always known that Umar nursed this resentment, this feeling that he got the short end of the stick. âItâs different, bro,â I said, my voice soft. âWe know better now. I was wrong, Umar. Donât envy meâ¦â
âBut I do, Ali, thatâs what you donât understand. Itâs like you got everything: the great school, the girls, the fun times⦠And Mum. You got Mum, too.â
My breath caught in my throat and I felt tears well up in my eyes instantly. Umar had hardly mentioned Mum since shedied. At times, I wondered whether he would ever mention her again. âNo, Umar,â I said, shaking my head. âThatâs where youâre wrong. You were the apple of her eye. You were the oneâ¦â
But Umarâs eyes were red now and he clenched his fists. âThen whyâd she have to go and get sick, huh? Whyâd she have to leave me?â Next thing I knew, he was crying like a baby, rubbing at his eyes with balled fists, just like he used to when he was little.
âHey, Umar,â I said softly, âit was Allahâs will that Mum got sick. Inna lillahi , remember? We belong to Allah and we will all return to Him. We canât be angry with Mum about that⦠and we canât be angry with Allah, either.â
âWell, I am ,â he said firmly, his eyes fixed on the ceiling. âAnd nothing you can say is going to change that.â He shrugged my hand off and pushed me away from him.
My heart was heavy as I left the room. Why couldnât I get through to Umar?
I didnât know how to help him heal, not without Islam. Because, without my faith in Allah, none of it made any sense to me.
***
My gran, Nana Jordan, rang to speak to us later that night.
âI miss you, Nana,â I said, suddenly wishing I was a little boy again, sitting at her kitchen table, stuffing myself with her delicious beef stew with fried dumplings. Then there would be apple crumble for afters, with ice cream, cream â or both. Tears stung my eyes at the memory; apple crumble had been Mumâsfavourite dessert. Sheâd promised to teach me her secret recipe but, when she was well, I had always had something else on and, when she became sick, there simply was no time. There were so many other things that needed to be doneâ¦
âI miss you, too, darling,â Nana was saying. âJust how long am I going to have to wait before I am blessed with a visit from my grandsons, eh? Doesnât that religion of yours say anything about the rights of grandparents?â
I chuckled. Nana was always trying to shame us into things by quoting Islam â even though she was a staunch Christian. âYes, it does, Nan. Itâs called âupholding the ties of kinshipâ.â
âYes, that sounds right,â she clucked. âSo letâs see some upholding around here, shall we? How about I meet you boys in London next weekend? We can go out, see the sights, have lunch⦠sound good?â
âThat sounds great, Nana. Just great.â
âAnd so where is my baby, Umar. Can I speak to him?â
I took a deep breath. âTo tell you the truth, Nan, heâs not doing so well. This area is quite rough and⦠heâs been getting into a bit of trouble.â
âWhat kind of trouble, Ali?â Nana asked, her voice rising, tense.
âSome of the kids around here⦠nothing major⦠but worrying.â Then I checked over my shoulder to make sure no one was in earshot. âTo be honest, Nan, I wish we could get him out of here. Out of all of us, he is the one Iâm most worried about. Do you think you couldâ¦?â
âAli, look. There is nothing I would like more than to have Umar up here with me, to get him ready for the new school year. Iâve tried, you know that. I even suggested to yourfather that he send him to stay with me for a few weeks but he wouldnât have it. Said he didnât
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