At eight o'clock in the evening, the Baltimore airport was nearly   deserted. The wide gray corridors were empty, and the newsstands were   dark, and the coffee shops were closed. Most of the gates had   admitted their last flights. Their signboards were blank and their   rows of vinyl chairs unoccupied and ghostly.
    But you could hear a distant hum, a murmur of anticipation, at the   far end of Pier D. You could see an overexcited child spinning   herself into dizziness in the center of the corridor, and then a   grownup popping forth to scoop her up and carry her, giggling and   squirming, back into the waiting area. And a latecomer, a woman in a   yellow dress, was rushing toward the gate with an armful of   long-stemmed roses.
    Step around the bend, then, and you'd come upon what looked like a   gigantic baby shower. The entire waiting area for the flight from San   Francisco was packed with people bearing pink- and blue-wrapped   gifts, or hanging on to flotillas of silvery balloons printed with   IT'S A GIRL! and trailing spirals of pink ribbon. A man gripped the   wicker handle of a wheeled and skirted bassinet as if he planned to   roll it onto the plane, and a woman stood ready with a stroller so   chrome-trimmed and bristling with levers that it seemed capable of   entering the Indy 500. At least half a dozen people held video   cameras, and many more had regular cameras slung around their necks.   A woman spoke into a tape recorder in an urgent, secretive way. The   man next to her clasped an infant's velour-upholstered car seat close   to his chest.
    MOM, the button on the woman's shoulder read--one of those  man's   read DAD. A nice-looking couple, not as young as you might   expect--the woman in wide black pants and an arty black-and-white top   of a geometric design, her short hair streaked with gray; the man a   big, beaming, jovial type with a stubbly blond buzz cut, his bald   knees poking bashfully from voluminous khaki Bermudas.
    And not only were there MOM and DAD; there were GRANDMA and GRANDPA,   twice over--two complete sets. One grandma was a rumpled, comfortable   woman in a denim sundress and bandanna-print baseball cap; the other   was thin and gilded and expertly made up, wearing an ecru linen   pantsuit and dyed-to-match pumps. The grandpas were dyed to match as   well--the rumpled woman's husband equally rumpled, his iron-gray   curls overdue for a cutting, while the gilded woman's husband wore   linen trousers and some sort of gauzy tropical shirt, and part of his   bright yellow hair was possibly not his own.
    It's true there were other people waiting, people clearly not   included in the celebration. A weary-eyed woman in curlers; an older   woman with a younger one who might have been her daughter; a father   with two small children already dressed in pajamas. These outsiders   stood around the edges, quiet and somehow dimmed, from time to time   sneaking glances in the direction of MOM and DAD.
    The plane was late. People grew restless. A child pointed out   accusingly that the arrivals board still read ON TIME--a plain old   lie. Several teenagers wandered off to the unlit waiting area just   across the corridor. A little girl in pigtails fell asleep on a vinyl   chair, the button on her green plaid blouse proclaiming COUSIN.
    Then something changed. There wasn't any announcement--the PA system   had been silent for some time--but people gradually stopped talking   and pressed toward the jetway, craning their necks, standing on   tiptoe. A woman in a uniform punched in a code and swung open the   jetway door. A skycap arrived with a wheelchair. The teenagers   reappeared. MOM and DAD, till now in the very center of the crowd,   were nudged forward with encouraging pats, a path magically widening   to let them approach the door.
    First off was a very tall young man in jeans, wearing the confused   look of someone who'd been flying too long. He spotted the mother and   daughter and went over to them and bent to kiss the daughter, but   only on the cheek because she was too busy peering past him, just   briefly returning his hug while she kept her eyes on the new arrivals.
    Two businessmen with briefcases, striding purposefully toward the   terminal. A teenage boy with a backpack so huge that he resembled an   ant with an oversized breadcrumb. Another businessman. Another   teenage boy, this one claimed by the woman in curlers. A smiling,   rosy-cheeked redhead instantly engulfed by the two children in   pajamas.
    Now a pause. A sort of gathering of focus.
    A crisply dressed Asian woman stepped through the door with a baby.   This baby was perhaps five or six months old--able to hold herself   confidently upright. She had a cushiony face and a head of amazingly   thick black hair, cut straight across her forehead and straight   across the tops of her ears, and she wore a footed pink sleeper.   "Ah!" everyone breathed--even the outsiders, even the mother and the   grown daughter. (Although the daughter's young man still appeared   confused.) The mother-to-be stretched out both arms, letting her tape   recorder bounce at the end of its strap. But the Asian woman stopped   short in an authoritative manner that warded off any approach. She   drew herself up and said, "Donaldson?"
