Asylum City (3 page)

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Authors: Liad Shoham

BOOK: Asylum City
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He wanted to call out for Inbar, but his mouth was too dry. His tongue felt like rubber.

He lay in bed, weary from a night of restless sleep. His temples were throbbing. Suddenly he remembered that Inbar had left on Thursday to spend a few days in Eilat with her girlfriends. An early bachelorette party. He didn't get it. The wedding was two months away but she was already frantic. He didn't have the strength to deal with all the drama.

Again he tried to sit up but was hit by a wave of nausea. Last night he'd gone out to a bar with Kobi. He shouldn't drink so much. He always regretted it the next morning.

The pressure in his bladder became intense. Yariv pushed himself up into a sitting position. Dizzy and headachy or not, he had to get to the bathroom before he burst.

When he was finally on his feet, he found it hard to breathe. He realized he had a stuffy nose. He looked down and a shiver ran through his body: he was fully dressed. He'd slept in his clothes, his shoes still on his feet and ugly brown stains on his shirt.

A fragment of memory from last night suddenly flashed through Yariv's mind: he's standing outside Michal's building shouting profanities at her. Then he's knocking on her door, calling out to her, waiting to tell her to her face what he thinks of her complaint, what he thinks of her in general.

He made his way as quickly as possible to the bathroom, struggling for breath.

“Go away, Yariv. Go home. You're drunk.” Michal's voice resounded in his head.

He gaped in surprise when he saw his face in the mirror. His nose was swollen and his nostrils were clogged with dried blood. Under his eyes were dark blue bruises that were already turning black. What the hell had happened to him? More to the point, what the hell had he done?

Chapter 4

WITH
a few quick strokes of his pencil, Gabriel Takela was trying to capture the arc of the pigeon's wing as it perched on a power line looking down at the street below. He was getting soaked by the rain, but he ignored it, just as he ignored the stench from the large green Dumpsters filling the space behind the restaurant. When he was drawing, he was totally absorbed in the emerging picture, even if it was no more than a pencil sketch in a small pad. It helped him escape. At such times he didn't think about the present, the future, or the fact that nothing was likely to happen anytime soon that would change his life for the better.

He sketched trees, animals, buildings, children, occasionally adults—Israelis he saw in the street. He felt compelled to. Forms and colors accosted him everywhere, begging to be captured on paper. But he never drew anything from home. Or women. It aroused too much emotion and longing.

Yesterday Itai had brought him watercolors and brushes. Gabriel could barely contain his excitement. He desperately missed painting in color, breathing life into his black-and-white drawings, yellowing the leaves and greening the grass and attempting to capture the colors of a white man. He was so overwhelmed, he hadn't even opened his present yet.

He knew he was good, that he had a keen eye and a quick hand. Even Michal had asked him to draw her. Despite his reluctance, he eventually gave in. Michal and Itai were like family, the big brother and sister he never had. He didn't have anyone else. There used to be Hagos, but Hagos was dead. Before that there was Liddie, but she was dead, too.

Amir, the restaurant owner, allowed them a fifteen-minute break every three hours. They also got a free lunch and could take home any food that was left over at the end of the day. Amir was a good man. He paid them a decent wage, and he paid on time, too. John told him the law said they should get more, but it was enough for him. Before Gabriel found this job he'd worked for people who paid much less and never let him take a break.

Not far away, three other Eritrean boys who worked in the restaurant were sheltering from the rain under an awning. Gabriel kept his distance, not joining in their animated chatter. He didn't used to be like this. Back home he'd had lots of friends and loved to be the center of attention. But that was a long time ago. Now he was a different person.

Just as he began on the pigeon's feet, it spread its wings and he watched it fly away. He was bringing his eyes back down to the pad when his cell phone rang.

“Gabriel?” He recognized the speaker immediately. Her voice was shaking.

His body responded with a shudder to what his head still hadn't grasped. Was it possible? He was afraid to hope. He dreamt so often of hearing her voice. He could imagine the moment, the instant he would get a sign of life from her. He agonized constantly over what had happened.

