Page 177 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 177

precisely at the midpoint between mockery and sincerity.



                          Tariq crushed his cigarette with the heel of his good foot. "So what do

                        you think about all this?"




                          "The party?"


                          "Who's the half-wit now? I meant the Mujahideen, Laila. Their coming

                        to Kabul."



                          Oh.

                          She started to tell him something Babi had said, about the troublesome
                        marriage  of  guns  and  ego,  when  she  heard  a  commotion  coming from

                        the house. Loud voices. Screaming.



                          Laila took off running. Tariq hobbled behind her.

                          There  was a melee in the  yard. In the  middle of it were two snarling
                        men, rolling on the  ground, a knife between them. Laila recognized one

                        of them as a man from the table who had been discussing politics earlier.

                        The  other  was  the  man  who  had  been  fanning  the  kebab  skewers.

                        Several men were trying to pull them apart. Babi wasn't among them. He
                        stood by the  wall, at  a safe distance from the  fight, with  Tariq's father,

                        who was crying.

                          From the  excited voices around her, Laila caught snippets that she put
                        together:  The  fellow  at  the  politics  table, a Pashtun, had called Ahmad

                        Shah Massoud a traitor for "making a deal" with the Soviets in the 1980s.

                        The kebab man, a Tajik, had taken offense and demanded a retraction.
                        The Pashtun had refused. The Tajik had said that if not for Massoud, the

                        other man's  sister would still be "giving it" to Soviet soldiers. They had

                        come  to  blows.  One  of  them  had  then  brandished  a  knife;  there  was
   172   173   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182