thousand troops there. Heâs fine.â
âHow do you know?â
âBelieve me, I know,â Dad said. âHave I ever lied to you?â
âPromise?â
âYes. Promise.â
âThe war is stupid,â Jack said.
Mom turned to him. Her lips pinched up. âWho said that?â
âCassie.â
âYou think itâs stupid too,â I said to her.
âWe have to respect the troops.â Her voice broke. âWe have to.â
âBecause weâre blowing everything up,â Jack said.
âIs that what she told you?â Mom asked.
He nodded.
âTheyâre looking for weapons,â Dad said. âTheyâre hidden in houses, and terrorists are everywhere.â
âBlue Sky says there werenât terrorists before the war,â I said.
âWhoâs Blue Sky?â Mom tipped her wineglass to her mouth.
âA girl from Iraq who has a blog Iâve been reading for social studies.â
âDid did did did you hear the falling bombs,â Jack sang.
âWhereâd you learn that?â Mom frowned.
âSefâs box.â
âWell, donât sing it at the supper table, please.â She turned to me. âAnd why do you assume everythingâs our fault? Why do you care about
them
so much?â
I clenched my fork. âMom, I care about Sef more than anything in the world.â
For the first time since I told Dad on her, her eyes softened when she looked at me. She was beginning to come out of the Deep Freeze. Part of me was relieved, but part of me had gotten used to the silent chill of these past weeks. It was easier not to say anything.
Dad looked like he felt sorry for me. âSure there were terrorists. That countryâs always been at war, and Saddam Hussein is a mass murderer. Heâs wiping out the Kurds and anyone elseââ
âWas,â I said. âHeâs in jail now. Anyway, thatâs what Blue Sky said, and she lives there.â
âWhereâd she get a name like Blue Sky?â Dad asked. âAnd did she say anything about the plastic shredders or torturing the soccer players?â
âJoe,â Mom said.
âWhatâs a mass murderer?â Jack asked.
We all looked at him. Mom filled her wineglass.
âYou donât want to know,â Van said.
âYes I do,â Jack said.
âYou shouldnât criticize our troops,â Mom said loudly.
âShe didnât say anything about the troops,â Dad said. âShe just doesnât have the full picture.â
âI donât want to hear it. All those troops are putting their lives on the line for that country,â Mom said. âIncluding my son.â
â
Our
son. Remember? It is
our
family. I want to keep it that way.â Dad turned to me. âAnd, Cass, as far as terrorism goes, Saddam Hussein is a terrorist. Facts are facts.â
âSo we should start a war in every country whose leader is a terrorist?â I was suddenly so mad about everything. I needed someone on my side. Jack didnât count. He was on everyoneâs side. I closed my eyes and mouth. I didnât say anything. I held on to that angerâsqueezed it between my teeth. I had made a dealâI was trying to be good.
Jack ran to the TV and began to shoot with his fingers pointed like a gun. âPow! Pow! Mom, I got the mass murderers! Sef can come home!â
âThank you, Jack.â Her eyes were watering. âI donât even know if Sefâs getting something decent to eat over there.â
Whatever he was having was probably better than what we were having, I thought.
âSupper, Sef, supper! Supper, Sef!â Jack called into the TV.
CHAPTER 19
NO WHERE IS SAFE
ON THANKSGIVING NIGHT I looked for an email from Sef and found a new blog from Blue Sky.
Â
Blue Skyâs Blog
Â
November 23, 2006
A lot days past. Sorry. The electricity is very bad, on and off, most
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