“Gabriel?” she asked again, and his eyes filled with tears. He heard a hacking cough in his ear.

HE
thought she was dead. The others urged him to accept it. At the border, just before Rafik released them, he asked where she was. Rafik moved his finger across his throat and grinned. Gabriel's body was weakened and exhausted, but nevertheless he felt the blood rushing to his head. He wanted to kill him right then and there. He didn't care about the consequences or how close he was to Israel and freedom. Rafik raised his rifle and cocked it. Gabriel saw him place his finger on the trigger, the same finger he'd gestured with. If the others hadn't pulled him out of the way, the Bedouin would have shot him without flinching, like he once saw someone shoot a rabid dog in his village back home.

“LIDDIE?”
he asked hesitantly, still afraid to believe it. His voice was trembling with emotion.

THE
last time he'd seen her was in Sinai. Rafik had his eye on her from the beginning. It frightened them both the way he looked at her. There'd been rumors in the refugee camp in Sudan about the things the Bedouins do to women. Gabriel put his hand on her shoulder to indicate that she belonged to him, that she was a married woman, although in actuality she was his little sister. Liddie hid her face as best she could, trying to make herself invisible. Rafik didn't make a move on her the first two days. Just stared. Gabriel allowed himself a sigh of relief. But the third night, everything changed. The Bedouin woke Liddie up and dragged her out of the tent by her hair. Gabriel raced to her defense, throwing himself at Rafik. But Rafik wasn't alone. Two of his henchmen grabbed Gabriel and held him down. No matter how hard he struggled, he couldn't free himself. Rafik dragged Liddie away, screaming and pleading. Like him, she resisted, and like him, she could do nothing to save herself. Michael, one of the other men in their group, tried to come to their aid, but a third Bedouin struck him in the face with the butt of his rifle, drawing blood. After that, no one else moved.

“LIDDIE,
is that you?” he asked again.

He heard a bloodcurdling scream at the other end, followed by more coughing.

“Liddie?” He was shouting, causing his three workmates to turn and look.

“Help me, Gabriel . . . help me,” he heard between tears and coughing.

WHEN
Rafik disappeared with Liddie, the Bedouins holding Gabriel started in on him, kicking him in the head, the abdomen, the ribs. Their feet kept coming, as if he were the ball of rags they used to kick around in their schoolyard soccer games. At some point he lost consciousness. When he came to he found himself chained to the rest of the men in their group. Michael offered him some water. The long cut on his face was infected. For several days he burned up with fever. He owed his life to the Israeli doctors who treated him.

“THEY
beat me, Gabriel . . . help me,” Liddie begged.

“Where are you? Tell me where you are,” he shouted frantically.

More coughing.

“Liddie?”

“Gabriel?” The voice was male.

“Give me back my sister. What are you doing to her?” He was crying now, too.

“Listen up, you son-of-a-bitch. If you want to see your sister again, it'll cost you twenty-five thousand shekels. You got one week. Be in Levinsky by the slides on Thursday. We'll find you. You don't bring the money and we kill your sister, understand?”

Gabriel didn't know what to say. The excitement of hearing Liddie's voice, of learning that she was alive, had been replaced by anxiety and horror. Where would he get that kind of money in a week? The little he earned he sent back to their mother who had stayed behind.

“Understand?” the man repeated.

“Help me, Gabriel, help me,” he heard Liddie crying out in the background, pleading as she had done the last time, in Sinai. He hadn't been able to save her then, but he wasn't going to let her down again.

“I understand, don't hurt her!” he yelled.

The call was disconnected.

Gabriel stood there motionless for a few moments, gripping the phone tightly in his hand. He'd heard about calls like this. The Bedouins in Sinai set a price for the passage to Israel, and then in the middle of the desert they demanded more. If you didn't pay you were tortured. People called their family, their friends, anyone who could raise the money. Meanwhile, they were held hostage.

But the man on the phone wasn't a Bedouin. He was speaking in Gabriel's mother tongue, Tigrinya. Had Liddie crossed the border? Was she here in Israel?

