“You shouldn’t talk that way about people!” Giti said.
“What people is that?”
“People who’ve been injured because of war,” Giti said earnestly, oblivious to Hasina’s toying.
“I think Mullah Giti here has a crush on Tariq. I knew it! Ha! But he’s already spoken for, don’t you know? Isn’t he, Laila?”
“I do not have a crush. On anyone!”
They broke off from Laila, and, still arguing this way, turned in to their street.
Laila walked alone the last three blocks. When she was on her street, she noticed that the blue Benz was still parked there,
outside Rasheed and Mariam’s house. The elderly man in the brown suit was standing by the hood now, leaning on a cane, looking
up at the house.
That was when a voice behind Laila said, “Hey. Yellow Hair. Look here.”
Laila turned around and was greeted by the barrel of a gun.
T
he gun was red, the trigger guard bright green. Behind the gun loomed Khadim’s grinning face. Khadim was eleven, like
Tariq. He was thick, tall, and had a severe underbite. His father was a butcher in Deh-Mazang, and, from time to time, Khadim
was known to fling bits of calf intestine at passersby. Sometimes, if Tariq wasn’t nearby, Khadim shadowed Laila in the schoolyard
at recess, leering, making little whining noises. One time, he’d tapped her on the shoulder and said,
You’re
so very
pretty, Yellow Hair. I want to marry you.
Now he waved the gun. “Don’t worry,” he said. “This won’t show. Not on
your
hair.”
“Don’t you do it! I’m warning you.”
“What are you going to do?” he said. “Sic your cripple on me? ‘Oh, Tariq jan. Oh, won’t you come home and save me from the
badmash
!’ ”
Laila began to backpedal, but Khadim was already pumping the trigger. One after another, thin jets of warm water struck Laila’s
hair, then her palm when she raised it to shield her face.
Now the other boys came out of their hiding, laughing, cackling.
An insult Laila had heard on the street rose to her lips.
She didn’t really understand it—couldn’t quite picture the logistics of it—but the words packed a fierce potency, and she
unleashed them now.
“Your mother eats cock!”
“At least she’s not a loony like yours,” Khadim shot back, unruffled. “At least my father’s not a sissy! And, by the way,
why don’t you smell your hands?”
The other boys took up the chant. “Smell your hands! Smell your hands!”
Laila did, but she knew even before she did, what he’d meant about it not showing in her hair. She let out a high-pitched
yelp. At this, the boys hooted even harder.
Laila turned around and, howling, ran home.
SHE DREW WATER from the well, and, in the bathroom, filled a basin, tore off her clothes. She soaped her hair, frantically
digging fingers into her scalp, whimpering with disgust. She rinsed with a bowl and soaped her hair again. Several times,
she thought she might throw up. She kept mewling and shivering, as she rubbed and rubbed the soapy washcloth against her face
and neck until they reddened.
This would have never happened if Tariq had been with her, she thought as she put on a clean shirt and fresh trousers. Khadim
wouldn’t have dared. Of course, it wouldn’t have happened if Mammy had shown up like she was supposed to either. Sometimes
Laila wondered why Mammy had even bothered having her. People, she believed now, shouldn’t be allowed to have new children
if they’d already given away all their love to their old ones. It wasn’t fair. A fit of anger claimed her. Laila went to her
room, collapsed on her bed.
When the worst of it had passed, she went across the hallway to Mammy’s door and knocked. When she was younger, Laila used
to sit for hours outside this door. She would tap on it and whisper Mammy’s name over and over, like a magic chant meant to
break a spell:
Mammy, Mammy,
Mammy, Mammy . . .
But Mammy never opened the door. She didn’t open it now. Laila turned the knob and walked in.
SOMETIMES MAMMY had good days. She sprang out of bed bright-eyed and playful. The droopy lower lip stretched upward in a smile.
