Five

  The House

  Raspberry

  Google

  Baby Sizes

  Nurah Haqq

  Skype

  Fajr Prayer Before Sunrise

  Nana’s Worries

  Swim Meets

  Where Is My Mother?

  Almost Neighbors

  The Next Day

  Teatime

  Plans of Penelope

  Staying Together

  The Surprise

  Leftover Paint

  Art Class

  My Art Teacher

  The Words of Ms. White

  Swim Meets

  Swim Meet

  Extra Sleep

  Afternoons

  Help

  Delayed Teatime

  Getting Better

  Part Six

  Bullied

  The Bus

  Jay

  Did You Know?

  The Incident

  I Wish

  Sunday School

  Pep Talk

  Courage

  Time

  Temper

  Inside

  The Incident

  Tomorrow

  Aftermath

  Terrorist Attack

  Knock on the Door

  Facts

  Art Class

  After the Terrorist Attack

  Part Seven

  Looks

  Jealousy

  Owais’s Room

  Extra Practice

  Star Athlete

  Instead of Pointers

  False Promises

  Before the Locker Rooms

  Locker Rooms

  Girls’ Locker Room

  Waiting

  Probably

  Lifeguard

  Stretcher

  Hospital

  Sorry

  Fighter

  Home Visit

  For My Brother

  Later

  Part Eight

  In America

  Dadi

  Airport

  Babysitting

  Hardware Store—$14.99

  Garden

  Deadheading

  Chess

  Junaid

  Conspirator

  The Walk Home

  Weighing Down of Words

  Aidan

  Decision

  The Mirror

  No Longer

  Lab

  Trying Again

  Melty Circles of Joy

  Unwanted

  Practice

  Spring Conferences

  Part Nine

  Owais’s Room

  Without Owais

  Offerings

  Returning

  My Father

  Thirsty

  Friends

  Hobbies of My Brother

  Who Do We Have?

  Stamina

  Sunday School

  Masjid Lobby

  Final Art Project

  Final Swim Meet

  Coach Kelly’s Warm-Up

  Diving Block

  50 Yards

  Final Swim Meet

  Owais’s Turn

  Medal

  Newspaper

  Summer

  Visitor

  Teatime

  For My Mother

  So

  Windy Day

  Author’s Note

  Glossary

  Nurah’s Aloo Kabab Lunch Recipe

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Part One

  Escape

  I grab Asna’s hand,

  palm to palm,

  nail to nail,

  and lean in,

  but Nana’s hand

  yanks my shoulder.

  Don’t you know

  about the father

  who went in

  to get the mother

  who went in

  to get the brother

  who went in

  to get the baby?

  The sea swallowed them up.

  These waves

  are not to be played in.

  But Nana . . . I’m a swimmer!

  Nana gives me a look,

  a flash of gray-ringed eyes.

  A look

  that makes me swallow

  my words up whole.

  Best Friends

  My grandmother Nana watches us,

  so we stay on the sand.

  After watching

  camels roam in the surf,

  their pom-poms taunting us,

  a balloon seller bobbing by,

  red yellow blue green circles

  looking

  d

  o

  w

  n

  at us,

  an
elderly beggar woman

  (with too many wrinkles to count),

  and black crows,

  shrieking for food and company,

  Asna and I trace our names

  over and over,

  watching the waves

  slurp them up.

  I watch Nana right back.

  Beach Food

  For lunch:

  Soft mutton that my fingers shred easily.

  Biryani rice.

  Brown, saffron gold, white

  ghee-soaked grains

  that gently slip off my spoon.

  For dessert:

  A white box tied with string

  Asna and I sneak our hands in.

  Buttery biscuits from the bakery,

  a dot of jelly in the middle.

  For tea:

  Roasted corn, its teeth

  more black than yellow.

  Chips saltier than the sea.

  Teatime

  When the sun is dipping,

  and Nana goes in the villa to pray with Nana Abu,

  we tiptoe in finally.

  The waves pull hard

  but we smile anyway

  stuff our laughter in our cheeks

  giddy with getting away with it.

  After a few waves

  guilt strikes.

  We turn to tiptoe back,

  but my glasses fall

  and even though I try to grab them,

  the sea sucks them up,

  never to return.

  The Perfect Day

  If I could choose

  a day

  to live over and over,

  I’d choose today.

  Camel rides on the sand,

  the feel of stiff fur.

  Memories of the sun setting in our hair,

  sandy eyelashes.

  Home

  After the bumpy ride home

  from the beach

  we are served

  scoops of gold—

  Nana’s mango ice cream

  and Baba’s news.

  The Worst Day

  If I could choose

  from all the days on this earth

  to live over and over,

  I’d skip today.

  Tangle

  Just when my grandmother Dadi’s mind

  becomes so tangled

  that she doesn’t remember

  my name anymore,

  Baba, my father, gets the news:

  a job offer in America.

  He says Yes

  because my uncle is here to help.

  He says Yes

  because schools there are better.

  He says Yes

  because of “job security.”

  He says Yes.

  The Yes slices our old world away.

  We will travel.

  Mile upon mile.

  Mile upon mile.

  While my grandmother’s mind

  tangles up more.

  Tangle upon tangle.

  Tangle upon tangle.

  Math Class

  While I wait

  for my new glasses to be ready,

  reading is fuzzier

  but numbers are still sharp

  in my mind.