    "Donaldson. That's us," the father-to-be said. His voice was shaking.   He had somehow got rid of the car seat, passed it blindly to someone   or other, but he stayed slightly to the rear of his wife and kept one   hand on her back as if in need of support.
    "Congratulations," the Asian woman said. "This is Jin-Ho." She   transferred the baby to the mother's waiting arms, and then she   unhitched a pink diaper bag from her shoulder and handed it to the   father. The mother buried her face in the crook of the baby's neck.   The baby stayed upright, gazing calmly out at the crowd. "Ah," people   kept saying, and "Isn't she a cutie!" and "Did you ever see such a   doll?"
    Flashbulbs, insistent video cameras, everyone pressing too close. The   father's eyes were wet. Lots of people's were; there were sniffing   sounds all through the waiting area and noses being blown. And when   the mother raised her face, finally, her cheeks were sheeted with   tears. "Here," she told the father. "You hold her."
    "Aw, no, I'm scared I might . . . You do it, honey. I'll watch."
    The Asian woman started riffling through a sheaf of papers. People   still disembarking had to step around her, step around the little   family and the well-wishers and the tangle of baby equipment.   Luckily, the flight hadn't been a full one. The passengers arrived in   spurts: man with a cane, pause; retired couple, pause . . .
    And then another Asian woman, younger than the first and plainer,   with a tucked, apologetic way of looking about. She was lugging a   bucket-shaped infant carrier by the handle, and you could tell that   the baby inside must not weigh all that much. This baby, too, was a   girl, if you could judge by the pink T-shirt, but she was smaller   than the first one, sallow and pinched, with fragile wisps of black   hair trailing down her forehead. Like the young woman transporting   her, she showed a sort of anxious interest in the crowd. Her watchful   black eyes moved too quickly from face to face.
    The young woman said something that sounded like "Yaz-dun?"
    "Yaz-dan," a woman called from the rear. It sounded like a   correction. The crowd parted again, not certain which way to move but   eager to be of help, and three people no one had noticed before   approached in single file: a youngish couple, foreign-looking,   olive-skinned and attractive, followed by a slim older woman with a   chignon of sleek black hair knotted low on the nape of her neck. It   must have been she who had called out their name, because now she   called it again in the same clear, carrying voice. "Here we are.   Yazdan." There was just the trace of an accent evident in the ruffled   r's.
    The young woman turned to face them, holding the carrier awkwardly in   front of her. "Congratulations, this is Sooki," she said, but so   softly and so breathlessly that people had to ask each other, "What?"   "Who did she say?" "Sooki, I believe it was." "Sooki! Isn't that   sweet!"
    There was a problem unfastening the straps that held the baby in her   carrier. The new parents had to do it because the Asian woman's hands   were full, and the parents were flustered and unskilled--the mother   laughing slightly and tossing back her explosive waterfall of hennaed   curls, the father biting his lip and looking vexed with himself. He   wore tiny, very clean rimless glasses that glittered as he angled   first this way and then that, struggling with a plastic clasp. The   grandmother, if that was who she was, made sympathetic tsk-tsking   sounds.
    But at last the baby was free. Such a little bit of a thing! The   father plucked her out in a gingerly, arm's-length manner and handed   her to the mother, who gathered her in and rocked her and pressed her   cheek against the top of the baby's feathery black head. The baby   quirked her eyebrows but offered no resistance. Onlookers were   blowing their noses again, and the father had to take off his glasses   and wipe the lenses, but the mother and the grandmother stayed   dry-eyed, smiling and softly murmuring. They paid no attention to the   crowd. When someone asked, "Is yours from Korea too?" neither woman   answered, and it was the father, finally, who said, "Hmm? Oh. Yes,   she is."
    "Hear that, Bitsy and Brad? Here's another Korean baby!"
    The first mother glanced around--she was allowing the two grandmas a   closer inspection--and said, "Really?" Her husband echoed her:   "Really!" He stepped over to the other parents and held out his hand.   "Brad Donaldson. That's my wife, Bitsy, over there."
