Thmyl- Albnt Tqwlh Ana Khayfh Ant Btdws Jamd Bnt... Review

Mariam looked down at Layla's hand on her sleeve. Then she looked at the void.

She was walking toward the edge.

Below them, Cairo screamed its thousand nightly screams. A wedding procession fired celebratory bullets into the sky. A child laughed somewhere—a pure, untouched sound. The city didn't know that on this rooftop, two girls were deciding whether the world deserved their tomorrows. thmyl- albnt tqwlh ana khayfh ant btdws jamd bnt...

Layla's voice cracked on the last syllable. She wasn't scared of the height. She wasn't scared of the drop. She was scared of her . Of Mariam. Of what Mariam had become in the three months since her older brother disappeared—taken by men in plain clothes, no charges, no phone call, just a black van and the screech of tires. Mariam looked down at Layla's hand on her sleeve