If Peshawar was the city that reminded me of what Kabul used to be, then Islamabad was the city Kabul could have become someday. The streets were wider than Peshawarโs, cleaner, and lined with rows of hibiscus and flame trees. The bazaars were more organized and not nearly as clogged with rickshaws and pedestrians. The architecture was more elegant too, more modern, and I saw parks where roses and jasmine bloomed in the shadows of trees.
Farid found a small hotel on a side street running along the foot of the Margalla Hills.
We passed the famous Shah Faisal Mosque on the way there, reputedly the biggest mosque in the world, with its giant concrete girders and soaring minarets. Sohrab perked up at the sight of the mosque, leaned out of the window and looked at it until Farid turned a corner.
THE HOTEL ROOM was a vast improvement over the one in Kabul where Farid and I had stayed. The sheets were clean, the carpet vacuumed, and the bathroom spotless.
There was shampoo, soap, razors for shaving, a bathtub, and towels that smelled like lemon. And no bloodstains on the walls. One other thing: a television set sat on the dresser across from the two single beds.
โLook!โ I said to Sohrab. I turned it on manually–no remote–and turned the dial. I found a childrenโs show with two fluffy sheep puppets singing in Urdu. Sohrab sat on one of the beds and drew his knees to his chest. Images from the TV reflected in his green eyes as he watched, stone-faced, rocking back and forth. I remembered the time Iโd promised Hassan Iโd buy his family a color TV when we both grew up.
โIโll get going, Amir agha,โ Farid said.
โStay the night,โ I said. โItโs a long drive. Leave tomorrow.โ
โTashakor,โ he said. โBut I want to get back tonight. I miss my children.โ On his way out of the room, he paused in the doorway. โGood-bye, Sohrab jan,โ he said. He waited for a reply, but Sohrab paid him no attention. Just rocked back and forth, his face lit by the silver glow of the images flickering across the screen.
217
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
Outside, I gave him an envelope. When he tore it, his mouth opened.
โI didnโt know how to thank you,โ I said. โYouโve done so much for me.โ โHow much is in here?โ Farid said, slightly dazed.
โA little over two thousand dollars.โ
โTwo thou–โ he began. His lower lip was quivering a little. Later, when he pulled away from the curb, he honked twice and waved. I waved back. I never saw him again.
I returned to the hotel room and found Sohrab lying on the bed, curled up in a big C. His eyes were closed but I couldnโt tell if he was sleeping. He had shut off the television. I sat on my bed and grimaced with pain, wiped the cool sweat off my brow. I wondered how much longer it would hurt to get up, sit down, roll over in bed. I wondered when Iโd be able to eat solid food.
I wondered what Iโd do with the wounded little boy lying on the bed, though a part of me already knew.
There was a carafe of water on the dresser. I poured a glass and took two of Armandโs pain pills. The water was warm and bitter. I pulled the curtains, eased myself back on the bed, and lay down. I thought my chest would rip open. When the pain dropped a notch and I could breathe again, I pulled the blanket to my chest and waited for Armandโs pills to work.
WHEN I WOKE UP, the room was darker. The slice of sky peeking between the curtains was the purple of twilight turning into night. The sheets were soaked and my head pounded. Iโd been dreaming again, but I couldnโt remember what it had been about.
My heart gave a sick lurch when I looked to Sohrabโs bed and found it empty I called his name. The sound of my voice startled me. It was disorienting, sitting in a dark hotel room, thousands of miles from home, my body broken, calling the name of a boy Iโd only met a few days ago. I called his name again and heard nothing. I struggled out of bed, checked the bathroom, looked in the narrow hallway outside the room. He was gone.
I locked the door and hobbled to the managerโs office in the lobby, one hand clutching the rail along the walkway for support. There was a fake, dusty palm tree in the corner of the lobby and flying pink flamingos on the wallpaper. I found the hotel manager reading a newspaper behind the Formica-topped check-in counter. I described Sohrab
218
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
to him, asked if heโd seen him. He put down his paper and took off his reading glasses.
He had greasy hair and a square-shaped little mustache speckled with gray. He smelled vaguely of some tropical fruit I couldnโt quite recognize.
โBoys, they like to run around,โ he said, sighing. โI have three of them. All day they are running around, troubling their mother.โ He fanned his face with the newspaper, staring at my jaws.
โI donโt think heโs out running around,โ I said. โAnd weโre not from here. Iโm afraid he might get lost.โ
He bobbed his head from side to side. โThen you should have kept an eye on the boy, mister.โ
โI know,โ I said. โBut I fell asleep and when I woke up, he was gone.โ โBoys must be tended to, you know.โ
โYes,โ I said, my pulse quickening. How could he be so oblivious to my apprehension?
He shifted the newspaper to his other hand, resumed the fanning. โThey want bicycles nowโ
โWho?โ
โMy boys,โ he said. โTheyโre saying, โDaddy, Daddy, please buy us bicycles and weโll not trouble you. Please, Daddy!โ He gave a short laugh through his nose. โBicycles.
Their mother will kill me, I swear to you.โ
I imagined Sohrab lying in a ditch. Or in the trunk of some car, bound and gagged. I didnโt want his blood on my hands. Not his too. โPlease…โ I said. I squinted. Read his name tag on the lapel of his short-sleeve blue cotton shirt. โMr. Fayyaz, have you seen him?โ
โThe boy?โ
I bit down. โYes, the boy! The boy who came with me. Have you seen him or not, for Godโs sake?โ
The fanning stopped. His eyes narrowed. โNo getting smart with me, my friend. I am not the one who lost him.โ
219
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
That he had a point did not stop the blood from rushing to my face. โYouโre right. Iโm wrong. My fault. Now, have you seen him?โ
โSorry,โ he said curtly. He put his glasses back on. Snapped his newspaper open. โI have seen no such boy.โ
I stood at the counter for a minute, trying not to scream. As I was exiting the lobby, he said, โAny idea where he might have wandered to?โ
โNo,โ I said. I felt tired. Tired and scared.
