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Authors: Khaled Hosseini

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7.

T
hey sat across from her, Jalil and his wives, at a long, dark brown table. Between them, in the center of the table,
was a crystal vase of fresh marigolds and a sweating pitcher of water. The red-haired woman who had introduced herself as
Niloufar’s mother, Afsoon, was sitting on Jalil’s right. The other two, Khadija and Nargis, were on his left. The wives each
had on a flimsy black scarf, which they wore not on their heads but tied loosely around the neck like an afterthought. Mariam,
who could not imagine that they would wear black for Nana, pictured one of them suggesting it, or maybe Jalil, just before
she’d been summoned.

Afsoon poured water from the pitcher and put the glass before Mariam on a checkered cloth coaster. “Only spring and it’s warm
already,” she said. She made a fanning motion with her hand.

“Have you been comfortable?” Nargis, who had a small chin and curly black hair, asked. “We hope you’ve been comfortable. This
. . . ordeal . . . must be very hard for you. So difficult.”

The other two nodded. Mariam took in their plucked eyebrows, the thin, tolerant smiles they were giving her. There was an
unpleasant hum in Mariam’s head. Her throat burned. She drank some of the water.

Through the wide window behind Jalil, Mariam could see a row of flowering apple trees. On the wall beside the window stood
a dark wooden cabinet. In it was a clock, and a framed photograph of Jalil and three young boys holding a fish. The sun caught
the sparkle in the fish’s scales. Jalil and the boys were grinning.

“Well,” Afsoon began. “I—that is, we—have brought you here because we have some very good news to give you.”

Mariam looked up.

She caught a quick exchange of glances between the women over Jalil, who slouched in his chair looking unseeingly at the pitcher
on the table. It was Khadija, the oldest-looking of the three, who turned her gaze to Mariam, and Mariam had the impression
that this duty too had been discussed, agreed upon, before they had called for her.

“You have a suitor,” Khadija said.

Mariam’s stomach fell. “A what?” she said through suddenly numb lips.

“A
khastegar.
A suitor. His name is Rasheed,” Khadija went on. “He is a friend of a business acquaintance of your father’s. He’s a Pashtun,
from Kandahar originally, but he lives in Kabul, in the Deh-Mazang district, in a two-story house that he owns.”

Afsoon was nodding. “And he does speak Farsi, like us, like you. So you won’t have to learn Pashto.”

Mariam’s chest was tightening. The room was reeling up and down, the ground shifting beneath her feet.

“He’s a shoemaker,” Khadija was saying now. “But not some kind of ordinary street-side
moochi,
no, no. He has his own shop, and he is one of the most sought-after shoemakers in Kabul. He makes them for diplomats, members
of the presidential family—that class of people. So you see, he will have no trouble providing for you.”

Mariam fixed her eyes on Jalil, her heart somersaulting in her chest. “Is this true? What she’s saying, is it true?”

But Jalil wouldn’t look at her. He went on chewing the corner of his lower lip and staring at the pitcher.

“Now he
is
a little older than you,” Afsoon chimed in. “But he can’t be more than . . . forty. Forty-five at the most. Wouldn’t you say,
Nargis?”

“Yes. But I’ve seen nine-year-old girls given to men twenty years older than your suitor, Mariam. We all have. What are you,
fifteen? That’s a good, solid marrying age for a girl.” There was enthusiastic nodding at this. It did not escape Mariam that
no mention was made of her half sisters Saideh or Naheed, both her own age, both students in the Mehri School in Herat, both
with plans to enroll in Kabul University. Fifteen, evidently, was not a good, solid marrying age for them.

“What’s more,” Nargis went on, “he too has had a great loss in his life. His wife, we hear, died during childbirth ten years
ago. And then, three years ago, his son drowned in a lake.”

“It’s very sad, yes. He’s been looking for a bride the last few years but hasn’t found anyone suitable.”

“I don’t want to,” Mariam said. She looked at Jalil. “I don’t want this. Don’t make me.” She hated the sniffling, pleading
tone of her voice but could not help it.

“Now, be reasonable, Mariam,” one of the wives said.

Mariam was no longer keeping track of who was saying what. She went on staring at Jalil, waiting for him to speak up, to say
that none of this was true.

“You can’t spend the rest of your life here.”

“Don’t you want a family of your own?”

“Yes. A home, children of your own?”

“You have to move on.”

“True that it would be preferable that you marry a local, a Tajik, but Rasheed is healthy, and interested in you. He has a
home and a job. That’s all that really matters, isn’t it? And Kabul is a beautiful and exciting city. You may not get another
opportunity this good.”

Mariam turned her attention to the wives.

“I’ll live with Mullah Faizullah,” she said. “He’ll take me in. I know he will.”

