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I kept going. The back of my neck was heating up. I didn’t want to start crying again. And if I did, I didn’t want Sohrab to see me.

He brushed my shoulder but I shrugged him off.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “About before.”

He followed me into my bedroom at the end of the hall and closed the door behind him.

“It’s fine.” I kept my back to him and took as long as I could to put my shoes away. I tucked the laces inside and lined them up perfectly parallel at the foot of my bed.

“No. It was not nice. I should not have said it. I should have stopped them.”

I sighed.

I wanted Sohrab to leave.

“It’s okay. I get it.”

Sometimes you’re just wrong about people.

“Thank you for bringing these back. They’re the only shoes I brought.”

“Darioush. Please.” Sohrab rested his palm on my shoulder. It was warm and tentative, like he thought I would pull away.

I thought I would too.

“I was...” He paused, and I looked over to see him swallow, his sharp Adam’s apple bobbing up and down. “It was nice. You know? Not being the one that Ali-Reza was making fun of.”

I mean, I could understand where Sohrab was coming from.

It sucked being a target all the time.

“But he is not my friend, Darioush. Or Hossein. I’m not like them.”

“Okay.”

“I’m sorry. Really.”

Sohrab smiled—not a squinty one, but almost like a question—and I knew he really meant it.

“It’s okay. I just took it wrong is all.”

“No.” Sohrab squeezed my shoulder. “I was very rude. And I am sorry. Will you give me another chance?”

I thought I had been wrong about Sohrab.

But maybe I had been right.

Maybe Sohrab and I really were destined to be friends.

Maybe we were.

“Okay.”

Sohrab’s smile brightened into a squint. “Friends?”

I smiled too.

It was impossible not to.