โDoes he have any interests?โ he said. I saw he had folded the paper. โMy boys, for example, they will do anything for American action films, especially with that Arnold
??WThatsanegger–โ
โThe mosque!โ I said. โThe big mosque.โ I remembered the way the mosque had jolted Sohrab from his stupor when weโd driven by it, how heโd leaned out of the window looking at it.
โShah Faisal?โ
โYes. Can you take me there?โ
โDid you know itโs the biggest mosque in the world?โ he asked. โNo, but–โ
โThe courtyard alone can fit forty thousand people.โ โCan you take me there?โ
โItโs only a kilometer from here,โ he said. But he was already pushing away from the counter.
โIโll pay you for the ride,โ I said. 220
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
He sighed and shook his head. โWait here.โ He disappeared into the back room, returned wearing another pair of eyeglasses, a set of keys in hand, and with a short, chubby woman in an orange sari trailing him. She took his seat behind the counter. โI donโt take your money,โ he said, blowing by me. โI will drive you because I am a father like you.โ
I THOUGHT WEโD END UP DRIVING around the city until night fell. I saw myself calling the police, describing Sohrab to them under Fayyazโs reproachful glare. I heard the officer, his voice tired and uninterested, asking his obligatory questions. And beneath the official questions, an unofficial one: Who the hell cared about another dead Afghan kid?
But we found him about a hundred yards from the mosque, sitting in the half-full parking lot, on an island of grass. Fayyaz pulled up to the island and let me out. โI have to get back,โ he said.
โThatโs fine. Weโll walk back,โ I said. โThank you, Mr. Fayyaz. Really.โ
He leaned across the front seat when I got out. โCan I say something to you?โ
โSure.โ
In the dark of twilight, his face was just a pair of eyeglasses reflecting the fading light.
โThe thing about you Afghanis is that… well, you people are a little reckless.โ
I was tired and in pain. My jaws throbbed. And those damn wounds on my chest and stomach felt like barbed wire under my skin. But I started to laugh anyway.
โWhat… what did I…โ Fayyaz was saying, but I was cackling by then, full-throated bursts of laughter spilling through my wired mouth.
โCrazy people,โ he said. His tires screeched when he peeled away, his taillights blinking red in the dimming light.
โYou GAVE ME A GOOD SCARE,โ I said. I sat beside him, wincing with pain as I bent.
He was looking at the mosque. Shah Faisal Mosque was shaped like a giant tent. Cars came and went; worshipers dressed in white streamed in and out. We sat in silence, me leaning against the tree, Sohrab next to me, knees to his chest. We listened to the call
221
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
to prayer, watched the buildingโs hundreds of lights come on as daylight faded. The mosque sparkled like a diamond in the dark. It lit up the sky, Sohrabโs face.
โHave you ever been to Mazar-i-Sharif?โ Sohrab said, his chin resting on his kneecaps.
โA long time ago. I donโt remember it much.โ
โFather took me there when I was little. Mother and Sasa came along too. Father bought me a monkey from the bazaar. Not a real one but the kind you have to blow up.
It was brown and had a bow tie.โ
โI might have had one of those when I was a kid.โ
โFather took me to the Blue Mosque,โ Sohrab said. โI remember there were so many pigeons outside the masjid, and they werenโt afraid of people.
They came right up to us.
Sasa gave me little pieces of _naan_ and I fed the birds. Soon, there were pigeons cooing all around me. That was fun.โ
โYou must miss your parents very much,โ I said. I wondered if heโd seen the Taliban drag his parents out into the street. I hoped he hadnโt.
โDo you miss your parents?โ he aked, resting his cheek on his knees, looking up at me.
โDo I miss my parents? Well, I never met my mother. My father died a few years ago, and, yes, I do miss him. Sometimes a lot.โ
โDo you remember what he looked like?โ
I thought of Babaโs thick neck, his black eyes, his unruly brown hair. Sitting on his lap had been like sitting on a pair of tree trunks. โI remember what he looked like,โ I said.
โWhat he smelled like too.โ
โIโm starting to forget their faces,โ Sohrab said. โIs that bad?โ
โNo,โ I said. โTime does that.โ I thought of something. I looked in the front pocket of my coat. Found the Polaroid snap shot of Hassan and Sohrab. โHere,โ I said.
He brought the photo to within an inch of his face, turned it so the light from the mosque fell on it. He looked at it for a long time. I thought he might cry, but he didnโt. He just held it in both hands, traced his thumb over its surface. I thought of a line Iโd read
222
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
somewhere, or maybe Iโd heard someone say it: There are a lot of children in Afghanistan, but little childhood. He stretched his hand to give it back to me.
โKeep it,โ I said. โItโs yours.โ
โThank you.โ He looked at the photo again and stowed it in the pocket of his vest. A horse-drawn cart clip-clopped by in the parking lot. Little bells dangled from the horseโs neck and jingled with each step.
โIโve been thinking a lot about mosques lately,โ Sohrab said. โYou have? What about them?โ
He shrugged. โJust thinking about them.โ He lifted his face, looked straight at me. Now he was crying, softly, silently. โCan I ask you something, Amir agha?โ
โOf course.โ
โWill God…โ he began, and choked a little. โWill God put me in hell for what I did to that man?โ
I reached for him and he flinched. I pulled back. โNay. Of course not,โ I said. I wanted to pull him close, hold him, tell him the world had been unkind to him, not the other way around.
His face twisted and strained to stay composed. โFather used to say itโs wrong to hurt even bad people. Because they donโt know any better, and because bad people sometimes become good.โ
โNot always, Sohrab.โ
He looked at me questioningly.
โThe man who hurt you, I knew him from many years ago,โ I said. โI guess you figured that out that from the conversation he and I had. He… he tried to hurt me once when I was your age, but your father saved me. Your father was very brave and he was always rescuing me from trouble, standing up
for me. So one day the bad man hurt your father instead. He hurt him in a very bad way, and I… I couldnโt save your father the way he had saved me.โ
223
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โWhy did people want to hurt my father?โ Sohrab said in a wheezy little voice. โHe was never mean to anyone.โ
โYouโre right. Your father was a good man. But thatโs what Iโm trying to tell you, Sohrab jan. That there are bad people in this world, and sometimes bad people stay bad.