“That’s no good,” Khadija said. “He’s old and so . . .” She searched for the right word, and Mariam knew then that what she
really wanted to say was
He’s
so close.
She understood what they meant to do.
You may not get another
opportunity this good.
And neither would they. They had been disgraced by her birth, and this was their chance to erase, once and for all, the last
trace of their husband’s scandalous mistake. She was being sent away because she was the walking, breathing embodiment of
their shame.

“He’s so old and weak,” Khadija eventually said. “And what will you do when he’s gone? You’d be a burden to his family.”

As you are now to us.
Mariam almost
saw
the unspoken words exit Khadija’s mouth, like foggy breath on a cold day.

Mariam pictured herself in Kabul, a big, strange, crowded city that, Jalil had once told her, was some six hundred and fifty
kilometers to the east of Herat.
Six hundred
and fifty kilometers.
The farthest she’d ever been from the
kolba
was the two-kilometer walk she’d made to Jalil’s house. She pictured herself living there, in Kabul, at the other end of that
unimaginable distance, living in a stranger’s house where she would have to concede to his moods and his issued demands. She
would have to clean after this man, Rasheed, cook for him, wash his clothes. And there would be other chores as well—Nana
had told her what husbands did to their wives. It was the thought of these intimacies in particular, which she imagined as
painful acts of perversity, that filled her with dread and made her break out in a sweat.

She turned to Jalil again. “Tell them. Tell them you won’t let them do this.”

“Actually, your father has already given Rasheed his answer,” Afsoon said. “Rasheed is here, in Herat; he has come all the
way from Kabul. The
nikka
will be tomorrow morning, and then there is a bus leaving for Kabul at noon.”

“Tell them!” Mariam cried.

The women grew quiet now. Mariam sensed that they were watching him too. Waiting. A silence fell over the room. Jalil kept
twirling his wedding band, with a bruised, helpless look on his face. From inside the cabinet, the clock ticked on and on.

“Jalil jo?” one of the women said at last.

Jalil’s eyes lifted slowly, met Mariam’s, lingered for a moment, then dropped. He opened his mouth, but all that came forth
was a single, pained groan.

“Say something,” Mariam said.

Then Jalil did, in a thin, threadbare voice. “Goddamn it, Mariam, don’t do this to me,” he said as though he was the one to
whom something was being done.

And, with that, Mariam felt the tension vanish from the room.

As Jalil’s wives began a new—and more sprightly—round of reassuring, Mariam looked down at the table. Her eyes traced the
sleek shape of the table’s legs, the sinuous curves of its corners, the gleam of its reflective, dark brown surface. She noticed
that every time she breathed out, the surface fogged, and she disappeared from her father’s table.

Afsoon escorted her back to the room upstairs. When Afsoon closed the door, Mariam heard the rattling of a key as it turned
in the lock.

8.

I
n the morning, Mariam was given a long-sleeved, dark green dress to wear over white cotton trousers. Afsoon gave her
a green
hijab
and a pair of matching sandals.

She was taken to the room with the long, brown table, except now there was a bowl of sugar-coated almond candy in the middle
of the table, a Koran, a green veil, and a mirror. Two men Mariam had never seen before—witnesses, she presumed—and a mullah
she did not recognize were already seated at the table.

Jalil showed her to a chair. He was wearing a light brown suit and a red tie. His hair was washed. When he pulled out the
chair for her, he tried to smile encouragingly. Khadija and Afsoon sat on Mariam’s side of the table this time.

The mullah motioned toward the veil, and Nargis arranged it on Mariam’s head before taking a seat.

Mariam looked down at her hands.

“You can call him in now,” Jalil said to someone.

Mariam smelled him before she saw him. Cigarette smoke and thick, sweet cologne, not faint like Jalil’s. The scent of it flooded
Mariam’s nostrils. Through the veil, from the corner of her eye, Mariam saw a tall man, thick-bellied and broad-shouldered,
stooping in the doorway. The size of him almost made her gasp, and she had to drop her gaze, her heart hammering away. She
sensed him lingering in the doorway. Then his slow, heavy-footed movement across the room. The candy bowl on the table clinked
in tune with his steps. With a thick grunt, he dropped on a chair beside her. He breathed noisily.

The mullah welcomed them. He said this would not be a traditional
nikka.

“I understand that Rasheed
agha
has tickets for the bus to Kabul that leaves shortly. So, in the interest of time, we will bypass some of the traditional
steps to speed up the proceedings.”

The mullah gave a few blessings, said a few words about the importance of marriage. He asked Jalil if he had any objections
to this union, and Jalil shook his head. Then the mullah asked Rasheed if he indeed wished to enter into a marriage contract
with Mariam. Rasheed said, “Yes.” His harsh, raspy voice reminded Mariam of the sound of dry autumn leaves crushed underfoot.

“And do you, Mariam jan, accept this man as your husband?”

Mariam stayed quiet. Throats were cleared.

“She does,” a female voice said from down the table.

“Actually,” the mullah said, “she herself has to answer.

