APRIL 1978
O
n April 17, 1978, the year Mariam turned nineteen, a man named Mir Akbar Khyber was found murdered. Two days later,
there was a large demonstration in Kabul. Everyone in the neighborhood was in the streets talking about it. Through the window,
Mariam saw neighbors milling about, chatting excitedly, transistor radios pressed to their ears. She saw Fariba leaning against
the wall of her house, talking with a woman who was new to Deh-Mazang. Fariba was smiling, and her palms were pressed against
the swell of her pregnant belly. The other woman, whose name escaped Mariam, looked older than Fariba, and her hair had an
odd purple tint to it. She was holding a little boy’s hand. Mariam knew the boy’s name was Tariq, because she had heard this
woman on the street call after him by that name.
Mariam and Rasheed didn’t join the neighbors. They listened in on the radio as some ten thousand people poured into the streets
and marched up and down Kabul’s government district. Rasheed said that Mir Akbar Khyber had been a prominent communist, and
that his supporters were blaming the murder on President Daoud Khan’s government. He didn’t look at her when he said this.
These days, he never did anymore, and Mariam wasn’t ever sure if she was being spoken to.
“What’s a communist?” she asked.
Rasheed snorted, and raised both eyebrows. “You don’t know what a communist is? Such a simple thing. Everyone knows. It’s
common knowledge. You don’t . . . Bah. I don’t know why I’m surprised.” Then he crossed his ankles on the table and mumbled
that it was someone who believed in Karl Marxist.
“Who’s Karl Marxist?”
Rasheed sighed.
On the radio, a woman’s voice was saying that Taraki, the leader of the Khalq branch of the PDPA, the Afghan communist party,
was in the streets giving rousing speeches to demonstrators.
“What I meant was, what do they want?” Mariam asked. “These communists, what is it that they believe?”
Rasheed chortled and shook his head, but Mariam thought she saw uncertainty in the way he crossed his arms, the way his eyes
shifted. “You know nothing, do you? You’re like a child. Your brain is empty. There is no information in it.”
“I ask because—”
“
Chup ko.
Shut up.”
Mariam did.
It wasn’t easy tolerating him talking this way to her, to bear his scorn, his ridicule, his insults, his walking past her
like she was nothing but a house cat. But after four years of marriage, Mariam saw clearly how much a woman could tolerate
when she was afraid. And Mariam
was
afraid. She lived in fear of his shifting moods, his volatile temperament, his insistence on steering even mundane exchanges
down a confrontational path that, on occasion, he would resolve with punches, slaps, kicks, and sometimes try to make amends
for with polluted apologies and sometimes not.
In the four years since the day at the bathhouse, there had been six more cycles of hopes raised then dashed, each loss, each
collapse, each trip to the doctor more crushing for Mariam than the last. With each disappointment, Rasheed had grown more
remote and resentful.
Now nothing she did pleased him. She cleaned the house, made sure he always had a supply of clean shirts, cooked him his favorite
dishes. Once, disastrously, she even bought makeup and put it on for him. But when he came home, he took one look at her and
winced with such distaste that she rushed to the bathroom and washed it all off, tears of shame mixing with soapy water, rouge,
and mascara.
Now Mariam dreaded the sound of him coming home in the evening. The key rattling, the creak of the door—these were sounds
that set her heart racing. From her bed, she listened to the
click-clack
of his heels, to the muffled shuffling of his feet after he’d shed his shoes. With her ears, she took inventory of his doings:
chair legs dragged across the floor, the plaintive squeak of the cane seat when he sat, the clinking of spoon against plate,
the flutter of newspaper pages flipped, the slurping of water. And as her heart pounded, her mind wondered what excuse he
would use that night to pounce on her. There was always something, some minor thing that would infuriate him, because no matter
what she did to please him, no matter how thoroughly she submitted to his wants and demands, it wasn’t enough. She could not
give him his son back. In this most essential way, she had failed him—seven times she had failed him—and now she was nothing
but a burden to him. She could see it in the way he looked at her,
when
he looked at her. She was a burden to him.
“What’s going to happen?” she asked him now.
Rasheed shot her a sidelong glance. He made a sound between a sigh and a groan, dropped his legs from the table, and turned
off the radio. He took it upstairs to his room. He closed the door.
ON APRIL 27, Mariam’s question was answered with crackling sounds and intense, sudden roars. She ran barefoot down to the
living room and found Rasheed already by the window, in his undershirt, his hair disheveled, palms pressed to the glass. Mariam
made her way to the window next to him. Overhead, she could see military planes zooming past, heading north and east. Their
deafening shrieks hurt her ears. In the distance, loud booms resonated and sudden plumes of smoke rose to the sky.
