Part 1 (2/2)
The officer introduced himself as Corporal Holder. ”Welcome,” he said. ”How much luggage do you have?” She identified one piece after another after another-more, with the medical supplies, than Corporal Holder might have expected, but he showed no surprise as, with fluid movements, he loaded the suitcases and boxes onto a cart. ”This way, ma”am” he said, soothingly direct and familiar.
Outside the terminal, Mandy felt dust settle on her skin almost immediately. Holder led the way past a paved expanse to a graveled lot, chatting as they walked. ”We”re parked all the way over here-sorry. They don”t allow you to get too close. How was your flight? You must be tired. I”ve brought some waters in case you”re thirsty. They”re in the vehicle. Here we are. And this is PFC Mendez.”
s.h.i.+fting her purse to one side, Mandy managed a handshake with the private. With Holder in the front pa.s.senger seat, Mendez at the wheel, and Mandy in the back, they pulled away from the airport.
Afghanistan felt immediately more chaotic than it had in the terminal, which moments earlier Mandy would have said was impossible. Cars hurtled toward one another on what could only loosely be called opposite sides of the road. Horns honked uselessly. Mendez swerved right and then left, careening past trucks, bicycles, men pulling large wooden carts, women in burqas like imploring blue ghosts at the roadside and finally, a legless beggar planted in the middle of the road, empty hands extended before him, undaunted as cars shot by close enough for him to lick if he tried. As they pa.s.sed him, Mandy sucked in her breath.
Holder turned to look at her, and seemed to read her thoughts, even those she couldn”t form into words. ”Jimmy showed me a couple photos once,” he offered. ”You look exactly like your pictures, Mrs. Wilkens.”
Mandy managed a silent if vacant smile into the rearview mirror. She planned to ask Holder what Jimmy had been like here, and how he”d spent his time when they weren”t fighting. But she wanted a more private moment for that conversation.
”So you”re from Houston, then?” Mendez spoke over his shoulder.
”Right,” Mandy said. ”How about you?”
”St. Louis,” said Holder.
”New Mexico,” answered Mendez. ”A little town south of Santa Fe. Watch out, dumba.s.s,” he said, addressing a pa.s.sing vehicle, and then, over his shoulder again, added, ”excuse me, ma”am. They drive crazy here.”
”I can see that.”
”If you don”t mind me asking, ma”am,” Mendez said, ”but what are you...well, what are you doing in Kabul? I mean, Holder here tried to explain but...”
”I”m a nurse preceptor back home,” Mandy said.
”Pre-what?”
”I work side by side with nurses that I train in the emergency ward. And we get our share of emergencies, especially on Friday...” Mandy trailed off, knowing that an emergency in Houston was nothing like one here. ”On Friday and Sat.u.r.day nights,” she finished lamely. ”Anyway, I”m here to visit some hospitals, maybe a refugee camp or two. I”ve brought supplies to hand out-antibiotics, sterile bandages, sutures, that kind of thing. I”ll observe. Maybe I can offer some best-practice suggestions on evaluation or triage.”
”Pretty brave of you to come here,” Mendez said. ”And to come alone.”
”Brave.” It hadn”t been the word Jimmy had used. Mandy touched the edge of her headscarf as if it were her hair. ”I worked for the Peace Corps way back when. I figured if I could do two years then, I could manage a couple weeks now.”
”But you”re on your own this time.”
She shook her head. ”I”m working through an NGO that deals with refugees. The incountry director used to be married to a friend of mine. He”s connecting me to the people and places.”
”And where were you based, back in the Peace Corps?”
”Ecuador. I worked in a clinic in there.”
Mendez drove in silence for a moment. ”Forgive me, ma”am,” he said, ”but I don”t imagine Ecuador is much like Afghanistan. Here, we”re all just scooping teacups out of the t.i.tanic. I”m probably not supposed to say that kind of s.h.i.+t, you know, morale and all...” Mendez twisted the steering wheel to the left, and Mandy lurched into the turn. ”Let”s just say I wouldn”t want my mom here.”
”Sorry about my buddy here,” Holder said as he socked Mendez”s right arm. ”He”s got too many questions and too many opinions.”
”It”s all right.” Mandy had heard a version of this, only with greater heat, from Jimmy. She”d hoped not to respond to questions like these. She”d hoped to talk only about her desire to help heal others injured by a war that had cost her son his legs. But this Mendez, he could be Jimmy. He even sounded a little like Jimmy used to sound. For reasons she couldn”t precisely name, she wanted to give him a fuller picture. ”You”re right,” she said, ”I”m not Doctors Without Borders. But I sent a son here to fight,” she went on. ”It”s the hardest thing I”ve ever done-you know from your own families. While Jimmy was here, I was living back there, but living differently. I lived with an everyday fear. He returned, thankfully. But he”s-you know, he”s...” She thought about saying changed, but she was trying to get at the root of what she felt now, and part of that involved veering away from euphuisms. ”He”s a double amputee.” She paused, finding herself surprised again at the ugliness of this phrase. ”So it”s also personal. I decided to try...maybe, to understand things better in the end. There have to be Afghan mothers here who feel like I do. I”d like to meet them.”
A car honked its horn as it pa.s.sed them and Mendez cursed under his breath. ”Yeah, well good luck with your work,” he said. ”h.e.l.l, it”s as likely to win hearts and minds as much as anything else we do out here.”
