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Chapter no 8

Ground Zero

 

โ€ŒReshmina took a deep breath and made her decision.โ€Œ

โ€œI am here,โ€ she told the soldier in English. โ€œI will go and bring my father to help you.โ€

โ€œNo, wait,โ€ the soldier said. โ€œPlease. Donโ€™t leave me. I canโ€™t see.โ€ He reached out a hand.

Reshmina took a step back and shook her head, then remembered the soldier couldnโ€™t see her. โ€œI cannot touch you,โ€ she told him. It was forbidden for a woman or girl to touch a man who wasnโ€™t related to her.

Anguish and frustration creased the soldierโ€™s face. โ€œRight. Of course,โ€ he said, lowering his hand. He sniffed, fighting back tears.

Reshmina understood why the soldier was distraught. He was badly injured and alone. Reshmina was his only hope for survival, and if she left him now, he couldnโ€™t be sure she would return.

She had a thought. โ€œI cannot touch you, and I cannot bring you back to my home without asking my father first,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œInstead, I will walk back to my homeย very slowlyโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, please,โ€ the soldier said again, cutting her off. โ€œDonโ€™t leave me!โ€

Reshmina huffed. He wouldnโ€™t let her finish! โ€œI will walk back to my homeย very slowly,โ€ Reshmina said again. โ€œAnd I will practice my English out loud along the way. If somebody happens toย follow me, there is nothing I can do to stop them.โ€

Reshmina saw the soldier relax, then nod. โ€œI understand,โ€ he whispered. โ€œThank you.โ€

Reshmina turned around and began walking slowly back toward her house. She opened her notebook and practiced her English lessons again.

โ€œThank you for inviting me to the movies with you,โ€ she read aloud.

She glanced behind her. The soldier was struggling to crawl after her, but at least he was moving.

Reshmina kept reading. โ€œIt was very nice to meet you. I will friend you on Facebook.โ€

As she walked and read out loud, Reshmina scanned the hillside, afraid that at any moment a Taliban fighter would jump out from behind some bush or twisted tree and kill both her and the soldier behind her. It was sillyโ€”she could see no one else was around. But if she was caught โ€ฆ

At last Reshmina reached her house. The American soldier was still struggling, but he was with her. She led him into the goat pen out back and latched the gate.

โ€œStay here until I bring my father,โ€ Reshmina whispered. โ€œYou are safe.โ€

The soldier didnโ€™t answer. He was too exhausted. He lay motionless on the ground as the goats butted him gently.

Reshmina ran inside the house. Her grandmother still sat in the womenโ€™s room doing needlework, and Zahir played in a corner.

โ€œAnaa! Whereโ€™s Baba? I need him!โ€ Reshmina cried.

โ€œHe just left to go down to the fields,โ€ her grandmother said. โ€œWhatโ€”?โ€ she began to ask, but Reshmina was already running out the front door and down the stairs. Baba was slow on his crutch, and Reshmina quickly overtook him.

โ€œBaba! Baba! Come quickly, please!โ€ she shouted. โ€œThereโ€™s something I have to show you!โ€

Baba nodded, looking concerned, and Reshmina hurried him back to the goat pens. Baba stopped short and gasped when he saw the American soldier lying facedown in the dirt.

โ€œHow did this man come to be here?โ€ Baba asked.

โ€œI donโ€™t know, Baba,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œHe must have followed me home when I was collecting wood.โ€

Babaโ€™s eyes narrowed. Reshmina knew he saw right through her simple lie.

โ€œI didnโ€™t touch him, Baba,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œHe was hurt, and he asked me for help, and I came looking for you right away,โ€ she explained. โ€œShouldnโ€™t we help him, Baba? Isnโ€™t that Pashtunwali?โ€

Baba sighed. He suddenly looked older to Reshmina than he ever had before, and her heart broke at the thought of bringing more hardship to him. She knew just how dangerous it would be to harbor an American soldier in their home. But Reshmina also knew her father was an honorable man.

โ€œIf this man has asked for refuge, he will have it,โ€ Baba said at last.

Reshmina clasped her fatherโ€™s hand in gratitude. Then she held Babaโ€™s crutch for him as he helped the American soldier to his feet. Together, Baba and the soldier hobbled into the house, Reshmina trailing behind them.

Anaa looked up from her needlework, and her eyes went wide. โ€œOh dear,โ€ she said.

