Chereads / A Thousand splendid suns / Chapter 33 - chapter 32

Chapter 33 - chapter 32

Laila

JLaila remembered a gathering once, years before at the house, on one of Mammy's good days. The

women had been sitting in the garden, eating from a platter of fresh mulberries that Wajma had picked

from the tree in her yard. The plump mulberries had been white and pink, and some the same dark

purple as the bursts of tiny veins on Wajma's nose.

"You heard how his son died?" Wajma had said, energetically shoveling another handful of

mulberries into her sunken mouth.

"He drowned, didn't he?" Nila, Giti's mother, said. "At Ghargha Lake, wasn't it?"

"But did you know, did you know that Rasheed…" Wajma raised a finger, made a show of nodding

and chewing and making them wait for her to swallow. "Did you know that he used to drinksharab

back then, that he was crying drunk that day? It's true. Crying drunk, is what I heard. And that was

midmorning. By noon, he had passed out on a lounge chair. You could have fired the noon cannon next

to his ear and he wouldn't have batted an eyelash."

Laila remembered how Wajma had covered her mouth, burped; how her tongue had gone exploring

between her few remaining teeth.

"You can imagine the rest. The boy went into the water unnoticed. They spotted him a while later,

floating facedown. People rushed to help, half trying to wake up the boy, the other half the father.

Someone bent over the boy, did the…the mouth-to-mouth thing you're supposed to do. It was

pointless. They could all see that. The boy was gone."

Laila remembered Wajma raising a finger and her voice quivering with piety. "This is why the Holy

Koran forbidssharab. Because it always falls on the sober to pay for the sins of the drunk. So it does."

It was this story that was circling in Laila's head after she gave Rasheed the news about the baby. He

had immediately hopped on his bicycle, ridden to a mosque, and prayed for a boy.

That night, all during the meal, Laila watched Mariam push a cube of meat around her plate. Laila

was there when Rasheed sprang the news on Mariam in a high, dramatic voice-Laila had never before

witnessed such cheerful cruelty. Mariam's lashes fluttered when she heard. A flush spread across her

face. She sat sulking, looking desolate.

After, Rasheed went upstairs to listen to his radio, and Laila helped Mariam clear thesojrah.

"I can't imagine what you are now," Mariam said, picking grains of rice and bread crumbs, "if you

were a Benz before."Laila tried a more lightheaded tactic. "A train? Maybe a big jumbo jet."

Mariam straightened up. "I hope you don't think this excuses you from chores."

Laila opened her mouth, thought better of it. She reminded herself that Mariam was the only innocent

party in this arrangement. Mariam and the baby-Later, in bed, Laila burst into tears.

What was the matter? Rasheed wanted to know, lifting her chin. Was she ill? Was it the baby, was

something wrong with the baby? No?

Was Mariam mistreating her?

"That's it, isn't it?"

"No."

"Wallah o billah, I'll go down and teach her a lesson. Who does she think she is, thatharami, treating

you-"

"No!"

He was getting up already, and she had to grab him by the forearm, pull him back down. "Don't! No!

She's been decent to me. I need a minute, that's all. I'll be fine."

He sat beside her, stroking her neck, murmuring- His hand slowly crept down to her back, then up

again. He leaned in, flashed his crowded teeth.

"Let's see, then," he purred, "if I can't help you feel better."

* * *

First, the trees-those that hadn't been cut down for firewood-shed their spotty yellow-and-copper

leaves. Then came the winds, cold and raw, ripping through the city. They tore off the last of the

clinging leaves, and left the trees looking ghostly against the muted brown of the hills. The season's

first snowfall was light, the flakes no sooner fallen than melted. Then the roads froze, and snow

gathered in heaps on the rooftops, piled halfway up frost-caked windows. With snow came the kites,

once the rulers of Kabul's winter skies, now timid trespassers in territory claimed by streaking

rockets and fighter jets.

Rasheed kept bringing home news of the war, and Laila was baffled by the allegiances that Rasheed

tried to explain to her. Sayyaf was fighting the Hazaras, he said. The Hazaras were fighting Massoud.

"And he's fighting Hekmatyar, of course, who has the support of the Pakistanis. Mortal enemies,

those two, Massoud and Hekmatyar. Sayyaf, he's siding with Massoud. And Hekmatyar supports the

Hazaras for now."

As for the unpredictable Uzbek commander Dostum, Rasheed said no one knew where he would stand. Dostum had fought the Soviets in the 1980s alongside the Mujahideen but had defected and

joined Najibullah's communist puppet regime after the Soviets had left. He had even earned a medal,

presented by Najibullah himself, before defecting once again and returning to the Mujahideen's side.

For the time being, Rasheed said, Dostum was supporting Massoud.

In Kabul, particularly in western Kabul, fires raged, and black palls of smoke mushroomed over

snow-clad buildings. Embassies closed down. Schools collapsed In hospital waiting rooms, Rasheed

said, the wounded were bleeding to death. In operating rooms, limbs were being amputated without

anesthesia.

"But don't worry," he said. "You're safe with me, my flower, mygul. Anyone tries to harm you, I'll

rip out their liver and make them eat it."