  The teacher taps her desk,

  picks and flicks

  chipped rosy polish,

  the color of my gums,

  while we are supposed to

  be solving for x, a, and b.

  But I am counting

  hours,

  minutes,

  seconds.

  How many seconds do I have

  if I leave in 53 days?

  Swift pencil marks

  On paper

  Calculate

  53 days × 24 hours × 60 minutes × 60 seconds

  = 4,579,200 seconds.

  I like math

  because there’s always one answer.

  6 + 7 will always = 13 (my age).

  I like math

  because numbers don’t change their minds.

  I wish Baba

  wasn’t like a number right now.

  I wish Baba

  would change his mind

  and let us stay.

  My Family’s Outsides

  Me

  I have a bump

  on my nose—

  the doctor calls it

  a deviated septum.

  My nose is always stuffy,

  and a little crooked,

  and even though I don’t want people

  to notice my nose,

  it is always making noise,

  so it gets noticed anyway,

  especially when it gets

  extra stuffy

  after I go for a swim,

  which is my favorite thing,

  ever,

  which is every day.

  My eyebrows are not

  inverted delicate Vs like my father’s

  but straight bushy lines

  like my mother’s.

  My face is practical,

  too practical,

  but it envies my hair,

  a black mirror

  that in the brightest sunlight

  turns brown.

  My hair is always smooth and silky,

  it makes friends easily

  with my fingers

  and the comb.

  If I choose to cover my hair,

  like my mother,

  what will my face envy?

  My Big Brother

  Owais, who is 2 years and 2 days

  older than me,

  732 days to be exact,

  doesn’t want to move either.

  His eyebrows hug each other

  as he pushes dal and rice

  around his plate,

  around and around.

  Instead of packing,

  he visits the swimming pool.

  Diving deep

  into the water,

  over and over again.

  Instead of packing,

  he visits the tennis courts,

  slicing the ball

  easily over the net.

  He slices the ball so hard

  and so far

  away,

  that when the ball finally

  hits the net,

  he sinks to his knees

  and doesn’t have the energy

  to get up.

  Ammi: My Mother

  Original owner of the thick bushy eyebrows.

  My mother’s brows are straight lines

  like Owais and me.

  If you were to pour tea,

  and add a little milk,

  and count 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,

  that would be the color of

  my skin.

  If you were to pour tea,

  and add milk,

  you would need to pour,

  pour,

  pour,

  and

  count 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10

  until the color of

  my mother’s skin.

  My mother, Ammi, is prettier than me.

  I know it in the way she lingers

  at the mirror

  and I don’t.

  Her delicate features

  boast at more beauty

  while mine

  have already

  accepted

  who

  they

  are.

  But there is one thing of mine

  that is better than hers.

  Her hair knots easily,

  and mine never does.

  Her smile doesn’t

  reach all the way

  to her eyes

  when she tries to sell us America.

  Baba: My Father

  My father’s eyebrows are

  the wings of birds

  flying into the horizon.

  Only when my father is mad,

  they become like my mother’s.

  Now that we’re moving,

  from Pakistan to the Unite
d States of America,

  they stay inverted.

  Nana Abu

  The father of my mother,

  Nana Abu,

  has two toes on his left foot

  that hug each other

  one a little in front

  of the other

  one a little behind

  the other

  that I call

  hugging toes.

  Even with his

  hugging toes,

  my grandfather does not really

  give out hugs.

  But when Nana told him

  that we were moving,

  his tree arms reached out,

  long and loving limbs

  gave me a side hug.

  Asna

  Is the tallest in the class,

  taller than the boys,

  taller than Mrs. Zakaria even.

  I am the smallest in the class,

  smaller than the teacher,

  smaller than all the other boys and girls,

  but when I am with Asna I am the loudest.

  So Mrs. Zakaria tries to move my seat

  far

  from Asna.

  Now that I’m moving,

  my seat will be very very

  far.

  Now is Mrs. Zakaria happy?

  Last Day of School

  I make my eyes hard

  scoot my chair

  next to Asna

  close the space

  all the way

  no inches left

  not even a millimeter.

  I look around

  and dare Mrs. Zakaria

  to say anything.

  She doesn’t.

  Asna

  Asna is my friend.

  Not just any friend.

  Not just a good friend,

  but a best friend.

  Asna,

  who has a new baby sister,

  says

  but you have to

  be here

  but you have to

  see her grow up . . .

  Have

  Have you

  Have you ever

  Have you ever said

  Have you ever said goodbye

  Have you ever said goodbye to

  Have you ever said goodbye to a

  Have you ever said goodbye to a best

  Have you ever said goodbye to a best friend?

  Visiting Grandmothers

  Guilt slaps

  the soles of my feet

  when I run up the marble stairs

  to the mother of my mother,

  Nana’s room.

  Then I walk slowly

  to Dadi’s room.

  Dadi

  When I tell

  the mother

  of my father

  goodbye,

  she doesn’t wish me

  a safe trip

  a happy life

  lots of love.

  Instead, she asks me my name.

  Seeds of Hope

  My grandmother Dadi may not know my name,

  but every morning,

  she scoops seed into her

  palms that are

  lined

  lined

  lined

  and she scatters it

  round the garden.

  The birds are remembered.

  When she’s not looking,

 

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