Unsettled

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Unsettled Page 7

by Reem Faruqi


  Star Athlete

  Coach Kelly smiles

  a big smile

  to see us at the pool

  on the weekend.

  He’s my star athlete!

  she boasts to

  the other coach there.

  Owais is tall

  has swimmer shoulders

  and a swimmer waist

  I am small and

  don’t have much

  of anything.

  Coach Kelly doesn’t

  see me

  or maybe she does

  but today

  she doesn’t really

  see me.

  Instead of Pointers

  From the very top of the diving board

  Owais is diving

  high to low

  high to low again

  a flip here

  a flip there

  and there is a girl

  with pink-painted lips

  who looks up

  smiles and claps.

  If I were to do

  the same dive,

  she would not clap

  for me.

  Owais is

  a better diver

  a better swimmer

  better in looks

  and most things

  and sometimes when

  I’m with him

  I fade

  away.

  If I were to sink

  to the bottom

  of the pool,

  nobody would notice.

  They would be too busy

  looking at Owais

  diving and

  diving again.

  The girl with pink-

  painted lips

  waves to Owais

  before he goes

  to the locker rooms.

  He waves back

  and I roll my eyes.

  False Promises

  Owais

  didn’t show me

  any pointers.

  Owais

  didn’t teach me

  anything.

  Owais

  didn’t do

  what he was supposed

  to do.

  Before the Locker Rooms

  Out of the corner

  of my eye

  I see two of them

  with football-player bodies.

  They exchange a look

  before they frown at Owais,

  who still has a smile

  on his lips.

  They walk toward the girl

  with the pink-painted lips.

  That jerk needs to stop showing off.

  I see one nudge the other.

  I know, right?

  smirks the girl

  with the pink-painted lips.

  She’s looking

  straight at me.

  Do you know him?

  she asks.

  I don’t really know him.

  Not anymore.

  I let out a laugh

  that doesn’t sound

  like a laugh.

  I let out a shrug

  that doesn’t look

  like a shrug.

  I let my mouth become an O

  let my answer s l i p

  out easily

  too

  easily.

  Nope.

  Locker Rooms

  I should call Owais back

  before he goes

  inside the locker room

  but he isn’t paying attention

  to me.

  So

  I

  let

  him

  go.

  Girls’ Locker Room

  Underneath the shower

  drip drop drip

  runs shower water

  Drip drop drip

  run my tears

  not from

  the chemicals

  of the pool,

  but from

  the chemicals

  of my heart.

  And although

  the water is hot,

  my tears

  run cold.

  I try to wash

  the worries away

  scrub my fears

  lather the pesky voice

  that says

  What kind

  of person,

  what kind

  of sister

  are you?

  Waiting

  I am waiting

  for too long

  outside the locker rooms

  on the too-hard bench

  and the two guys

  who are tall tall tall

  and wide wide wide

  come out

  laughing.

  The girl

  with the pink-painted lips

  smirks at them

  All done? she says.

  I am stuck

  waiting

  waiting

  waiting

  for Owais.

  Where is he?

  Guilt nibbles at my stomach.

  I stood up

  for the bus monitor man,

  but for my brother who

  has 2 arms

  and is better than me

  at everything

  I didn’t call back.

  When trouble

  was thick in the air,

  heavy in my ears,

  I just watched

  and waited.

  Invisible.

  Probably

  He is probably just taking

  a long

  long

  long

  long

  long

  shower.

  Right?

  Lifeguard

  Turning out the lights

  my tongue is swollen

  with tension.

  My words are dry.

  My brother hasn’t

  come out yet,

  can you check on him—

  please?

  Stretcher

  Under a sky

  the color of

  broken promises

  the body of

  my brother

  is lifted out

  of the locker room

  in a stretcher.

  His face

  is puffy

  and discolored.

  I feel so

  so

  so

  alone.

  Why did

  I let him go?