And she should wait until I ask three times. The point is, he’s seeking her, not the other way around.”

He asked the question two more times. When Mariam didn’t answer, he asked it once more, this time more forcefully. Mariam
could feel Jalil beside her shifting on his seat, could sense feet crossing and uncrossing beneath the table. There was more
throat clearing. A small, white hand reached out and flicked a bit of dust off the table.

“Mariam,” Jalil whispered.

“Yes,” she said shakily.

A mirror was passed beneath the veil. In it, Mariam saw her own face first, the archless, unshapely eyebrows, the flat hair,
the eyes, mirthless green and set so closely together that one might mistake her for being cross-eyed. Her skin was coarse
and had a dull, spotty appearance. She thought her brow too wide, the chin too narrow, the lips too thin. The overall impression
was of a long face, a triangular face, a bit houndlike. And yet Mariam saw that, oddly enough, the whole of these unmemorable
parts made for a face that was not pretty but, somehow, not unpleasant to look at either.

In the mirror, Mariam had her first glimpse of Rasheed: the big, square, ruddy face; the hooked nose; the flushed cheeks that
gave the impression of sly cheerfulness; the watery, bloodshot eyes; the crowded teeth, the front two pushed together like
a gabled roof; the impossibly low hairline, barely two finger widths above the bushy eyebrows; the wall of thick, coarse,
salt-and-pepper hair.

Their gazes met briefly in the glass and slid away.

This is the face of my husband,
Mariam thought.

They exchanged the thin gold bands that Rasheed fished from his coat pocket. His nails were yellow-brown, like the inside
of a rotting apple, and some of the tips were curling, lifting. Mariam’s hands shook when she tried to slip the band onto
his finger, and Rasheed had to help her. Her own band was a little tight, but Rasheed had no trouble forcing it over her knuckles.

“There,” he said.

“It’s a pretty ring,” one of the wives said. “It’s lovely, Mariam.”

“All that remains now is the signing of the contract,” the mullah said.

Mariam signed her name—the
meem,
the
reh,
the
ya,
and the
meem
again—conscious of all the eyes on her hand. The next time Mariam signed her name to a document, twenty-seven years later,
a mullah would again be present.

“You are now husband and wife,” the mullah said. “
Tabreek.
Congratulations.”

RASHEED WAITED in the multicolored bus. Mariam could not see him from where she stood with Jalil, by the rear bumper, only
the smoke of his cigarette curling up from the open window. Around them, hands shook and farewells were said. Korans were
kissed, passed under. Barefoot boys bounced between travelers, their faces invisible behind their trays of chewing gum and
cigarettes.

Jalil was busy telling her that Kabul was so beautiful, the Moghul emperor Babur had asked that he be buried there. Next,
Mariam knew, he’d go on about Kabul’s gardens, and its shops, its trees, and its air, and, before long, she would be on the
bus and he would walk alongside it, waving cheerfully, unscathed, spared.

Mariam could not bring herself to allow it.

“I used to worship you,” she said.

Jalil stopped in midsentence. He crossed and uncrossed his arms. A young Hindi couple, the wife cradling a boy, the husband
dragging a suitcase, passed between them.

Jalil seemed grateful for the interruption. They excused themselves, and he smiled back politely.

“On Thursdays, I sat for hours waiting for you. I worried myself sick that you wouldn’t show up.”

“It’s a long trip. You should eat something.” He said he could buy her some bread and goat cheese.

“I thought about you all the time. I used to pray that you’d live to be a hundred years old. I didn’t know. I didn’t know
that you were ashamed of me.”

Jalil looked down, and, like an overgrown child, dug at something with the toe of his shoe.

“You were ashamed of me.”

“I’ll visit you,” he muttered. “I’ll come to Kabul and see you. We’ll—”

“No. No,” she said. “Don’t come. I won’t see you. Don’t you come. I don’t want to hear from you. Ever.
Ever.

He gave her a wounded look.

“It ends here for you and me. Say your good-byes.”

“Don’t leave like this,” he said in a thin voice.

“You didn’t even have the decency to give me the time to say good-bye to Mullah Faizullah.”

She turned and walked around to the side of the bus. She could hear him following her. When she reached the hydraulic doors,
she heard him behind her.

“Mariam jo.”

She climbed the stairs, and though she could spot Jalil out of the corner of her eye walking parallel to her she did not look
out the window. She made her way down the aisle to the back, where Rasheed sat with her suitcase between his feet. She did
not turn to look when Jalil’s palms pressed on the glass, when his knuckles rapped and rapped on it. When the bus jerked forward,
she did not turn to see him trotting alongside it. And when the bus pulled away, she did not look back to see him receding,
to see him disappear in the cloud of exhaust and dust.

Rasheed, who took up the window and middle seat, put his thick hand on hers.

“There now, girl. There. There,” he said. He was squinting out the window as he said this, as though something more interesting
had caught his eye.

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