Page 257 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 257

"You're not going to get on this bus. You might as well accept that. You

                        will follow me. Unless you want your little girl to see you dragged."
                          As they were led to a truck, Laila looked over her shoulder and spotted

                        Wakil's  boy  at  the  rear  of  the  bus.  The  boy  saw  her  too  and  waved
                        happily.



                        * * *
                          At the  police station at  Torabaz Khan  Intersection, they were made to

                        sit apart, on opposite  ends  of a long, crowded corridor, between them a

                        desk,  behind  which  a  man  smoked  one  cigarette  after  another  and
                        clacked occasionally on a typewriter. Three hours passed this way. Aziza

                        tottered  from  Laila  to Mariam, then back. She played  with  a paper  clip

                        that the man at the desk gave her. She finished the crackers. Eventually,
                        she fell asleep in Mariam's lap.

                          At around three o'clock, Laila was taken to an interview room. Mariam

                        was made to wait with Aziza in the corridor.

                          The man sitting on the other side of the desk in the interview room was
                        in his thirties and wore civilian clothes- black suit, tie, black loafers. He

                        had  a  neatly  trimmed  beard,  short  hair,  and  eyebrows  that  met.  He

                        stared at Laila, bouncing a pencil by the eraser end on the desk.

                            "We  know,"  he  began,  clearing  his  throat  and  politely  covering  his
                        mouth  with  a  fist,  "that  you  have  already  told  one lie today,  kamshira

                        The  young man at  the  station was not your cousin. He told us as  much

                        himself. The question is whether you will tell more lies today. Personally,
                        I advise you against it."

                          "We were going to stay with my uncle," Laila said "That's the truth."

                            The  policeman  nodded.  "The  hamshira  in  the  corridor,  she's  your
                        mother?"
                          "Yes."
                          "She has a Herati accent. You don't."

                          "She was raised in Herat, I was born here in Kabul."
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