  Hospital

  At the hospital

  my parents will

  demand

  Who has done this?

  Why did they do it?

  But I will

  just shrug.

  The words

  clogged in my throat.

  Sorry

  He cannot hear me.

  At least I think he can’t . . .

  I hold his hand,

  I’m sorry

  I didn’t warn you.

  More sorry

  than you can

  imagine.

  The sorry

  loosens my tongue.

  The sorry

  teaches me that next time—

  if there’s a next time—

  I will know what to do.

  I will know what to say.

  I will

  I will always

  I will always say

  I will always say something.

  Fighter

  When my brother wakes up,

  his face is still a little colorful.

  Owais, what happened?

  Nurah, I told them

  I’m not a fighter,

  but they wouldn’t listen.

  They wouldn’t listen . . .

  Doesn’t he know

  the day we came here

  we were made into

  fighters?

  Home Visit

  Coach Kelly

  comes to our house

  and words like

  surveillance cameras

  file a report

  justice must be served


  are written by Baba

  on bright-yellow paper

  served on the table

  right next to chai

  next to Owais’s

  emergency room

  discharge papers.

  Words fill up

  the paper.

  For My Brother

  Before I felt

  bubbles of anger.

  Now I feel a

  Waterf

  a

  l

  l

  of regret.

  For my brother,

  I churn my apology into action.

  I bring him steaming bowls of dal,

  fresh stories of back home,

  a pile of laundry

  with socks matched

  toe to toe.

  I tell him he doesn’t look so bad,

  wait for him to smile,

  but he’s not ready yet.

  Later

  His face will become

  the right color.

  He will be fine.

  Handsome again.

  The two boys

  will be reported

  but they will come back

  to the Rec Center

  unfazed

  and my brother

  my brave

  diving brother

  will stay away from

  the blue cocoon

  of water.

  Part Eight

  In America

  I will look

  for my grandparents

  by habit

  even though I know

  they are back home

  in Pakistan.

  I realize

  when I am in

  the checkout line

  helping

  my mother

  (always helping)

  bananas

  eggs

  cans of tomato sauce

  (for curry)

  that I don’t see

  old people

  here.

  Where do they hide?

  Here I see

  young

  and middle aged.

  Only later when I join

  Key Club

  and have community service

  I finally see

  the old people

  in nursing homes

  rocking on chairs

  staring into space

  not being served

  crispy samosas

  not having their feet

  massaged

  not being visited.

  Just staring.

  Dadi

  When Baba

  says that Dadi is going to visit

  to see a few doctors,

  my heart lifts

  to the top

  of my short hair

  I will see her soon.

  But it drops again

  to the bottoms

  of my feet

  when I remember that she

  won’t remember

  my name.

  Airport

  At the Atlanta

  international terminal

  anticipation bubbles

  around me.

  There are people

  who have light skin

  the color of milk

  with a drop of tea,

  medium skin

  the color of milky tea,

  and dark skin

  the color of tea

  without a drop of milk.

  People who are all

  looking around

  hungry for family.

  I am holding my sign

  Welcome Dadi!

  On purpose

  I left out

  Home

  because America

  is not a home

  for Dadi.

  When Zaidu Chacha

  and the attendant

  walks Dadi out,

  we wave big.

  But Dadi

  sees us

  has to be guided over

  to us

  and when she sees us

  her arms pat

  the bones in my back,

  and I smile big

  because she must

  remember me,

  but then she

  asks my name.

  Babysitting

  One Friday a month,

  my neighbor Ms. Grayson asks me to babysit

  her kids.

  For dinner,

  I feed them

  sticks of fish

  trees of broccoli

  valleys of chocolate mousse.

  At bedtime,

  I braid the sky

  with my stories.

  I blend

  stories of land

  stories of oceans

  stories of Pakistan.

  When Ms. Grayson returns,

  my stories evaporate back into the sky,

  but it’s okay because I get paid money.

