
I knew he wouldn't pick up.
Tarik never answered when I needed him.34Please respect copyright.PENANAbuYFe1zM1F
Not when I was calling to leave the gym.34Please respect copyright.PENANAiXsAWpgdv3
Not when I was stuck outside in the cold.34Please respect copyright.PENANADatyI4niML
Not even that one time I broke my wrist and called from the hospital with my left hand.34Please respect copyright.PENANAxHTPYvhcmq
But if he was bored in class?34Please respect copyright.PENANAMeH6dyHqvW
Suddenly, I was his emotional support animal.
I tapped my thumb against the steering wheel, phone pressed to my ear.
Voicemail. Again.
I hung up, leaned my head back against the seat, and stared at the roof like it might offer answers.34Please respect copyright.PENANAupvFA0IeTH
It didn't.
I let out a breath through my nose. Then killed the engine.
I grabbed the keys and slammed the Jeep door shut behind me.34Please respect copyright.PENANAEEMNKg2mt6
Hoodie sleeves shoved up, palms still raw from deadlifts.
My phone buzzed in my pocket—probably not Tarik.34Please respect copyright.PENANAhGuITU1nqW
Of course not Tarik.
I crossed the lot, boots hitting pavement in steady rhythm.34Please respect copyright.PENANAc9VDUCbiIU
Going to get him.
Because he wasn't allowed to go home alone.
That was the rule.34Please respect copyright.PENANAl3x4kqQT65
Our rule.34Please respect copyright.PENANA6wnuQPWn7Q
Never spoken. Never broken.34Please respect copyright.PENANANBKKu91NBV
Not if we wanted to make it through the night.
Zmaj's familiar glow lit up the block like always—34Please respect copyright.PENANAwf86gSteUL
Greasy ćevapi, over-salted fries, and too many TVs mounted crooked on the walls.34Please respect copyright.PENANAlQYYW3XMLB
The scent of charred meat drifted from the vents overhead, and I could already hear the low hum of teenage chaos inside.
And sure enough, through the fogged glass, I spotted them.
Same corner booth.34Please respect copyright.PENANAEKiFpZX1ah
Same chaos.
Tarik—hunched over a worksheet he was definitely pretending to care about.34Please respect copyright.PENANAZNwXjNjSw7
Adem—leaning back, wearing that permanently unimpressed face of his.34Please respect copyright.PENANAaYr4GRXZat
And Amina—
Right in the middle of them, like she'd been born to orbit both boys at once.
She was half-turned toward Tarik, brows pulled together in that stubborn little way she had when she was scolding him.34Please respect copyright.PENANAXeKN4uaSge
One hand pointed at the paper.34Please respect copyright.PENANAwHf81i1Rdd
The other wrapped around a drink she'd probably stolen from Tarik.34Please respect copyright.PENANAQDwIHRw6oe
Her mouth moved fast—expression alive with frustration and something gentler buried underneath.
Love.
That was the thing about her.
Even when she was yelling, it felt like being protected.
Even from here, even through the glass—she stood out.34Please respect copyright.PENANAtgwQ42kna0
Not in a way that asked for attention.34Please respect copyright.PENANAnJ7Jk4kUVN
Just... in a way that made you pause.
Like something in the room had shifted.34Please respect copyright.PENANAj5n44U9VxC
Like she pulled focus without trying to.
She always did.
I stepped in. The smell hit hard—fried meat, somun, and adolescent despair.
"It's a simple concept," Amina was saying as I walked closer, voice steady but on the edge. "Think of electron repulsion. The lone pairs push the bonded atoms down—tetrahedral becomes bent. Just follow VSEPR. You've done this."
Tarik squinted at the worksheet like it had insulted his entire bloodline. "So... the electrons are like... fans at a stadium?"
Adem didn't even glance away from the screen. "What kind of stadium has fans circling like vultures? Maybe she should draw it in crayon."
Amina whipped a straw wrapper at his face. "Shut up, Mr. 97 in chem. Not everyone wants to marry science."
"Never said I wanted to marry it," Adem said. "Just not allergic to critical thinking like some people."
Tarik muttered, "Geometry doesn't belong in chemistry. That's betrayal."
Amina narrowed her eyes. "Tarik. I swear on my mother's life—"
"M-Mine too," I cut in, stepping up to the booth. "If he s-survives the n-night, it'll b-be a mir-miracle."
All three heads turned.
Amina's eyes flicked up to mine—surprised, but only for a second.
Then that smile crept onto her face.34Please respect copyright.PENANAiTIQgEp7sP
The one she didn't even know she gave me.34Please respect copyright.PENANAEe7wyz7x6r
The one that always said she missed me, whether she'd admit it or not.
