helping others, marked him out as lacking
warmth
.
Jaswinda was standing at the sink, stirring sugar into a mug of black coffee.
âIâm so sorry about your mother,â Graeme said.
She kept stirring. âThank you.â
âIâm sorry for not saying anything sooner. I only just heard.â
She nodded at her coffee.
âIt might be a good idea for you to take some time off.â
Jaswinda laughed, short and loud. âAnd who will take over my cases?â
âIâll find someone.â
Her eyes were swollen and her nostrils chapped. âIf there was anyone else I wouldnât already be doing the work of two.â
Graeme shrugged. âWeâll cope.â
âI doubt it.â Jaswinda rinsed her spoon and placed it on the draining tray. Threw the paper sugar packet in the bin under the sink.
âEverybody is concerned about you, Jaswinda.â
âI know.â She held her coffee mug in front of her with both hands. âBut it is good for me to come to work. Routine is comforting, I find. Or maybe just distracting. Whatever, Iâd rather be here than at home.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes,â she said, walking past him and out of the room.
Late that night, he thought of Jaswinda as he sat in front of the news nursing a mug of weak tea. He admired her strength and thought her approach to grief wise, but mostly he envied her. He longed for a specific grief and for something to do to distract from it.
âWar should always be a last resort,â the pubescent talking head on the TV said, as if he knew anything about it, as if war was a stand-off between a recalcitrant child and a kind father at the end of his tether, rather than something that happened because the child has no food and the father has no hope and there is no kindness or tether or attention being paid.
Footage showed French soldiers leaning against a wire fence on what the voiceover said was the ChadâSudan border but which, with its bitumen ground cover andhulking gunmetal sheds, could have been any airbase in the world. The scene changed and Graeme had the familiar sensation of seeing his memories played back in front of him: the endless procession of Somalis using the dry river bed as a track, their faces wrapped in grimy rags to protect against the dusty air.
Graemeâs nostrils twitched at the remembered stench of diarrhoea and decaying animals. The roar of a Land-Cruiser, the screaming of women and grunts of militia men drowned out the reporterâs voice and he was again watching from the passenger seat of the supply truck as the
wadi
turned from dry land to a stream and then the stream to an overflowing river. He heard the rushing water and the roaring engines louder and closer and the screaming women and his driver saying
three months
; felt the ache of not moving while radio messages told of infections taking hold and bodies piling up.
He closed his eyes and let the sounds and smells work their way over and through him. He counted his breaths until the only smell was stale cigarette smoke, the only sound a British girl talking about topless photos of a minor royal. He finished his tea and watched the end of the news and went to bed.
He was woken around 3 am by the sound of his flatmates. He lay in the dark listening as it went on and on. What did they think they were doing? To what possible end all that screwing and shouting?
6.
Adam woke feeling like heâd aged thirty years overnight. He remembered climbing a fence, falling on his butt, hitting his head. He remembered swimming in a lake or possibly a pool, getting chased by a dog, screwing clumsily on wet grass. He knew none of these things happened in a dream, because Eugenie had not been there.
He used to wake up like this often. A room full of stale air, a strangerâs limbs stuck to his skin, pain behind his eyes, stomach swirling with bile. Occasionally heâd stick with a stranger long
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