by Terry Sanville
coconut milk
“Holy crap,
Hussein, why are you so freaked out?” Leo asked. “Ya gotta lay off the
caffeine.”
“Yeah, I know,
I know. But I get nervous when I travel.”
The young men
huddled at a window table in Starbucks, not far from the University, laptops
glowing, smartphones within easy reach. They’d been close friends and roommates
since freshman year, studying chemistry and spending long hours in the labs,
with graduation just weeks away. But Hussein had to leave early.
“Why is it so
damn important?” Leo complained. “Can’t your Uncle wait a week or two?”
“Yeah, yeah, I
know. I’ve got a crazy family spread all over. One of my cousins is getting
married in Zinjibar the day after I arrive in Yemen. I think my Uncle wants to
show me off as his rich nephew.”
“You, rich?
That’s a good one. But why do you have to go at all? Don’t the Feds have some
sort of advisory against going there?”
“Tell me
something I don’t know. But the thing is, they’re my family and my Father can’t
travel anymore…Mom won’t let him.”
“But I thought
we were gonna hit the road, ya know, cruise down to Palm Beach and hang out
before grad school starts.”
“There’ll be
plenty of time when I get back.”
Leo grinned,
remembering how the two enjoyed their breaks from school. Together, they seemed
able to overcome their innate clumsiness around women, while flying solo each
became a stumbling fool.
“So you’re just
gonna leave me here with my freakazoid parents while you’re off drinking camel’s
milk and trying to speak Arabic?
“Yeah,
something like that. Hey look, I don’t like it any more than you. But family…”
Hussein shrugged and threw up his hands.
“Well I hope
you have your passport in order. The way Homeland Security is acting, those TSA
goons give guys like you a body cavity search.”
“What do you
mean, guys like me?”
“You know what
I mean.”
“Hey, I don’t
look any less American than you. Do I hafta have blond hair and freckles to be
legit? I was born here.”
“I know, I
know. But it’s your name, man. And you’ll be coming back from Yemen where
there’s all sorts of nut jobs.”
“Great. Maybe I
should change my name.”
“It wouldn’t
help. Once you pull out your prayer rug in the terminal, they’ll know what’s
up.”
“So, I’m a
Muslim. Is that a crime? Are we becoming like Saudi Arabia where Christians can
be arrested for practicing their religion in public?”
“Don’t be
absurd. You can be whoever you wanna be. But you gotta keep a low profile, man,
both here and in Yemen. Just don’t do anything, ya know, stupid.”
“Hey, I read
the news too. I’m not about to piss anybody off. Besides, you’re as white bread
and Christian as they come. You’d vouch for me with the TSA, wouldn’t you?”
Hussein stared into Leo’s eyes and frowned.
Leo cleared his
throat. “If they think you’re a terrorist or somethin’, they’ll think I’m one
too. We could both wind up in Guantanamo or chained to a wall at some CIA black
site.”
Hussein gazed
out the window at the throng of young people passing along the crowded street.
“I can see it now. They nab me and within an hour you’ll deny even knowing
me…over and over and over again.”
Leo felt his
face burn. “That’s not gonna happen, Hussein. You’re getting yourself all worked
up. You’re gonna come back five pounds fatter and we’ll bake it out of you on
some Florida beach. Jesus, just relax, will ya? Try the decaf.”
A month later,
Leo hung out at Starbucks and stared at his laptop screen, not really seeing
anything. He’d promised Hussein he’d give him a ride home from the airport and
he waited for a call, text or e-mail. Finally his smartphone buzzed.
Leo checked the
incoming number and grinned. “Yeah, whaddaya want?”
“Hey, it’s
me.”
“Yeah, yeah.
I’m surprised you’re not speaking Arabic.”
“Just shut up,
will ya. I’m on EgyptAir Flight 287 from Cairo. I should arrive in about an
hour.”
“How’s
traveling been so far? Any hassles?”
“I’ve gotten
the enhanced security treatment at every boarding. They pat me down and go
through my luggage. And in Cairo they made me check my laptop. What’s that
about?”
“I don’t know.
Anyway, you ready for some fun in the sun in Florida?”
“I’m ready for
the fun part. But I’ve had enough blistering rays to last a lifetime.”
“So, I’ll see
ya at the terminal.”
“Copy that.
Over and out.” Hussein laughed, sounding happy to be almost home.
Leo collected
his gear, gulped the remnants of his mocha and headed for the airport’s terminal
for international flights. The early morning crowd filled the causeways, surging
toward gates where planes arrived or departed. Leo let the flow carry him along
until reaching the EgyptAir counter. Their board showed Flight 287 arriving on
schedule at Gate 70.
He made his way
to the gate’s entrance and sat in a plastic-backed chair, his legs jouncing with
excitement. A huge digital clock on the wall clicked off the minutes. The flood
of people coming and going, the emotional meetings and separations of lovers and
family members always excited him, provided glimpses into the lives of strangers
when their inhabitations deserted them. Leo imagined himself kissing the pretty
women goodbye or hello and squirmed in his seat.
A garbled voice
announced the arrival of Hussein’s red-eye flight. At a little after nine, Leo
stood and walked to the rope barrier. At the far end of the gate’s
boarding/arrival area, a line of passengers exited the jetway and surged toward
the Immigration counters, too far away for him to pick out Hussein.
He moved down
the causeway to the walled-off room containing baggage carousels and waited near
its exit. Time pushed forward like a bicyclist into a strong headwind. Finally,
a tall guy with dark olive skin and a heavy five o’clock shadow moved to one of
the carousels and struggled to recover a huge bag. It took Leo a few moments to
realize that he stared at Hussein. Jesus,
the guy looks fried. He musta spent the entire trip outdoors.
