Chapter
14
No
one could miss it. Her cherry red bike stood out like a beauty pageant winner from the run-of-the-mill Schwinn, Raleigh and Specialized brands beside it on
the rack. He sat against the wall and waited for her, his insides beginning to feel more like a frenzied gaggle of geese than butterflies. Then he saw
her. She had a small red bow in her hair today and plaid long shorts with
kitten heels on her tiny feet. It was as though she walked back-lit, standing
aglow from the dull surroundings of the college. She didn’t see him until she
was right beside her bike. When she looked over, he couldn’t move, frozen.
“Hey,
you! Watcha sitting over there for?” she asked, in her Irish lilt.
He
jerked to remember he was still sitting on the cold concrete. Looking either
side of him, he grabbed his backpack and walked towards her. With each step,
his legs got heavier as though wading through water. She was beautiful. He
noticed how her tee shirt stretched over her breasts; the band’s printed logo
distorted across them and he felt himself stir. He swiftly swung his bag in
front of him, hugging it to his hips and quickly cleared his thoughts.
“Hi,
Sarah. Hey, you wanna go see Lord of the Rings this week?”
“I’d
rather see Harry Potter. Are you asking me on a date, Bassam?” she smiled and
popped her gum.
“I,
I...well, ya! Do you want to?” So far so good, he thought, rummaging around for
more confidence.
She bent
over her bike, pushing her chest out closer to him. He used all his strength
not to fall backwards. “Why don’t we see both?” she suggested. “We can do Frodo
on Friday and Hogwarts on Saturday? You got a car?”
“No.
I-I mean yes, ah, let’s do that and no, I don’t drive. We can meet there!”
“Then
it’s not really a date, then. Is it?” she quipped, teasingly. The wind caught
her, shoulder-length light brown hair and tossed it across her sticky lip-gloss,
he imagined tasted like Dr Pepper.
Had
he blown it already? Think!
“I’ll
bus over to your place and we’ll go from there.”
“Good
recovery, Bays.” She grabbed him by the collar and kissed him on the cheek, her
lips slightly sticking to his skin. “I’d love too!” She bent down to unlock her
bike. “I’ll call you with my address.”
He
quickly pulled out a pen and paper from his backpack. “I’ll call you.” He said
quickly, imagining his mother answering the phone. “What’s your number?” As he
wrote down the last two digits, she peddled off.
“Bye,
Lover!” She yelled back at him, laughing. He waved and realized a few students
were watching them. The heat climbed up his neck and settled on his cheeks and
then he saw Atiq, jogging towards him. The frown creased his red face. He was peeved
with Atiq’s sudden appearance, dulling his golden mood.
“Hey,
Bassam! I need your help!”
“What
is it? And where have you been?” He stuffed the paper into his jacket before
Atiq saw it.
“Just
listen! I need your Chemist’s brain.” He looked around him and lowered his
voice. “If you were to cause a little explosion, say for a movie stunt, you’d
use fertilizer and oil, right? So, what kind of oil works best and how much.”
He waited. “Bassam!”
“Atiq!
You disappear for two weeks and the first thing you want to know is how to
build a bomb!?”
“Shhhhhh! Are you crazy? Keep it down!” He pulled Bassam away from the crowd. “Just tell
me, all right?”
“No!
It’s not all right! You’re crazy! What the hell are you doing?”
“I
told ya. It’s for a movie we’re doing in class. I want to create a small
explosion.”
“Well,
first of all it’s illegal. You must need a special permit or something, even
for a movie. You think that’s so bright for an Afghani to do right now? Atiq,
are you nuts? Where have you been anyway?”
“Nowhere!
I am bogged down with homework is all. What’s with you? Why the FBI? You don’t
seem to be missing me; looks like you’ve got yourself a girlfriend. Do your
folks know your dating an outsider?”
“She’s
just a friend and no they don’t know. And it’s going to stay that way until I
decide to tell them. You’re changing the subject.”
“Well,
she’s gorgeous. I don’t blame you one bit. So help me out, Bassam. You see
those guys over there with the camera?”
Bassam
looked in the direction Atiq was nodding towards. He did see a group of guys
with a camcorder.
“Those
are my classmates. See, there’s Dan," Atiq said. "We’re rehearsing the first scene right
now. But we need a little poof! Not so big, and I don't have the foggiest. Please.”
“What
makes you think I know? We don’t actually study bomb-making in class!”
“Well,
look it up in one of your books!”
“For
that matter, Atiq, why don’t you look it up yourself on the Web?”
“What,
and have the Mounties breathing down my brown back. No thanks, man! Come on, I
told them you were the expert.”
He began walking away. ““Look Atiq, I don’t know. You could probably research
it at the library. I gotta go.”
Annoyed,
he continued walking and didn’t look back. He felt Atiq’s eyes locked on his jacket
but didn’t have the heart to show Atiq his face and see the disappointment he
felt towards his friend. He thought about the cop and how he had been berated
about his “buddy.” His anger had grown at their assumption that they were involved
in terrorist activities because of their skin. But now, the world was upside
down. Could Atiq be involved in something?
He sighed deeply and felt his back
pocket for Agent Kent’s business card. It was still there. Of course it was. It
insisted itself upon him and nagged at him, like his mother did to pick up his
clothes. He knew he should but didn’t want to. He pulled the card out when he had
made it onto the bus. The edges were worn from his constant fingering, the
simple letters bold and strong.
Hopping
off at his transfer spot, he headed for the nearest phone booth.
***
Joanne Yordanou (rhymes with Book 'em
Danno!) lives in Port Credit with hubby and 2 daughters. She has worked on a
number of knitting books and magazines and published her own knitting book in
2008 with Random House division, Crown Publishing's Potter Craft. She enjoys
writing newsletters, blogs (2 of them but mostly photos), journals and has been
working on her novel, Love and Terror. She
discovered Brian's classes through Quick Brown Fox and has enjoyed his guidance
and suggestions, along with the camaraderie of the group. In March, she gave a reading
of this excerpt from Love and Terror
at CJs Café in Bronte.
For information about Brian Henry's upcoming weekly classes, see here.
See Brian Henry's schedule here, including creative writing courses and workshops in Kingston, Peterborough, Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Georgetown, Oakville, Burlington, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Dundas, Kitchener, Guelph, London, Woodstock, Orangeville, Newmarket, Barrie, Gravenhurst, Sudbury, Muskoka, Peel, Halton, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.