  Hardware Store—$14.99

  In the aisle

  next to food for cats

  and food for dogs

  I see the food that will make

  Dadi happy—

  food for birds.

  In the area

  at the back

  that peeks outside

  I use my babysitting money

  to buy a pot of flowers

  that will make

  Dadi happy—

  petunias.

  Garden

  On the grass that is

  green

  like the Pakistan flag

  Dadi’s mind becomes

  like a pointed pencil,

  sharp,

  as she scoops out

  the birdseed

  I bought for her.

  Dadi’s hands

  do not tremble.

  Dadi’s hands

  are full of

  purpose.

  Dadi holds in

  a deep breath

  full of hope

  and longing

  before letting out a laugh

  that floats.

  The cardinal comes

  right before sunset,

  a fluttering flash

  of red wings.

  Deadheading

  Dadi’s voice is clear

  as she pinches off

  pouty pink petunias,

  wilted blooms.

  You need to get rid of

  all the old

  and dead flowers

  to make space

  for new ones.

  Maybe I need to get rid

  of all my old

  and bad choices

  to make space

  for new ones?

  Chess

  My brother spends

  too much time in his room

  so I set up the chessboard

  and challenge Owais.

  Usually Owais wins,

  but today looking at the pieces

  his mouth goes into a yawn.

  When I play Owais,

  his mind is not on the perfect squares in front of us

  but on the other shapes in his mind.

  In chess,

  my horse hops

  my bishop bops

  my queen glides everywhere.

  Checkmate!

  And even though I’m finally beating Owais in something,

  it doesn’t really feel good.

  Junaid

  At the masjid

  he is the one who makes the others invisible.

  Everyone seems to light up

  around Junaid,

  even Owais.

  In the parking lot

  under the basketball hoop

  Junaid dribbles neatly

  jumps high

  swishes the ball through the net.

  Nothing about Junaid

  is awkward.

  He moves like water.

  My eyes must be drinking

  because when he pauses to look at me

  looking at him

  I fe
el important

  and floaty

  like the ocean.

  Conspirator

  After Zaidu Chacha flies home,

  Dadi whispers to me,

  not Owais, because

  he is

  always in his room

  lately,

  because he is safer

  on land

  than in water,

  Do you want

  to go to Baskin-Robbins?

  I say Yes!

  But today,

  my mouth apologizes No because I am struggling

  to balance equations

  in chemistry.

  Carbon

  Hydrogen

  Oxygen.

  I balance my voice

  because that is something

  I know how to do

  and focus

  on my work again.

  But when the house

  gets quiet

  too quiet

  because I don’t hear

  her Quran playing

  in the back

  or hear her tasbih beads

  clicking praying clicking praying clicking praying

  I get up to get

  a glass of water

  then run to the wide-open

  front door.

  Where is she?

  Panic.

  I run down the

  cul-de-sac.

  She is not there.

  Up the steep hill—

  she is not there.

  On the walking path

  I spot her curlers

  her nightgown

  swirling with the wind

  right

  and left.

  I call her name

  and she looks up at me.

  Confused at first,

  she smiles.

  My heart whispers

  Alhamdulillah.

  Praise be to God.

  The Walk Home

  When we walk home

  the next-door neighbor

  Ms. Grayson waves hello.

  Hi y’all!

  She smiles with her coral-painted lips,

  but not with her eyes.

  And even though Dadi’s mind

  is unraveling,

  she sees this

  and returns the same

  lukewarm smile.

  When Ms. Grayson

  pulls me to the side

  and asks,

  Does she speak English?

  I am so angry

  I want to spit.

  Do you know that she reads

  Yeats,

  Shakespeare,

  Austen?

  Do you know that she has

  shelves full

  of books?

  Do you know that she graduated

  top of her class?

  Do you know that she taught

  English at school?

  Instead, I nod,

  keep walking,

 

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