โ€œMor jani, help me,โ€ Baba said to his mother, and Anaa quickly stood and spread a sleeping mat on the floor. The American soldier let out a groan of pain as Baba lowered him onto it.

โ€œWhere are we?โ€ the American asked, turning his head. โ€œWhatโ€™s happened?โ€

โ€œThis is my home,โ€ Reshmina told him. โ€œYou are safe. I am Reshmina, and my father and grandmother are here.โ€

Anaa leaned over and peered at the soldierโ€™s wounds. โ€œThank you,โ€ the soldier said. โ€œMy nameโ€™s Taz.โ€ He put

his head back wearily on the sleeping mat, then suddenly jerked up again. โ€œWaitโ€”did I lose it?โ€ he asked. He patted at his chest until his hands found the brown stuffed animal attached to his vest.

Reshmina blinked. Sheโ€™d seen that stuffed creature before. This was the American soldier whoโ€™d led the search of their house!

The soldier seemed to relax when he found the toy. โ€œWhat is that?โ€ Reshmina asked him.

โ€œMy Tasmanian Devil,โ€ said Taz. โ€œHeโ€™s kind of my good luck charm.โ€

Reshmina frowned. The wordย Tasmanianย meant nothing to her. She knew the wordย devil, but the thing didnโ€™t look like any devil sheโ€™d ever seen.

โ€œIs this what Americans think the devil looks like?โ€

Taz grunted a laugh. โ€œNo. Heโ€™s a cartoon character. He spins around and destroys things.โ€

Reshmina didnโ€™t know what a cartoon was, but destroying things certainly sounded American.

โ€œThatโ€™s why they call me Taz,โ€ he added. โ€œFor my Tasmanian Devil.โ€

Reshmina noticed that the wordย LOWERY, not Taz, was sewn on Tazโ€™s vest. Most Afghans didnโ€™t have family names, but Reshmina knew from her teacher that many other people in

the world used them. Lowery must have been this soldierโ€™s family name.

โ€œAnd what doesย DTVย mean?โ€ Reshmina asked. The letters were tattooed on Tazโ€™s arm.

โ€œOh,โ€ Taz said. He pulled his arm against his chest to hide the tattoo, as though he were embarrassed by it. โ€œIt means

โ€ฆ Damn the Valley. Itโ€™s kind of my companyโ€™s slogan. This valleyโ€”it kills our friends and ruins our lives,โ€ he said sadly.

โ€œYes,โ€ Reshmina said quietly. โ€œIt is the same for us.โ€ โ€œWill he live, Mor jani?โ€ Baba asked Anaa.

Anaa looked up from Tazโ€™s bloodstained leg. โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ she said. โ€œHe is badly wounded and needs a hospital.โ€

Reshmina knew that wasnโ€™t going to happen. The nearest hospital was in Asadabad, more than a dayโ€™s walk through mountains full of Taliban.

Marzia came in from the front room with an armful of wet clothes. She saw the American soldier laid out on the mat, dropped the clothes on the dirt floor, and screamed.

โ€œFoolish girl!โ€ Mor scolded, following on Marziaโ€™s heels. โ€œNow weโ€™ll have to wash those all over again!โ€

Mor froze when she saw the American soldier. Taz seemed to sense that he had been discovered by the rest of the family and stayed tensely quiet.

โ€œNo!โ€ her mother cried. โ€œNo no no no no!โ€

Reshmina gulped. Sheโ€™d known her mother would be furious. But Reshminaย hadย to help him. It was Pashtunwali. Her mother had to understand.

โ€œHe asked me for help,โ€ Reshmina said.

Morโ€™s eyes flashed to Reshmina.ย โ€œReshmina, you foolish girl,โ€ย she hissed,ย โ€œyou have brought death to this family! You have brought death to this entire village!โ€

Her motherโ€™s words stung as if she had slapped her. Reshmina tried to argue, but her mother turned and

marched back into the kitchen.

The front door banged open, startling Reshmina. A moment later, her brotherโ€™s voice came from the front room.

โ€œEverybody! Youโ€™ll never guess what happened!โ€

Pasoon! He was back. A chill ran down Reshminaโ€™s spine. She had never feared her brother before. But lately, Pasoon had grown angrier and angrier about the Americans. If he saw Taz in their house now, there was no telling what he would do.

