โReshmina picked up another rock and tossed it off the pile that used to be her home. The sun had almost set on September 11, 2019, and she and Baba were still digging through the rubble, trying to find anything of value. Anything that could help them survive.โ
The digging was slow and hard, and all Reshmina had to show for her labor so far was one torn sleeping mat and one crushed metal pot. The work was even harder for her father, but he rolled rocks off the pile with determined patience.
The rest of her family was down in the valley, Mor and Marzia making camp while Anaa watched Zahir. They were going to have to spend at least one night without a roof over their heads. Probably many more.
The American soldiers had stayed, calling in Afghan National Army forces to help them secure the area. Now a team of Americans was meeting with each of the families who had lost their homes and their possessions, arranging for financial compensation for their losses.
Taz had left to receive proper medical treatment for his wounds, but he was back now. Reshmina could see him
climbing the hill toward where she and her father worked. Taz was clean and bandaged and had put on a new uniform, and he carried something over his shoulder.
Reshmina kept her head down and kept moving rocks until Taz was standing right next to her.
โCan I help?โ Taz asked.
Reshmina didnโt look at him.
โI brought blankets,โ Taz added. He held out a large duffel bag. โFood. A portable stove.โ
โThank you,โ Reshmina said at last.
Baba nodded to him, and Taz set the bag down and started to help them clear the debris. He had a new rifle on a strap across his back, and when he bent over to move a rock, the rifle slid down in his way.
โI hear some of the villagers are packing up and leaving for Pakistan,โ Taz said.
It was true. Half the village had already collected their payments from the US Army and set off before dark.
Taz pushed his rifle out of the way again and hefted a rock. โAre you and your family going to go with them?โ
โNo,โ Reshmina told him. โMy family has decided to stay here. To rebuild.โ
โYou sound like you donโt want to do that.โ
โWhy should we?โ Reshmina asked. โOur home will just be destroyed again. If not by you, then by the next country that invades. But there is no future for me in Pakistan either.โ Reshmina sat back to take a break and catch her breath. โDid you rebuild your fallen towers?โ
โThe World Trade Center?โ Taz asked. โYes and no. They built one new giant skyscraper at Ground Zero instead.โ
โGround Zero?โ Reshmina asked. She knew what those words meant, but not together.
Taz stood and pushed his rifle around to his back again. โGround Zero is like โฆ the place where a big bomb goes off,
or a big disaster happens. Itโs what they called the place the World Trade Center used to be, until they built the new tower on top of it.โ
Ground Zero, Reshmina thought. That was as good a name as any for the pile of rocks she was sitting on. It certainly wasnโt a village anymore.
โWe can help you,โ Taz said. โRebuild your village, I mean. We have machines and stuff for this. I donโt know how weโd get them in here โฆโ
โBombed them back up to the Stone Age,โย Reshmina said. She went back to work, moving rocks. โThatโs what one of your people said. Right after your Apache destroyed my village.โ
โHe shouldnโt have said that,โ Taz said quietly. โAnd it was an accident. Weโre paying for everything that was lost.โ โYes, I know,โ Reshmina said. She gestured at the rock pile. โLost your house and everything in it? Hereโs 4,724 American dollars. Lose a goat? Our sincere apologies, and here is 106 dollars. Lose a daughter? Hereโs 1,143 dollars.
Not as much as for a son, of course, because girls are not worth as much in Afghanistan.โ
Taz grimaced at how callous it all sounded, but Reshmina wasnโt wrong, and they both knew it. โTheyโll reward you for saving my life,โ Taz said. โYou and your family. Youโll get more money than anyone else.โ
Reshmina sighed. โWhat will we do with money?โ she asked. โWe cannot eat it. We cannot milk it. We cannot ride upon it, or sleep inside it. There is no place to spend it, and nothing to spend itย on.โ Taz opened his mouth as if to say something, but Reshmina went on. โUse the money to bribe our way across the border into Pakistan? For what? To live the rest of our lives in a refugee camp? Thatโs if weโre lucky and the Taliban doesnโt steal the money from us first.โ
Reshmina picked up a rock and threw it away. โYou Americans think you can fix everything by throwing money at it,โ she added. โBut your friend was right. Thisย isย like the Stone Age. Because no one will let us getย pastย the Stone Age. Not when there is nothing but war. Do you understand? The best thing you can do to help us is leave us alone.โ
โBut the Talibanโโ Taz said.