Sometimes you have to stand up to them. What you did to that man is what I should have done to him all those years ago. You gave him what he deserved, and he deserved even more.โ
โDo you think Father is disappointed in me?โ
โI know heโs not,โ I said. โYou saved my life in Kabul. I know he is very proud of you for that.โ
He wiped his face with the sleeve of his shirt. It burst a bubble of spittle that had formed on his lips. He buried his face in his hands and wept a long time before he spoke again.
โI miss Father, and Mother too,โ he croaked. โAnd I miss Sasa and Rahim Khan sahib.
But sometimes Iโm glad theyโre not … theyโre not here anymore.โ โWhy?โ I touched his arm. He drew back.
โBecause–โ he said, gasping and hitching between sobs, โbecause I donโt want them to see me… Iโm so dirty.โ He sucked in his breath and let it out in a long, wheezy cry. โIโm so dirty and full of sin.โ
โYouโre not dirty, Sohrab,โ I said.
โThose men–โ
โYouโre not dirty at all.โ
โ–they did things… the bad man and the other two… they did things… did things to me.โ
โYouโre not dirty, and youโre not full of sin.โ I touched his arm again and he drew away. I reached again, gently, and pulled him to me. โI wonโt hurt you,โ I whispered. โI promise.โ
He resisted a lit tle. Slackened. He let me draw him to me and rested his head on my chest. His little body convulsed in my arms with each sob.
A kinship exists between people whoโve fed from the same breast. Now, as the boyโs pain soaked through my shirt, I saw that a kinship had taken root between us too. What had happened in that room with Assef had irrevocably bound us.
224
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
Iโd been looking for the right time, the right moment, to ask the question that had been buzzing around in my head and keep ing me up at night. I decided the moment was now, right here, right now, with the bright lights of the house of God shining on us.
โWould you like to come live in America with me and my wife?โ He didnโt answer. He sobbed into my shirt and I let him.
FOR A WEEK, neither one of us mentioned what I had asked him, as if the question hadnโt been posed at all. Then one day, Sohrab and I took a taxicab to the Daman-e-Koh Viewpoint–or โthe hem of the mountain.โ Perched midway up the Margalla Hills, it gives a panoramic view of Islamabad, its rows of clean, tree-lined avenues and white houses. The driver told us we could see the presidential palace from up there. โIf it has rained and the air is clear, you can even see past Rawalpindi,โ he said. I saw his eyes in his
rearview mirror, skipping from Sohrab to me, back and forth, back and forth. I saw my own face too. It wasnโt as swollen as before, but it had taken on a yellow tint from my assortment of fading bruises.
We sat on a bench in one of the picnic areas, in the shade of a gum tree. It was a warm day, the sun perched high in a topaz blue sky. On benches nearby, families snacked on samosas and pakoras. Somewhere, a radio played a Hindi song I thought I remembered from an old movie, maybe Pakeeza. Kids, many of them Sohrabโs age, chased soccer balls, giggling, yelling. I thought about the orphanage in Karteh-Seh, thought about the rat that had scurried between my feet in Zamanโs office. My chest tightened with a surge of unexpected anger at the way my countrymen were destroying their own land.
โWhat?โ Sohrab asked. I forced a smile and told him it wasnโt important.
We unrolled one of the hotelโs bathroom towels on the picnic table and played panjpar on it. It felt good being there, with my half brotherโs son, playing cards, the warmth of the sun patting the back of my neck. The song ended and another one started, one I didnโt recognize.
โLook,โ Sohrab said. He was pointing to the sky with his cards. I looked up, saw a hawk circling in the broad seamless sky. โDidnโt know there were hawks in Islamabad,โ I said.
โMe neither,โ he said, his eyes tracing the birdโs circular flight. โDo they have them where you live?โ
225
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โSan Francisco? I guess so. I canโt say Iโve seen too many, though.โ
โOh,โ he said. I was hoping heโd ask more, but he dealt another hand and asked if we could eat. I opened the paper bag and gave him his meatball sandwich. My lunch consisted of yet another cup of blended bananas and oranges–Iโd rented Mrs. Fayyazโs blender for the week. I sucked through
the straw and my mouth filled with the sweet, blended fruit. Some of it dripped from the corner of my lips. Sohrab handed me a napkin and watched me dab at my lips. I smiled and he smiled back.
โYour father and I were brothers,โ I said. It just came out. I had wanted to tell him the night we had sat by the mosque, but I hadnโt. But he had a right to know; I didnโt want to hide anything anymore. โHalf brothers, really. We had the same father.โ
Sohrab stopped chewing. Put the sandwich down. โFather never said he had a brother.โ
โThatโs because he didnโt know.โ โWhy didnโt he know?โ
โNo one told him,โ I said. โNo one told me either. I just found out recently.โ
Sohrab blinked. Like he was looking at me, really looking at me, for the very first time.
โBut why did people hide it from Father and you?โ
โYou know, I asked myself that same question the other day. And thereโs an answer, but not a good one. Letโs just say they didnโt tell us because your father and I… we werenโt supposed to be brothers.โ
โBecause he was a Hazara?โ
I willed my eyes to stay on him. โYes.โ
โDid your father,โ he began, eyeing his food, โdid your father love you and my father equally?โ
I thought of a long ago day at Ghargha Lake, when Baba had allowed himself to pat Hassan on the back when Hassanโs stone had outskipped mine. I pictured Baba in the hospital room, beaming as they removed the bandages from Hassanโs lips. โI think he loved us equally but differently.โ
226
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โWas he ashamed of my father?โ
โNo,โ I said. โI think he was ashamed of himself.โ He picked up his sandwich and nibbled at it silently.
WE LEFT LATE THAT AFTERNOON, tired from the heat, but tired in a pleasant way.
All the way back, I felt Sohrab watching me. I had the driver pull over at a store that sold calling cards. I gave him the money and a tip for running in and buying me one.
