Page 383 - Leadership in the Indian Army
P. 383

As she leans back and watches Sayeed receding in the rear window of
                        the  bus, Laila  hears the voice of doubt whispering in her head. Are they

                        being  foolish,  she  wonders, leaving behind the  safety of Murree? Going

                        back  to  the  land  where  her  parents  and  brothers  perished,  where  the

                        smoke of bombs is only now settling?
                          And then,  from the  darkened spirals of her memory, rise two lines of

                        poetry, Babi's farewell ode to Kabul:



                            One  could  not  count  the  moons  that  shimmer  on  her  roofs,  Or  the

                        thousand splendid suns that hide behind her -walls.




                          Laila settles back in her seat, blinking the wetness from her eyes. Kabul
                        is waiting. Needing. This journey home is the right thing to do.

                          But first there is one last farewell to be said.



                        * * *


                            The  wars  in  Afghanistan  have  ravaged  the  roads  connecting  Kabul,

                        Herat, and Kandahar. The easiest way to Herat now is through Mashad, in

                        Iran. Laila and her family are there only overnight. They spend the night

                        at a hotel, and, the next morning, they board another bus.



                            Mashad  is  a  crowded,  bustling city. Laila  watches as  parks, mosques,

                        and chelo kebab restaurants  pass by. When the bus passes the shrine to

                        Imam Reza, the eighth Shi'a imam, Laila cranes her neck to get a better
                        view  of  its  glistening  tiles,  the  minarets, the  magnificent golden dome,

                        all of it immaculately and lovingly preserved. She thinks of the Buddhas

                        in  her  own  country.  They  are  grains  of  dust  now,  blowing  about  the
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