She bathed. She put on fresh clothes and wore mascara. She let Laila brush her hair, which Laila loved doing, and pin earrings
through her earlobes. They went shopping together to Mandaii Bazaar. Laila got her to play snakes and ladders, and they ate
shavings from blocks of dark chocolate, one of the few things they shared a common taste for. Laila’s favorite part of Mammy’s
good days was when Babi came home, when she and Mammy looked up from the board and grinned at him with brown teeth. A gust
of contentment puffed through the room then, and Laila caught a momentary glimpse of the tenderness, the romance, that had
once bound her parents back when this house had been crowded and noisy and cheerful.
Mammy sometimes baked on her good days and invited neighborhood women over for tea and pastries. Laila got to lick the bowls
clean, as Mammy set the table with cups and napkins and the good plates. Later, Laila would take her place at the living-room
table and try to break into the conversation, as the women talked boisterously and drank tea and complimented Mammy on her
baking. Though there was never much for her to say, Laila liked to sit and listen in because at these gatherings she was treated
to a rare pleasure: She got to hear Mammy speaking affectionately about Babi.
“What a first-rate teacher he was,” Mammy said. “His students loved him. And not only because he wouldn’t beat them with rulers,
like other teachers did. They respected him, you see, because he respected
them.
He was marvelous.”
Mammy loved to tell the story of how she’d proposed to him.
“I was sixteen, he was nineteen. Our families lived next door to each other in Panjshir. Oh, I had the crush on him,
hamshiras
! I used to climb the wall between our houses, and we’d play in his father’s orchard. Hakim was always scared that we’d get
caught and that my father would give him a slapping. ‘Your father’s going to give me a slapping,’ he’d always say. He was
so cautious, so serious, even then. And then one day I said to him, I said, ‘Cousin, what will it be? Are you going to ask
for my hand or are you going to make me come
khastegari
to you?’ I said it just like that. You should have seen the face on him!”
Mammy would slap her palms together as the women, and Laila, laughed.
Listening to Mammy tell these stories, Laila knew that there had been a time when Mammy always spoke this way about Babi.
A time when her parents did not sleep in separate rooms. Laila wished she hadn’t missed out on those times.
Inevitably, Mammy’s proposal story led to matchmaking schemes. When Afghanistan was free from the Soviets and the boys returned
home, they would need brides, and so, one by one, the women paraded the neighborhood girls who might or might not be suitable
for Ahmad and Noor. Laila always felt excluded when the talk turned to her brothers, as though the women were discussing a
beloved film that only she hadn’t seen. She’d been two years old when Ahmad and Noor had left Kabul for Panjshir up north,
to join Commander Ahmad Shah Massoud’s forces and fight the jihad. Laila hardly remembered anything at all about them. A shiny
ALLAH pendant around Ahmad’s neck. A patch of black hairs on one of Noor’s ears. And that was it.
“What about Azita?”
“The rugmaker’s daughter?” Mammy said, slapping her cheek with mock outrage. “She has a thicker mustache than Hakim!”
“There’s Anahita. We hear she’s top in her class at Zarghoona.”
“Have you seen the teeth on that girl? Tombstones.
She’s hiding a graveyard behind those lips.”
“How about the Wahidi sisters?”
“Those two dwarfs? No, no, no. Oh, no. Not for my sons. Not for my sultans. They deserve better.”
As the chatter went on, Laila let her mind drift, and, as always, it found Tariq.
MAMMY HAD PULLED the yellowish curtains. In the darkness, the room had a layered smell about it: sleep, unwashed linen, sweat,
dirty socks, perfume, the previous night’s leftover
qurma.
Laila waited for her eyes to adjust before she crossed the room. Even so, her feet became entangled with items of clothing
that littered the floor.
Laila pulled the curtains open. At the foot of the bed was an old metallic folding chair. Laila sat on it and watched the
unmoving blanketed mound that was her mother.
The walls of Mammy’s room were covered with pictures of Ahmad and Noor. Everywhere Laila looked, two strangers smiled back.
Here was Noor mounting a tricycle. Here was Ahmad doing his prayers, posing beside a sundial Babi and he had built when he
was twelve. And there they were, her brothers, sitting back to back beneath the old pear tree in the yard.
