Beneath the Lion's Gaze

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Authors: Maaza Mengiste

BOOK: Beneath the Lion's Gaze
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Contents

Cover

About the Book

About the Author

Dedication

Title Page

Epigraph

Part One

Book One

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Part Two

Book Two

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Book Three

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Book Four

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Author’s Note

Bibliography

Copyright

About the Book

Beneath the Lion’s Gaze
opens in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 1974, on the eve of a revolution. Yonas kneels in his mother’s prayer room, pleading to his god for an end to the violence that has wracked his family and country. His father, Hailu, a prominent doctor, has been ordered to report to jail after helping a victim of state-sanctioned torture to die. And Dawit, Hailu’s youngest son, has joined an underground resistance movement – a choice that will lead to more upheaval and bloodshed across a ravaged Ethiopia.

Maaza Mengieste’s powerful debut tells a gripping story of family and of the bonds of love and friendship set in a time and place that has rarely been explored in fiction. It is a story about the lengths to which human beings will go in pursuit of freedom and the human price of a national revolution. Emotionally gripping, poetic and indelibly tragic,
Beneath the Lion’s Gaze
is a transcendent story that introduces a powerful new voice.

About the Author

Maaza Mengiste was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and graduated with an MFA in Creative Writing from New York University. A recent Pushcart Prize nominee, she was named ‘New Literary Idol’ by
New York Magazine
. Her work has appeared in
The Baltimore Review, Ninth Letter
and
420pus
, has been translated and published into German and Romanian for
Lettre International
, and can be found in the Seal Press anthology
Homelands: Women’s Journeys Across Race, Place and Time
. She has received fellowships from Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and Yaddo. She currently lives in New York.

For my grandparents,
Abebe Haile Mariam and Maaza Wolde Hanna
.

And for my uncles, Mekonnen, Solomon, Seyoum,
and all who died trying to find a better way
.

We are the humbled bones

Bent in the thick of your silence
.

Ask of your father God who elected you

Why he has forsaken us
.


T
SEGAYE
G
ABRE
-
M
EDHIN

PART ONE

BOOK ONE

1.

A THIN BLUE VEIN
pulsed in the collecting pool of blood where a bullet had lodged deep in the boy’s back. Hailu was sweating under the heat from the bright operating room lights. There was pressure behind his eyes. He leaned his head to one side and a nurse’s ready hand wiped sweat from his brow. He looked back at his scalpel, the shimmering blood and torn tissues, and tried to imagine the fervor that had led this boy to believe he was stronger than Emperor Haile Selassie’s highly trained police.

This boy had come in shivering and soaked in his own blood, in the latest American-style jeans with wide legs, and now he wasn’t moving. His mother’s screams hadn’t stopped. Hailu could still hear her just beyond those doors, standing in the hallway. More doors led outside to an ongoing struggle between students and police. Soon, more injured students would fill the emergency rooms and this work would begin all over again. How old was this boy?

“Doctor?” a nurse said, her eyes searching his above her surgical mask.

The heart monitor beeped steadily. All was normal, Hailu knew without looking, he could understand the body’s silent language without the help of machinery. Years of practice had taught him how to decipher what most patients couldn’t articulate. These days were teaching him more: that the frailty of our bodies stems from the heart and travels to the brain. That what the body feels and thinks determines the way it stumbles and falls.

“How old is he?” he asked. Is he the same age as my Dawit, he thought, one of those trying to lead my youngest son into this chaos?

His nurses drew back like startled birds. He never spoke during surgery, his focus on his patients so intense that it had become legendary. His head nurse, Almaz, shook her head to stop anyone from answering him.

“He has a bullet in his back that must be taken out. His mother is waiting. He is losing blood.” Almaz spoke quickly, her eyes locked on his, professional and stern. She sponged blood away from the wound and checked the patient’s vital signs.

The hole in the boy’s back was a punctured, burned blast of muscle and flesh. The run towards the bullet had been more graceful than his frightened sprint away. Hailu imagined him keeping pace with the throngs of other high school and college students, hands raised, voice loud. The thin, proud chest inflated, his soft face determined. A boy living his moment of manhood too early. How many shots had to be fired to turn this child back towards his home and anxious mother? Who had carried him to her once he’d fallen? Stones. Bullets. Fists. Sticks. So many ways to break a body, and none of these children seemed to believe in the frailty of their muscles and bones. Hailu cut around the wound and paused for one of his nurses to wipe the blood that flowed.