“What’s going on, Rasheed?” she said. “What is all this?”
“God knows,” he muttered. He tried the radio and got only static.
“What do we do?”
Impatiently, Rasheed said, “We wait.”
LATER IN THE DAY, Rasheed was still trying the radio as Mariam made rice with spinach sauce in the kitchen. Mariam remembered
a time when she had enjoyed, even looked forward to, cooking for Rasheed. Now cooking was an exercise in heightened anxiety.
The
qurma
s were always too salty or too bland for his taste. The rice was judged either too greasy or too dry, the bread declared too
doughy or too crispy. Rasheed’s faultfinding left her stricken in the kitchen with self-doubt.
When she brought him his plate, the national anthem was playing on the radio.
“I made
sabzi,
” she said.
“Put it down and be quiet.”
After the music faded, a man’s voice came on the radio.
He announced himself as Air Force Colonel Abdul Qader. He reported that earlier in the day the rebel Fourth Armored Division
had seized the airport and key intersections in the city. Kabul Radio, the ministries of Communication and the Interior, and
the Foreign Ministry building had also been captured. Kabul was in the hands of the people now, he said proudly. Rebel MiGs
had attacked the Presidential Palace. Tanks had broken into the premises, and a fierce battle was under way there. Daoud’s
loyalist forces were all but defeated, Abdul Qader said in a reassuring tone.
Days later, when the communists began the summary executions of those connected with Daoud Khan’s regime, when rumors began
floating about Kabul of eyes gouged and genitals electrocuted in the Pol-e-Charkhi Prison, Mariam would hear of the slaughter
that had taken place at the Presidential Palace. Daoud Khan
had
been killed, but not before the communist rebels had killed some twenty members of his family, including women and grandchildren.
There would be rumors that he had taken his own life, that he’d been gunned down in the heat of battle; rumors that he’d been
saved for last, made to watch the massacre of his family, then shot.
Rasheed turned up the volume and leaned in closer.
“A revolutionary council of the armed forces has been established, and our
watan
will now be known as the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan,” Abdul Qader said. “The era of aristocracy, nepotism, and inequality
is over, fellow
hamwatan
s. We have ended decades of tyranny. Power is now in the hands of the masses and freedom-loving people. A glorious new era
in the history of our country is afoot. A new Afghanistan is born. We assure you that you have nothing to fear, fellow Afghans.
The new regime will maintain the utmost respect for principles, both Islamic and democratic. This is a time of rejoicing and
celebration.”
Rasheed turned off the radio.
“So is this good or bad?” Mariam asked.
“Bad for the rich, by the sound of it,” Rasheed said.
“Maybe not so bad for us.”
Mariam’s thoughts drifted to Jalil. She wondered if the communists would go after him, then. Would they jail him?
Jail his sons? Take his businesses and properties from him?
“Is this warm?” Rasheed said, eyeing the rice.
“I just served it from the pot.”
He grunted, and told her to hand him a plate.
DOWN THE STREET, as the night lit up in sudden flashes of red and yellow, an exhausted Fariba had propped herself up on her
elbows. Her hair was matted with sweat, and droplets of moisture teetered on the edge of her upper lip. At her bedside, the
elderly midwife, Wajma, watched as Fariba’s husband and sons passed around the infant. They were marveling at the baby’s light
hair, at her pink cheeks and puckered, rosebud lips, at the slits of jade green eyes moving behind her puffy lids. They smiled
at each other when they heard her voice for the first time, a cry that started like the mewl of a cat and exploded into a
healthy, full-throated yowl. Noor said her eyes were like gemstones. Ahmad, who was the most religious member of the family,
sang the
azan
in his baby sister’s ear and blew in her face three times.
“Laila it is, then?” Hakim asked, bouncing his daughter.
“Laila it is,” Fariba said, smiling tiredly. “Night Beauty. It’s perfect.”
RASHEED MADE a ball of rice with his fingers. He put it in his mouth, chewed once, then twice, before grimacing and spitting
it out on the
sofrah.
“What’s the matter?” Mariam asked, hating the apologetic tone of her voice. She could feel her pulse quickening, her skin
shrinking.
“What’s the matter?” he mewled, mimicking her. “What’s the matter is that you’ve done it again.”
“But I boiled it five minutes more than usual.”
“That’s a bold lie.”
“I swear—”
He shook the rice angrily from his fingers and pushed the plate away, spilling sauce and rice on the
sofrah.
Mariam watched as he stormed out of the living room, then out of the house, slamming the door on his way out.
