Another wintry day in Ottawa, the town that fun forgot. Not for the first time Laila Fatimid wondered why her parents fled their hometown of Abu Kamal, Syria, for frosty Ontario, Canada. Head down against the heavy snowfall, the young woman walked up the hill leading to her neighborhood in the Barrhaven sector. I hate Ottawa, she cursed under her breath. A car barreling down the icy road came dangerously close to clipping her on the sidewalk's edge, and she flipped the bird at the uncaring driver, who just continued on his merry way as if nothing had happened.
At last Laila arrived at the corner of Tartan and Jockvale, and walked up her house steps. Willing her frozen fingers to reach into her pocket, she fumbled with the key for several seconds before finally inserting it into the lock. Hey Shaqiqa ( sister ), her brother Ibrahim greeted her. Tall, broad-shouldered and muscular, with a smooth, shaved head, Ibrahim Fatimid was the eldest son of the family and the only one of her relatives she got along with.
Come here, Ibrahim said, giving her a hug. Hey brother I'm freezing, Laila muttered under her breath, her nearly frozen lips refusing to open fully. Finally she took off her silvery hijab, freeing her shoulder-length frizzy black hair. Laughing, her brother took off her coat and hung it up. I left you some food on the table, he said, then went into the basement. Knowing Ibrahim, he would be down there for a while. The basement was his official corner, even though he had his bedroom upstairs and the family garage was littered with his old comic books and musical instruments, whom he refused to either move or get rid of.
Kicking off her boots and slipping out of her wet, freezing socks, Laila made her way into the kitchen. A delicious plate of Chinese food awaited her. Shrimp-fried rice with orange chicken and two spring rolls. Brother you're the best, she shouted, wondering if Ibrahim heard her. Probably not. Her elder brother wasn't home often and when he did come to visit, he was in his own little world. In a bid to escape their controlling parents, Ibrahim opted to study civil engineering at Ryerson University in Toronto instead of attending one of Ottawa's many schools. As usual, Ibrahim was in the basement, playing Grand Theft Auto.
Laila ate in silence, watching a rerun of Stargate Atlantis on TV and trying really hard not to think about the day's events. Not for the first time she silently thanked her lucky stars that neither of her brothers attended Carleton University. Her other brother Khalid was at Algonquin College, studying business administration. If Ibrahim or Khalid went to Carleton, then they might know what was going on with her, and there would be hell to pay. Laila's cell phone buzzed, and she smiled faintly when she realized who it was.
Hey boo, David texted her. Hey babe I can't talk now I'm eating, Laila messaged back. Just checking to see if you're alright, David wrote back, followed by a sad face. Laila blinked back tears as she kissed her phone's on-screen wall paper, the very first picture they took together while hanging out at Silver City on their first date. Soon babe, she told herself, soon. On the tube, the handsome black warrior known as Teal'C battled a ferocious ( and equally black ) alien fighter called Imhotep.
The sight of these two muscular, well-built and dark-skinned men fighting stirred Laila, causing her momentarily forget her troubles. Her heart skipped a beat as they put their athletic prowess on display, and her groin tingled. That is one fine brother, she whispered to herself as she watched Teal'C take down Imhotep in a last-minute move. Growing up in a household with two older brothers obsessed with comic books and science fiction movies, Laila really got into shows like Buffy, Angel, Stargate and The Invisible Man. She had crushes on two well-known African-American science fiction actors, Christopher Judge of Stargate fame and the guy who played Commander Worf on Star Trek.