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Masham Means Evening

Page 2

by Kanina Dawson


  waiting to hit the right note. A tuning fork, humming

  like instinct

  in the back of my brain. I watch the boy

  pick his way through the graves,

  his days tied to a bomber’s suicide like a timer

  though neither of us can know it. It’s already started to count back.

  Like a leaf in the heat, like a bird in between blinks,

  I keep still, listening for that tuning fork

  its low note of caution, telling me

  when time is up.

  The Morning Commute

  Driving through Kandahar City. Morning. 0730.

  We’ve come straight from the airfield

  and I’m holding a coffee, fresh

  from the boardwalk.

  There are goats to steer around.

  A man stares.

  Ah, says Christian. The morning commute.

  I look down at my cup,

  feeling ridiculously at ease.

  Maybe I should get rid of this, I say,

  taking another sip.

  There are more goats. And two women in burqas,

  hustling along. I catch the worry in the brown

  flash of their heels like a sideways glance,

  like maybe the rumours are true

  and we’re all rape-hungry Americans.

  Why, asks Christian.

  He drives carefully around them and waves – Ladies.

  Even at this slow crawl we raise

  dust clouds in our wake.

  I don’t know, I say, shrugging.

  Because we’re at war? It feels unprofessional.

  Christian shrugs back.

  So we hit an IED, he says.

  The worst that happens

  is you spill your coffee.

  The White School House

  This is what I learn from John in the ops room

  on the morning of my day off – that dismounted patrols,

  attempting to clear Taliban from among the rock walls

  and grapevines west of Kandahar City, have been ambushed

  near a school house.

  The Taliban take three lives. Then they take one more

  when an RPG slams into the side of an armoured carrier

  on its way to the fight.

  Later that day I learn that they are now in the midst

  of falling back. Us – not them. It’s surreal

  to be told of this. Taliban in their flip flops

  causing our 21st century war machines

  to run backwards. Back across the river,

  is how John puts it, pushing pins into a map

  somewhere south of Arghandab – To get us

  the fuck out of there.

  Firefight

  Attacks in the background,

  beyond the outskirts of the city

  become part of the nightly clutter of noise.

  Inside the muffled tapping

  of donkey hooves headed home, or boys

  shouting, running their kites,

  are the undertones of violence –

  the tock tock of a Kandahar City police patrol

  being ambushed on the road.

  Consistent or sporadic, the sound of gunfire

  varies but is constant –

  a sound that instinct recognizes.

  It filters into the subconscious

  for later reference,

  when we head out the gate.

  Working for the Coalition

  The Afghan cooks arrive at camp before dawn

  so they don’t get their heads cut off after work.

  That can happen if they’re not careful.

  Last year an interpreter went missing from the airfield.

  He was nabbed and taken away, hands holding him by the hair,

  his heels left to kick, dragging in the dirt,

  his throat slit.

  The Taliban filmed it.

  You can buy those DVDs in the city markets.

  Powerful stuff, intimidation.

  At the camp gate I watch as the cooks come shuffling in

  one by one, laughing, arms raised.

  They arrive in secret, filter in through the alleys.

  Start peeling potatoes early.

  You don’t ask them where they live

  or how big their families are or if the money’s worth the risk.

  You learn the odd word and point to what you want.

  Sometimes they look confused. Mostly they grin,

  sizing up our tattoos.

  It’s amazing the things you don’t stay amazed at. Afghan cooks

  risk losing their heads to make rice with lamb and eggplant, something

  none of us even like.

  The Wrong Crowd

  Before you were used as a Taliban sentry in these hills,

  before you were a bone, blown apart

  and lodged in the rock of this cave,

  before the geckos found you and made nests of your skull,

  you were not necessarily against the West.

  Maybe you just fell into step with the wrong crowd, got recruited

  from a refugee camp on the border, somehow hoping to be reborn

  or maybe just make a buck. After all, the Madrassas

  can only take so many

  and your mother had other children to feed. You used to be

  one of those

  typical kids from the camp, wearing a donated sweater

  with a leaf pattern

  and too-short sleeves. Constantly wiping your nose on them. Kind

  until you learned not to be.

  Maybe I’m naive. Maybe I want you to be something more

  than what people say you are – an opium-smoking

  religious faggot. A product of the buggery

  you must have asked for

  in order to keep watch from this rock face. Not much liked,

  but still used all the time, you took the grunting of old men

  behind a pigeon-laced wall at noon.