Mariam kneeled to the ground and tried to pick up the grains of rice and put them back on the plate, but her hands were shaking
badly, and she had to wait for them to stop. Dread pressed down on her chest. She tried taking a few deep breaths. She caught
her pale reflection in the darkened living-room window and looked away.
Then she heard the front door opening, and Rasheed was back in the living room.
“Get up,” he said. “Come here. Get up.”
He snatched her hand, opened it, and dropped a handful of pebbles into it.
“Put these in your mouth.”
“What?”
“Put. These. In your mouth.”
“Stop it, Rasheed, I’m—”
His powerful hands clasped her jaw. He shoved two fingers into her mouth and pried it open, then forced the cold, hard pebbles
into it. Mariam struggled against him, mumbling, but he kept pushing the pebbles in, his upper lip curled in a sneer.
“Now chew,” he said.
Through the mouthful of grit and pebbles, Mariam mumbled a plea. Tears were leaking out of the corners of her eyes.
“CHEW!” he bellowed. A gust of his smoky breath slammed against her face.
Mariam chewed. Something in the back of her mouth cracked.
“Good,” Rasheed said. His cheeks were quivering. “Now you know what your rice tastes like. Now you know what you’ve given
me in this marriage. Bad food, and nothing else.”
Then he was gone, leaving Mariam to spit out pebbles, blood, and the fragments of two broken molars.
KABUL, SPRING 1987
N
ine-year-old Laila rose from bed, as she did most mornings, hungry for the sight of her friend Tariq. This morning,
however, she knew there would be no Tariq sighting.
“How long will you be gone?” she’d asked when Tariq had told her that his parents were taking him south, to the city of Ghazni,
to visit his paternal uncle.
“Thirteen days.”
“
Thirteen
days?”
“It’s not so long. You’re making a face, Laila.”
“I am not.”
“You’re not going to cry, are you?”
“I am not going to cry! Not over you. Not in a thousand years.”
She’d kicked at his shin, not his artificial but his real one, and he’d playfully whacked the back of her head.
Thirteen days. Almost two weeks. And, just five days in, Laila had learned a fundamental truth about time: Like the accordion
on which Tariq’s father sometimes played old Pashto songs, time stretched and contracted depending on Tariq’s absence or presence.
Downstairs, her parents were fighting. Again. Laila knew the routine: Mammy, ferocious, indomitable, pacing and ranting; Babi,
sitting, looking sheepish and dazed, nodding obediently, waiting for the storm to pass. Laila closed her door and changed.
But she could still hear them. She could still hear
her.
Finally, a door slammed. Pounding footsteps. Mammy’s bed creaked loudly. Babi, it seemed, would survive to see another day.
“Laila!” he called now. “I’m going to be late for work!”
“One minute!”
Laila put on her shoes and quickly brushed her shoulder-length, blond curls in the mirror. Mammy always told Laila that she
had inherited her hair color—as well as her thick-lashed, turquoise green eyes, her dimpled cheeks, her high cheekbones, and
the pout of her lower lip, which Mammy shared—from her great-grandmother, Mammy’s grandmother.
She was a
pari,
a stunner,
Mammy said.
Her beauty was the talk of the valley. It skipped two generations
of women in our family, but it sure
didn’t
bypass you, Laila.
The valley Mammy referred to was the Panjshir, the Farsi-speaking Tajik region one hundred kilometers northeast of Kabul.
Both Mammy and Babi, who were first cousins, had been born and raised in Panjshir; they had moved to Kabul back in 1960 as
hopeful, bright-eyed newlyweds when Babi had been admitted to Kabul University.
Laila scrambled downstairs, hoping Mammy wouldn’t come out of her room for another round. She found Babi kneeling by the screen
door.
“Did you see this, Laila?”
The rip in the screen had been there for weeks. Laila hunkered down beside him. “No. Must be new.”
“That’s what I told Fariba.” He looked shaken, reduced, as he always did after Mammy was through with him. “She says it’s
been letting in bees.”
Laila’s heart went out to him. Babi was a small man, with narrow shoulders and slim, delicate hands, almost like a woman’s.
At night, when Laila walked into Babi’s room, she always found the downward profile of his face burrowing into a book, his
glasses perched on the tip of his nose. Sometimes he didn’t even notice that she was there. When he did, he marked his page,
smiled a close-lipped, companionable smile. Babi knew most of Rumi’s and Hafez’s
ghazal
s by heart. He could speak at length about the struggle between Britain and czarist Russia over Afghanistan. He knew the difference
between a stalactite and a stalagmite, and could tell you that the distance between the earth and the sun was the same as
going from Kabul to Ghazni one and a half million times. But if Laila needed the lid of a candy jar forced open, she had to
go to Mammy, which felt like a betrayal. Ordinary tools befuddled Babi. On his watch, squeaky door hinges never got oiled.