”Jimmy was a good soldier,” Holder said after a moment. He turned to Mandy. ”So how is he, really?”
This was too complex a question to answer in this hurtling car, in front of strangers. What could she say? That loud noises frighten him and he seems to have forgotten how to laugh? That he says Afghanistan left him forever half a man, and that some nights he grows so dark it scares her, and then he drinks himself into oblivion? That sometimes she feels like she”s just waiting for the day he”ll give up altogether and become a delayed, unacknowledged fatality of this war, possibly taking her down with him?
She looked out the window, aware of the awkward fall of silence. ”He”s alive,” she said. ”In the end, I guess we”re lucky.”
”d.a.m.n straight,” Mendez said. Then, mercifully, he turned on the radio and Arabicsounding music flooded the car, making Mandy think of young women dancing in gauze dresses. She gazed out the window, remembering when she herself had been a young woman with clingy dresses and shapely legs and an easy stride, a woman who”d not yet cleaned blood off a wound or leaned over a terminal patient or had a baby ripen in her belly.
She rested a hand on her chest, feeling the air move inside her. Something was badly broken in there, she knew. But maybe-and this was the secret hope she”d carried with her from Texas to Dubai and over the yawning stretch of Afghanistan-maybe she”d heal herself in their hospitals, by a taste of the country that had chewed up her son and then spit him back. Maybe, if G.o.d existed, if he were truly great, they”d all be healed.
Todd, September 4th.
The argument had tumbled forward for almost 20 minutes now and had already begun circling back; Todd was ready for ice cream. To a casual observer, the debate might seem onesided; after all, Amin did all the talking. But Todd had a knack for disagreeing without speaking. His was the art of those too cautious or too isolated to engage in frank exchanges. He”d refined it over years of working far from home, challenging himself to seek persuasion through patience and through words used like pinches of pepper in a delicate dish.
”This isn”t our work,” Amin said, ”I don”t trust Zarlasht; her aim is to manipulate,” and then, with greater heat, ”it”s dangerous to involve yourself in a dispute of this sort, Mr. Todd-I feel a responsibility to make sure you understand this,” and finally, ”it”s outside our sphere of responsibility anyway. We must concentrate on working for refugees.”
Todd smiled or grimaced now and then, nodded in a way that indicated nothing more than thoughtfulness, and occasionally glanced out the window. Though his vision was curtailed by the ten-foot-high, whitewashed security wall that encased the compound, he knew that just beyond it lay the chaotic life of Kabul streets, where women in burqas clutched kohl-eyed babies and begged at stoplights, and men pus.h.i.+ng wheelbarrows loaded with bruised fruit swayed between cars with audacity, where underfed children scattered and regrouped to sell pieces of rusted metal intended for purposes Todd could never discern, where traffic lights and lane markings were thought to be for sissies and safe travel was achieved only through great boldness and luck. He longed for it. He longed especially now, stuck in a room of intellectual-and ultimately, he feared, irresolvable-discord.
Finally, blessedly, Amin paused for breath.
”Shall I get us some sheer yakh?” Todd asked.
”Why not simply have told her to return on Thursday, instead of Wednesday?” Amin said, using what surely had to be the last of his arguing energy. ”Then I could have said you were called out of town on an emergency. That might have discouraged her-or at least would have given me time to look into her claims, her family.” Todd”s travel plans were always secret; Amin, his closest Kabul colleague-no, friend-was the only person here who knew that early Thursday, just before fajr prayers, Todd would depart for Islamabad. By Thursday evening, he would be waist-deep in issues involving refugees in Pakistan, and Zarlasht would have been turned away at the gate. After four weeks in Pakistan, Todd would return for one more month in Kabul, his last. Then back to New York, and to Clarissa, for good, though Amin hadn”t yet been told that, and of course that involved challenges of its own. Challenges not to be considered now; Todd always said his doctors insisted that, for his continued good health, he ignore all problems outside his current time zone.
”Because, Amin, we cannot simply dismiss this as beyond our mandate.” Todd kept his voice neutral in contrast to Amin”s heat. ”You tell me the villagers are turning to the Taliban for justice. Well, Zarlasht is turning to us. If we do nothing, we are by default supporting the Taliban.”
”How many years do I know you now, Mr. Todd? Long enough for me to say that you are still too trusting, and my words are not a-how do you say?-a compliment. You-”
But Todd held up his hand, cutting Amin off. ”Wait, my friend. First...” He reached to a tray on a table in the corner, lifted aloft two small gla.s.s bowls, and raised his eyebrows in a question.
Amin let out an exasperated breath of air. ”Too late for ice cream,” he said.
”Oh Amin, we haven”t reached the end of the world yet. And even then-”
”Your cook told me to strictly forbid you from eating ice cream after 3 p.m. because otherwise, you won't eat her dinners.”
”Yes,” Todd agreed. ”Shogofa will not be happy with me. But there's nothing for it; sheer yakh it must be. It will clear our brains. Remember, we have the late meeting with the American nurse, Mandy Wilkens.”
”I didn”t forget,” Amin said. ”But, Mr. Todd. Do you really want ice cream, or just to escape my reasonable words?”
”The ice cream. Okay, mostly the ice cream.” Todd, mock-somber, put his hand to his chest. ”I swear.”
Amin shook his head in resignation. ”One scoop,” he said. ”Only one.”
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