Beneath Mammy’s bed, Laila could see the corner of Ahmad’s shoe box protruding. From time to time, Mammy showed her the old,
crumpled newspaper clippings in it, and pamphlets that Ahmad had managed to collect from insurgent groups and resistance organizations
headquartered in Pakistan. One photo, Laila remembered, showed a man in a long white coat handing a lollipop to a legless
little boy. The caption below the photo read:
Children are
the intended victims of Soviet land mine campaign.
The article went on to say that the Soviets also liked to hide explosives inside brightly colored toys. If a child picked
it up, the toy exploded, tore off fingers or an entire hand. The father could not join the jihad then; he’d have to stay home
and care for his child. In another article in Ahmad’s box, a young Mujahid was saying that the Soviets had dropped gas on
his village that burned people’s skin and blinded them. He said he had seen his mother and sister running for the stream,
coughing up blood.
“Mammy.”
The mound stirred slightly. It emitted a groan.
“Get up, Mammy. It’s three o’clock.”
Another groan. A hand emerged, like a submarine periscope breaking surface, and dropped. The mound moved more discernibly
this time. Then the rustle of blankets as layers of them shifted over each other. Slowly, in stages, Mammy materialized: first
the slovenly hair, then the white, grimacing face, eyes pinched shut against the light, a hand groping for the headboard,
the sheets sliding down as she pulled herself up, grunting. Mammy made an effort to look up, flinched against the light, and
her head drooped over her chest.
“How was school?” she muttered.
So it would begin. The obligatory questions, the per functory answers. Both pretending. Unenthusiastic partners, the two of
them, in this tired old dance.
“School was fine,” Laila said.
“Did you learn anything?”
“The usual.”
“Did you eat?”
“I did.”
“Good.”
Mammy raised her head again, toward the window. She winced and her eyelids fluttered. The right side of her face was red,
and the hair on that side had flattened. “I have a headache.”
“Should I fetch you some aspirin?”
Mammy massaged her temples. “Maybe later. Is your father home?”
“It’s only three.”
“Oh. Right. You said that already.” Mammy yawned. “I was dreaming just now,” she said, her voice only a bit louder than the
rustle of her nightgown against the sheets. “Just now, before you came in. But I can’t remember it now. Does that happen to
you?”
“It happens to everybody, Mammy.”
“Strangest thing.”
“I should tell you that while you were dreaming, a boy shot piss out of a water gun on my hair.”
“Shot what? What was that? I’m sorry.”
“Piss. Urine.”
“That’s . . . that’s terrible. God. I’m sorry. Poor you. I’ll have a talk with him first thing in the morning. Or maybe with
his mother. Yes, that would be better, I think.”
“I haven’t told you who it was.”
“Oh. Well, who was it?”
“Never mind.”
“You’re angry.”
“You were supposed to pick me up.”
“I was,” Mammy croaked. Laila could not tell whether this was a question. Mammy began picking at her hair. This was one of
life’s great mysteries to Laila, that Mammy’s picking had not made her bald as an egg. “What about . . . What’s his name,
your friend, Tariq? Yes, what about him?”
“He’s been gone for a week.”
“Oh.” Mammy sighed through her nose. “Did you wash?”
“Yes.”
“So you’re clean, then.” Mammy turned her tired gaze to the window. “You’re clean, and everything is fine.”
Laila stood up. “I have homework now.”
“Of course you do. Shut the curtains before you go, my love,” Mammy said, her voice fading. She was already sinking beneath
the sheets.
As Laila reached for the curtains, she saw a car pass by on the street tailed by a cloud of dust. It was the blue Benz with
the Herat license plate finally leaving. She followed it with her eyes until it vanished around a turn, its back window twinkling
in the sun.
“I won’t forget tomorrow,” Mammy was saying behind her. “I promise.”
“You said that yesterday.”
“You don’t know, Laila.”
“Know what?” Laila wheeled around to face her mother. “What don’t I know?”
Mammy’s hand floated up to her chest, tapped there. “In
here.
What’s in
here.
” Then it fell flaccid. “You just don’t know.”
A
week passed, but there was still no sign of Tariq. Then another week came and went.
