Girl at War: A Novel

“I’ve got a reservation. We can walk.”


I trailed behind her back up the stairs, in awe of the ease with which she carried herself in high heels. I still clomped whenever I tried to wear them, and the older I got the more unlikely it seemed I would ever learn the grace other women had. Each time we passed an expensive-looking restaurant, I held out hope we’d be going someplace more casual, where I wouldn’t make an ass of myself. Sharon pecked at her BlackBerry and gestured absently to UN-affiliated properties—the Malaysian consulate, the hotel where all the bigwigs stayed. I looked at them inattentively, but could think only of how I might begin the conversation I’d been suppressing for a decade.

The sun broke through a patch of gray, warming my cheeks and sending India’s mission building shimmering. At the top, the inset porch was now awash in a spring gold, sun spilling through the latticed skylight and glancing off the mirrored cut-ins along the walls.

“It is a beautiful one,” Sharon said, leaning back on her heels. “Something futuristic about it, almost.”

I’d been thinking the opposite—that the russet granite suggested desert, an ancient-temple kind of beauty, but I said nothing and followed her across the street.

The restaurant looked a little dingy, its awning faded and curtains caked in dust. When we entered, though, I was dismayed to find the place was indeed upscale, if not exactly clean. The tables were sheathed in stodgy white linen even for the lunch hour. I looked down at my sneakers.

“I’ll have the house red,” Sharon said to a waiter in a metallic vest.

“Can I have a Coke, please?”

The waiter smiled and took my wineglass away with him. The room was lit with patchy spotlights, and I squinted at the menu. There were no prices on anything.

“I think that went very well, don’t you?” said Sharon. I told her I thought so, too, but in reality I wasn’t so sure. I fiddled with my napkin, folding and unfolding the little cloth rectangle, and asked about her project. She responded with stock lines about busyness and moved her file folders beneath her chair.

“But enough about that. How’s college? And your sister—Rahela?”

The use of my sister’s name, the one no one had called her in years, caught me off guard. “They—we—call her Rachel here.”

“And she’s well?”

“She’s good, yeah. I’m surprised you remembered her.”

“Petar often spoke fondly of your family when we were on duty together. Particularly during the period in which you were…missing.”

Speaking of Petar. For all the times the question had lingered in my mind, it was difficult to shape in my mouth. The finality of knowing. “Do you—” I faltered. The waiter returned with our drinks, and I hoped Sharon, who had not picked up the menu, would tell him to go away. But she ordered a steak salad with mustard dressing, and, unprepared, I ordered the same. When the waiter left, Sharon sipped her wine and looked at me expectantly. “What were you saying?”

“Nothing.”

She paused but decided to take me at my word. “Then tell me more about you. I want to hear all about your new family, your new life.”

I clenched my teeth at her use of the word. New, like I had traded one family for another in a used-car deal. I swallowed the resentment and told her that my family was kind and had taken good care of me. Rahela was healthy now, as if nothing had ever been wrong with her at all. We’d spent most of the last ten years in a suburb of Philadelphia, where everything was clean and calm. That I had come to New York to get away from that quiet. Sharon nodded along like a woman at church. She meant to be encouraging, I knew, or else she was pleased with herself, but either way it bothered me that my life was something for her to evaluate and take some kind of credit for. “Anyway,” I said. I looked down at my plate. “I wanted to ask you about Petar.”

Sharon stopped nodding.

“Do you know what happened to him? The day we left?”

“No,” she said. “The men I sent—they couldn’t find him. Then I was in Germany for a month, and after that Bosnia, out of communication. I was sort of hoping you had—”

“I haven’t,” I said.

“I tried. I wrote letters. Even asked the people who set up the new embassy. But there was nothing.”

“What about all the other guys in the unit?”

“I think of all of them, of course, but none of them were as close—Petar and I were friends. And, after you, I just wanted to know that everything was okay.”

“Petar told me he saved your life.”

“That, too—I owe him. Really it was probably more than once. His unit actually used their guns and we were carrying ours around like handbags.”

My face must have betrayed my anxiety because Sharon said, “I’m sorry. Sometimes I just feel like if I don’t laugh about it, something really ugly could take root in me. I’m sure you understand.”

I said I did.

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