That night, we were lying on our beds, watching a talk show on TV. Two clerics with pepper gray long beards and white turbans were taking calls from the faithful all over the world. One caller from Finland, a guy named Ayub, asked if his teenaged son could go to hell for wearing his baggy pants so low the seam of his underwear showed.
โI saw a picture of San Francisco once,โ Sohrab said. โReally?โ
โThere was a red bridge and a building with a pointy top.โ โYou should see the streets,โ I said.
โWhat about them?โ He was looking at me now. On the TV screen, the two mullahs were consulting each other.
โTheyโre so steep, when you drive up all you see is the hood of your car and the sky,โ I said.
โIt sounds scary,โ he said. He rolled to his side, facing me, his back to the TV.
โIt is the first few times,โ I said. โBut you get used to it.โ โDoes it snow there?โ
โNo, but we get a lot of fog. You know that red bridge you saw?โ 227
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โYes.โ
โSometimes the fog is so thick in the morning, all you see is the tip of the two towers poking through.โ
There was wonder in his smile. โOh.โ โSohrab?โ
โYes.โ
โHave you given any thought to what I asked you before?โ
His smiled faded. He rolled to his back. Laced his hands under his head. The mullahs decided that Ayubโs son would go to hell after all for wearing his pants the way he did.
They claimed it was in the Haddith. โIโve thought about it,โ Sohrab said. โAnd?โ
โIt scares me.โ
โI know itโs a little scary,โ I said, grabbing onto that loose thread of hope. โBut youโll learn English so fast and youโll get used to–โ
โThatโs not what I mean. That scares me too, but… โBut what?โ
He rolled toward me again. Drew his knees up. โWhat if you get tired of me? What if your wife doesnโt like me?โ
I struggled out of bed and crossed the space between us. I sat beside him. โI wonโt ever get tired of you, Sohrab,โ I said. โNot ever. Thatโs a promise.
Youโre my nephew, remember? And Soraya jan, sheโs a very kind woman. Trust me, sheโs going to love you. I promise that too.โ I chanced something. Reached down and took his hand. He tightened up a little but let me hold it.
โI donโt want to go to another orphanage,โ he said. 228
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โI wonโt ever let that happen. I promise you that.โ I cupped his hand in both of mine.
โCome home with me.โ
His tears were soaking the pillow. He didnโt say anything for a long time. Then his hand squeezed mine back. And he nodded. He nodded.
THE CONNECTION WENT THROUGH on the fourth try. The phone rang three times before she picked it up. โHello?โ It was 7:30 in the evening in Islamabad, roughly about the same time in the morning in California. That meant Soraya had been up for an hour, getting ready for school.
โItโs me,โ I said. I was sitting on my bed, watching Sohrab sleep. โAmir!โ she almost screamed. โAre you okay? Where are you?โ โIโm in Pakistan.โ
โWhy didnโt you call earlier? Iโve been sick with tashweesh! My motherโs praying and doing nazr every day.โ
โIโm sorry I didnโt call. Iโm fine now.โ I had told her Iโd be away a week, two at the most.
Iโd been gone for nearly a month. I smiled. โAnd tell Khala Jamila to stop killing sheep.โ
โWhat do you mean โfine nowโ? And whatโs wrong with your voice?โ
โDonโt worry about that for now. Iโm fine. Really. Soraya, I have a story to tell you, a story I should have told you a long time ago, but first I need to tell you one thing.โ
โWhat is it?โ she said, her voice lower now, more cautious.
โIโm not coming home alone. Iโm bringing a little boy with me.โ I paused. โI want us to adopt him.โ
โWhat?โ 229
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
I checked my watch. โI have fifty-seven minutes left on this stupid calling card and I have so much to tell you. Sit some where.โ I heard the legs of a chair dragged hurriedly across the wooden floor.
โGo ahead,โ she said.
Then I did what I hadnโt done in fifteen years of marriage: I told my wife everything.
Everything. I had pictured this moment so many times, dreaded it, but, as I spoke, I felt something lifting off my chest. I imagined Soraya had experienced something very similar the night of our khastegari, when sheโd told me about her past.
By the time I was done with my story, she was weeping. โWhat do you think?โ I said.
โI donโt know what to think, Amir. Youโve told me so much all at once.โ
โI realize that.โ
I heard her blowing her nose. โBut I know this much: You have to bring him home. I want you to.โ
โAre you sure?โ I said, closing my eyes and smiling.
โAm I sure?โ she said. โAmir, heโs your qaom, your family, so heโs my qaom too. Of course Iโm sure. You canโt leave him to the streets.โ There was a short pause. โWhatโs he like?โ
I looked over at Sohrab sleeping on the bed. โHeโs sweet, in a solemn kind of way.โ
โWho can blame him?โ she said. โI want to see him, Amir. I really do.โ โSoraya?โ
โYeah.โ
โDostet darum.โ I love you. 230
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โI love you back,โ she said. I could hear the smile in her words. โAnd be careful.โ
โI will. And one more thing. Donโt tell your parents who he is. If they need to know, it should come from me.โ
โOkay.โ
We hung up.
THE LAWN OUTSIDE the American embassy in Islamabad was neatly mowed, dotted with circular clusters of flowers, bordered by razor-straight hedges. The building itself was like a lot of buildings in Islamabad: flat and
white. We passed through several road blocks to get there and three different security officials conducted a body search on me after the wires in my jaws set off the metal detectors. When we finally stepped in from the heat, the airconditioning hit my face like a splash of ice water. The secretary in the lobby, a fifty-something, lean-faced blond woman, smiled when I gave her my name.
She wore a beige blouse and black slacks–the first woman Iโd seen in weeks dressed in something other than a burqa or a shalwar-kameez. She looked me up on the appointment list, tapping the eraser end of her pencil on the desk. She found my name and asked me to take a seat.
โWould you like some lemonade?โ she asked. โNone for me, thanks,โ I said.
โHow about your son?โ โExcuse me?โ
โThe handsome young gentleman,โ she said, smiling at Sohrab. โOh. Thatโd be nice, thank you.โ
Sohrab and I sat on the black leather sofa across the reception desk, next to a tall American flag. Sohrab picked up a magazine from the glass-top coffee table. He flipped the pages, not really looking at the pictures.