    "How do you do," the second father said. "Sami Yazdan." He shook   Brad's hand, but his lack of interest was almost comical; he couldn't   keep his eyes off his baby. "Uh, my wife, Ziba," he added after a   moment. "My mother, Maryam." He had a normal Baltimore accent,   although he pronounced the two women's names as no American would   have--Zee-bah and Mar-yam. His wife didn't even look up. She was   cradling the baby and saying what sounded like "Soo-soo-soo." Brad   Donaldson flapped a hand genially in her direction and returned to   his own family.
    By the time the transfers had been made official--both Asian women   proving to be sticklers for detail--the Donaldson crowd had started   to thin. Evidently some sort of gathering was planned for later,   though, because people kept calling, "See you back at the house!" as   they moved toward the terminal. And then the parents themselves were   free to go, Bitsy leading the way while the woman with the stroller   wheeled it just behind her like a lady-in-waiting. (Clearly nothing   would persuade Bitsy to give up her hold on that baby.) Brad lumbered   after her, followed by a few stragglers and, at the very tail end,   the Yazdans. One of the Donaldson grandpas, the rumpled one, dropped   back to ask the Yazdans, "So. Did you have a long wait for your baby?   Lots of paperwork and cross-examinations?"
    "Yes," Sami said, "a very long wait. A very long-drawn-out process."   And he glanced toward his wife. "At times we thought it never would   happen," he said.
    The grandpa clucked and said, "Don't I know it! Lord, what Bitsy and   Brad had to put themselves through!"
    They passed to one side of Security, which was staffed by a lone   employee sitting on a stool, and started down the escalator--all but   the man with the bassinet. He had to take the elevator. The woman   with the stroller, however, seemed undaunted. She tipped the front   end of the stroller back smartly and stepped on without hesitation.
    "Listen," Brad called up to the Yazdans from the lower level.   "You-all feel like coming to our house? Joining the celebration?"
    But Sami was absorbed in guiding his wife onto the escalator, and   when he didn't answer, Brad flapped a hand again in that oh-well,   affable way of his. "Maybe another time," he said to no one in   particular. And he turned to catch up with the others.
    The exit doors slid open and the Donaldsons streamed out. They headed   toward the parking garage in twos and threes and fours, and shortly   after that the Yazdans emerged to stand on the curb a moment,   motionless, as if they needed time to adjust to the hot, humid, dimly   lit, gasoline-smelling night.
    Friday, August 15, 1997. The night the girls arrived.    
      2
      Sometimes when Maryam Yazdan looked at her new little granddaughter   she had an eerie, lightheaded feeling, as if she had stepped into   some sort of alternate universe. Everything about the child was   impossibly perfect. Her skin was a flawless ivory, and her hair was   almost too soft to register on Maryam's fingertips. Her eyes were the   shape of watermelon seeds, very black and cut very precisely into her   small, solemn face. She weighed so little that Maryam often lifted   her too high by mistake when she picked her up. And her hands! Tiny   hands, with curling fingers. The wrinkles on her knuckles were   halvah-colored (so amusing, that a baby had wrinkles!), and her nails   were no bigger than dots.
    Susan, they called her. They chose a name that resembled the name she   had come with, Sooki, and also it was a comfortable sound for   Iranians to pronounce.
    "Su-san!" Maryam would sing when she went in to get her from her nap.   "Su-Su-Su!" Susan would gaze out from behind the bars of her crib,   sitting beautifully erect with one hand cupping each knee in a poised   and self-possessed manner.
    Maryam took care of her Tuesdays and Thursdays--the days her   daughter-in-law worked and Maryam did not. She arrived at the house   around eight-thirty, slightly later if the traffic was bad. (Sami and   Ziba lived out in Hunt Valley, as much as a half-hour drive from the   city during rush hour.) By that time Susan would be having breakfast   in her high chair. She would light up and make a welcoming sound when   Maryam walked into the kitchen. "Ah!" was what she most often   said--nothing to do with "Mari-june," which was what they had decided   she should call Maryam. "Ah!" she would say, and she would give her   distinctive smile, with her lips pursed together demurely, and tilt   her cheek for a kiss.
    Well, not in the first few weeks, of course. Oh, those first weeks   had been agony, the two parents trying their best, shrilling   "Susie-june!" and shaking toys in her face and waltzing her about in   their arms. All she did was stare at them, or--worse yet--stare away   from them, twisting to get free, fixing her eyes stubbornly anywhere   else. She wouldn't take more than a sip or two from her bottle, and   when she woke crying in the night, as she did every few hours, her   parents' attempts to comfort her only made her cry harder.								
									 Copyright © 2006 by Anne Tyler. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.