ATo fill the time, Laila fixed the screen door that Babi still hadn’t got around to. She took down Babi’s books, dusted and
alphabetized them. She went to Chicken Street with Hasina, Giti, and Giti’s mother, Nila, who was a seamstress and sometime
sewing partner of Mammy’s. In that week, Laila came to believe that of all the hardships a person had to face none was more
punishing than the simple act of waiting.
Another week passed.
Laila found herself caught in a net of terrible thoughts.
He would never come back. His parents had moved away for good; the trip to Ghazni had been a ruse. An adult scheme to spare
the two of them an upsetting farewell.
A land mine had gotten to him again. The way it did in 1981, when he was five, the last time his parents took him south to
Ghazni. That was shortly after Laila’s third birthday. He’d been lucky that time, losing only a leg; lucky that he’d survived
at all.
Her head rang and rang with these thoughts.
Then one night Laila saw a tiny flashing light from down the street. A sound, something between a squeak and a gasp, escaped
her lips. She quickly fished her own flashlight from under the bed, but it wouldn’t work. Laila banged it against her palm,
cursed the dead batteries. But it didn’t matter. He was back. Laila sat on the edge of her bed, giddy with relief, and watched
that beautiful, yellow eye winking on and off.
ON HER WAY to Tariq’s house the next day, Laila saw Khadim and a group of his friends across the street. Khadim was squatting,
drawing something in the dirt with a stick. When he saw her, he dropped the stick and wiggled his fingers. He said something
and there was a round of chuckles. Laila dropped her head and hurried past.
“What did you
do
?” she exclaimed when Tariq opened the door. Only then did she remember that his uncle was a barber.
Tariq ran his hand over his newly shaved scalp and smiled, showing white, slightly uneven teeth.
“Like it?”
“You look like you’re enlisting in the army.”
“You want to feel?” He lowered his head.
The tiny bristles scratched Laila’s palm pleasantly. Tariq wasn’t like some of the other boys, whose hair concealed cone-shaped
skulls and unsightly lumps. Tariq’s head was perfectly curved and lump-free.
When he looked up, Laila saw that his cheeks and brow had sunburned.
“What took you so long?” she said.
“My uncle was sick. Come on. Come inside.”
He led her down the hallway to the family room. Laila loved everything about this house. The shabby old rug in the family
room, the patchwork quilt on the couch, the ordinary clutter of Tariq’s life: his mother’s bolts of fabric, her sewing needles
embedded in spools, the old magazines, the accordion case in the corner waiting to be cracked open.
“Who is it?”
It was his mother calling from the kitchen.
“Laila,” he answered.
He pulled her a chair. The family room was brightly lit and had double windows that opened into the yard. On the sill were
empty jars in which Tariq’s mother pickled eggplant and made carrot marmalade.
“You mean our
aroos,
our daughter-in-law,” his father announced, entering the room. He was a carpenter, a lean, white-haired man in his early sixties.
He had gaps between his front teeth, and the squinty eyes of someone who had spent most of his life outdoors. He opened his
arms and Laila went into them, greeted by his pleasant and familiar smell of sawdust. They kissed on the cheek three times.
“You keep calling her that and she’ll stop coming here,”
Tariq’s mother said, passing by them. She was carrying a tray with a large bowl, a serving spoon, and four smaller bowls on
it. She set the tray on the table. “Don’t mind the old man.” She cupped Laila’s face. “It’s good to see you, my dear. Come,
sit down. I brought back some water-soaked fruit with me.”
The table was bulky and made of a light, unfinished wood—Tariq’s father had built it, as well as the chairs. It was covered
with a moss green vinyl tablecloth with little magenta crescents and stars on it. Most of the living-room wall was taken up
with pictures of Tariq at various ages. In some of the very early ones, he had two legs.
“I heard your brother was sick,” Laila said to Tariq’s father, dipping a spoon into her bowl of soaked raisins, pistachios,
and apricots.
He was lighting a cigarette. “Yes, but he’s fine now,
shokr
e Khoda,
thanks to God.”
“Heart attack. His second,” Tariq’s mother said, giving her husband an admonishing look.
Tariq’s father blew smoke and winked at Laila. It struck her again that Tariq’s parents could easily pass for his grandparents.
