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Authors: Randa Abdel-Fattah

Does My Head Look Big in This? (27 page)

BOOK: Does My Head Look Big in This?
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“Yeah, how premenstrual are you?” Rita says.

“Well done,” I say. “Another piece of original thought by Rita Mason.”

“Maybe we’re being insensitive,” Tia says. “Did somebody
dump
you, Amal?”

“Yeah,” Rita says, giggling, “was
it Adam
?”

“You’ve all become a little lovey-dovey, haven’t you now?” Tia says, smirking. “Adam and you, Josh and Simone. Well, there’s something to say for opposites attract. Fat and thin. Hip and daggy. Hey Rita, maybe I should wear a tablecloth on my head and live on Snickers bars and I’ll get a man too!”

Rita bursts out laughing and I flash them a knowing smile.

“It must burn you, hey Tia? I mean, there you are chucking up your bottled water, applying your fake tan, conditioning your hair and throwing yourself at Josh and he picks
Simone
.”

She crosses her arms and looks at me with narrow, angry eyes. “Let’s get one thing straight, I’ve never been after Josh. If I wanted him, I would have had him.”

“You must be joking, right? Tia, you are beyond a cliché. I mean, does it come naturally to you or do you stay up late at night and practise this whole Hollywood-soapie-drama-queen-bitch act?”

Before giving her a chance to respond I walk out. If there’s ever been a time when home education sounded appealing, this is it.

32

I
t’s a warm October night and Mrs Vaselli and I are seated outside on her front porch drinking hot chocolate. She’s wearing the shawl. It took her a while to appear in front of me with it on. I kept seeing a tassel or two protruding from the hall cupboard every time I visited. One evening I walked up to the cupboard, took the shawl out and put it around her shoulders.

“Should have been black,” she said gruffly, trying to salvage some pride.

“Should have been any colour but blue?” I joked knowingly, and she looked at me for a moment and then let out a short, hard laugh.

“Yes, any colour but blue,” she said, hugging it closer around her.

“Don’t you ever feel like calling him?” I ask her tonight.

“Sometime,” she says curtly.

“Won’t Jesus be upset with you for lying, Mrs Vaselli?” I wag my finger at her.

“Don’t joke to me wis Jesus,” she says sternly.

“Don’t lie to me about your son.”

She sighs and leans back into her chair, playing with the tassels on her shawl.

“He no call me.”

“But he must have at first. What happened?”

“I tell him I no want him call me.” We look at each other gingerly. She’s unsure how much to give out. I’m unsure how much of a right I have to interfere.

“But . . . that’s obviously why he doesn’t call.”

“Huh!” She’s not impressed.

“Mrs Vaselli, I know it must hurt you. That he rejected your religion—”

“His religion.”

“OK,
his
religion. But everybody . . . you can’t cut off from him like this!”

“I know he no have salvation now. How I be happy? How I see him and knowing he going hell? All because zat woman he marry!”

“But . . . but . . . nobody knows where they’ll end up. Nobody can play God with other people’s destiny.”

“I know he choosing wrong religion.”

“Yeah but then everybody would be cut off from everybody else if we sorted people out into hell and heaven.”

“Huh! You no understanding. When you have child, maybe you understanding. He become other religion and you sit easy?”

I scrunch my face up in thought. “I don’t know . . . but don’t you miss him? I don’t get it. Are you telling me that if your son were to walk up to your front door now you’d slam it in his face?”

“You tinking life like movie. You people born here, you no understanding what life is. You having life easy. You no going through what we went through. You changing your religion and your mama and papa culture like changing clothe. My son he no showing his papa and mama respect . . . you, you tinking, I know, I bad woman. Reject my son and no talk to him. But I am a mama. Yes?”

I nod.

“You asking if my son come door I close in his face?”

“Yeah.”

“I am a mama. I . . . I will . . . Iisten to me. He will never coming door first place! I angry at him and I saying tings and he saying tings. I blaming him for his papa dead. His papa die from heart attack and I blaming my son. And somewhere inside me I still blaming him. And I angry and so sad and pray for him to return to Jesus. But too late. I no call him. After all I do for him he reject. And he no call me . . . he no call me any more . . . so . . . no fixing ze problem, Amal.” She looks at me pensively and sighs.

“Look, I know you built your life here from scratch, without English or your mum and dad or your friends. So I kind of get that maybe loyalty means the world to you. Especially seeing as you only had one son.”

“Yes! You understanding now!”

“And you worked really hard and you heard about your parents’ death through the mail and you never knew what it felt like to have an extended family around you.”

“Yes, exact. My life very, very hard.”

“And your husband he worked so hard for you and your son, to build a new life for you here.”

“Jesus bless him.”

“Well then, what I don’t understand is why you’re punishing yourself with loneliness when your reward in old age should be your son and his family! I don’t get it. Why can’t you just call?”

“No!” she cries, throwing her face in her hands and shaking her head. “Why he no call his mama?”

“How will you know unless you call? Maybe he thinks you’re going to hang the phone up on him.”

“Always stupid answer! Why I listen to you? You a child. You no understanding.”

