His sister fidgeted in her seat and he gave her a harsh stare.
âYou didn't know, did you?' Mum implored.
âOf course notâ' Safet got out of the car and held Mum.
âSevda said your wife wrote to you,' Auntie Zehra interrupted. âThat the embassy gave her your address.'
âI never received any letters from her,' Safet retorted, his head muffled in Mum's hair.
âSevda says she wrote five times and the letters weren't returned.'
Mum lifted her head from Safet's chest. âHe didn't get the letters,' she barked.
âWhy don't we go inside?' Safet stroked Mum's back as he walked her to his flat. Safeta went ahead and unlocked the door.
âIt's not appropriate for my sister to be alone with a married man,' Auntie Zehra said.
Safet stood still. âI'll, of course, be legally rectifying that.'
âAnd your daughters?' Auntie asked.
He turned. âI'll always be their father.'
âBeing a parent is more than just a word. I'm sure Bahra would agree.'
Mum rushed at Auntie Zehra. âHe's not Esad. He's nothing like Esad.'
I blinked back tears at my Dad's name. This was getting ugly.
âWhile I will meet my obligations to my daughters, my life is with Bahra.' Safet reached Mum's side and put his arm around her.
âBy obligations you mean you'll give money so your wife can support your daughters.'
âOf course.' Safet's hold tightened on Mum.
âThat will be difficult to do without a job.'
âStop it! We've already worked this out with Dido!' Mum shouted.
âAnd Bahra's pension will only stretch so far.'
Mum's arm arced back and she whacked Auntie Zehra across the face. Auntie nearly toppled to the ground. I ran to her side.
âYou've already chased away one man I loved, I won't let you do it again!' Mum yelled.
Auntie looked at Mum, shocked. When Mum was healthy she wasn't capable of hitting anyone.
While Auntie Zehra was struck dumb, I pointed at Safet. âHe's lying. He knew his wife was alive.'
âShut up.' Mum headed for me. âI'm trying to find you a father, but you're an ungrateful little bitch.' For the first time in ages, I was scared of my mother. Of the emptiness in her eyes, as if she were possessed.
âCome on, let's go.' Safet pulled Mum towards the flat.
âI curse the day I fell pregnant with you!' Mum shrieked, her voice as disembodied as the kid in
The Exorcist
.
Her venom took my breath away. My legs were trembling; I was certain I'd fall down, or be struck down by this witch my mother had become.
âShe doesn't mean it.' Auntie hugged me. âRemember, she's sick.'
I grasped her arm as we walked back to her car.
Safet's sister turned around to us. âMy brother isn't a bad man,' she said. âThey were getting divorced anyway.'
It took Auntie three tries to get the key in the ignition. âWhat was Mum talking about when she said you chased off the man she loved?' I asked as we drove home.
Auntie's lips tightened. âWhen we were young I told Babo about her seeing her boyfriend, Darko. Dido managed to get him fired from his job, and she never saw him again.' She kept looking straight ahead.
âBut Auntie,' I cried, âhow could you do that?'
âI have no regrets at all, Sabiha. Your mother married a Bosnian, and you wouldn't be here otherwise.' She said crisply, if not defiantly.
The love letters I'd found had been full of passion and now I understood why there was so much tension between Mum and Auntie Zehra, and why Mum sometimes acted like she hated her sister. How could she
not
feel resentful, even after all this time? âMum didn't love my Dad, did she?' I murmured.
âOf course she did,' Auntie's response was immediate.
âShe married my Dad one month after Darko left.' I knew in my heart now that Mum hadn't married my Dad simply on the rebound, but because she wanted to punish her family.
Auntie pulled up in our driveway. âShe was angry with all of us after Darko. Your father came from Australia looking for a bride and she saw it as her chance to run away.' I stared through the windscreen. Auntie put her hands on my face and turned my head to her. âBut she learnt to love him.'
I bit my lip. âShe never wanted me.'
Auntie slapped my arm. âOf course she did. Every mother loves her child. They're a gift from God.'
I pretended I believed her clichés, but I knew differently. Every time Mum looked at me she saw the life she'd missed out on with the one man she truly loved.