โWhat?โ Sohrab said. 231
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โSorry?โ
โYouโre smiling.โ
โI was thinking about you,โ I said.
He gave a nervous smile. Picked up another magazine and flipped through it in under thirty seconds.
โDonโt be afraid,โ I said, touching his arm. โThese people are friendly. Relax.โ I could have used my own advice. I kept shifting in my seat, untying and retying my shoelaces.
The secretary placed a tall glass of lemonade with ice on the coffee table. โThere you go.โ
Sohrab smiled shyly. โThank you very much,โ he said in English. It came out as โTank you wery match.โ It was the only English he knew, heโd told me, that and โHave a nice day.โ
She laughed. โYouโre most welcome.โ She walked back to her desk, high heels clicking on the floor.
โHave a nice day,โ Sohrab said.
RAYMOND ANDREWS was a short fellow with small hands, nails perfectly trimmed, wedding band on the ring finger. He gave me a curt little shake; it felt like squeezing a sparrow. Those are the hands that hold our fates, I thought as Sohrab and I seated our selves across from his desk. A
_Les Misรฉrables_ poster was nailed to the wall behind Andrews next to a topographical map of the U.S. A pot of tomato plants basked in the sun on the windowsill.
โSmoke?โ he asked, his voice a deep baritone that was at odds with his slight stature.
โNo thanks,โ I said, not caring at all for the way Andrewsโs eyes barely gave Sohrab a glance, or the way he didnโt look at me when he spoke. He pulled open a desk drawer and lit a cigarette from a half-empty pack. He also produced a bottle of lotion from the same drawer. He looked at his tomato plants as he rubbed lotion into his hands, cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth. Then he closed the drawer, put his elbows on the desktop, and exhaled. โSo,โ he said, crinkling his gray eyes against the smoke, โtell me your story.โ
232
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
I felt like Jean Valjean sitting across from Javert. I reminded myself that I was on American soil now, that this guy was on my side, that he got paid for helping people like me. โI want to adopt this boy, take him back to the States with me,โ I said.
โTell me your story,โ he repeated, crushing a flake of ash on the neatly arranged desk with his index finger, flicking it into the trash can.
I gave him the version I had worked out in my head since Iโd hung up with Soraya. I had gone into Afghanistan to bring back my half brotherโs son. I had found the boy in squalid conditions, wasting away in an orphanage. I had paid the orphanage director a sum of money and withdrawn the boy.
Then I had brought him to Pakistan. โYou are the boyโs half uncle?โ โYes.โ
He checked his watch. Leaned and turned the tomato plants on the sill. โKnow anyone who can attest to that?โ
โYes, but I donโt know where he is now.โ
He turned to me and nodded. I tried to read his face and couldnโt. I wondered if heโd ever tried those little hands of his at poker.
โI assume getting your jaws wired isnโt the latest fashion statement,โ he said. We were in trouble, Sohrab and I, and I knew it then. I told him Iโd gotten mugged in Peshawar.
โOf course,โ he said. Cleared his throat. โAre you Muslim?โ โYes.โ
โPracticing?โ
โYes.โ In truth, I didnโt remember the last time I had laid my forehead to the ground in prayer. Then I did remember: the day Dr. Amani gave Baba his prognosis. I had kneeled on the prayer rug, remembering only fragments of verses I had learned in school.
233
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โHelps your case some, but not much,โ he said, scratching a spot on the flawless part in his sandy hair.
โWhat do you mean?โ I asked. I reached for Sohrabโs hand, intertwined my fingers with his. Sohrab looked uncertainly from me to Andrews.
โThereโs a long answer and Iโm sure Iโll end up giving it to you. You want the short one first?โ
โI guess,โ I said.
Andrews crushed his cigarette, his lips pursed. โGive it up.โ โIโm sorry?โ
โYour petition to adopt this young fellow. Give it up. Thatโs my advice to you.โ
โDuly noted,โ I said. โNow, perhaps youโll tell me why.โ
โThat means you want the long answer,โ he said, his voice impassive, not reacting at all to my curt tone. He pressed his hands palm to palm, as if he were kneeling before the Virgin Mary. โLetโs assume the story you gave me is true, though Iโd bet my pension a good deal of it is either fabricated or omitted. Not that I care, mind you. Youโre here, heโs here, thatโs all that matters. Even so, your petition faces significant obstacles, not the least of which is that this child is not an orphan.โ
โOf course he is.โ
โNot legally he isnโt.โ
โHis parents were executed in the street. The neighbors saw it,โ I said, glad we were speaking in English.
โYou have death certificates?โ
โDeath certificates? This is Afghanistan weโre talking about. Most people there donโt have birth certificates.โ
234
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
His glassy eyes didnโt so much as blink. โI donโt make the laws, sir. Your outrage notwithstanding, you still need to prove the parents are deceased. The boy has to be declared a legal orphan.โ
โBut–โ
โYou wanted the long answer and Iโm giving it to you. Your next problem is that you need the cooperation of the childโs country of origin. Now, thatโs difficult under the best of circumstances, and, to quote you, this is Afghanistan weโre talking about. We donโt have an American embassy in Kabul. That makes things extremely complicated. Just about impossible.โ
โWhat are you saying, that I should throw him back on the streets?โ I said. โI didnโt say that.โ
โHe was s*xually abused,โ I said, thinking of the bells around Sohrabโs ankles, the mascara on his eyes.
โIโm sorry to hear that,โ Andrewsโs mouth said. The way he was looking at me, though, we might as well have been talking about the weather. โBut that is not going to make the INS issue this young fellow a visa.โ
โWhat are you saying?โ
โIโm saying that if you want to help, send money to a reputable relief organization.
Volunteer at a refugee camp. But at this point in time, we strongly discourage U.S.
citizens from attempting to adopt Afghan children.โ
I got up. โCome on, Sohrab,โ I said in Farsi. Sohrab slid next to me, rested his head on my hip. I remembered the Polaroid of him and Hassan standing that same way. โCan I ask you some thing, Mr. Andrews?โ
โYes.โ
โDo you have children?โ
For the first time, he blinked.