“I think I do understand, Mrs Vaselli. . . I understand that you left your homeland without even knowing what you were coming to and that you lost your babies without a mum’s shoulder to cry on. I understand that you’re really religious and your son broke your heart when he converted. I come from a religious family. I can only imagine how my parents would react if I did the same thing.”

She looks up at me in surprise.

“But you’re alone now. . . Some people live in agony wishing they had just one minute more with someone they love who’s left them. It’s in your hands . . . you have an only son out there and you can spend the rest of your life reunited with him.”

She looks at me intensely and I expect her to slap me or tell me to shut up. But then her body just kind of shrivels. Her frame collapses into a heap and her eyes well up with tears. “I no knowing what to do. . .” she murmurs, staring at the concrete. “I just no knowing what to do. . .”

It’s so dark out in the garden. All we have on is a single porch light, capturing us in a whirl of shadows and pools of artificial light or evening darkness. The cicadas are partying hard all around us, breaking the silence of our street

I approach her cautiously. I reach out to touch her but shrink back, scared, of what, I don’t know. Am I scared her pain will somehow transfer from her skin to mine? I reach out again, and place one hand on her shoulder, sitting on the armrest of my seat. She doesn’t stir, just sits shrunken, deflated of energy and rage. She doesn’t say anything so I talk.

“My mum’s had three miscarriages. I don’t even know if I would have had a brother or a sister.” She stirs slightly but doesn’t speak.

“She told me some people said some really dumb things when they came over and tried to make her feel better. They’d tell her God was saving her from a bad child. How awful is that? Or they would tell her that she never got to know her child so it shouldn’t hurt her so much, she’d get over it. How idiotic can people get? Because I know for a fact that it aches inside my mum until today. . . Maybe you’re really upset because you think your son is lost to you. But isn’t that, like. . . Look, don’t make him a miscarriage, Mrs Vaselli. Not over religion. Nothing’s worth that.” We sit in silence. And then I let out a startled laugh.

“I don’t know why I’m telling you all this, Mrs Vaselli. Why should I care? I’ve never even met your son. ’Cause when I think about it, actually, I reckon you’re the grumpiest grouch of a neighbour I’ve ever had.” She looks up at me and I almost detect a twitch of a smile.

“You cheeky girl,” she says slowly.

“Look, if you don’t call him, I think
I
will, ’cause you are so stubborn! You put my dad to shame! There’s this Arabic saying my mum always tells my dad when he’s really stubborn. She says his mind is like a shoe.”

“A shoe?”

“Yep,” I shrug. “Lost in translation, I guess.”

She bursts into laughter. She doesn’t stop, her chest heaves up and down and she leans over, wiping her eyes and shaking as her lungs gasp for air. I see her and I crack up, and we’re sitting on the porch, an old woman with her tasselled shawl, me with my hijab, and we’re finding out that we’re connected enough to affect each other. And it makes us laugh harder to realize we’d ever doubted it.

33

S
urvival through high school is all about appendages, specifically, the hand (left or right is irrelevant). Let me explain: whether you overcome ridicule, acne, cellulite, rejection, unrequited lust, bitchiness and the rest of what can make high school awesome fun (
not
)
is entirely dependent upon who maintains the upper hand. For example, Tia and I, in our long-standing efforts to destroy each other, are really involved in a struggle to establish who has the upper hand. Some days her comeback lines are infinitely more eloquent than mine and we both know that she’s come out on top. Other days I, to put it bluntly, kick arse.

This is what I am thinking as I watch Mr Piper flap his arms about and pace the classroom in his excitement over the Somme offensive in World War I. I really don’t understand how teachers manage to conduct themselves in such a deluded state of mind. How can he possibly believe, with any degree of sincerity, that we’re interested? Doesn’t he realize that he has managed to put Tim, Rachel and Carlos to sleep in the back row? And over to my right we have Tia, Rita and Claire hiding magazines in their textbooks and pretending to be absorbed in Chapter Six.

Well hello, hello. Adam, who is sitting at the desk next
to me and has barely made eye contact with me since class started, has suddenly caught my eye and, check this out, rolled his eyes. Not rolled-his-eyes-
at-me
scenario. But rolled-his-eyes-at-teacher-in-united-solidarity-with-fellow-student scenario. I wonder if this is an opportunity for me to gain the upper hand again. Because until now he has undoubtedly had exclusive possession of it. At first, I did, when I rejected him. But after the rejection-due-to-principles-not-aversion-to-Adam incident, Adam’s two-week sulk/macho act enabled him to regain the upper hand. I think I might attempt to normalize things again. So I slip Adam the following note, squashed in the lid of my liquid paper pen to avoid Mr Piper’s watchful eyes:
Do you think he wears that toupee to bed? Incidentally, what’s with the verbal constipation?

The rest of our literary conversation goes like this:

Adam:
No, he would take it off. Probably put it down for the night in a kennel. PS: Ran out of Mylanta.

Me:
There’s always prune juice.

Adam:
It would interfere with my consumption of sardine and banana sandwiches.

Me:
Yummo
. . .

Adam:
I’ve just noticed that your handwriting is pretty ugly for a girl.

Me:
Thanks!
So, kissed anyone lately? Ha ha

BOOK: Does My Head Look Big in This?
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