I pretended to be sick the next day and didn't go to school, not that anyone noticed. Mum was still at Safet's and Dido hadn't moved from the sofa since Edin's funeral the day before. While I sat stunned in front of the TV, there was a knock at the front door. Two police officers stood on our threshold. Fucking Shelley.
to err is human, to forgive divine
âDoes Bahra Omerovic live here?' asked the taller police officer, his name tag identifying him as Constable Twist.
I shook my head. âShe's not home.'
âIs there an adult we can speak to?'
âNot really. My grandfather doesn't speak English.' I wiped my sweaty palms on my jumper.
âMay we come in?' Constable Twist persisted.
I held the door open for them and shouted for Dido. When they entered the living room he sat up on the sofa, confused. âThey want to speak to you,' I told him.
He pushed the blanket off and smoothed his hair. âWhat do they want?'
The officers looked concerned. âCall an interpreter please, Constable,' Constable Twist said to his partner.
The other officer turned away as he used his mobile.
âWhy aren't you at school?' Constable Twist asked.
âI'm sick.'
âCall the Department of Human Services, too,' he said, turning back to his sidekick, who nodded while he talked.
âWhat's going on?' Dido asked.
âThey're calling an interpreter.' I pulled him into the kitchen and tried to tell him about the Department of Human Services, but I didn't have the words to explain what a caseworker does and how much power they wielded. It was the DHS that had put me in a foster home when I was little and Mum had got sick. It was only when Frankie came into our lives that I'd been safe from their clutches. If Shelley pressed charges they'd take me away again.
âCall Zehra and tell her to bring Merisa,' Dido said.
âI'll call my Aunt,' I told the officers.
âDoes she speak English?' Constable Twist asked.
I shook my head. âMy cousin does.'
Auntie Zehra came straight away. Merisa was at work, but Auntie said she'd called her to come home. The police officers retreated to their car to wait.
âWhat are they doing here?' Auntie Zehra watched through the window.
âThey're here because of me.' I burst into tears and told them about bashing Shelley.
âOh Sabiha.' Auntie Zehra held me against her.
âThey're bringing the government,' Dido said hoarsely. âThey can take her away.'
â
Allah
protect usâ¦' Auntie sat on the sofa and pulled me with her so that I was between Dido and her. She plucked a tissue and wiped her eyes. âWe won't let them take you away.'
The police officers returned an hour later with the interpreter in tow. We stood. I held onto Auntie and Dido's hands.
âBahra Omerovic was taken into custody this morning at ten a.m,' Constable Twist declared. âShe was discovered in Sunshine Shopping Centre, disorientated and belligerent. She's been admitted to Sunshine Hospital psychiatric ward.'
My legs gave way and I dropped onto the couch while the interpreter translated for Dido and Auntie. Auntie gasped and covered her mouth with her hand. Dido sobbed.
There was another knock on the door and Constable Twist led in a woman. âThis is Ms Janet Woods, a caseworker with the Department of Human Services.'
I went cold. I knew what was going to happen now. It was a story that had been played out before. They were taking me away. Auntie and Dido argued that they were my family and could take care of me, while the caseworker explained DHS procedures. I had to be taken into care while they evaluated whether my Auntie and Dido were suitable carers.
Ms Woods asked me to pack my things. I tried to leave, but Auntie wouldn't let me go. Constable Twist held her back while the other police officer led me to my bedroom. My mind was frozen. I opened my drawers, but I couldn't get anything out. Ms Woods came in and sifted through the drawers, stuffing the backpack with clothes. She took me by the arm and led me out the front door.
Merisa pulled up in the driveway. âSabiha, what's going on?' she asked.
I couldn't speak. Behind me, I heard Dido's sobs and Auntie comforting him.
I kept walking. I'd learnt never to look back because that last glimpse would haunt me. They put me in the police car and Ms Woods sat in the back seat next to me. I closed my eyes and leaned my head against the seat. I don't know how much time passed before the car stopped. Ms Woods helped me out of the car and into a house. A woman bustled to open the door and started chirping at me.
âSabiha will be staying here for a few weeks,' Ms Woods spoke for me. âMartha will be taking care of you.' For a second she bent towards me, then walked back to her car.