โWell, do you? Itโs a simple question.โ 235
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
He was silent.
โI thought so,โ I said, taking Sohrabโs hand. โThey ought to put someone in your chair who knows what itโs like to want a child.โ I turned to go, Sohrab trailing me.
โCan I ask you a question?โ Andrews called. โGo ahead.โ
โHave you promised this child youโll take him with you?โ โWhat if I have?โ
He shook his head. โItโs a dangerous business, making promises to kids.โ He sighed and opened his desk drawer again. โYou mean to pursue this?โ he said, rummaging through papers.
โI mean to pursue this.โ
He produced a business card. โThen I advise you to get a good immigration lawyer.
Omar Faisal works here in Islamabad. You can tell him I sent you.โ I took the card from him. โThanks,โ I muttered.
โGood luck,โ he said. As we exited the room, I glanced over my shoulder. Andrews was standing in a rectangle of sunlight, absently staring out the window, his hands turning the potted tomato plants toward the sun, petting them lovingly.
โTAKE CARE,โ the secretary said as we passed her desk.
โYour boss could use some manners,โ I said. I expected her to roll her eyes, maybe nod in that โI know, everybody says that,โ kind of way. Instead, she lowered her voice. โPoor Ray. He hasnโt been the same since his daughter died.โ
I raised an eyebrow. โSuicide,โ she whispered. 236
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
ON THE TAXI RIDE back to the hotel, Sohrab rested his head on the window, kept staring at the passing buildings, the rows of gum trees. His breath fogged the glass, cleared, fogged it again. I waited for him to ask me about the meeting but he didnโt.
ON THE OTHER SIDE of the closed bathroom door the water was running. Since the day weโd checked into the hotel, Sohrab took a long bath every night before bed. In Kabul, hot running water had been like fathers, a rare commodity. Now Sohrab spent almost an hour a night in the bath, soaking in the soapy water, scrubbing. Sitting on the edge of the bed, I called Soraya. I glanced at the thin line of light under the bathroom door.
Do you feel clean yet, Sohrab?
I passed on to Soraya what Raymond Andrews had told me. โSo what do you think?โ I said.
โWe have to think heโs wrong.โ She told me she had called a few adoption agencies that arranged international adoptions. She hadnโt yet found one that would consider doing an Afghan adoption, but she was still looking.
โHow are your parents taking the news?โ
โMadar is happy for us. You know how she feels about you, Amir, you can do no wrong in her eyes. Padar… well, as always, heโs a little harder to read. Heโs not saying much.โ
โAnd you? Are you happy?โ
I heard her shifting the receiver to her other hand. โI think weโll be good for your nephew, but maybe that little boy will be good for us too.โ
โI was thinking the same thing.โ
โI know it sounds crazy, but I find myself wondering what his favorite
_qurma_ will be, or his favorite subject in school. I picture myself helping him with homework…โ She laughed. In the bathroom, the water had stopped running. I could hear Sohrab in there, shifting in the tub, spilling water over the sides.
โYouโre going to be great,โ I said. 237
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โOh, I almost forgot! I called Kaka Sharif.โ
I remembered him reciting a poem at our nika from a scrap of hotel stationery paper.
His son had held the Koran over our heads as Soraya and I had walked toward the stage, smiling at the flashing cameras. โWhat did he say?โ
โWell, heโs going to stir the pot for us. Heโll call some of his INS buddies,โ she said.
โThatโs really great news,โ I said. โI canโt wait for you to see Sohrab.โ โI canโt wait to see you,โ she said.
I hung up smiling.
Sohrab emerged from the bathroom a few minutes later. He had barely said a dozen words since the meeting with Raymond Andrews and my attempts at conversation had only met with a nod or a monosyllabic reply. He climbed into bed, pulled the blanket to his chin. Within minutes, he was snoring.
I wiped a circle on the fogged-up mirror and shaved with one of the hotelโs old-fashioned razors, the type that opened and you slid the blade in. Then I took my own bath, lay there until the steaming hot water turned cold and my skin shriveled up. I lay there drifting, wondering, imagining…
OMAR FAISAL WAS CHUBBY, dark, had dimpled cheeks, black button eyes, and an affable, gap-toothed smile. His thinning gray hair was tied back in a ponytail. He wore a brown corduroy suit with leather elbow patches and carried a worn, overstuffed briefcase. The handle was missing, so he clutched the briefcase to his chest. He was the sort of fellow who started a lot of sentences with a laugh and an unnecessary apology, like Iโm sorry, Iโll be there at five. Laugh. When I had called him, he had insisted on coming out to meet us. โIโm sorry, the cabbies in this town are sharks,โ he said in perfect English, without a trace of an accent. โThey smell a foreigner, they triple their fares.โ
He pushed through the door, all smiles and apologies, wheezing a little and sweating.
He wiped his brow with a handkerchief and opened his briefcase, rummaged in it for a notepad and apologized for the sheets of paper that spilled on the bed. Sitting crosslegged on his bed, Sohrab kept one eye on the muted television, the other on the harried lawyer. I had told him in the morning that Faisal would be coming and he had nodded, almost asked some thing, and had just gone on watching a show with talking animals.
238
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โHere we are,โ Faisal said, flipping open a yellow legal notepad. โI hope my children take after their mother when it comes to organization. Iโm sorry, probably not the sort of thing you want to hear from your prospective lawyer, heh?โ He laughed.
โWell, Raymond Andrews thinks highly of you.โ
โMr. Andrews. Yes, yes. Decent fellow. Actually, he rang me and told me about you.โ
โHe did?โ
โOh yes.โ
โSo youโre familiar with my situation.โ
Faisal dabbed at the sweat beads above his lips. โIโm familiar with the version of the situation you gave Mr. Andrews,โ he said. His cheeks dimpled with a coy smile. He turned to Sohrab. โThis must be the young man whoโs causing all the trouble,โ he said in Farsi.
