Page 283 - Leadership in the Indian Army
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behind their parched lands, selling off their goods, roaming from village

                        to  village  looking  for  water.  They  moved  to  Pakistan  or  Iran.  They
                        settled  in  Kabul.  But  water  tables  were  low  in  the  city  too,  and  the

                        shallow  wells  had  dried  up.  The  lines  at  the  deep  wells  were  so  long,

                        Laila  and Mariam would spend hours waiting their turn. The Kabul River,

                        without  its  yearly  spring  floods,  had  turned  bone-dry.  It  was  a  public
                        toilet now, nothing in it but human waste and rubble.

                            So  they  kept  swinging  the  spade  and  striking,  but  the  sun-blistered

                        ground had hardened like a rock, the dirt unyielding, compressed, almost

                        petrified.
                          Mariam was forty  now. Her hair, rolled up above her face,  had a few

                        stripes  of  gray  in  it.  Pouches  sagged  beneath  her  eyes,  brown  and

                        crescent-shaped.  She'd  lost  two  front  teeth.  One  fell  out,  the  other
                        Rasheed  knocked out when she'd accidentally dropped  Zalmai. Her skin

                        had coarsened, tanned from all the time they were spending in the yard

                        sitting  beneath the  brazen sun. They would sit and watch Zalmai chase
                        Aziza.

                            When  it  was  done,  when  the  hole  was  dug,  they  stood  over  it  and

                        looked down.

                          "It should do," Mariam said.



                        * * *


                          Zalmai was two now. He was a plump little boy with curly hair. He had

                        small  brownish  eyes,  and  a  rosy  tint  to  his  cheeks,  like  Rasheed,  no

                        matter  the  weather.  He  had  his  father's  hairline  too,  thick  and
                        half-moon-shaped, set low on his brow.

                          When Laila was alone with him, Zalmai was sweet, good-humored, and

                        playful.  He  liked  to climb Laila's shoulders,  play  hide-and-seek in the
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