Page 313 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 313

"They're  fractures  along  the  earth's  crust,"  said  Aziza.  'They're called

                        faults."



                          It was a warm afternoon, a Friday, in June of 2001. They were sitting in

                        the  orphanage's  back  lot,  the  four of them, Laila, Zalmai, Mariam, and

                        Aziza.  Rasheed  had  relented  this  time-as  he  infrequently  did-and

                        accompanied  the  four  of  them. He was waiting  down  the  street, by the
                        bus stop.




                            Barefoot  kids  scampered  about  around  them.  A  flat  soccer  ball  was
                        kicked around, chased after listlessly.

                            "And,  on either side of the  faults, there are these sheets of rock that
                        make up the earth's crust," Aziza was saying.



                            Someone  had  pulled  the  hair  back  from  Aziza's  face,  braided it, and

                        pinned it neatly on top of her head. Laila begrudged whoever had gotten

                        to sit behind her daughter, to flip sections of her hair one over the other,
                        had asked her to sit still.

                          Aziza was demonstrating by opening her hands, palms up, and rubbing

                        them against each other. Zalmai watched this with intense interest.



                          "Kectonic plates, they're called?"



                            "Tectonic,  "Laila  said. It hurt to talk. Her jaw was still sore, her back

                        and  neck  ached.  Her  lip  was  swollen,  and  her  tongue  kept  poking  the
                        empty pocket of the  lower incisor Rasheed had knocked loose two days

                        before.  Before  Mammy  and  Babi  had  died  and  her  life  turned  upside

                        down,  Laila  never  would  have  believed  that  a  human  body  could

                        withstand  this  much  beating,  this  viciously,  this  regularly,  and  keep
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