Page 160 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 160

"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.



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