Reshmina ran into the front room to intercept her brother. โ€œThe Taliban ambushed the Americans and the ANA, just like they said they would!โ€ Pasoon crowed. He circled the room, wrapped up in the memory of what heโ€™d seen. โ€œThey

killed them all and dragged their bodies away!โ€

Reshmina bit off a gasp. The Taliban wouldnโ€™t distinguish between soldiers and their translatorโ€”especially not a female one. That meant that Mariamโ€”

Reshmina hiccuped a sob, and then swallowed her grief. She couldnโ€™t let Pasoon think she was crying over dead Americans.

โ€œThey even shot down an American helicopter with an RPG!โ€ Pasoon said. He mimicked the sound of a rocket- propelled grenade streaking across the sky.ย โ€œShhhhhhhhhhh

โ€”โ€

Pasoon paused before he could say โ€œBoom.โ€ Over Reshminaโ€™s shoulder, he caught sight of Anaa, Baba, and Marzia huddled in the next room. โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€ he asked.

Reshmina tried to move to block his view, but Pasoon pushed past her. Reshmina raced after him but it was too late. Her brother stopped and glared down at the American soldier, his face twisting into an angry scowl.

โ€œWhat isย thatย doing here?โ€ย he cried.

โ€œHeโ€™s wounded. He canโ€™t see,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œHe needed help.โ€

โ€œDid youย touchย him?โ€ Pasoon cried.

โ€œNo! He followed me here!โ€ Reshmina turned to her father for help. โ€œBut itโ€™s Pashtunwali to help him, isnโ€™t it, Baba? To give him refuge, even if heโ€™s an enemy?โ€

โ€œSo is revenge!โ€ said Pasoon. โ€œOr have you forgotten that they killed our sister?โ€

Reshmina glanced over at Taz. It was clear that the American didnโ€™t understand what the family was saying, but he could sense they were arguing.

โ€œHeย didnโ€™t kill her,โ€ Reshmina said.

โ€œIf he didnโ€™t do it, his people did!โ€ Pasoon said. โ€œHe probably killed somebodyย elseโ€™sย sister. We should turn him over to the Taliban!โ€

โ€œNo!โ€ Reshmina cried.

โ€œEnough,โ€ said Baba. โ€œThis man has asked us for our help, and so we will help him.โ€

Reshmina raised her chin to her brother, triumphant.

โ€œI canโ€™t believe it!โ€ Pasoon cried. โ€œTheyโ€™reย the terrorists here. All of them. They just call it a war. And you let one of the terrorists into our house! If youโ€™re not going to tell the Taliban, I am.โ€

โ€œNo, youโ€™re not,โ€ Baba told him. โ€œWhile you live under my roof, you live by my rules.โ€

โ€œThen I no longer live under this roof!โ€ Pasoon yelled, and he stormed out the back door.

Reshmina started to follow him, but Anaa reached out for her hand.

โ€œLet him go, Mina-jan,โ€ she said. โ€œHe just needs to blow off a little steam.โ€

Reshmina nodded. Pasoon had often stormed out after arguing with Baba, and he always came back.

But what if this time was different?

โ€œReshmina?โ€ Taz asked at last. โ€œAre you there? Whatโ€™s going on?โ€

โ€œI am here,โ€ Reshmina said in English. โ€œMy father offers you refuge in our house.โ€

โ€œI thought I heard someone say Taliban,โ€ Taz said. โ€œHeโ€™s not going to turn me over to them, is he?โ€

Reshmina translated Tazโ€™s question for her father.

โ€œTell him that even if there are only women and children left alive to fight in our village, we will not let the Taliban take him,โ€ Baba said to Reshmina. โ€œHe is under our protection now.โ€

Women and children might be all thatย wereย left, Reshmina thought, along with a few old and wounded men. The very people they were swearing to protect Taz from were the villageโ€™s sons and nephews and brothers who had left to join the insurgents in the mountains.

Reshmina translated her fatherโ€™s assurances for Taz. โ€œIโ€”Wow. Tell him thank you.ย Manana,โ€ Taz said in badly

accented Pashto. โ€œThank you.โ€

โ€œThere is no guarantee the Taliban will respect Pashtunwali,โ€ Baba said, โ€œand the longer this man stays here, the longer he is a danger to himself and us. He must be returned to his people as soon as possible.โ€

โ€œMy friends will come looking for me,โ€ Taz said. โ€œThe other soldiers who were with me.โ€

โ€œThe other soldiers are dead,โ€ Reshmina told him. She hated to be so blunt, but she didnโ€™t have the words to say it more gently. โ€œSo is an Apache,โ€ she said. She didnโ€™t know the English word forย helicopter, but she knew Taz would understand. Her teacher had taught her that the Americans named their flying deathships after other tribes they had conquered.

