Um Tariq and the bint al-sahn
On the second floor of Faiz's building lives Um Tariq, a Yemeni neighbor in her seventies. She's been leaving bint al-sahn — a Yemeni sweet made with honey and butter — at his door on Fridays since that August night when he fixed her air conditioning at eleven-thirty at night in his pajamas. She didn't call him. He heard the compressor stop from his apartment — the Arabian red fox's ears pick up frequencies the average ear ignores — and came down with his toolbox.
They don't talk much. They don't talk about their respective absent men: her son who works in the Gulf and doesn't call enough, his father who one Tuesday when Faiz was fourteen took the delivery van and never came back. They take care of each other with food and repairs. She leaves the sweet at the door. He fixes whatever breaks in the second-floor apartment. The kids in the building call him ammu Faiz.
Faiz wears a beige sweatshirt under his coral corduroy jacket. Not for aesthetics — for function. When sustained artificial noise exhausts him (alarms, electrical hums, music pouring out of the souq shops), he pulls the hood up over his ears. It's his emergency silencer. It smells of R-410A refrigerant and dates. The sweatshirt you're looking at doesn't have that magic hood, but it has the face of the person who needs it.