  At night your Taliban brothers would have made supper,

  laughing at the fact that they wouldn’t be the first ones found

  if the Americans stormed this place. It would be you –

  up on the rock cliff, struggling to take a shit –

  your eyes wet with yawning, your lungs remembering

  what it was to run through camp with a plastic bag kite

  in boots too big for your feet, the taste of smoke

  from your mother’s cooking fires and all the things

  you had to eat – before the bad choices –

  naan bread with rice and chicken,

  sometimes saffron.

  Once you had a soccer ball.

  And a name –

  Abdul-Hanaan, slave

  of the merciful.

  Repatriation and a Rainstorm

  Shot down over the northern edge of Kandahar, he is repatriated

  back to Ontario on a day of thunderstorms. Air smelling of rain

  and weedy-bottomed lakes. The pressure of clouds

  like a steep descent.

  Onlookers line the streets, waiting in the wind for his plane to land

  in two-star Trenton, the leaves of each tree

  turning inside out.

  As the crowd stands hushed, looking

  for that grey fin of plane to appear,

  his family files out onto the tarmac, holding on to their hats,

  each other

 
as though they are old.

  I recall that photo of him, the one that gets taken

  before you go overseas – the same day you get all your needles

  and anti-malarial pills.

  He was one of the few to have smiled.

  You never think it’s going to be you.

  Helicopter Crash

  Crumpled, dusty, whirling into the camp wall,

  a helicopter folds, burning like a metal deck of cards,

  melting the seatbelts.

  No way to get them out, the pilot and door gunner.

  Inside the operations centre the order gets given –

  start making the calls back home.

  The officer in charge swallows hard, nods.

  Poised on the last step of the stairs

  he feels his own bones on fire,

  thinks of his boys, eleven and thirteen, says –

  It would be quick though.

  It would be quick.

  But I can tell from his face –

  how he sees those flames

  like a tableau, those hands

  in a cockpit spasming for air –

  that he’s not sure.

  The General’s Briefing

  The briefing room smells like a cottage

  closed up in the dead of summer

  or a second-hand shop in July.

  We are sticking to our chairs, Sean and I,

  listening to a fan that makes noise, but moves no air.

  We have a few minutes to wait.

  The General is at a ramp ceremony –

  an American this time, and one of Hannah’s friends.

  Died in her arms in Pashmul.

  She told me this on the boardwalk at KAF,

  out front of the Tim Horton’s trailer

  and I said that I was sorry for her loss. Us Canadians

  were holding steady at twenty-three. I wondered

  what number it was for them. A shitty thing

  to keep track of, even worse to lose it.

  The door to the briefing room opens, closes. A thousand times

  I twist the cap on a water bottle warm as a beach.

  We go over our notes.

  Outside the plane takes off and I start to feel sad.

  Then the General brushes in and it’s all business.

  He takes his seat, apologizing

  for being late.

  Casting the Net

  Dirty, fecal, filled with old fruit skins and farts,

  the canal breaks the city in half, one side full of bad guys –

  quiet, watchful, arms clasped behind their backs

  (no booms there – they don’t shit in their backyard)

  and the other side, full of merchants, the maybe not-so-bad guys

  where the booms go off instead, amid spice carts

  and propane stands,

  schoolgirls and us.

  We’re getting ready to roll into this mess, paused, idling at the gate.

  Inside our truck I turn my head against the heavy stink of air

  trying to avoid that shit taste it leaves on the tongue.

  A pair of leather gloves is broiling on the dashboard.

  The burning outline of a sun, reflected on the ground

  in puddles full of algae scum.

  The radio crackles with reports of troops in contact, under fire

  somewhere southwest of the city, where last night I watched

  bonfires on the hill and wondered what they meant. Guessing

  gets old when nothing in this desert is news. I ache to discern

  something concrete, something definitive that I can use

  to turn the tide of this thing.

  Listening to troops locked in a firefight, the driver

  looks out over the canal, the endless sprawl

  of clay-coloured compounds.

  He eyeballs an old Afghan man who is eyeballing us.

  Says he wishes we had found a more reliable way

  to tell the bad from the not-so bad,

  the everyday man from the Taliban –

  none of this one-by-one shit.