โWill take over when you go. I know,โ Reshmina said. โBut your country helped create the Taliban. You gave them weapons and trained them to drive out the Soviets. We have the old textbooks to prove it. Even when you try to help us, you hurt us. And yourselves. Maybe what we need is for you to stop โhelpingโ us.โ
Taz shook his head. โI learned a long time ago that itโs not โus against the world,โ Reshmina. Itโs all of us, together.ย Forย each other.โ
Reshmina smiled at Taz. How could he not see it? โYou canโt help us by rebuilding villages and destroying them at the same time. Look at you,โ she said. โYou canโt even help me with both hands right now because your gun keeps getting in the way.โ
Sheโd caught Taz pushing his rifle up onto his back again with one hand while he tried to pick up a rock with the other. He froze, realizing what he was doing, and his face went red. Carefully, deliberately, he took off his rifle and set it to one side, then picked up the rock with both hands and chucked it away. He held out his arms, palms up, as if to say,ย Look, see? Iย canย help with both hands.
Reshmina smiled ruefully. โYou may be able to do that,โ she told him, โbut your country never will. They help with one hand and hold a gun in the other.โ
It was Tazโs turn to sit down and rest. He studied his dirty hands as he rubbed the rock dust from them.
โWhen the towers came down, everybody pulled together,โ he said, as if deep in memory. โNot just Americans, but people all over the world. There was this feeling of unity. America invaded Afghanistan with aย coalitionย of countries. But then we turned around and invaded Iraq when we still hadnโt captured bin Laden or stopped al Qaeda. By 2010, weย stillย hadnโt caught the people who planned the World Trade Center attacks. Thatโs when I joined the army. I was eighteen, and I wantedย revenge.โ
Reshmina nodded. She understood revenge.
โWe got bin Laden a year after that, but the mission wasnโt over,โ Taz went on. โNow it was just this โWar on Terror.โ I thought I was fighting the good fight. Making sure what happened to me and my dad all those years ago never happened to anybody else. But now Iโm not so sure what Iโm doing. Who are we fighting? How do we know weโve won?โ
Taz picked up a small rock and threw it.
โYou know,โ he said, โon 9/11, after everything happened, I remember wondering,ย Why does somebody hate us that bad?ย Weโre the good guys, you know?โ
Reshmina put down the rock she was picking up and looked at him through narrowed eyes.ย The good guys?
Taz put his hands up in surrender. โI know, I know. But thatโs what I mean. After 9/11, everybody said al Qaeda attacked us because they hated our way of life, our freedom. But Iโve been over here ten years, and Iโve never heard one single person, Taliban or otherwise, talking about how much they hate Americaโs freedom, or Starbucks coffee, or free elections. You and your family didnโt even recognize a picture of New York.โ Taz shook his head. โIn America, we think everybody in the world cares about everything we say and do. But the only thing people here care about is what we say and doย over here.โ He looked out
at what was left of her village. โMy dad once told me a bully is somebody who does whatever they want and never gets in trouble for it. Maybe thatโs what we are. Maybe weโre the bullies.โ
Reshmina watched Taz for a long moment. โYour country may be,โ she said at last. โBut you are not.โ
โThanks,โ said Taz. โMaybe itโs time for me to think about leaving the army.โ He smiled. โI want to be able to help with both hands.โ
Another soldier called up the hill. It was almost dark, and the Americans were heading back to their base.