She always lit up when I was around.34Please respect copyright.PENANAYxBe21nwXG
Everyone knew it.
"You came in," she said simply.
"Be-because he d-didn't an-answer," I said, nodding toward Tarik. "A-again."
"He's not ready," Amina said, jabbing a finger at his worksheet.34Please respect copyright.PENANA31FMIoXk45
"We've got a chem test tomorrow and he still can't tell the difference between sp² and sp³ hybridization. He drew water as linear, Talha. Linear."
Tarik threw his head back. "It has two atoms!"
"It has two lone pairs!" she snapped. "It's bent, genius. VSEPR? We've been over this."
"I'm done," Tarik muttered, sliding the worksheet away like it had personally offended him. "If I don't know it by now, I'm not gonna."
Amina turned to me like I was reinforcements.
"He's being impossible."
I looked at her, then at him. And then—at the worksheet.
It could've been written in another language.
Hell, maybe it was.
Tarik gave me the look—wide-eyed, hopeful, full of fake innocence.
"D-don't ," I warned.
"But I've been sitting here for two hours."
"Then s-sit for one m-more," I said, dropping into the booth across from them. "If sh-she says you're n-not ready, y-you're not rea-dy."
Tarik groaned and thunked his head on the table. "You're supposed to be on my side."
"I a-am," I said. "Th-that's why you're fin-finish-ing the w-worksh-sheet."
Amina smirked, satisfied. Tarik sighed like he was being tortured.
I stared down at the notes again—bond angles, hybrid orbitals, lone pairs marked like landmines—and shook my head.
"I d-don't know wh-what any of th-that m-means," I muttered.
Amina didn't even look up. "Neither does he."
"I hate this family," Tarik muttered.
"You love this family," Amina said, poking his arm without looking up.
"You just hate being held accountable like a functioning human being."
"Same thing," he grumbled, sliding lower in his seat like he was trying to escape the conversation entirely.
"Leg day hit that hard?" Adem asked, giving me a once-over as I stretched out my legs under the table.
I rolled my shoulder and let out a breath.34Please respect copyright.PENANASIkEwy82Ay
"Y-yeah. W-was temp-ted to l-leave Tarik h-here. Let h-him get hum-humbled b-by the st-street dogs."
Tarik didn't look up from his worksheet. "Joke's on you. I am a street dog."
"You're a house cat with delusions," Amina muttered, not even looking up.
Tarik didn't bother arguing. Just stared at the worksheet like it had ruined his life.
"Bet you still had a better night than me," he said, nodding at the paper like it had drawn blood.34Please respect copyright.PENANAoPPemeTLj9
"She chucked a book at my head earlier."
"It was a softcover," Amina replied, clearly unbothered.
"It had corners."
"Y-you angry to-today, Mino?" I asked.
She met my gaze—calmer now, but with that familiar spark in her eyes.
"Depends," she said. "Will you finally let me ride your bike this Sunday?"
I laughed—low, automatic.
"Y-you'd crash it in f-five sec-seconds."
She grinned. "So that's a no?"
"Tha-that's a hell n-no."
"Then yeah," she said, sipping her drink. "I'm furious."
The bell over the door chimed.
A group of boys from their school spilled in—loud, half-zipped jackets and half-finished stories. One of them—Nermin—broke off immediately and made a straight line for our table.
Didn't look around. Didn't hesitate.
Just saw her—and came.
"Hey, Amina," he said, all confidence and way too much cologne.
His eyes barely skimmed the rest of us.34Please respect copyright.PENANA3DjnYktEzJ
"You coming on the class trip this weekend?"
He leaned on the edge of the booth like he'd done it before.
Like this was a conversation they'd had more than once.
Amina looked up and smiled—sweet, but thin. The kind of smile you give when someone's trying too hard.
"Working on it," she said, tilting her head slightly.
From beside her, Adem's head snapped up like he'd just heard a threat.
"Working on what?"
She didn't miss a beat. "The class trip. I might still go."
"No," he said flatly. "You're not."
Tarik didn't even look up. "We already talked about this. You're coming to Mostar."
"I haven't decided," she said, playful now. Almost daring them to keep pushing.
"Pretty sure we decided for you," Adem muttered, eyes narrowed.
Nermin shifted, finally catching the shift in the room.
"She can come to both, can't she?"
"She can't," Tarik said, finally glancing up. "She'll be busy."
"Doing what?"
"Cheering me on," he said with a smug grin. "Obviously."
Adem didn't even blink.
"Go take a walk, man," he said, voice low and flat, still watching the game like Nermin wasn't even worth turning his head for.
Amina groaned. "You guys are unbelievable."
"We're protective," Tarik said, like it was a badge of honor.
"We're looking out for you," Adem added, voice calm but final.
"You're controlling," she snapped.
