LINKS
“You didn’t have to be so rude.” My words rush out before I remember that I am in no position to chastise Amir. I duck my head so he can’t watch me hopscotching between indignation and shame.
Amir relaxes as Ian disappears. “You need to be careful. Things aren’t as easy here as they seem at first.”
I can only stare at him, confused. What is that supposed to mean? What does he want? “What are you doing here?” I ask again.
“I wanted to talk to you, but your brother said you were out. So I waited.”
I feel like a dog bracing for a second kick.
He pulls an envelope from a pocket inside his jacket and thrusts it toward me. “Here. It should be enough.”
I don’t have to ask him what it is; the flap has come unsealed. It’s money. American money. The envelope is bulging with wrinkled bills. Some are torn; all are dirty. These are not the clean, crisp bills of Emmy’s ATM visits. This is money hard-earned and well hidden.
“But …” Questions collide on my tongue, but no words come out.
“Your mother called us late last night. You didn’t know?”
“No,” I whisper, embarrassed. “What did she say?”
He looks as confused as I am. “She said that she needed money to pay the rent. She asked to borrow it from us.”
“No!” I’m repulsed by the idea of taking his money. “We can’t. I mean, you can’t afford it anyway.”
“Why would you think that? That we can’t afford it?”
I can see in his eyes that this is a test. His questions are challenges. “I’ve seen where you live, Amir.” I say it softly. I force meekness into my voice to lessen the insult.
But he doesn’t take it as an insult. He responds as if he were teaching a small child, patronizing and slow. “We have plenty of money, Laila. Everyone living there works at least one job, and sometimes two or three. Except Nadeen, of course.”
My face grows hot at the mention of his sister. Her very name feels like a rebuke, even if Amir does not intend it that way. “You work? When?”
“Nights. Weekends. Weekdays during lunch period sometimes if they need me. Though there aren’t many busboy emergencies at the restaurant.”
My brain calculates his schedule. No wonder I never see him at school. He’s racing to his job the moment the bell rings. “Then why—” I search for a polite way to phrase my question. “Why do you live like you do? With so many of you crammed together? With those horrible neighbors?”
“We have better things to do with our money, Laila.”
I can see that he wants me to ask the question, so I do. “Like what?” I’m more dutiful than I am curious, since I already know that the answer will sting.
It does.
“I’m saving to get my father out of prison, first. But everyone in that apartment has someone back home who needs rescuing. Airfare, travel visas, medical care, food. We’re a needy family. We come from a needy place.”
“You heard from your father?” I perk up at the reference, hungry for good news.
But Amir wilts when he answers. “Not exactly. Not directly from him, anyway. But he is alive. That alone is worth celebrating. And we’ve discovered that your uncle’s regime is more open to bribes than your father’s was. I suppose that’s worth celebrating, too. If we can get enough money to the right people to pay for my father’s release, that is.”
I hold up the envelope. “Then why this? Why would you give us money that you need far more than we do?”
“We were up most of the night discussing this, and for once they included me. Do you want to know why, Laila?”
He wants me to nod, so I do, slowly.
“They wanted to know about you. You and Bastien, really, but since I haven’t spent much time with your brother, they mostly wanted to know what I thought of you.”
I try to swallow, but my throat is too dry. “What did you tell them?”
He leans closer to me, every bit as close as Ian was just before he kissed me. “I told them you didn’t know. That you had no idea what your father was doing. That you and your brother are innocent. I saw it on your face, Laila, when I told you about my village. I saw how painful it was for you to hear. I’m right, aren’t I? That you didn’t know?”
He’s studying me, not even breathing, and I realize that this truly matters to him. He needs to be right. He wants for me to be innocent.
“I didn’t know,” I whisper, and a part of me crumbles. I’m admitting—what, exactly? I’m admitting something, to Amir and to myself. I’m acknowledging the monster I never saw in my father’s shoes. “I didn’t know,” I repeat, and this time I’m able to look at Amir as I say it.
He nods, satisfied. “I didn’t think so. But even so, my cousins aren’t giving this to your family as an act of kindness. This isn’t charity. It’s more like an investment. Or maybe a gamble. We expect to be paid back and more.”
I feel myself shrink as I understand. This is no rescue, no lifeline. This is another noose around my family’s neck. If we take this money, we are doubly indebted—first to Darren Gansler and now to Amir’s family. I’m certain we’ll pay a steep price for both of these debts.
I hold out the envelope. “Take it back,” I say. “We don’t want it. Not from you.” It’s pride mixed with fear making me reckless, and even though my voice sounds firm, I know deep down that we need this money.
Amir doesn’t take it. “This is a long-term plan. Your family has a way of coming out on top, Laila. This time you need us. Next time we might need you. Besides, you should know by now that neither one of us really has a vote here.”
For a moment we’re frozen like this—me holding out the envelope, Amir not taking it. Out of nowhere it occurs to me that if Ian and I tilt toward one another, off balance and light, then Amir and I are welded together. Our pasts, our shared strangeness here, and our connected fates give us a weighty bond.
Slowly, I lower the envelope, silently accepting his conditions. I don’t like it. I don’t like accepting money from him, both because he has better uses for it and because, as I learned yesterday, my family is already so deeply indebted to his. This loan will cost too much either way. He knows it, and I know it.
But welded together as we are, if I sink, he does too. I take the money.
INTENTIONS
The envelope is warm. This repulses me—it makes the money feel like a living, breathing burden, even though I know it’s only because Amir was carrying it inside his jacket.
I steam-train up the stairs, prepared to confront my mother. How dare she? Surely she didn’t know what she was asking.
Bastien sits in the hallway in front of our door, carefully sorting glass from paper. He learned about recycling in school, and he’s been a fanatic ever since. I don’t have the heart to tell him that I saw the building maintenance crew toss all the bins into one giant Dumpster, mixed together and headed to the same place as the rest of the trash. His intentions are noble, and the end result is out of his control.
“That’s a lot, right, Laila?” His brow is pinched.
I inspect his handiwork. Four clear and three green glass bottles. All alcohol except for a single empty jar of mayonnaise. Wine and gin and whatever else my mother now drinks in place of tea. “This is from just this week?”
Bastien nods. He looks worried, and I mentally commit to pay more attention to him.
“No, it’s not so much,” I lie. “Come on, I’ll help you take it downstairs.”
He only lets me carry the lightest pile, a small stack of newspapers. Bastien insists on carrying the bottles, stuffed into plastic grocery bags, by himself. I feel protective of him as he clinks down the stairs, and I wonder if that’s how my mother feels too. I hate that she asked for money from people so wounded by my father’s actions, but I can understand her instinct. She’s trying to keep us safe in the only way she knows how.
After Bastien finishes putting his recycling into the proper bins, we trudge back upstairs. My resolve to confront Mother is fading. I’ll give her the money without argument, I decide. But I will do everything I can to make sure she pays it back. It’s time our family repaid our debts.