Chapter no 32

Ground Zero

 

 

โ€ŒReshmina woke to the sound of singing.โ€Œ

We are Afghan people

We are Afghans of the mountains

It was pitch-black and Reshmina couldnโ€™t see, but she would know the sound of her grandmotherโ€™s voice anywhere. The song she was singing, โ€œMomardene Afghane,โ€ was one of Anaaโ€™s favorites.

Ears ringing, dust clogging her mouth and throat, Reshmina crawled toward the sound. She found her grandmother lying on the ground, half-covered by the door of an old Soviet truck.

โ€œI figured if I kept singing, someone would find me,โ€ her grandmother rasped.

Reshmina pulled the door off her. โ€œAre you all right, Anaa?โ€

โ€œI may have a broken bone or two,โ€ she admitted. โ€œJust let me lie here, Mina-jan.โ€

Reshminaโ€™s heart skipped a beat. Her grandmother was as stubborn as a donkey when it came to doctors. She claimed sheโ€™d never been sick in her life, but Reshmina knew she just didnโ€™t like to make trouble. She might be lying there without a leg right now and not even admit it.

Reshmina patted her grandmotherโ€™s body just to be sure. โ€œStop fussing,โ€ Anaa groused.

Reshmina heard whining and crying in the darknessโ€”her brother! Zahir was alive!

โ€œHush,โ€ Reshminaโ€™s mother said, her voice heavy. โ€œAnaa, keep singing.โ€

โ€œMor!โ€ Reshmina cried. She wanted to go to her mother, but where was she?

Reshminaโ€™s grandmother sang โ€œMomardene Afghaneโ€ again, and Reshmina heard the sound of people crawling to them through the scraps of old Soviet metal that had been scattered by the blast. First came her mother and Zahir. Then Marzia. As Reshmina hugged her family, more people found them: an old couple from next door, a young girl from farther up the steps. Taz too.

For a little while, everyone was too dazed to move or speak. Anaa finished her song, and things grew deathly, oppressively quiet. They couldnโ€™t even feel vibrations anymore from the fighting up above.

โ€œIs everyone all right?โ€ Taz asked at last. โ€œWhatโ€™s happened? I still canโ€™t see.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ Reshmina told him. โ€œWe canโ€™t see either. Itโ€™s completely dark. Wait,โ€ she remembered. โ€œThe flashlight!โ€

Thank God she had put it in her pocket before the explosion. She put her hand in her pocket, but when she touched the flashlight, a sharp pain shot through her palm and she gasped.

โ€œWhat is it, Mina-jan?โ€ Mor asked in Pashto.

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€ Taz asked in English.

Reshmina pulled the flashlight out with her other hand and clicked it on. Everyone squinted again in the bright light. Even Taz, a little.

โ€œHeyโ€”I can see that!โ€ Taz said. โ€œNot great, but I can see a dull glow! I think my eyes are getting better.โ€

Reshmina shined the light on her hand. There was a deep gash across her right palm. It must have happened when part of the ceiling caved in.

โ€œI have a bad cut. On my hand,โ€ Reshmina told her mother, then translated for Taz.

Reshminaโ€™s mother started to tear a piece of cloth from her tunic for a bandage.

โ€œWait. I have some Kerlix,โ€ Taz told them.

Reshmina didnโ€™t know that word, but it was some kind of bandage Taz carried in his pockets. He told her how to use it, and she pushed the gauze into her cut with a hiss of pain. โ€œSorry,โ€ he told her. โ€œThis stuff is good, but if the cutโ€™s deep, you may still end up with a scar. See? Iโ€™ve got one too.โ€ He held out his hand to show her. He had a long, dirty scar in almost the same place on his palm. โ€œIt still aches every now and then, when itโ€™s cold and gloomy outside,โ€ he

told her. โ€œBut most of the time โ€ฆโ€

Taz paused, as though what he was saying brought back a painful memory for him.

โ€œBut most of the time you just forget itโ€™s there,โ€ he finished.

Some of the others in the cave had injuries too.Reshmina did what she could to help them with the bandages Taz had given her.

โ€œWhere are all the other people?โ€ Reshminaโ€™s mother asked. โ€œThere were a lot more of us before.โ€

Reshmina turned the flashlight toward the front of the cave. Where there had once been a large, open cavern filled

with old Soviet equipment, now there was just a pile of rocks.

The whole front half of the ceiling had caved in.

Reshmina explored the rockfall, looking for a way through. She stopped when she saw the legs of some poor soul sticking out from under a boulder, the rest of the womanโ€™s body crushed in the cave-in.

