Page 332 - Leadership in the Indian Army
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sent you."



                            Tariq  had  liked  Murree  as  soon  as  he'd  stepped  off  the  bus:  the

                        snow-laden  pines;  the  cold,  crisp  air;  the  shuttered  wooden  cottages,

                        smoke curling up from chimneys.

                            Here  was  a  place,  Tariq  had  thought,  knocking  on  Sayeed's  door,  a
                        place  not  only  worlds  removed  from  the  wretchedness  he'd  known  but

                        one  that  made  even  the  notion  of  hardship  and  sorrow  somehow

                        obscene, unimaginable.



                          "I said to myself, here is a place where a man can get on."



                          Tariq was hired as a janitor and handyman. He did well, he said, during
                        the  one-month  trial  period,  at  half  pay,  that  Sayeed  granted  him.  As

                        Tariq  spoke,  Laila  saw  Sayeed,  whom  she  imagined  narrow-eyed  and

                        ruddy-faced, standing at the reception office window watching Tariq chop

                        wood  and  shovel  snow  off  the  driveway.  She  saw  him  stooping  over
                        Tariq's legs, observing, as Tariq lay beneath the sink fixing a leaky pipe.

                        She pictured him checking the register for missing cash.



                          Tariq's shack  was beside the  cook's little bungalow, he said. The cook

                        was a matronly old widow named Adiba. Both shacks were detached from

                        the  hotel  itself,  separated  from  the  main  building  by  a  scattering  of

                        almond trees, a park  bench,  and a pyramid-shaped stone fountain that,
                        in the  summer, gurgled water all day. Laila  pictured Tariq in his shack,

                        sitting up in bed, watching the leafy world outside his window.




                          At the  end of the  grace period, Sayeed raised Tariq's pay to full, told
                        him  his  lunches  were  free,  gave  him  a  wool  coat, and fitted him for a
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