  I imagine looking down on the city. I envision it

  like a picture from the top. Us in the middle

  spreading out our nets, draining these compounds like a sea

  until all that’s left are Taliban, conveniently marked, caught

  flopping on the bottom. The shock of air

  hitting their gills like a jackboot.

  When the gate goes up it yanks my thoughts

  back into the truck. We roll out

  past the old Afghan man – older than dirt the driver says

  and we laugh, scanning the streets for suicide bombers –

  that stillness,

  that telltale lingering, those quiet signs of hate

  like ripples in the water – bottom feeders

  humping the muck for their dinner, hiding

  deep among the everyday weeds.

  Shades of Grey

  Spores of metal are in this Afghan man like a blood smell,

  his hand stump wrapped in gauze, his lower legs full of pins.

  He keeps his face turned to the hospital wall

  and I see his throat work hard at swallowing –

  a dry well.

  I hear he got injured when his plough struck a mine.

  But the medics on call say – Don’t let him suck you in.

  We see this all the time. He’s no farmer.

  The man moves a blanket with his stump.

  Runs his tongue around the metal

  anaesthetic taste of his mouth.

  He moans that he wants to be released.

  Says, please – he has a family to care for

  and his plough is what hit the mine.

  But the medic, familiar with wounds, is unconvinced

  and thinks he knows how most of this man’s hand has gone –

  on a night with no moon, in hushed and hurried digging, emplacing

  roadside bombs.

  Incoming

  A few of us stand outside in the compound, a moment spent

  in quiet camaraderie, looking up, losing thought,

  the fat moon a full cow bawling in the sky –

  then something goes whizzing by

  in the dark overhead, uncategorized.

  I know what it is. Not fast enough though.

  A high, falling whistle fills the night eye and my brain

  is stuck open like the aperture of a pinhole camera

  capturing each upside-down frame

  a split second before impact, instinct

  screaming at us to move, like bull riders

  storing curse words in the mouth for later,

  too late to be of use.

  We are halfway to our rooms

  when a dark, hurtling star drives us all to ground,

  fumbling for sudden cover, the giant bang of its boom

  leaving us open-mouthed in the dust.

  Soft Things

  Escaping the confines of the office, Todd takes a smoke break

  out back where some Afghan workers are digging a ditch.

  They squat behind their shovels and shade their eyes,

  sucking on their scarves to keep moisture in their mouths.

  Yesterday we lost two more guys to an IED –

  not the fault of Afghans in general, but these ones

  keep their distance, knowing we’re angry enough

  to blame them anyway.

  Plus it’
s hot. And we’re all getting on each other’s nerves.

  When Todd returns he lets the screen door bang behind him.

  It’s the third time that day and Sean sighs, rolling his eyes.

  Todd announces that he’s seen a kitten outside – an event –

  because things here don’t thrive.

  My roommate runs, clapping her hands for something soft.

  She can’t wait to hold it. Her mouth is an Ohhhhh.

  All week she has been alone in her head, tossing at night,

  nervous and afraid to dream. Afraid the next IED

  will be hers.

  She hurries outside and the screen door slams.

  Don’t forget your purse, Todd jokes.

  I watch his shoulders go up and down.

  There is a pause in the sound of shovels

  ringing against the rocks in the dirt

  as the Afghans stop to watch.

  Todd says, laughing –

  Guess I should have told her it was dead.

  Through the screen door I see

  her hands fall, her face

  go the colour of Vanilla Bean body cream.

  An Awning of Birds

  Waiting for a convoy to come in,

  an Afghan policeman with his AK slung,

  hot hush of slippers on his feet, beckons me

  to where guards gather for yogurt

  in the garden beneath a tree, alive

  with little brown sparrows, an awning of birds.

  He wants to show me their latest prize –

  a car his men have just towed in, a white Saracha,

  bullet-holed, its windows broken,

  the driver side door streaked with blood.

  Air fresheners from Iran hang, slowly

  turning above the dash.

  This bomber they shot – before he went off.

  I wish I could ask how they knew

  to be so sure – if it was just luck or something else,

  something in the way he moved behind the wheel

  that lacked peace. The forehead sweat, the glimpse

  of gritted teeth.

  Across the city an echo reverberates in the air

  like the rumbling of an earthquake, dispelling

  the men from their afternoon shade. Disturbed,

 

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