January1989
One cold, overcast day in January 1989, three months before Laila turned eleven, she, her parents,
and Hasina went to watch one of the last Soviet convoys exit the city. Spectators had gathered on both
sides of the thoroughfare outside the Military Club near Wazir Akbar Khan. They stood in muddy
snow and watched the line of tanks, armored trucks, and jeeps as light snow flew across the glare of
the passing headlights. There were heckles and jeers. Afghan soldiers kept people off the street.
Every now and then, they had to fire a warning shot.
Mammy hoisted a photo of Ahmad and Noor high over her head. It was the one of them sitting back-
to-back under the pear tree. There were others like her, women with pictures of theirshaheed
husbands, sons, brothers held high.
Someone tapped Laila and Hasina on the shoulder. It was Tariq.
"Where did you get that thing?" Hasina exclaimed.
"I thought I'd come dressed for the occasion." Tariq said. He was wearing an enormous Russian fur
hat, complete with earflaps, which he had pulled down.
"How do I look?"
"Ridiculous," Laila laughed.
"That's the idea."
"Your parents came here with you dressed like this?"
"They're home, actually," he said.
The previous fall, Tariq's uncle in Ghazni had died of a heart attack, and, a few weeks later, Tariq's
father had suffered a heart attack of his own, leaving him frail and tired, prone to anxiety and bouts of
depression that overtook him for weeks at a time. Laila was glad to see Tariq like this, like his old
self again. For weeks after his father's illness, Laila had watched him moping around, heavy-faced
and sullen.
The three of them stole away while Mammy and Babi stood watching the Soviets. From a street
vendor, Tariq bought them each a plate of boiled beans topped with thick cilantro chutney. They ate
beneath the awning of a closed rug shop, then Hasina went to find her family.
On the bus ride home, Tariq and Laila sat behind her parents. Mammy was by the window, staring out, clutching the picture against her chest. Beside her, Babi was impassively listening to a man who
was arguing that the Soviets might be leaving but that they would send weapons to Najibullah in
Kabul.
"He's their puppet. They'll keep the war going through him, you can bet on that."
Someone in the next aisle voiced his agreement.
Mammy was muttering to herself, long-winded prayers that rolled on and on until she had no breath
left and had to eke out the last few words in a tiny, high-pitched squeak.
* * *
They "went to Cinema Park later that day, Laila and Tariq, and had to settle for a Soviet film that
was dubbed, to unintentionally comic effect, in Farsi. There was a merchant ship, and a first mate in
love with the captain's daughter. Her name was Alyona. Then came a fierce storm, lightning, rain, the
heaving sea tossing the ship. One of the frantic sailors yelled something. An absurdly calm Afghan
voice translated: "My dear sir, would you kindly pass the rope?"
At this, Tariq burst out cackling. And, soon, they both were in the grips of a hopeless attack of
laughter. Just when one became fatigued, the other would snort, and off they would go on another
round. A man sitting two rows up turned around and shushed them.
There was a wedding scene near the end. The captain had relented and let Alyona marry the first
mate. The newlyweds were smiling at each other. Everyone was drinking vodka.
"I'm never getting married," Tariq whispered.
"Me neither," said Laila, but not before a moment of nervous hesitation. She worried that her voice
had betrayed her disappointment at what he had said. Her heart galloping, she added, more forcefully
this time, "Never."
"Weddings are stupid." "All the fuss."
"All the money spent." "For what?"
"For clothes you'll never wear again."
"Ha!"
"If I everdo get married," Tariq said, "they'll have to make room for three on the wedding stage. Me,
the bride, and the guy holding the gun to my head."
The man in the front row gave them another admonishing look.
On the screen, Alyona and her new husband locked lips.Watching the kiss, Laila felt strangely conspicuous all at once. She became intensely aware of her
heart thumping, of the blood thudding in her ears, of the shape of Tariq beside her, tightening up,
becoming still. The kiss dragged on. It seemed of utmost urgency to Laila, suddenly, that she not stir
or make a noise. She sensed that Tariq was observing her-one eye on the kiss, the other on her-as she
was observinghim. Was he listening to the air whooshing in and out of her nose, she wondered,
waiting for a subtle faltering, a revealing irregularity, that would betray her thoughts?
And what would it be like to kiss him, to feel the fuzzy hair above his lip tickling her own lips?
Then Tariq shifted uncomfortably in his seat. In a strained voice, he said, "Did you know that if you
fling snot in Siberia, it's a green icicle before it hits the ground?"
They both laughed, but briefly, nervously, this time. And when the film ended and they stepped
outside, Laila was relieved to see that the sky had dimmed, that she wouldn't have to meet Tariq's
eyes in the bright daylight.