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LAILA:
An Excerpt from The Night Counter
Laila
stared at a slab of pork at the supermarket and calculated the
cost of a nervous breakdown: $150 an hour for the shrink, $200
a month for pills not covered by insurance, another $200 for a
homeopathic doctor and nutritionist, at least $500 for a lawyer
to write up her will in case she became suicidal, and $850 for
a self-actualization yoga retreat in California. Throw in another
$600 for a couple of colonics and a massage. Expensive.
The
one thing Laila had inherited from Fatima, besides the nose, was
the ability to do math and shop at the same time. A nervous breakdown,
along with all her other medical expenses, was just not in the
family
budget. She would just have to settle for prayer, her husband’s
response to everything these days. Or she just might get as much
satisfaction out of purchasing pork.
It
was so cold in the meat aisle that Laila found herself readjusting
her wig as if it were a ski cap. She shivered and reached for
the pinkish gray pork. Her hand jerked back. How did people touch
this
stuff? She watched a frazzled woman with three kids grab a large
armful of packages – it was a pretty good pork sale. One of
the kid’s suckers popped out of his mouth and landed where
Laila used to have 36D breasts.
“
Oh, I’m sorry, ma’am,” the woman apologized, reaching
to pull off the Jolly Rancher.
Laila
brushed the woman’s hand away. “It’s okay.
My boys were always doing things like that,” she said and plucked
the sucker off her sweater and handed it to the mother, who handed
it back to the kid. This woman isn’t the germaphobe I was with
my boys, Laila thought. The woman’s two other kids were now
tossing one of the pork packages to each other as if it were a football.
“
What do you do with this stuff?” Laila asked, pointing at the
flying meat.
“
The pork chops?”
“
Yes, the pork.”
“
Well, you can broil them and then cover them in barbecue sauce,” the
woman recommended. “That’s what they do in the south.”
She
pointed to a row of barbecue sauce bottles lined up above the pork
section. Laila thanked her as she
and her
kids rolled
away
with their cart, which overflowed with cereal boxes
redeemable via the
coupons the youngest kid was waving around. Laila
grabbed a bottle of barbecue sauce and then saw
the price.
$4.99 a bottle.
It
was a darn good thing she’d never eaten pork. She could get two
bottles of ketchup for that price and that would take care of at
least 50 hamburgers. She bought a couple of cans of tomato sauce
instead. It was not like Ghazi had ever eaten pork. He wouldn’t
know how it was supposed to be served.
As
she put her groceries in the car, Laila almost slipped on a greasy
rain puddle made last night
during the
first thunderstorm
of summer.
Typical Detroit. She could smell more rain on
the way. She and Ghazi used to talk about moving to
Florida when the kids
grew
up.
In truth,
she had only flown on an airplane once in her
life, she’d never
lived anywhere but Detroit, all her doctors were here, and her relationship
with Ghazi wasn’t such that either relaxed at the thought of
living in a place where the only people they would know were each
other. And Ghazi’s mosque was here. She slammed the trunk hard.
When
Laila had discovered her cancer, Ghazi had discovered Islam. Up
until then they had been
the kind of Muslims
who fulfilled
their duties by giving to the poor and not
eating pork. They only knew
when the Muslim holidays were when Ghazi’s mother called from
Cairo to say Eid Mubarak. Now Ghazi was the kind of Muslim who went
to the mosque five times a day, didn’t drink, and gave all
the money he used to spend on his fancy gym membership to the new
mosque, as if trading in fat for prayer would make his family healthy
again.
Laila
drove by the new mosque every time she went to Dearborn for cooking
supplies - or
real food,
as Fatima
called it.
It was where
she was heading now. She couldn’t just serve tomato sauce pork
for dinner. She couldn’t miss the mosque’s minarets from
the freeway. After all, Michigan’s Muslims bragged that the
mosque was the largest one in North America.
At
Greenland Supermarket, she bought halloumi cheese, a bag of pumpkin
seeds, and a five
liter bottle
of olive oil from
Lebanon,
which she
noted didn’t cost half as much as the pork, despite the sale.
She usually got the ingredients to make foul for Ghazi, but today,
for the first time in her marriage, she wasn’t in the mood.
Amani, Ghazi’s mother, could make it for him later in the week.
After all, she had come here from Cairo to help, as Ghazi described
the purpose of her chaotic arrival.
The
store was packed, as usual, and Laila waited in a very long line
with women in
headscarves,
black abayas,
or tight
rayon
tops with
glitter designs. It all fit in here,
but Laila remembered that when she was a girl
it was
very rare to see
a headscarf,
let
alone an
abaya, in Dearborn. The Arabs of her
childhood had been blenders; they just mixed into
the rest of the
country.
She didn’t even
know where those Arabs were now, all those popular girls from high
school.
The
shoppers at Greenland, mostly women, checked each other out as
usual, either
in judgment
or curiosity. Laila used
to think
that
gave the hijabis the advantage because
she couldn’t see the
secrets under their scarves. However, now with the wig, she felt
that they were on even ground, and she stared right back. It turned
out that after all these years, she was a better starer than anyone
else. A few minutes later, no one would look at her.
She
turned her attention to the collage of posters at the exit behind
the cashiers.
Most featured
big-eyed children
in rags,
lone figures
amongst rubble – one sign asking in both English and Arabic
to sponsor a child in the refugee camps, which Laila did, another
asking to give money to the schools in southern Lebanon, which Laila
did, another asking for contributions to restore Egypt’s classic
black and white films, which Laila also did.
There
were posters asking for money to rebuild Iraq. This Laila did not
give
to. Many of
her neighbors had kids in
the military,
and
Laila felt sad for them every day,
but she did not
agree with the destruction of Iraq
and so she could not bring
herself to give
to its reconstruction. It was also
how she had responded to
the loss
of her breasts. Ghazi had said
that
reconstructive surgery would make
her feel like a woman
again. But she still
felt like a woman,
even if he couldn’t see that anymore. Laila had found her cancer
430 days ago, the same day the US invaded Iraq.
The
bagger, Ahmad, asked her how she was doing. Everyone in Dearborn
knew
her “situation,” as they called the cancer in whispers,
because of Ghazi’s generous contributions to the mosque. Ahmad
was a sweet kid, 24, about the same age as Zaki, her youngest. Ahmad
had been in the U.S. only 14 months, and he always said how lucky
her boys were to have her so close. He missed his mom. Laila would
have definitely had a nervous breakdown if her sons had talked about
missing her. But on the days when the boys took her to radiation
instead of Ghazi, she smelled their fear through their clothes, which
she still ironed for them. If her boys were married, they would not
miss her so much if the cancer came back. When she had told them
that if she died, they would want someone to lean on, they had told
her that the cancer would not come back. They did not mention any
girlfriends.
“
I hope you can get your mom a visa soon, Ahmad,” Laila said,
as she always did. “She won’t believe how successful
you’ve become in such a short time.”
“
Allah wa Akbar,” Ahmad grunted as he heaved the five liters
of olive oil into the trunk. The pork bag tipped over.
“
That’s funny looking chicken, Auntie,” he said.
Laila
stepped in between him and the pork. “It was on sale,” she
explained. “Fifty cents a pound. What can you expect for that,
you know.”
Ahmad
was impressed. Dearborn’s stores, like ethnic markets
everywhere, sold meat and produce at rock bottom prices. But fifty
cents a pound.
“
You shop well, Auntie,” he said.
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