โThis is Sohrab,โ I said. โSohrab, this is Mr. Faisal, the lawyer I told you about.โ
Sohrab slid down the side of his bed and shook hands with Omar Faisal. โSalaam alaykum,โ he said in a low voice.
โAlaykum salaam, Sohrab,โ Faisal said. โDid you know you are named after a great warrior?โ
Sohrab nodded. Climbed back onto his bed and lay on his side to watch TV.
โI didnโt know you spoke Farsi so well,โ I said in English. โDid you grow up in Kabul?โ
โNo, I was born in Karachi. But I did live in Kabul for a number of years. Shar-e-Nau, near the Haji Yaghoub Mosque,โ Faisal said. โI grew up in Berkeley, actually. My father opened a music store there in the late sixties. Free love, headbands, tiedyed shirts, you name it.โ He leaned forward. โI was at Woodstock.โ
239
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โGroovy,โ I said, and Faisal laughed so hard he started sweating all over again.
โAnyway,โ I continued, โwhat I told Mr. Andrews was pretty much it, save for a thing or two. Or maybe three. Iโll give you the uncensored version.โ
He licked a finger and flipped to a blank page, uncapped his pen. โIโd appreciate that, Amir. And why donโt we just keep it in English from here on out?โ
โFine.โ
I told him everything that had happened. Told him about my meeting with Rahim Khan, the trek to Kabul, the orphanage, the stoning at Ghazi Stadium.
โGod,โ he whispered. โIโm sorry, I have such fond memories of Kabul. Hard to believe itโs the same place youโre telling me about.โ
โHave you been there lately?โ โGod no.โ
โItโs not Berkeley, Iโll tell you that,โ I said. โGo on.โ
I told him the rest, the meeting with Assef, the fight, Sohrab and his slingshot, our escape back to Pakistan. When I was done, he scribbled a few notes, breathed in deeply, and gave me a sober look. โWell, Amir, youโve got a tough battle ahead of you.โ
โOne I can win?โ
He capped his pen. โAt the risk of sounding like Raymond Andrews, itโs not likely. Not impossible, but hardly likely.โ Gone was the affable smile, the playful look in his eyes.
โBut itโs kids like Sohrab who need a home the most,โ I said. โThese rules and regulations donโt make any sense to me.โ
โYouโre preaching to the choir, Amir,โ he said. โBut the fact is, take current immigration laws, adoption agency policies, and the political situation in Afghanistan, and the deck is stacked against you.โ
240
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โI donโt get it,โ I said. I wanted to hit something. โI mean, I get it but I donโt get it.โ
Omar nodded, his brow furrowed. โWell, itโs like this. In the aftermath of a disaster, whether it be natural or man-made–and the Taliban are a disaster, Amir, believe me–itโs always difficult to ascertain that a child is an orphan. Kids get displaced in refugee camps, or parents just abandon them because they canโt take care of them. Happens all the time. So the INS wonโt grant a
visa unless itโs clear the child meets the definition of an eligible orphan. Iโm sorry, I know it sounds ridiculous, but you need death certificates.โ
โYouโve been to Afghanistan,โ I said. โYou know how improbable that is.โ
โI know,โ he said. โBut letโs suppose itโs clear that the child has no surviving parent.
Even then, the INS thinks itโs good adoption practice to place the child with someone in his own country so his heritage can be preserved.โ
โWhat heritage?โ I said. โThe Taliban have destroyed what heritage Afghans had. You saw what they did to the giant Buddhas in Bamiyan.โ
โIโm sorry, Iโm telling you how the INS works, Amir,โ Omar said, touching my arm. He glanced at Sohrab and smiled. Turned back to me. โNow, a child has to be legally adopted according to the laws and regulations of his own country. But when you have a country in turmoil, say a country like Afghanistan, government offices are busy with emergencies, and processing adoptions wonโt be a top priority.โ
I sighed and rubbed my eyes. A pounding headache was settling in just behind them.
โBut letโs suppose that somehow Afghanistan gets its act together,โ Omar said, crossing his arms on his protruding belly. โIt still may not permit this adoption. In fact, even the more moderate Muslim nations are hesitant with adoptions because in many of those countries, Islamic law, Shariโa, doesnโt recognize adoption.โ
โYouโre telling me to give it up?โ I asked, pressing my palm to my forehead.
โI grew up in the U.S., Amir. If America taught me anything, itโs that quitting is right up there with pissing in the Girl Scoutsโ lemonade jar. But, as your lawyer, I have to give you the facts,โ he said. โFinally, adoption agencies routinely send staff members to evaluate the childโs milieu, and no reasonable agency is going to send an agent to Afghanistan.โ
I looked at Sohrab sitting on the bed, watching TV, watching us. He was sitting the way his father used to, chin resting on one knee.
241
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โIโm his half uncle, does that count for anything?โ
โIt does if you can prove it. Iโm sorry, do you have any papers or anyone who can support you?โ
โNo papers,โ I said, in a tired voice. โNo one knew about it. Sohrab didnโt know until I told him, and I myself didnโt find out until recently. The only other person who knows is gone, maybe dead.โ
โWhat are my options, Omar?โ
โIโll be frank. You donโt have a lot of them.โ โWell, Jesus, what can I do?โ
Omar breathed in, tapped his chin with the pen, let his breath out. โYou could still file an orphan petition, hope for the best. You could do an independent adoption. That means youโd have to live with Sohrab here in Pakistan, day in and day out, for the next two years. You could seek asylum on his behalf. Thatโs a lengthy process and youโd have to prove political persecution. You could request a humanitarian visa. Thatโs at the discretion of the attorney general and itโs not easily given.โ He paused. โThere is another option, probably your best shot.โ
โWhat?โ I said, leaning forward.