Taz stood. โListen, the armyโs got this interpreter program. If you work for the US Army here in Afghanistan as a translator, you get special permission to come to America when youโre done. Go to an American university. Maybe become a US citizen. I donโt know all the details, but I could find out. Recommend you for the program when youโre old enough. Your English is great. Youโd be a natural at it, like the lady you met this morning.โ
โThe lady who is dead,โ said Reshmina.
โYeah,โ said Taz. He lowered his head, no doubt thinking about Mariam and everyone else who had died that morning.
โItโs not easy,โ Taz told her. โBut then, nothing really worth it ever is.โ
Reshmina nodded. Just the thought of going to the United States to study at one of their schools gave her goose bumps. But to do it, Reshmina would have to ally herself with the people who had killed her sister. Destroyed her village.
โThank you, but no,โ Reshmina said. She would keep going to school, keep learning English. Perhaps move to Kabul when she was old enough. Maybe even find a way to
go to the US or Canada or Australia to study. But it would be on her own terms.
โWell, if you change your mind, let me know,โ Taz said. โNo matter what, Iโll come back and help. I promise.โ
โThank you for the warning,โ Reshmina told him.
Taz smiled at her joke. โI deserve that,โ he admitted.
He unhooked the strange stuffed devil from his vest and gave it to Reshmina.
โHere,โ Taz said. โThis brought me luck once. Of a kind.
Maybe itโll bring luck to you too.โ
Reshmina took the dusty, ratty thing. It wasnโt much to look at, and it wouldnโt serve her any real purpose, but she knew how important it was to Taz.
โThank you,โ Reshmina said. She bowed her head to Taz, then remembered how sheโd been taught to say goodbye from her English lessons.
โI will friend you on Facebook,โ she told him.
Taz laughed and said his thanks and goodbyes to Reshminaโs father.
When Taz was gone, Reshmina helped her father stand up. Theyโd done enough work for now, and it was time to join the rest of their family in the valley.
They started walking, but Baba was slow. The steps had always been hard for him, and now even those were goneโ buried under a villageโs worth of wood and stone.
โIs there any other way down?โ Baba asked.
Reshmina scanned the hillside. The sun had almost set. On a ridge across the valley, silhouetted against the orange- yellow sky, Reshmina spotted the lone figure of a boy. He was so far away she could never see his face, but Reshmina knew instantly who it was: Pasoon. She would know her brother anywhere.
So he wasnโt dead! And he had come back to check on them. Why? To make sure they were all right? Or to gloat
over firing another shot at the American hornetโs nest?
Despite everything that had happened, everything Pasoon had done, Reshminaโs heart still ached at the sight of him. He was her twin, after all. A piece of her would always be missing when they were apart. But apart they would always be, as long as Pasoon chose revenge.
Pasoon raised a hand to wave to her, but Reshmina turned away.
โCome, Baba,โ Reshmina told her father. โIโve found another path.โ
โThe World Trade Centerโ
Lย Oย Wย Eย Rย Mย Aย N Hย Aย Tย Tย A N
Southย Tower
Impactย areaย โนs:03 a.m.)
78th-B4thย floors
Northย Tower
Windowsย onย theย Worldย 107thย floor
Impactย areaย (8 46 a.w.โบ
94th-98th floors
Skyย Lobby
78thย floor
Skyย Lobby
44th floor
Theย underqroundย mall
NEWย JERSEY
MANHATTAN
STATENย ISLAND
THEย BRONX
OUEENS
NEWย YORK
Brookย ynย Bridge
BROOK LVN
UZBEKISTAN
KYRGYZSTAN
TAJIKISTAN
CHINA
TURKMENISTAN
Kabulย @
Asadabad
Jalalabad
g.
Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Reshmiย village
IRAN
INDIA
Aย RAย BIANย SEA
100ย Mล
0ย 100 KM
US*ย ‘”รผย ‘โย ‘
AS1A
Newย York