That winter, everywhere Laila turned, walls blocked her way. She thought longingly of the wide-

open skies of her childhood, of her days of going tobuzkashi tournaments with Babi and shopping at

Mandaii with Mammy, of her days of running free in the streets and gossiping about boys with Giti

and Hasina. Her days of sitting with Tariq in a bed of clover on the banks of a stream somewhere,

trading riddles and candy, watching the sun go down.

But thinking of Tariq was treacherous because, before she could stop, she saw him lying on a bed,

far from home, tubes piercing his burned body. Like the bile that kept burning her throat these days, a

deep, paralyzing grief would come rising up Laila's chest. Her legs would turn to water. She would

have to hold on to something.

Laila passed that winter of 1992 sweeping the house, scrubbing the pumpkin-colored walls of the

bedroom she shared with Rasheed, washing clothes outside in a big copperlagoon. Sometimes she

saw herself as if hovering above her own body, saw herself squatting over the rim of thelogoon,

sleeves rolled up to the elbows, pink hands wringing soapy water from one of Rasheed's undershirts.

She felt lost then, casting about, like a shipwreck survivor, no shore in sight, only miles and miles of

water.

When it was too cold to go outside, Laila ambled around the house. She walked, dragging a

fingernail along the wall, down the hallway, then back, down the steps, then up, her face unwashed,

hair uncombed. She walked until she ran into Mariam, who shot her a cheerless glance and went back

to slicing the stem off a bell pepper and trimming strips of fat from meat. A hurtful silence would fill

the room, and Laila could almost see the wordless hostility radiating from Mariam like waves of heat

rising from asphalt. She would retreat back to her room, sit on the bed, and watch the snow falling.

* * *

Rasheed took her to his shoe shop one day.

When they were out together, he walked alongside her, one hand gripping her by the elbow. For

Laila, being out in the streets had become an exercise in avoiding injury. Her eyes were still adjusting

to the limited, gridlike visibility of the burqa, her feet still stumbling over the hem. She walked in

perpetual fear of tripping and falling, of breaking an ankle stepping into a pothole. Still, she found some comfort in the anonymity that the burqa provided. She wouldn't be recognized this way if she

ran into an old acquaintance of hers. She wouldn't have to watch the surprise in their eyes, or the pity

or the glee, at how far she had fallen, at how her lofty aspirations had been dashed.

Rasheed's shop was bigger and more brightly lit than Laila had imagined. He had her sit behind his

crowded workbench, the top of which was littered with old soles and scraps of leftover leather. He

showed her his hammers, demonstrated how the sandpaper wheel worked, hisvoice ringing high and

proud-He felt her belly, not through the shirt but under it, his fingertips cold and rough like bark on

her distended skin. Laila rememberedTariq's hands, soft but strong, the tortuous, full veins on the

backs of them, which she had always found soappealingly masculine.

"Swelling so quickly," Rasheed said."It's going to be a big boy. My sonwill beapahlawanl Like his

father."

Laila pulled down her shirt. It filled her with fear when he spoke likethis.

"Howare things with Mariam?"

She said they were fine.

"Good. Good."

She didn't tell him that they'd had their first true fight.

It had happened a few days earlier. Laila had gone to the kitchen and found Mariam yanking drawers

and slamming themshut. She was looking, Mariam said, forthe long wooden spoon she used to stir

rice.

"Where did you put it?" she said, wheeling around to face Laila.

"Me?" Laila said "I didn't take it. I hardly come in here."

"I've noticed."

"Is that an accusation? It's how you wanted it, remember. You said you would make the meals. But if

you want to switch-"

"So you're saying it grew little legs and walked out.Teep, teep, teep, teep. Is that what

happened,degeh?'

"I'm saying…" Laila said, trying to maintain control. Usually, she could will herself to absorb

Mariam's derision and finger-pointing. But her ankles had swollen, her head hurt, and the heartburn

was vicious that day. "I am saying that maybe you've misplaced it."

"Misplaced it?" Mariam pulled a drawer. The spatulas and knives inside it clanked. "How long

have you been here, a few months? I've lived in this house for nineteen years,dokhiarjo. I have

keptthat spoon inthis drawer since you were shitting your diapers.""Still," Laila said, on the brink now, teeth clenched, "it's possible you put it somewhere and forgot."

"And it'spossible you hid it somewhere, to aggravate me."

"You're a sad, miserable woman," Laila said.

Mariam flinched, then recovered, pursed her lips. "And you're a whore. A whore and adozd. A

thieving whore, that's what you are!"

Then there was shouting- Pots raised though not hurled. They'd called each other names, names that

made Laila blush now. They hadn't spoken since. Laila was still shocked at how easily she'd come

unhinged, but, the truth was, part of her had liked it, had liked how it felt to scream at Mariam, to

curse at her, to have a target at which to focus all her simmering anger, her grief.

Laila wondered, with something like insight, if it wasn't the same for Mariam.

After, she had run upstairs and thrown herself on Rasheed's bed. Downstairs, Mariam was still

yelling, "Dirt on

your head! Dirt on your head!" Laila had lain on the bed, groaning into the pillow, missing her

parents suddenly and with an overpowering intensity she hadn't felt since those terrible days just after

the attack. She lay there, clutching handfuls of the bedsheet, until, suddenly, her breath caught. She sat

up, hands shooting down to her belly.

The baby had just kicked for the first time.