In your stained dishdasha, drooping collar, and sneakers with grimy laces, you stand waiting. You see him poring over a faded paper, its lines glowing red with numbers and scribbles. The paper yells: Overdue payment!
Staggered, the grocer asks, βWhen did you come?β
βA few minutes ago.β
βI didnβt notice.β
βWell, now that you have, cough up your rent.β
He holds back his words, feigning calm. βWeβre back to that again?β
You slam your fist on his table. His teacup shakes, the paper trembles, and the numbers, the packets of chewing gum, and the lighters jiggle around, while the bags of nuts look at you stupidly. This isnβt even your job. She should be the one running after these tenants. Lazy woman.
Angrily, you stress, βThe rent is always due at the end of the month.β
βYouβre right, andββ
Irritated, you cut him off. βIβll be back in an hour, not a minute more.β
You leave the grocerβs, his sighs of exasperation ruffling the back of your neck. Heading to collect the rest of the rents, you look forward to the downtime between each apartment: no disturbance from car horns, no biting comments weighing you down, no sarcastic smiles. You cross the road, heading toward the building where the rest of the tenants are. Your destination: those denying doors. You know how much they shun you, but you are doggedly resolute.
The First Apartment
The sound of your footsteps vibrates on the stairs. You arrive. Your fist pounds the shut door, but the door remains rigid in its silence, and the garish red Welcome sign shudders. Burning sobs burst forth from a baby, whose sound is buried by someone speaking in a strange accent, her phrases jumbled: βI donβt have the key β¦ theyβre out.β
βTell them I donβt accept late payments.β
βIβll let them know.β
You hear the servant scolding the infant, and you imagine the baby swaddled, his feet squirming, while she hugs her own silent feet close to her body, painting her toes red. You rap on the door again, but she doesnβt answer. You yell, βOne day Iβll throw you out!β
The Second Apartment
You dillydally by looking at your shoes. You wipe their dusty tops with the corner of your dishdasha. You bang on the door with your open palm. The key coughs, choking in the lock. The door is now ajar, then it opens.
She looks at you with her wild hair, her voluptuous body, her slender waist, her sleepy eyes, her perky breasts. Nibbling on her red apple, she spits out a βYes?β at you.
βThe rent.β
βWe paid it.β
βI didnβt get it.β
Disdainfully, she tosses her apple high; it sails over you and slams into the bottom of the garbage can beside you. You can barely conceal your admirationβwhat a shot! She turns and slams the door in your face. You scream: βOne day Iβll throw you out!β
The Third Apartment
You circle the flat, closing in on the door and then walking away from it. You make a decision. You tap the point of your shoe on the ground, and, with one courageous finger, you rap on the shut door. It flings wide open to all-out yelling. Your voice shrinks; his enormous figure expands. Youβre surprised by the way his bald head shinesβand that heβs around today. His insolent wife, with her stuffed-up nose, is the one you usually run into. His shirt grates on you, its small squares spouting red.
He says nothing to you as he leans his bulk toward you. You brace yourself as he lunges toward your legs, and you shuffle back a step or two, inadvertently standing on the edge of a newspaper lying on the floor. He yanks it out from under you, yelling as he slams the door, βNo news!β
You whisper, βOne day, Iβll throw you both out.β
When youβre done, you return to the grocer and find that he has a cold juice waiting for you. In his hand, you notice the numbers and the red scrawl burying themselves into the paper, disappearing into a line at the edge of the whiteness. He says, βYouβre late.β
βTheyβre horrible.β
βItβs not your fault.β He goes on to ask, βDid you fall out with your servant?β
You look closely at him, then ask, βHow did you know?β
βHe came here looking for you, in his scruffy clothes. I didnβt tell him where you were. Will you give me a break on this monthβs rent?β
βYes.β
βHere, take this, clean yourself up.β
You take another gulp of juice and wipe your sweating brow and your mouth with his white handkerchief. You say, βYou can stay.β You go outside to sit on the stoop, and you see the third tenant drawing close. He looks at you, disgusted; he bellows in your face. βGet up! Get out of here, and if I see you again,β pointing to his leg and his wrist, βIβll cut your arms and legs off!β
You jump up and scramble away with your legs while you still have them, groping for your hand, remembering how you repeatedly interrupted your stepmom as she counted the rents collected this morning, her dirty red shoes thrown in your face. You kicked the table, scattering the money everywhere, then wriggled out of the servantβs grip. You punched him in the face and escaped, running out the door to the grocerβs, her voice hissing at your back, βImbeccccile, one day Iβll throw you out!β
Translated from the Arabic by Sawad Hussain
Acknowledgement: This story was first published in The Common, Issue 11, Spring 2016.
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