Two TSA agents
in blue uniforms with black vests stopped Hussein. He handed them his passport.
A third official in a gray suit joined them. His friend looked stunned,
wide-eyed and scared. Hussein stared at the scattering of people waiting beyond
the baggage room exit. Their eyes met. A broad smile cracked his face and he
waved frantically. The agents took him by the elbows. The suited official looked
in Leo’s direction before saying something to the uniforms who spirited Hussein
and his baggage away.
Mr. Gray Suit
approached. “My name is Agent Sheldon with Homeland Security.” He flashed his
badge with ID. “Do you know Mr. Burkan?”
“Ah…who’s
that?”
“The man we
just took for questioning. He looked your way and seemed to recognize you?”
“No, I don’t
know him. We’ve never met.”
“What are you
doing here? Are you waiting for someone?”
“No. I…I come
to the international terminal to watch the big planes take off and land.”
“Well, you
won’t see any in the baggage room. Can I see some identification?”
“I locked all
my stuff in my car.”
“What’s your
name?”
“Leo.”
“Leo what?”
“Leo…Jacobson.”
“Come with me,
Leo.”
“Hey look,
dude, I haven’t done anything wrong. What do you want me for?”
“You’ll
see.”
Mr. Gray Suit
took him by the elbow and guided him down a corridor lit by greenish florescent
lights. The agent nudged him into a featureless room with a table and three
chairs but did not enter. The door clicked shut behind Leo. He tried the knob;
the door had locked. He checked his watch and paced back and forth before
finally sitting at the table and resting his head on his folded arms. What the hell are they doing with Hussein?
Will he tell them we’re friends? Will they lock us both up? Damn it, we should
be in Palm Beach. What did Hussein do, anyway?
The door opened
and Gray Suit and a TSA agent entered and sat across from Leo. Gray Suit clicked
a couple pictures of Leo with his smartphone while the agent spread a series of
colored photographs on the table. “Do you see anyone you know in these photos?”
Gray Suit asked.
Leo stared at
the images of a squad of men, each holding some kind of automatic weapon. He
counted three bloodied bodies on the ground and guessed them to be soldiers
based on their camouflaged uniforms. A tall dark-complected guy stood over one
body; he looked a lot like Hussein. The ruins of buildings filled the
background. Could that really be my
friend, fighting with Al-Qaeda insurgents?
“Well, do you
see anyone you know?” Gray Suit repeated.
“Who are these
people?”
“Don’t worry
about that. But this guy looks a lot like your friend.” The agent pointed to the
tall figure.
“No, I don’t
know him.”
Gray Suit bowed
his head then pushed back his chair. “Just sit tight.”
The agents left
him to wonder what their next move would be. But the images of the dead soldiers
and of Hussein or his double moving through a bombed-out village stuck in Leo’s
brain. Was this why Hussein went to
Yemen, why he’d been so nervous? Was all that stuff about his Uncle and the
wedding just a front for his guerrilla activities? And if so, will the Feds come
after me next?
The door swung
open, but this time only Agent Sheldon entered. He set a tablet on the table and
tapped its screen. “Watch this,” he ordered.
A video clip
showed Leo standing behind the roped barriers of an airport gate.
“That’s you in
the video, correct?” Gray Suit asked.
“Yeah, so?”
“You’re
standing at the very gate where Hussein Burkan departed for Yemen over a month
ago.”
“Yeah, so? A
whole bunch of people stood at that same gate. And I already told you, I like to
come and watch the planes. I’m here most weeks.”
“That’s funny,
because our cameras hadn’t picked you up before.”
“I can’t help
that.”
“So you deny
ever knowing Mr. Burkan?”
“Yes, damn it,
I don’t know the guy. Give me a fucking break. Do I look like I’d know someone
like that?”
Gray Suit
sighed and leaned back in his chair. “I don’t believe you. But we don’t need you
anyway.”
“Can I go now?
Are you charging me with something?”
“No, you may
go. But we know where you are.”
Leo hurried
from the room, not stopping until he reached the main concourse. The clock
showed a little before ten. He huddled in a corner and searched the river of
faces flowing past for Hussein’s. But the colored images of the Al-Qaeda
fighters and dead soldiers in Yemen interrupted his search.
Then he
remembered what Hussein told him: “…within an hour you’ll deny even knowing
me…over and over and over again.” Something seemed familiar with that phrase,
something he’d learned in Catholic School…when Peter denied knowing Christ three
times before the rooster crowed at dawn, the night before they crucified
Jesus.
Leo jumped to
his feet and walked toward the baggage room, hoping maybe Gray Suit might still
be around. But then the shame and fear hit him and he retreated once more, tears
streaking his cheeks, knowing that if the Feds ever released Hussein, he could
never be close to him again.
About the author
Terry Sanville lives in San Luis Obispo, California
with his artist-poet wife (his in-house editor) and two plump cats (his in-house
critics). He writes full time, producing short stories, essays, poems, and
novels. Since 2005, his short stories have been accepted by more than 270
literary and commercial journals, magazines, and anthologies including The
Potomac Review, The Bitter Oleander, Shenandoah, and Literally Stories. He was
nominated twice for Pushcart Prizes for his stories “The Sweeper” and “The
Garage.” Terry is a retired urban planner and an accomplished jazz and blues
guitarist – who once played with a symphony orchestra backing up jazz legend
George Shearing.
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