His mother hadn’t had him until she’d been well into her forties.
“How is your father, my dear?” Tariq’s mother said, looking on over her bowl.
As long as Laila had known her, Tariq’s mother had worn a wig. It was turning a dull purple with age. It was pulled low on
her brow today, and Laila could see the gray hairs of her sideburns. Some days, it rode high on her forehead. But, to Laila,
Tariq’s mother never looked pitiable in it. What Laila saw was the calm, self-assured face beneath the wig, the clever eyes,
the pleasant, unhurried manners.
“He’s fine,” Laila said. “Still at Silo, of course. He’s fine.”
“And your mother?”
“Good days. Bad ones too. The same.”
“Yes,” Tariq’s mother said thoughtfully, lowering her spoon into the bowl. “How hard it must be, how terribly hard, for a
mother to be away from her sons.”
“You’re staying for lunch?” Tariq said.
“You have to,” said his mother. “I’m making
shorwa.
”
“I don’t want to be a
mozahem.
”
“Imposing?” Tariq’s mother said. “We leave for a couple of weeks and you turn polite on us?”
“All right, I’ll stay,” Laila said, blushing and smiling.
“It’s settled, then.”
The truth was, Laila loved eating meals at Tariq’s house as much as she disliked eating them at hers. At Tariq’s, there was
no eating alone; they always ate as a family. Laila liked the violet plastic drinking glasses they used and the quarter lemon
that always floated in the water pitcher. She liked how they started each meal with a bowl of fresh yogurt, how they squeezed
sour oranges on everything, even their yogurt, and how they made small, harmless jokes at each other’s expense.
Over meals, conversation always flowed. Though Tariq and his parents were ethnic Pashtuns, they spoke Farsi when Laila was
around for her benefit, even though Laila more or less understood their native Pashto, having learned it in school. Babi said
that there were tensions between their people—the Tajiks, who were a minority, and Tariq’s people, the Pashtuns, who were
the largest ethnic group in Afghanistan.
Tajiks have always felt slighted,
Babi had said.
Pashtun kings ruled this country for almost two
hundred and fifty years, Laila, and Tajiks for all of nine months,
back in 1929.
And you,
Laila had asked,
do you feel slighted, Babi?
Babi had wiped his eyeglasses clean with the hem of his shirt.
To me,
it’s
nonsense—
and very dangerous nonsense at
that—
all this talk of
I’m
Tajik and
you’re
Pashtun and
he’s
Hazara and
she’s
Uzbek.
We’re
all Afghans, and
that’s
all that
should matter. But when one group rules over the others for so
long . . .
There’s
contempt. Rivalry. There is. There always
has been.
Maybe so. But Laila never felt it in Tariq’s house, where these matters never even came up. Her time with Tariq’s family always
felt natural to Laila, effortless, uncomplicated by differences in tribe or language, or by the personal spites and grudges
that infected the air at her own home.
“How about a game of cards?” Tariq said.
“Yes, go upstairs,” his mother said, swiping disapprovingly at her husband’s cloud of smoke. “I’ll get the
shorwa
going.”
They lay on their stomachs in the middle of Tariq’s room and took turns dealing for
panjpar.
Pedaling air with his foot, Tariq told her about his trip. The peach saplings he had helped his uncle plant. A garden snake
he had captured.
This room was where Laila and Tariq did their homework, where they built playing-card towers and drew ridiculous portraits
of each other. If it was raining, they leaned on the windowsill, drinking warm, fizzy orange Fanta, and watched the swollen
rain droplets trickle down the glass.
“All right, here’s one,” Laila said, shuffling. “What goes around the world but stays in a corner?”
“Wait.” Tariq pushed himself up and swung his artificial left leg around. Wincing, he lay on his side, leaning on his elbow.
“Hand me that pillow.” He placed it under his leg.
“There. That’s better.”
Laila remembered the first time he’d shown her his stump. She’d been six. With one finger, she had poked the taut, shiny skin
just below his left knee. Her finger had found little hard lumps there, and Tariq had told her they were spurs of bone that
sometimes grew after an amputation. She’d asked him if his stump hurt, and he said it got sore at the end of the day, when
it swelled and didn’t fit the prosthesis like it was supposed to, like a finger in a thimble.
