a clump of my T-shirt, and the others joined until our whole class had formed a disorderly human chain. It was scarier now to separate than to walk into a city on fire.
We reached the base of the stone steps that led to the upper town, toward Banski Dvori. The police had already blocked off the stairways, so we weaved through the adultcrowd, pushing ourselves up onto a cement ledge to get a better view. My father worked in the transportation office in the upper town some days, though now I couldn’t remember which. It wasn’t close enough for him to have been hurt in this explosion, was it? In the haze it was impossible to tell, and I scanned the faces of all the broad-shouldered men in sight, but did not find him.
Fragments of conflicting reports churned around us:
“Have you heard? The president exploded right at his desk!”
“Come on, they’ve had him in a bunker since last week.”
“Have you heard? His wife was inside, too!”
A voice from behind: “Are you kids up here alone?” My classmates and I were startled to find someone talking to rather than over us, the same shock of nerves firing as if we’d been caught sharing answers to a math test. I spun around to see a newsman wielding a large microphone and fiddling with a wire in his ear. He wore a gray vest with a sheen of nylon and metal.
“We’re not alone,” I said. “My dad just—”
“What’s it to you?” Luka cut in, puffing out his chest to mimic the man’s bulky vest. The reporter, whose cameraman had come over to get a shot with the children, now stuttered.
“You should be at home,” he said, his apprehension exposing a French accent. His revealed foreignness dissolved any remaining authority.
“You should go home,
stranac
,” I said, emboldened. My classmates giggled, and I reveled in the girls’ acceptance, if only momentary. I was brave, powerful even.
“
Stranac, stranac
,” my classmates chanted. One of them threw an apple core, and it bounced off the newsman’s padded shoulder.
“Oh, what do I care if you all blow up, you gypsy vermin!” he said. He motioned his cameraman to move a few feet over so we were out of the picture and began to refilm his report.
Another explosion rumbled near the palace, then rippled down the hill through the concrete. A crack, thin as a strand of hair, bloomed across the ledge beneath our feet. Home suddenly didn’t sound like such a bad idea. We took off, Luka and I sprinting down Ilica Street before our paths diverged.
“Good luck!” I called as we split. It seemed afterward like a stupid thing to say, but another string of ambulances rounded the corner, sirens screaming as they passed, and if he replied I didn’t hear.
I arrived home hyper and smelling of fire, swinging the door open with such force that I enlarged the dent, born of similar displays of overzealousness, in the opposite wall.
“Where were you?” my mother yelled from her bedroom, sounding frantic.
“At the shelter. Haven’t you heard about Banski Dvori?”
I had expected her to hold me tightly like she had after the first air raid, but instead she looked me over and said, “You
stink
. God, Ana, why can’t you play with girls?” then slipped back into her room. I followed her a few steps and leaned in her doorway. Though it seemed like an odd reaction, I recognized it as the bait to engage in a well-worn argument; she wanted me to chat and jump rope, bake things; I wanted to ride my bike, swim in the Sava, play football. I loved the feeling of dry mud cracking on my arms and the grass-stained knees of my jeans, felt important when my clothes carried the traces of my daily activities. Almost all my possessions, including my bicycle, were castoffs of a boy who lived one floor up in our building. If my mother was disappointed by my tomboyish tendencies, she may have found solace in the fact that nearly everything sustaining my existence was free.
The path of hand-me-downs was a complex web that connected