father hanging from the ceiling as if he wanted to blend with the Christmas decorations and give the house
a festive look. She remembered how she had spent her teenage years holding her mother responsible for
the suicide of her father. As a young girl, Ella had promised herself that when she got married, she would
always make her husband happy and not fail in her marriage, like her mother. In her endeavor to make her
marriage as different from her mother’s as possible, she had
not married a Christian man, preferring to
marry inside her faith.
It was only a few years earlier that Ella had stopped hating her aging mother, and though the two of
them
had been on good terms lately, the truth was, deep inside she still felt ill at ease when she
remembered the past.
“Mom! … Earth to Mom! Earth to Mom!”
Ella heard a ripple of giggles and whispers behind her shoulder. When she turned around, she saw four
pairs of eyes watching her with amusement. Orly, Avi, Jeannette, and David had for once all come to
breakfast at the same time and were now standing side by side inspecting her as if she were an exotic
creature. From the way they looked, it seemed they had been standing there for a while, trying to get her
attention.
“Good morning, you all.” Ella smiled.
“How come you didn’t hear us?” Orly asked, sounding genuinely surprised.
“You seemed so absorbed in that screen,” David said without looking at her.
Ella’s gaze followed her husband’s, and there on the
open screen in front of her, she saw Aziz Z.
Zahara’s e-mail shining dimly. In a flash she closed her laptop, without waiting for it to shut down.
“I’ve got a lot of reading to do for the literary agency,” Ella said, rolling her eyes. “I was working on
my report.”
“No you were not! You were reading your e-mails,” Avi said, his face serious, matter-of-fact.
What was it in teenage boys that made them so eager to detect everyone’s flaws and lies? Ella
wondered. But, to her relief, the others didn’t seem interested in the subject. In fact, they were all looking
somewhere else now, focused on the kitchen counter.
It was Orly who turned to Ella, voicing the question for them all. “Mom, how come you haven’t made
us any breakfast this morning?”
Now Ella turned to the counter and saw what they had seen. There was no coffee brewing, no
scrambled eggs on the stove, no toast with blueberry sauce. She nodded repeatedly as if agreeing with an
inner voice that spoke an undeniable truth.
Right, she thought, how come she had forgotten the breakfast?