Ceilings went on leaking after he plugged them. Mold thrived defiantly in kitchen cabinets. Mammy said that before he left
with Noor to join the jihad against the Soviets, back in 1980, it was Ahmad who had dutifully and competently minded these
things.
“But if you have a book that needs urgent reading,” she said, “then Hakim is your man.”
Still, Laila could not shake the feeling that at one time, before Ahmad and Noor had gone to war against the Soviets—before
Babi had
let
them go to war—Mammy too had thought Babi’s bookishness endearing, that, once upon a time, she too had found his forgetfulness
and ineptitude charming.
“So what is today?” he said now, smiling coyly. “Day five? Or is it six?”
“What do I care? I don’t keep count,” Laila lied, shrugging, loving him for remembering. Mammy had no idea that Tariq had
left.
“Well, his flashlight will be going off before you know it,” Babi said, referring to Laila and Tariq’s nightly signaling game.
They had played it for so long it had become a bedtime ritual, like brushing teeth.
Babi ran his finger through the rip. “I’ll patch this as soon as I get a chance. We’d better go.” He raised his voice and
called over his shoulder, “We’re going now, Fariba! I’m taking Laila to school. Don’t forget to pick her up!”
Outside, as she was climbing on the carrier pack of Babi’s bicycle, Laila spotted a car parked up the street, across from
the house where the shoemaker, Rasheed, lived with his reclusive wife. It was a Benz, an unusual car in this neighborhood,
blue with a thick white stripe bisecting the hood, the roof, and the trunk. Laila could make out two men sitting inside, one
behind the wheel, the other in the back.
“Who are they?” she said.
“It’s not our business,” Babi said. “Climb on, you’ll be late for class.”
Laila remembered another fight, and, that time, Mammy had stood over Babi and said in a mincing way,
That’s
your business,
isn’t
it, cousin? To make nothing your business.
Even your own sons going to war. How I pleaded with you.
But you buried your nose in those cursed books and let our sons go
like they were a pair of
harami
s.
Babi pedaled up the street, Laila on the back, her arms wrapped around his belly. As they passed the blue Benz, Laila caught
a fleeting glimpse of the man in the backseat: thin, white-haired, dressed in a dark brown suit, with a white handkerchief
triangle in the breast pocket. The only other thing she had time to notice was that the car had Herat license plates.
They rode the rest of the way in silence, except at the turns, where Babi braked cautiously and said, “Hold on, Laila. Slowing
down. Slowing down. There.”
IN CLASS THAT DAY, Laila found it hard to pay attention, between Tariq’s absence and her parents’ fight. So when the teacher
called on her to name the capitals of Romania and Cuba, Laila was caught off guard.
The teacher’s name was Shanzai, but, behind her back, the students called her Khala Rangmaal, Auntie Painter, referring to
the motion she favored when she slapped students—palm, then back of the hand, back and forth, like a painter working a brush.
Khala Rangmaal was a sharp-faced young woman with heavy eyebrows. On the first day of school, she had proudly told the class
that she was the daughter of a poor peasant from Khost. She stood straight, and wore her jet-black hair pulled tightly back
and tied in a bun so that, when Khala Rangmaal turned around, Laila could see the dark bristles on her neck. Khala Rangmaal
did not wear makeup or jewelry. She did not cover and forbade the female students from doing it. She said women and men were
equal in every way and there was no reason women should cover if men didn’t.
She said that the Soviet Union was the best nation in the world, along with Afghanistan. It was kind to its workers, and its
people were all equal. Everyone in the Soviet Union was happy and friendly, unlike America, where crime made people afraid
to leave their homes. And everyone in Afghanistan would be happy too, she said, once the antiprogressives, the backward bandits,
were defeated.
“That’s why our Soviet comrades came here in 1979. To lend their neighbor a hand. To help us defeat these brutes who want
our country to be a backward, primitive nation. And you must lend your own hand, children. You must report anyone who might
know about these rebels. It’s your duty. You must listen, then report. Even if it’s your parents, your uncles or aunts. Because
none of them loves you as much as your country does. Your country comes first, remember! I will be proud of you, and so will
your country.”
On the wall behind Khala Rangmaal’s desk was a map of the Soviet Union, a map of Afghanistan, and a framed photo of the latest
communist president, Najibullah, who, Babi said, had once been the head of the dreaded KHAD, the Afghan secret police. There
were other photos too, mainly of young Soviet soldiers shaking hands with peasants, planting apple saplings, building homes,
always smiling genially.
