Page 290 - Leadership in the Indian Army
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"Gently," Mariam said now, her knees over the edge. They lowered the
                        TV into the hole by each clutching one end of the plastic sheet in which it

                        was wrapped

                          "That should do it," Mariam said.

                            They  patted  the  dirt  when  they  were  done, filling the  hole up again.
                        They tossed some of it around so it wouldn't look conspicuous.

                          "There," Mariam said, wiping her hands on her dress.

                          When it was safer, they'd agreed, when the  Taliban cut down on their

                        raids,  in a month or two or six, or maybe longer, they would dig the TV
                        up.




                        * * *


                          In Laila'S dream, she and Mariam are out behind the toolshed digging

                        again. But, this time, it's Aziza they're lowering into the  ground. Aziza's

                        breath  fogs  the  sheet  of  plastic  in  which  they  have  wrapped her. Laila
                        sees  her  panicked  eyes,  the  whiteness  of  her  palms  as  they  slap  and

                        push against the  sheet. Aziza pleads. Laila  can't hear her screams. Only
                        for a while, she calls down, it's only for a while. It's the raids, don't you

                        know, my love? When the raids are over, Mammy and Khala Mariam will

                        dig you out.  I promise, my love.  Then we can play. We can play all you

                        want.  She fills the  shovel. Laila  woke up,  out of breath, with  a taste of

                        soil in her mouth, when the first granular lumps of dirt hit the plastic.



                        41.
                          Madam
                          In the summer of 2000, the drought reached its third and worst year.

                            In  Helmand,  Zabol,  Kandahar,  villages  turned  into  herds  of  nomadic

                        communities, always moving, searching for water and green pastures for
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