Martha closed the door behind me. âWhat would you like to do now?'
I stared at her blankly.
âMaybe a lie down.'
I followed her into a bedroom.
âThis will be your room while you're staying here.' Martha took the backpack from me and put my clothes away. âI'll leave you until dinner.'
I lay on the bed and closed my eyes.
The next day Ms Woods came back to fill me in on my future. As the foster home was somewhere deep in the eastern suburbs, and the court date when my care would be decided was set for two weeks time, I chose not to go to school. Ms Woods told me that I would definitely be placed with a family member so I could return to my old school.
She asked if I wanted to visit Mum. I shook my head. I remembered the hatred in my mother's eyes at our last confrontation, the venom in her voice when she told me that she'd never wanted me, and I felt tired again. Even though I'd slept for twelve hours I craved sleep and the oblivion it offered. After Ms Woods left I returned to bed. My days passed in a blur of sleep and daytime television.
She returned the following week and took me to visit my family. When the car pulled up in Auntie Zehra's driveway I couldn't get out. Auntie came to the door and led me into the house like an invalid. She sat me down at the dining table and brought out food. I felt as if I was drifting in and out of consciousness. She and Dido talked to me, but it was like their words were coming from inside a tunnel. When I went to respond to their questions, I couldn't make my mouth move.
They left me alone and went to the living room to talk, Merisa acting as translator for Ms Woods. Snatches of their conversation drifted to the dining room.
âSabiha's depressed,' Ms Woods said.
âShe needs to be with her family,' Merisa translated for Auntie Zehra.
âBahra is asking about her. When can Sabiha visit her?' Dido asked.
âWhenever her mother is mentioned she retreats even more,' Ms Woods said.
âSabiha, Sabiha, Sabiha,' someone kept calling.
I lifted my head from the plate of
pita
I'd been staring at, its spiral shape mesmerising me.
Adnan sat on the chair next to me. âYou're not going to tell anyone, are you?' he asked, his eyes on the living room door. âYou'd just hurt everyone.'
I stood to leave.
He stood too and gripped my arm. âNot that anyone would believe you.' He watched me like I was a specimen at a museum. âYou've gone crazy like your mother.'
My arm flesh was pinched between his fingers. As the pain pierced through the fog in my head, a flicker of anger lit inside me. I met his eyes and while he stared at my face, I lifted my knee and drove it into his groin. The soft flesh squashed under my kneecap and I kept pushing his balls into his torso. Those fight lessons he'd given me had finally paid off. He leaped into the air, letting out a whimper.
âIs everything all right?' Auntie asked from the doorway.
I sat and took a bite of
pita
.
âI was checking on my cuz,' Adnan said. Auntie nodded and returned to the living room. Adnan limped away, sweat covering his face as he fought not to make a sound.
Later, I sat on the sofa surrounded by Auntie, Dido and Ms Woods, each of them looking at me with wary concern.
âWe want to talk about your future while your Mum is in hospital,' Ms Woods said. âYour Auntie wants you to live with her.'
I shook my head violently. Auntie looked like she was about to cry. I couldn't tell her about Adnan. âI want to go home,' I forced out, my voice like a rusty pipe.
âYou can't go home,' Ms Woods said. âThere's no one to look after you.'
I looked at Dido.
âYour grandfather is old and needs help himself.'
Ms Woods kept asking me questions. She mentioned Frankie. I lay on the sofa and closed my eyes. Someone covered me with a blanket and patted my hair. I smelt tobacco and knew it was Dido's hand gently caressing me. I heard them talking as I drifted in and out of sleep.
âI can stay with Dido and Sabiha,' Auntie said. âMy children are adults and Merisa can take care of the house while I live in Bahra's home.' It was a solution of sortsâ¦even in my befuddled state, I knew I could endure it. I grunted my acknowledgment from the sofa.
Two weeks after I'd been taken away, Ms Woods drove me back home. Dido and Auntie Zehra waited for me on the porch. âWelcome back,' Auntie moaned as she embraced me. Dido held me, his raspy beard scratching my face. He'd aged ten years in two weeks.