“Well,” Khala Rangmaal said now, “have I disturbed your daydreaming,
Inqilabi
Girl?”
This was her nickname for Laila, Revolutionary Girl, because she’d been born the night of the April coup of 1978—except Khala
Rangmaal became angry if anyone in her class used the word
coup.
What had happened, she insisted, was an
inqilab,
a revolution, an uprising of the working people against inequality.
Jihad
was another forbidden word. According to her, there wasn’t even a war out there in the provinces, just skirmishes against
troublemakers stirred by people she called foreign provocateurs. And certainly no one,
no one,
dared repeat in her presence the rising rumors that, after eight years of fighting, the Soviets were losing this war. Particularly
now that the American president, Reagan, had started shipping the Mujahideen Stinger Missiles to down the Soviet helicopters,
now that Muslims from all over the world were joining the cause: Egyptians, Pakistanis, even wealthy Saudis, who left their
millions behind and came to Afghanistan to fight the jihad.
“Bucharest. Havana,” Laila managed.
“And are those countries our friends or not?”
“They are,
moalim
sahib. They are friendly countries.”
Khala Rangmaal gave a curt nod.
WHEN SCHOOL LET OUT, Mammy again didn’t show up like she was supposed to. Laila ended up walking home with two of her classmates,
Giti and Hasina.
Giti was a tightly wound, bony little girl who wore her hair in twin ponytails held by elastic bands. She was always scowling,
and walking with her books pressed to her chest, like a shield. Hasina was twelve, three years older than Laila and Giti,
but had failed third grade once and fourth grade twice. What she lacked in smarts Hasina made up for in mischief and a mouth
that, Giti said, ran like a sewing machine. It was Hasina who had come up with the Khala Rangmaal nickname.
Today, Hasina was dispensing advice on how to fend off unattractive suitors. “Foolproof method, guaranteed to work. I give
you my word.”
“This is stupid. I’m too young to have a suitor!”
Giti said.
“You’re not too young.”
“Well, no one’s come to ask for
my
hand.”
“That’s because you have a beard, my dear.”
Giti’s hand shot up to her chin, and she looked with alarm to Laila, who smiled pityingly—Giti was the most humorless person
Laila had ever met—and shook her head with reassurance.
“Anyway, you want to know what to do or not, ladies?”
“Go ahead,” Laila said.
“Beans. No less than four cans. On the evening the toothless lizard comes to ask for your hand. But the timing, ladies, the
timing is everything. You have to suppress the fireworks ’til it’s time to serve him his tea.”
“I’ll remember that,” Laila said.
“So will he.”
Laila could have said then that she didn’t need this advice because Babi had no intention of giving her away anytime soon.
Though Babi worked at Silo, Kabul’s gigantic bread factory, where he labored amid the heat and the humming machinery stoking
the massive ovens and mill grains all day, he was a university-educated man. He’d been a high school teacher before the communists
fired him—this was shortly after the coup of 1978, about a year and a half before the Soviets had invaded. Babi had made it
clear to Laila from a young age that the most important thing in his life, after her safety, was her schooling.
I know
you’re
still young, but I want you to understand and
learn this now,
he said.
Marriage can wait, education cannot.
You’re
a very, very bright girl. Truly, you are. You can be anything
you want, Laila. I know this about you. And I also know
that when this war is over, Afghanistan is going to need you as
much as its men, maybe even more. Because a society has no
chance of success if its women are uneducated, Laila. No chance.
But Laila didn’t tell Hasina that Babi had said these things, or how glad she was to have a father like him, or how proud
she was of his regard for her, or how determined she was to pursue her education just as he had his. For the last two years,
Laila had received the
awal numra
certificate, given yearly to the top-ranked student in each grade. She said nothing of these things to Hasina, though, whose
own father was an ill-tempered taxi driver who in two or three years would almost certainly give her away. Hasina had told
Laila, in one of her infrequent serious moments, that it had already been decided that she would marry a first cousin who
was twenty years older than her and owned an auto shop in Lahore.
I’ve
seen him twice,
Hasina had said.
Both times he ate with his mouth open.
“Beans, girls,” Hasina said. “You remember that. Unless, of course”—here she flashed an impish grin and nudged Laila with
an elbow—“it’s your young handsome, one legged prince who comes knocking. Then . . .”
Laila slapped the elbow away. She would have taken offense if anyone else had said that about Tariq. But she knew that Hasina
wasn’t malicious. She mocked—it was what she did—and her mocking spared no one, least of all herself.