Crushed like all the other people whoโ€™d been with them in the cave.

And there was no way through. The fallen rocks covered everything.

Iโ€™ve killed us, Reshmina thought.ย Everyone we know and love. Mor was right. I brought death to our village when I brought Taz into our home.ย She cried silently. She had chosen what was right over what was easy. She had dared to be someone new, someone better, to carve a path for herself. And look at where it had gotten her: buried with her family in a grave of her own making.

Reshmina quickly swept the light away, so no one else could see the body.

โ€œIs it bad?โ€ Taz asked.

Reshmina felt the anger of a hundred souls well up inside her, and she turned on the American soldier.

โ€œIs it bad?โ€ย she said. โ€œYes, itโ€™s bad! There was only one entrance to this cave, and now weโ€™re trapped! Weโ€™re trapped, and all those other people who were in here with us areย dead!โ€

Reshmina picked up a rock from the ground and hurled it at Taz. He still couldnโ€™t see well, but he heard the rock strike the wall behind him and flinched. Reshmina picked up another stone and threw it at him, hitting him in the arm.

โ€œHey, whatโ€”?โ€ he started to ask.

โ€œWeโ€™re trapped and theyโ€™re dead and itโ€™s all your fault!โ€ Reshmina yelled at him. It wasnโ€™t her fault for dreaming. It

wasย hisย fault for being here. โ€œBut I didnโ€™tโ€”โ€

โ€œYou and all the other Americans!โ€ Reshmina told him. She threw another rock that clanged off an old Soviet hubcap. โ€œWhy donโ€™t you get out of Afghanistan? All youโ€™re doing is killing us!โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to fix things!โ€ Taz argued.

โ€œThings you broke to begin with!โ€ Reshmina told him. โ€œWeโ€™re building wells. Roads. Schools!โ€ Taz said.

โ€œProbably the school you go to.โ€

โ€œYou killed my sister!โ€ Reshmina cried.

Taz looked horrified. โ€œI what? How? When?โ€

โ€œNot you. Your country,โ€ Reshmina said. She was crying now, big wet tears fed by the horrible things that had happened two years ago, and today. โ€œYou bombed my sister! She died. So many of our friends did too.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Taz told her. โ€œReally, I am. But weโ€™re fighting a war against the Taliban. Sometimes innocent people get hurt. Weโ€™re trying toย help.โ€

Reshmina burned inside. Was this anger what Pasoon felt all the time? The fury that had pushed him to join the Taliban?

โ€œYou can help us by leaving,โ€ย Reshmina told Taz. โ€œMy village was never bombed until the Americans came!โ€

โ€œWe have to be here,โ€ Taz argued. โ€œDo you know the first thing that will happen if the US leaves Afghanistan? There will be another civil war, and the Taliban will take over again. Youโ€™re too young to remember, Reshmina, but they did awful things. They are bad, bad people.โ€

โ€œI know all about the Taliban!โ€ Reshmina told him. โ€œI know how awful they are.โ€

โ€œWell, if we leave, youโ€™ll be right back where you started before we got here.โ€

โ€œBut your drones kill as many of us as them,โ€ Reshmina said. She held up her injured hand. โ€œYou bandage our wounds and want us to say thank you, but youโ€™re the reason we were hurt.โ€

Taz was quiet for a moment. โ€œIf we can just beat the Taliban. Get Afghanistan back on its feet. Give you a chance to grow โ€ฆโ€

Reshmina remembered the cedar cone in the graveyardโ€” and the graves from the previous wars. All those invaders who had swept to victory with their superior weapons, only to be driven out again by Afghan fighters.

โ€œYou say you have been here for ten years,โ€ Reshmina said. โ€œYour country has been here nearly twice that long. Andย stillย you havenโ€™t won. You never will. Nobody can rule Afghanistan. Not even Afghans. So I ask you again: Why are you still here?โ€

Taz looked away without answering.

โ€œZahir! Come away from there!โ€ Reshminaโ€™s mother called.

Reshmina shined the flashlight in her little brotherโ€™s direction. All she could see was his legs, sticking out from under a rock. For a horrible moment, she thought Zahir had been buried like the lady at the front of the cave. But Zahir just had his head in a hole in the wallโ€”a crack that had opened up during the cave-in. Marzia and their mother were able to drag the curious two-year-old out by his ankles.

Reshmina examined the hole with her flashlight, and she gasped.

โ€œWhat is it? Whatโ€™s under there?โ€ asked a woman standing nearby.

Reshmina felt a tiny spark of hope rekindle in her chest, and she turned excitedly to the others.

โ€œIt might be another way out!โ€

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