โYou could relinquish him to an orphanage here, then file an orphan petition. Start your I-600 form and your home study while heโs in a safe place.โ
โWhat are those?โ
โIโm sorry, the 1-600 is an INS formality. The home study is done by the adoption agency you choose,โ Omar said. โItโs, you know, to make sure you and your wife arenโt raving lunatics.โ
โI donโt want to do that,โ I said, looking again at Sohrab. โI promised him I wouldnโt send him back to an orphanage.โ
โLike I said, it may be your best shot.โ 242
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
We talked a while longer. Then I walked him out to his car, an old VW Bug. The sun was setting on Islamabad by then, a flaming red nimbus in the west. I watched the car tilt under Omarโs weight as he somehow managed to slide in behind the wheel. He rolled down the window. โAmir?โ
โYes.โ
โI meant to tell you in there, about what youโre trying to do? I think itโs pretty great.โ
He waved as he pulled away. Standing outside the hotel room and waving back, I wished Soraya could be there with me.
SOHRAB HAD TURNED OFF THE TV when l went back into the room. I sat on the edge of my bed, asked him to sit next to me. โMr. Faisal thinks there is a way I can take you to America with me,โ I said.
โHe does?โ Sohrab said, smiling faintly for the first time in days. โWhen can we go?โ
โWell, thatโs the thing. It might take a little while. But he said it can be done and heโs going to help us.โ I put my hand on the back of his neck. From outside, the call to prayer blared through the streets.
โHow long?โ Sohrab asked.
โI donโt know. A while.โ
Sohrab shrugged and smiled, wider this time. โI donโt mind. I can wait. Itโs like the sour apples.โ
โSour apples?โ
โOne time, when I was really little, I climbed a tree and ate these green, sour apples. My stomach swelled and became hard like a drum, it hurt a lot. Mother said that if Iโd just waited for the apples to ripen, I wouldnโt have become sick. So now, whenever I really want something, I try to remember what she said about the apples.โ
โSour apples,โ I said. โ_Mashallah_, youโre just about the smartest little guy Iโve ever met, Sohrab jan.โ His ears reddened with a blush.
โWill you take me to that red bridge? The one with the fog?โ he said. 243
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โAbsolutely,โ I said. โAbsolutely.โ
โAnd weโll drive up those streets, the ones where all you see is the hood of the car and the sky?โ
โEvery single one of them,โ I said. My eyes stung with tears and I blinked them away.
โIs English hard to learn?โ
โI say, within a year, youโll speak it as well as Farsi.โ โReally?โ
โYes.โ I placed a finger under his chin, turned his face up to mine. โThere is one other thing, Sohrab.โ
โWhat?โ
โWell, Mr. Faisal thinks that it would really help if we could… if we could ask you to stay in a home for kids for a while.โ
โHome for kids?โ he said, his smile fading. โYou mean an orphanage?โ โIt would only be for a little while.โ
โNo,โ he said. โNo, please.โ
โSohrab, it would be for just a little while. I promise.โ
โYou promised youโd never put me in one of those places, Amir agha,โ he said. His voice was breaking, tears pooling in his eyes. I felt like a prick.
โThis is different. It would be here, in Islamabad, not in Kabul. And Iโd visit you all the time until we can get you out and take you to America.โ
โPlease! Please, no!โ he croaked. โIโm scared of that place. Theyโll hurt me! I donโt want to go.โ
244
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
โNo one is going to hurt you. Not ever again.โ
โYes they will! They always say they wonโt but they lie. They lie! Please, God!โ
I wiped the tear streaking down his cheek with my thumb. โSour apples, remember? Itโs just like the sour apples,โ I said softly.
โNo itโs not. Not that place. God, oh God. Please, no!โ He was trembling, snot and tears mixing on his face.
โShhh.โ I pulled him close, wrapped my arms around his shaking little body. โShhh. Itโll be all right. Weโll go home together. Youโll see, itโll be all
right.โ
His voice was muffled against my chest, but I heard the panic in it. โPlease promise you wonโt! Oh God, Amir agha! Please promise you wonโt!โ
How could I promise? I held him against me, held him tightly, and rocked badk and forth. He wept into my shirt until his tears dried, until his shaking stopped and his frantic pleas dwindled to indecipherable mumbles. I waited, rocked him until his breathing slowed and his body slackened. I remembered something I had read somewhere a long time ago: Thatโs how children deal with terror. They fall asleep.
I carried him to his bed, set him down. Then I lay in my own bed, looking out the window at the purple sky over Islamabad.
THE SKY WAS A DEEP BLACK when the phone jolted me from sleep. I rubbed my eyes and turned on the bedside lamp. It was a little past 10:30 P.M.; Iโd been sleeping for almost three hours. I picked up the phone. โHello?โ
โCall from America.โ Mr. Fayyazโs bored voice.
โThank you,โ I said. The bathroom light was on; Sohrab was taking his nightly bath. A couple of clicks and then Soraya:
โSalaam!โ She sounded excited.
โHow did the meeting go with the lawyer?โ 245
โThe Kite Runnerโ By Khaled Hosseini
I told her what Omar Faisal had suggested. โWell, you can forget about it,โ she said.
โWe wonโt have to do that.โ
I sat up. โRawsti? Why, whatโs up?โ
โI heard back from Kaka Sharif. He said the key was getting Sohrab into the country.
Once heโs in, there are ways of keeping him here. So he made a few calls to his INS
friends. He called me back tonight and said he was almost certain he could get Sohrab a humanitarian visa.โ
โNo kidding?โ I said. โOh thank God! Good olโ Sharifjan!โ
โI know. Anyway, weโll serve as the sponsors. It should all happen pretty quickly. He said the visa would be good for a year, plenty of time to apply for an adoption petition.โ
โItโs really going to happen, Soraya, huh?โ
โIt looks like it,โ she said. She sounded happy. I told her I loved her and she said she loved me back. I hung up.
โSohrab!โ I called, rising from my bed. โI have great news.โ I knocked on the bathroom door. โSohrab! Soraya jan just called from California. We wonโt have to put you in the orphanage, Sohrab. Weโre going to America, you and I. Did you hear me? Weโre going to America!โ
I pushed the door open. Stepped into the bathroom.
Suddenly I was on my knees, screaming. Screaming through my clenched teeth.
Screaming until I thought my throat would rip and my chest explode. Later, they said I was still screaming when the ambulance arrived.