Page 112 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 112

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 ghazals 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
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