Page 288 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 288

money from the  shop alone was no longer enough to sustain the five of

                        them. "I didn't tell you earlier to spare you the worrying."
                          "Besides," he said, "you'd be surprised how much they can bring in."

                            Laila  said  no  again.  They  were  in  the  living  room.  Mariam  and  the

                        children  were  in  the  kitchen.  Laila  could  hear  the  clatter  of  dishes,

                        Zalmai's  high-pitched  laugh,  Aziza  saying  something  to  Mariam  in  her
                        steady, reasonable voice.

                          "There will be others like her, younger even," Rasheed said. "Everyone

                        in Kabul is doing the same."



                          Laila told him she didn't care what other people did with their children.
                          "I'll keep a close eye on her," Rasheed said, less patiently now. "It's a

                        safe corner. There's a mosque across the street."

                          "I won't let you turn my daughter into a street beggar!" Laila snapped.

                           The slap made a loud smacking sound, the  palm of his thick-fingered
                        hand  connecting  squarely  with  the  meat  of  Laila's  cheek.  It  made  her

                        head whip around. It silenced the noises from the kitchen. For a moment,

                        the  house  was  perfectly  quiet.  Then a flurry of hurried footsteps in the

                        hallway  before  Mariam  and  the  children  were  in  the  living  room,  their
                        eyes shifting from her to Rasheed and back.

                          Then Laila punched him.

                            It  was  the  first  time  she'd  struck  anybody,  discounting  the  playful
                        punches  she  and  Tariq  used  to  trade.  But  those  had  been  open-fisted,

                        more  pats        than     punches,  self-consciously  friendly,  comfortable

                        expressions  of  anxieties  that  were  both  perplexing  and  thrilling.  They
                        would  aim  for  the  muscle  that Tariq, in a professorial voice, called the

                        deltoid

                          Laila watched the arch of her closed fist, slicing through the air, felt the

                        crinkle of Rasheed's stubbly, coarse skin under her knuckles. It made a
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