Page 251 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 251

azan rang out, and then the morning sun was falling flat on the rooftops

                        and the roosters were crowing and nothing out of the ordinary happened
                            She  could  hear  him  now  in  the  bathroom,  the  tapping  of  his  razor

                        against  the  edge  of  the  basin.  Then  downstairs, moving about, heating

                        tea. The keys jingled. Now he was crossing the yard, walking his bicycle.

                          Laila  peered through a crack in the  living-room curtains. She watched
                        him pedal away, a big man on a small bicycle, the morning sun glaring
                        off the handlebars.
                          "Laila?"

                          Mariam was in the doorway. Laila could tell that she hadn't slept either.

                        She  wondered  if  Mariam  too  had  been  seized  all  night  by  bouts  of

                        euphoria and attacks of mouth-drying anxiety.
                          "We'll leave in half an hour," Laila said.



                        * * *



                          In the  backseat of the  taxi, they did not speak. Aziza sat on Mariam's
                        lap,  clutching  her  doll,  looking  with  wide-eyed  puzzlement  at  the  city

                        speeding by.

                            "Ona!"  she  cried,  pointing  to  a  group  of  little  girls  skipping  rope.
                        "Mayam! Ona"
                            Everywhere  she  looked,  Laila  saw  Rasheed.  She  spotted  him coming

                        out of barbershops with windows the color of coal dust, from tiny booths

                        that sold partridges, from battered, open-fronted stores packed with old
                        tires piled from floor to ceiling.

                          She sank lower in her seat.

                          Beside her, Mariam was muttering a prayer. Laila wished she could see

                        her face,  but Mariam was in burqa-they both were-and all she could see
                        was the glitter of her eyes through the grid.

                            This  was  Laila's  first  time  out  of the  house in weeks, discounting the
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