A chill went down his spine as he recalled how he himself had been tortured. He reached out and touched the scar on his left cheek. Like the burn marks on his hands and feet, it was a memento that Rafik's Bedouins had left on him for the rest of his life.

Where had Liddie been all this time? What were they doing to her?

GABRIEL
was standing at the bus stop, his drawing pad clutched to his chest. He'd asked Amir to let him off early. Time was running out. If he couldn't come up with twenty-five thousand shekels in a week, his little sister would die. Those people had no conscience. He knew that.

He had to find a way. He'd promised his mother before they left that he'd take care of Liddie. Now, every time he sat down to write her a letter, he felt too ashamed, too guilty, to tell her that his sister wasn't with him.

Where would he get the money? He lived with fifteen other Eritreans in an apartment near the old Tel Aviv bus station, five to a room. He and John shared a mattress. It had taken a long time before he could afford the luxury of a mattress and a roof over his head.

Gabriel had heard about a man who went to the Israeli police when he got a call like this. His son was murdered.

He had to talk to Michal and Itai. He had to tell them. They were good people, and smart, too. Maybe they could tell him what to do. He called Itai's cell phone several times but got no answer. When he called OMA, Naomi told him Itai hadn't come in yet. He was at a meeting in Jerusalem. He called Michal at home, but the line was busy. She was probably still there. She didn't arrive at the office before two o'clock on Sundays. He couldn't wait. He had to talk to her right now. She wouldn't get mad, she'd understand. She said he could get in touch with her at any hour of the day or night if he needed help.

Gabriel got on the bus and found an empty seat. He didn't look the other passengers in the face. They didn't look at him, either. He'd already learned that Africans were invisible to Israelis. They could stand right next to you and not notice you. Just don't look them in the eye or make any trouble. Then they noticed you and got scared. And only bad things ever happened when they were scared.

Chapter 5

YARIV
listened with half an ear as attorney Shlomo Lankry argued before the court. He had no patience this morning for the self-righteous homilies of a man whose eloquent orations about social justice and morals didn't prevent him from fleecing his clients.

The slightest movement of his head was painful. Yariv had managed to clean the clotted blood from his nose, but it was still sore and swollen. The two aspirin he'd taken hadn't done much good, either. He would have gone to the doctor if he didn't have to be in court, even though there wasn't much point. As an army medic, he'd seen quite a few broken noses in his time, and he knew there wasn't a lot you could do.

He also had another reason for preferring to be in court this morning. It kept him from thinking about last night. It was too daunting, particularly the fact that he couldn't remember how he'd gotten his injuries and what exactly had gone down with Michal.

But he was getting antsy. He wanted to go back to his empty apartment, close the blinds, and go to sleep. He didn't have the strength for anything else, including Inbar, who'd called from Eilat. As if he cared where Sivan stood on the question of a sit-down dinner versus a buffet. He could tell from her tone that she was offended when he brushed her off, but he didn't care. He had more urgent things to worry about.

There was no doubt in Yariv's mind that Michal would use whatever happened last night to get back at him. After all, she'd already filed a formal complaint with the Bar Association.

THEY'D
dated for a couple of months about three years ago when he was a criminal prosecutor handling rape cases and she was a volunteer at one of those women's organizations that ran a hot line. She was all right, no more than that. Cute face, reasonable body, big ass. Somewhere between a six and a seven. He hit on her because he thought it would be good for his career, that he'd get bigger cases if she convinced the poor women she worked with to ask for him by name. It never happened. At least not like he was hoping. He broke up with her after a while when he got tired of her and her holier-than-thou attitude. If there was one thing he couldn't stand it was self-righteous jerks, and Michal was the mother of all self-righteous jerks.

They ran into each other on a regular basis ever since, not only because of their work. They lived in the same neighborhood, just a few blocks apart. He was over her, with Inbar now, but he still couldn't get out of his head the things she used to do in bed. He'd never had sex like that with anyone else. He was pretty sure she was having the same thoughts whenever they bumped into each other. Yet despite the sexual tension between them, they always remained civil.

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