โ€œThe Taliban killed them all and took their bodies,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œI am sorry.โ€

Taz lay back, stunned. โ€œThe other American? Him too?โ€ โ€œI think so, yes,โ€ said Reshmina.

Tears welled in the corners of Tazโ€™s blackened eyes. โ€œThat guy was my brother,โ€ Taz said. โ€œThey all were. And today, of all days.โ€

โ€œThe Afghans? And the woman also? Mariam? She was your brother?โ€ Reshmina asked.

โ€œNot really my brothers. I trained with those men, that woman, for a long time. They were like my family. My people. Do you understand?โ€

โ€œYour tribe,โ€ Reshmina said.

โ€œYes,โ€ said Taz. โ€œMy tribe.โ€ He wiped his eyes. โ€œTell your father my radio is broken, and if my people think the Taliban killed me and took me away, they wonโ€™t come back here looking for me.โ€

Reshmina translated for her father, and Baba nodded. โ€œI must go and tell the other families in the village,โ€ he said. โ€œThey must know what we have done. Then I will go to the ANA base and tell them this American is here. They can let the Americans in Asadabad know.โ€

Reshmina looked at her father in surprise. The base was almost five kilometers from here. It would be a hard journey on foot for anyone, let alone a man on a crutch.

โ€œSomeone else should go, Baba,โ€ Marzia told him, speaking up for the first time since sheโ€™d seen Taz.

Their father shook his head. โ€œIt must be me. Our family has offered this man refuge. He is our responsibility.โ€

Reshmina felt a jumble of emotions. She would have gladly gone in Babaโ€™s place, but no family would ever send a daughter to an army base alone. Pasoon could have gone instead, but he had made it clear he no longer stood with his family.

Reshmina turned back to Taz and explained in English what her father planned to do. Taz thanked him again and

pulled the strip of cloth that readย LOWERYย off his uniform with a loud ripping sound. โ€œGive this to your father,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™m special forces, assigned to advise the base heโ€™s going to. Tell him to show this to the Afghan soldiers there, and theyโ€™ll know Iโ€™m really here.โ€

Baba took the strip of cloth from Reshmina. โ€œKeep Zahir in the room whenever one of you is with the soldier,โ€ he said, and she understood. Neither she nor Marzia nor Anaa nor her mother would be allowed in the same room as Taz without a male member of the family as a chaperone. Zahir was hardly a helpful escort, but he still counted.

Baba left the house, and Taz lay back to rest. Anaa sent Marzia for hot water and a cloth to clean Tazโ€™s wounds, and Mor called angrily from the kitchen for the firewood Reshmina was supposed to have collected.

โ€œThe firewood!โ€ Reshmina said. Twice today her chores had been interrupted. โ€œIโ€™ll be back,โ€ she told Anaa, then said the same to Taz in English.

He was already asleep.

โ€œMarzia and I will watch over him,โ€ Anaa told her, and Reshmina ran out the back door.

The goats bleated at her, angry they hadnโ€™t been taken up into the mountains to graze. Reshmina stopped. Whereย wasย Pasoon? When her brother wanted to go somewhere and be mad, he disappeared into the hills with the goats and didnโ€™t come back until heโ€™d calmed down.

What if this time he reallyย hadย gone to join the Taliban?

No. Reshmina couldnโ€™t believe heโ€™d do it. Still, something itched at the back of her brain. Today had been different in so many waysโ€”the raid, the woman translator, the American soldier in their home.

What if Pasoon seeing Taz really was the last straw for her brother?

There was one sure way to know.

Reshmina ran around the side of the house, her heart hammering in her chest. Halfway along the wall sat an upside-down white plastic bucket. Reshmina climbed on top of it, reached as high as she could, and found the little hole in the wall where Pasoon always hid his toy airplane.

It was empty.

Reshmina knew Pasoon had put the plane back after the Americans left. Of the few things Pasoon owned, that toy was the one thing her brother would never leave behind.

If it was gone now, Pasoon was too.

Gone to join the Taliban and tell them Taz was alive and hiding in their home. If Pasoon got to the Taliban before their father got to the ANA base โ€ฆ

Reshmina hopped off the bucket and sprinted for the goat path that led up into the mountains. She didnโ€™t go back to tell anyone where she was headed. She didnโ€™t have time.

Reshmina had to catch her brother and stop him from joining the Taliban.

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