The whine of police cars flashed past the hospital. The sirens hadn’t stopped all day. Police and soldiers were overwhelmed and racing through streets packed with frenzied protestors running in all directions. What if Dawit were there amidst those running, what if he were wheeled into his operating room? Hailu focused on the limp body in front of him, ignored his own hammering heart, and put thoughts of his son out of his mind.

HAILU SAT IN HIS OFFICE
under a pale light that threaded its way through open curtains. He stared at his hand lying palm open in his lap and felt the solitude and panic that had been eating into the edges of his days since his wife Selam had gone into the hospital. Seven days of confusion. And he’d just operated on a boy for a gunshot wound to the back. After years as a doctor, he knew the rotations and shifts of his staff, the scheduled surgeries in any given week, Prince Mekonnen Hospital’s daily capacity for new patients, but he could not account for his wife’s deteriorating condition and this relentless drive of students who demanded action to address the country’s poverty and lack of progress. They asked again and again when Ethiopia’s backward slide into the Middle Ages would stop. He had no answers, could do nothing but sit and gaze in helplessness at an empty hand that looked pale and thin
in
the afternoon sun. He feared for Dawit, his youngest son, who also wanted to enter the fray, who was not much older or bigger, nor more brave, than his permanently crippled patient today. His wife was leaving him to carry the burden of these days alone.

There was a knock at his door. He looked at his watch, a gift given to him by Emperor Haile Selassie when he’d returned from medical school in England. The emperor’s piercing eyes, rumored to hold the power to break any man’s will, had bore into Hailu during the special palace ceremony to honor young graduates recently returned from abroad.

“Do not waste your hours and minutes on foolish dreams,” the emperor had said, his voice cool and crisp. “Make Ethiopia proud.”

The knock came again. “Dr. Hailu,” Almaz said.

“Come in,” Hailu said, turning in his chair to face the door.

“You’ve finished your shift.” She stood in the doorway. “You’re still here.” Almaz, in her usual custom, turned all her questions into declarations. She cleared her throat and adjusted the collar of her white nurse’s uniform. She matched him in height, very tall for a woman.

“There was a teachers’ union strike,” he said. “The emperor’s forbid the police to shoot at anyone, but look what happened already.” He sighed tiredly. “I want to make sure no other emergencies come in. And I need to check on Selam soon.”

Almaz raised a hand to stop him. “I already checked on her, she’s sleeping. There’s nothing for you to do here anymore,” she said. “You’ve already done your shift, go home.”

“My sons have to see her,” Hailu said. “I’ll go and come back.”

Almaz shook her head. “Your wife always complained about your stubbornness.” She took his coat from the hanger on the door and held it out for him. “You’ve been working too hard this week. You think I haven’t noticed.”

Almaz was his most trusted colleague. They had been working together for nearly two decades. He could feel her searching his face.

The rattle of a heavy falling object echoed in the corridor. It was coming from beyond the swinging doors, from the intensive care unit.

“What was that?” Hailu asked. He stood up and walked over to get his coat. It was then he realized how tired he was. He hadn’t eaten since the night before in Selam’s room, and he’d spent the entire day operating.

Almaz shook her head and led him out of his office. She closed the door gently behind them and motioned him towards the exit. “I’ll tell you later. Something with one of the prisoners.”

In the last few weeks, the ICU ward, headed by another doctor, had become the designated location for some of the emperor’s officials, old men well past their prime who had been arrested without charges and had fallen ill while in prison because of preexisting ailments and lack of medical supervision. So far, the hospital had been able to function normally, no irregular activity to bring undue attention to their new, special patients.

From the direction of the noise came an angry male voice, a sharp slap, then a soft whimper. “What’s going on?” he asked again, turning around.

“They’ve got soldiers watching one of them,” Almaz said. She pushed him on, away from the ICU. “There’s nothing you can do about it, so don’t concern yourself.” The expression on her angular face, with its pointed jaw and thin mouth, was determined. “Go.” She walked away, into another patient’s room.

Hailu looked down at the long hallway that stretched in front of him and sighed. There was a time when he could tell what went on beyond the hospital by what he heard from inside of it, when he could piece together the shouts and brake squeals and laughter and let logic carry him to a safe assumption. But these days of riots and demonstrations made everything indecipherable. And now, what was once beyond the walls had crept inside. He turned back and decided to leave through the swinging doors of the intensive care unit, a shortcut to the parking lot.

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