None of them argued.
Not even me.
Because they were.
And sometimes, she let them be.
I leaned back, watching them bicker like always.
Couldn't help myself.
"Y-you know wh-what I'm g-gonna say."
Tarik groaned immediately. "Bro—again?"
Amina didn't even look at me. Just sighed into her cup like she'd heard it a hundred times.
"Per-perfect for ea-each-other."
"She's like a sister, man," Tarik muttered.
"Y-yeah," I said. "And y-you're an idi-ot."
Amina shot me a warning look across the table. I ignored it.
"Y-oh think g-girls like her g-grow on tr-trees?"
"I can hear you," she said, sipping her drink without missing a beat.
"Good."
Tarik shook his head. "Just because you think she's perfect for me doesn't mean—"
"It's n-not about wh-what I thi-think," I cut in, voice low. Tired. Sharper than I meant it to be.34Please respect copyright.PENANACzfH0QqL28
"It's obv-ious. To e-every-one but y-you."
Adem glanced between us, slow. The humor was gone from his face.
"Funny," he said. "I didn't realize we were taking applications for my sister."
Amina turned to him. "Adem—"
He held up his hands. "Just saying. If we're doing arranged marriages, I'd like to be consulted before he volunteers my best friend."
Tarik dropped his pencil and leaned back, giving me a flat look.
"Can you not?" he said. "She's finally getting to the part where I understand things."
I smirked. "Just s-saying—f-for a guy w-who claims he d-doesn't like h-her like th-that, you get r-real Terri-torial."
Tarik raised an eyebrow, slow. Then, without breaking eye contact, he threw an arm around Amina's shoulders.
"She's the sister I never had," he said. "And always wanted."
Amina made a face. "Lucky me."
Tarik grinned. "Damn right."
I leaned back, watching her walk him through another example.34Please respect copyright.PENANALgc1R33avn
Her voice had that edge—firm, sharp—but underneath it, there was patience.34Please respect copyright.PENANAnhMHS5MAnC
Steady. Unshaken.
She believed in him.
More than he ever had in himself.
It was always her. Since they were seven.
Adem and Tarik were solid—brothers in everything but blood.34Please respect copyright.PENANAUJYagW0BJM
But it was Amina who made them whole.34Please respect copyright.PENANAB8TzGkKTPd
Who dragged Tarik to practice when he didn't want to go.34Please respect copyright.PENANAbVuqrE1Jg7
Who sat on the curb with him after every bad grade, every missed shot.34Please respect copyright.PENANAVMYSvxta0A
Who convinced the Begovićs to cover his school fees when our parents couldn't.34Please respect copyright.PENANAcI0JRUpZlR
Who never let him forget he was worth the effort.
Even when he did.
Especially then.
And me?
I was just the older brother who picked him up after.
But even I wasn't immune to her.
She had that way about her—like sunlight cutting through fog.34Please respect copyright.PENANAZzc7drVULg
Loud, bright, impossible to ignore.34Please respect copyright.PENANAOOsLCQWP3m
Even on the worst days, she made things feel... less heavy.
"You okay?" she asked suddenly.
I looked up. "Y-yeah. Why?"
She tilted her head. "You get quiet when you're tired. But this feels... quieter."
"Just thi-thinking."
"About what?"
I hesitated.
"Don't pull the stutter card," she said, leaning in. "You know I'll wait all night."
That made me smile.
"A-about how luck-y he is," I said finally, nodding toward Tarik—still scribbling like the worksheet might save his life.
She softened. "We missed you last week. You didn't come."
"Busy."
"Liar."
I looked away.
She didn't say anything else.34Please respect copyright.PENANAU4tuPhU5Jb
She didn't have to.
She always noticed when I disappeared.
Always took it a little harder than the others.
The truth was, sometimes I stayed gone on purpose.
Not because I didn't want to be around them—34Please respect copyright.PENANADykSwvSZBJ
but because I couldn't always stomach how easy they made it look.
Friendship.34Please respect copyright.PENANADbNijdtlvC
Life.34Please respect copyright.PENANA6TSSSOw9yG
Peace.
Things that never came quiet in my world.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
This was meant to be harmless.34Please respect copyright.PENANAyOeF0BEYEA
Some tutoring, some fries, some light bullying between friends.
And yet here we are:34Please respect copyright.PENANArmxd4VcXyY
One silent older brother, two bickering soulmates, and Amina holding it all together with sarcasm and snacks.
No one's in love. Definitely not.34Please respect copyright.PENANACfMunnVUUn
Everything is fine.
—Ash&Olive, lying through her teeth34Please respect copyright.PENANA8DCEd0SQDo
but having a great time doing it
34Please respect copyright.PENANAVoYfCU63GB