And sometimes it gets rubbed. Especially when
it’s
hot.
Then I get rashes and blisters, but my mother has creams that
help.
It’s
not so bad.
Laila had burst into tears.
What are you crying for?
He’d strapped his leg back on.
You asked to see it, you
giryanok,
you crybaby! If
I’d
known you
were going to bawl, I
wouldn’t
have shown you.
“A stamp,” he said.
“What?”
“The riddle. The answer is a stamp. We should go to the zoo after lunch.”
“You knew that one. Did you?”
“Absolutely not.”
“You’re a cheat.”
“And you’re envious.”
“Of what?”
“My masculine smarts.”
“Your
masculine
smarts? Really? Tell me, who always wins at chess?”
“I let you win.” He laughed. They both knew that wasn’t true.
“And who failed math? Who do you come to for help with your math homework even though you’re a grade ahead?”
“I’d be two grades ahead if math didn’t bore me.”
“I suppose geography bores you too.”
“How did you know? Now, shut up. So are we going to the zoo or not?”
Laila smiled. “We’re going.”
“Good.”
“I missed you.”
There was a pause. Then Tariq turned to her with a half-grinning, half-grimacing look of distaste. “What’s the
matter
with you?”
How many times had she, Hasina, and Giti said those same three words to each other, Laila wondered, said it without hesitation,
after only two or three days of not seeing each other?
I missed you, Hasina. Oh, I missed you too.
In Tariq’s grimace, Laila learned that boys differed from girls in this regard. They didn’t make a show of friendship. They
felt no urge, no need, for this sort of talk. Laila imagined it had been this way for her brothers too. Boys, Laila came to
see, treated friendship the way they treated the sun: its existence undisputed; its radiance best enjoyed, not beheld directly.
“I was trying to annoy you,” she said.
He gave her a sidelong glance. “It worked.”
But she thought his grimace softened. And she thought that maybe the sunburn on his cheeks deepened momentarily.
LAILA DIDN’T MEAN to tell him. She’d, in fact, decided that telling him would be a very bad idea. Someone would get hurt,
because Tariq wouldn’t be able to let it pass. But when they were on the street later, heading down to the bus stop, she saw
Khadim again, leaning against a wall. He was surrounded by his friends, thumbs hooked in his belt loops. He grinned at her
defiantly.
And so she told Tariq. The story spilled out of her mouth before she could stop it.
“He did what?”
She told him again.
He pointed to Khadim. “Him? He’s the one?
You’re sure?”
“I’m sure.”
Tariq clenched his teeth and muttered something to himself in Pashto that Laila didn’t catch. “You wait here,” he said, in
Farsi now.
“No, Tariq—”
He was already crossing the street.
Khadim was the first to see him. His grin faded, and he pushed himself off the wall. He unhooked his thumbs from the belt
loops and made himself more upright, taking on a self-conscious air of menace. The others followed his gaze.
Laila wished she hadn’t said anything. What if they banded together? How many of them were there—ten? eleven? twelve? What
if they hurt him?
Then Tariq stopped a few feet from Khadim and his band. There was a moment of consideration, Laila thought, maybe a change
of heart, and, when he bent down, she imagined he would pretend his shoelace had come undone and walk back to her. Then his
hands went to work, and she understood.
The others understood too when Tariq straightened up, standing on one leg. When he began hopping toward Khadim, then charging
him, his unstrapped leg raised high over his shoulder like a sword.
The boys stepped aside in a hurry. They gave him a clear path to Khadim.
Then it was all dust and fists and kicks and yelps.
Khadim never bothered Laila again.
THAT NIGHT, as most nights, Laila set the dinner table for two only. Mammy said she wasn’t hungry. On those nights that she
was, she made a point of taking a plate to her room before Babi even came home. She was usually asleep or lying awake in bed
by the time Laila and Babi sat down to eat.
Babi came out of the bathroom, his hair—peppered white with flour when he’d come home—washed clean now and combed back.