Page 201 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 201

she had to retch.

                          "How long is she staying?" she asked Rasheed.
                          "Until she's better. Look at her. She's in no shape to go. Poor thing."



                        * * *



                          It was Rasheed who  found the girl, who dug her out from beneath the
                        rubble.

                            "Lucky  I  was  home,"  he  said  to  the  girl.  He  was  sitting  on a folding

                        chair beside Mariam's bed, where the girl lay. "Lucky for you, I mean. I
                        dug  you  out  with  my own  hands. There  was a scrap of metal this big-"

                        Here, he spread his thumb and index finger apart to show her, at  least

                        doubling, in Mariam's estimation, the actual size of it. "This big. Sticking
                        right out of your shoulder. It was really embedded in there. I thought I'd

                        have to use a pair of pliers.




                          But you're all right. In no time, you'll be nau socha. Good as new."
                          It was Rasheed who salvaged a handful of Hakim's books.
                          "Most of them were ash. The rest were looted, I'm afraid."
                            He  helped  Mariam  watch  over  the  girl  that  first  week.  One  day,  he

                        came  home  from  work  with  a  new  blanket  and  pillow.  Another  day,  a

                        bottle of pills.

                          "Vitamins," he said.
                          It was Rasheed who  gave Laila  the  news that her friend Tariq's house

                        was occupied now.

                            "A  gift,"  he  said.  "From  one  of  Sayyaf  s commanders to three of his
                        men. A gift. Ha!"
                            The  three  men  were  actually  boys  with  suntanned,  youthful  faces.

                        Mariam  would  see  them  when  she  passed  by,  always  dressed  in  their

                        fatigues, squatting by the  front door of Tariq's house, playing cards and
                        smoking,  their  Kalashnikovs  leaning  against  the  wall.  The  brawny one,
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