Page 306 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 306

heads  of  some,  as  he  passed  by,  said  a  cordial  word  or  two  to  them,

                        tousled  their  hair,  without  condescension.  The  children  welcomed  his
                        touch. They all looked at him, Laila thought, in hope of approval.

                          He showed them into his office, a room with only three folding chairs,

                        and a disorderly desk with piles of paper scattered atop it.



                            "You're  from  Herat,"  Zaman  said  to  Mariam.  "I  can  tell  from  your

                        accent."


                          He leaned back in his chair and laced his hands over his belly, and said

                        he  had  a  brother-in-law who  used  to live there. Even in these ordinary

                        gestures,  Laila  noted a laborious quality to his movements. And though
                        he  was  smiling  faintly,  Laila  sensed  something  troubled  and  wounded

                        beneath, disappointment and defeat glossed over with a veneer of good

                        humor.



                            "He  was  a  glassmaker,"  Zaman  said.  "He  made these beautiful,  jade

                        green swans. You held them up to sunlight and they glittered inside, like
                        the glass was filled with tiny jewels. Have you been back?"




                          Mariam said she hadn't.
                            "I'm  from  Kandahar  myself.  Have  you  ever  been  to  Kandahar,
                                   1
                        hamshira ?  No?  It's  lovely.  What  gardens!  And  the  grapes!  Oh,  the

                        grapes. They bewitch the palate."
                          A  few children had gathered by the door and were peeking in. Zaman

                        gently shooed them away, in Pashto.



                            "Of  course  I  love  Herat  too.  City  of  artists  and  writers,  Sufis  and

                        mystics.  You  know  the  old  joke,  that  you  can't  stretch  a  leg  in  Herat

                        without poking a poet in the rear."
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