He was my baby brother and I was supposed to take care of him. The fact that I had nothing to give him filled me with shame. The fact that I didnât want to talk to him filled me with shame. I didnât want to talk to him because I knew he would talk about Anabel. I didnât want to think about her, so I couldnât think about him. I shoved my phone back in my purse, left his text unanswered. My father, I thought, would have been disappointed in me.
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Three times he asked me to finish him off, three times I refused. This was before, before I allowed myself to think anything I want. If I had been then what Iâve become today, I would have killed him the first time he asked, his head turned toward me, his left hand in my right.
Godâs truth, if Iâd already become then what I am now, I would have slaughtered him like a sacrificial sheep, out of friendship. But I thought of my old father, of my mother, of the inner voice that commands us all, and I couldnât cut the barbed wire of his suffering. I was not humane with Mademba, my more-than-brother, my childhood friend. I let duty make my choice. I offered him only mistaken thoughts, thoughts commanded by duty, thoughts condoned by a respect for human law, and I was not human.
When I went back to my hotel, I would think about Jeanne and her daughter Andrea. They were watching Ryan die, slowly and painfully. They had prayed for a miracle, but the miracle never came. They had every right to feel angry and resentful. But they didnât feel that way. They were stoic, they were forgiving, they were patient and kind. Even in the most awful circumstances I loved being around them, but they made me feel ashamed of myself, in a way Iâd never felt before. I spent half my life feeling angry and resentful about things that didnât matter. I was the kind of person who got on the phone and shouted at people because the weather outside my Park Lane hotel didnât suit me. Whatever else had been wrong with my childhood, I hadnât been brought up to behave that way. How the fuck had I become like this? Iâd always managed somehow to justify my behaviour to myself, or to make a joke of it, but now I couldnât: real life had barged into my celebrity bubble.
I wanted to grab his cigarette from his rough lips. I wanted to burn my fleshâany cigarette-sized section of fleshâwith it. Then, for just a second, I wanted to burn his flesh instead. Perhaps I wanted to see physical pain in his eyes because I couldnât see my own pain, not really, not clearly. I was horrified by my thoughts, but my horror did not quiet them.
I did ache when I said goodbye to the friends Iâd made. I ached when I said goodbye to my grandparents, to my cousins, to my aunts, to my mother. I ached for lasting connection, for a place where rejection was not inevitable. No matter how many times I stood on bare floors, surrounded by blank walls, telling myself I belonged everywhere and to everyone, emptied houses never stopped feeling like ruin. Failing to fully belong in my fatherâs family, and my motherâs, never stopped feeling like disgrace.
He would smile, perhaps relieved by my unaffectedness. Sometimes Yasmeen cried. I thought two crying daughters would be too much for him, so I trained myself to wait until I was alone, in my closet or in the bath. My father would wipe Yasmeenâs face, hug us both, ask us if we wanted chocolate milk.
âGood girl,â heâd whisper in my ear. I was good because I was restrained. My father, I believe, carried a lot of hurt from his relationship with my mother. He did not like to see the related pain radiating from his daughtersâ eyes.
Those letters taught me about longing. Reading them in front of my father taught me to hide it, often even from myself. I know now what a dangerous kind of denial that is. It leaves you ravenous. It makes your seismometer vibrate when the phone call you are shocked to discover you have been waiting for your whole life offers you precisely what you are terrified to want: Hello, Nadia. This is your mama.