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Chapter no 38

A Thousand Splendid Suns

Laila

Laila was glad, when the Taliban went to work, that Babi wasnโ€™t around to witness it. It would have crippled him.

Men wielding pickaxes swarmed the dilapidated Kabul Museum and smashed pre-Islamic statues to rubbleโ€”that is, those that hadnโ€™t already been looted by the Mujahideen. The university was shut down and its students sent home. Paintings were ripped from walls, shredded with blades. Television screens were kicked in. Books, except the Koran, were burned in heaps, the stores that sold them closed down. The poems of Khalili, Pajwak, Ansari, Haji Dehqan, Ashraqi, Beytaab, Hafez, Jami, Nizami, Rumi, Khayyรกm, Beydel, and more went up in smoke.

Laila heard of men being dragged from the streets, accused of skippingย namaz, and shoved into mosques. She learned that Marco Polo Restaurant, near Chicken Street, had been turned into an interrogation center. Sometimes screaming was heard from behind its black-painted windows. Everywhere, the Beard Patrol roamed the streets in Toyota trucks on the lookout for clean-shaven faces to bloody.

They shut down the cinemas too. Cinema Park. Ariana. Aryub.

Projection rooms were ransacked and reels of films set to fire. Laila remembered all the times she and Tariq had sat in those theaters and watched Hindi films, all those melodramatic tales of lovers separated by some tragic turn of fate, one adrift in some faraway land, the other forced into marriage, the weeping, the singing in fields of marigolds, the longing for reunions. She remembered how Tariq would laugh at her for crying at those films.

โ€œI wonder what theyโ€™ve done to my fatherโ€™s cinema,โ€ Mariam said to her one day. โ€œIf itโ€™s still there, that is. Or if he still owns it.โ€

Kharabat, Kabulโ€™s ancient music ghetto, was silenced. Musicians were beaten and imprisoned, theirย rubabs,ย tam-bouras, and harmoniums

trampled upon. The Taliban went to the grave of Tariqโ€™s favorite singer, Ahmad Zahir, and fired bullets into it.

โ€œHeโ€™s been dead for almost twenty years,โ€ Laila said to Mariam. โ€œIsnโ€™t dying once enough?โ€

RASHEED WASNโ€™T BOTHERED much by the Taliban. All he had to do was grow a beard, which he did, and visit the mosque, which he also did. Rasheed regarded the Taliban with a forgiving, affectionate kind of

bemusement, as one might regard an erratic cousin prone to unpredictable acts of hilarity and scandal.

Every Wednesday night, Rasheed listened to the Voice ofย Shariโ€™aย when the Taliban would announce the names of those scheduled for punishment. Then, on Fridays, he went to Ghazi Stadium, bought a Pepsi, and watched the spectacle. In bed, he made Laila listen as he described with a queer sort of exhilaration the hands heโ€™d seen severed, the lashings, the hangings, the beheadings.

โ€œI saw a man today slit the throat of his brotherโ€™s murderer,โ€ he said one night, blowing halos of smoke.

โ€œTheyโ€™re savages,โ€ Laila said.

โ€œYou think?โ€ he said. โ€œCompared to what? The Soviets killed a million people. Do you know how many people the Mujahideen killed in Kabul alone these last four years? Fifty thousand.ย Fifty thousand!ย Is it so insensible, by comparison, to chop the hands off a few thieves? Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth. Itโ€™s in the Koran. Besides, tell me this: If someone killed Aziza, wouldnโ€™t you want the chance to avenge her?โ€

Laila shot him a disgusted look. โ€œIโ€™m making a point,โ€ he said. โ€œYouโ€™re just like them.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s an interesting eye color she has, Aziza. Donโ€™t you think? Itโ€™s neither yours nor mine.โ€

Rasheed rolled over to face her, gently scratched her thigh with the crooked nail of his index finger.

โ€œLet me explain,โ€ he said. โ€œIf the fancy should strike meโ€”and Iโ€™m not saying it will, but it couldโ€”it couldโ€”I would be within my rights to give Aziza away. How would you like that? Or I could go to the Taliban one day, just walk in and say that I have my suspicions about you.

Thatโ€™s all it would take. Whose word do you think they would believe? What do you think theyโ€™d do to you?โ€

Laila pulled her thigh from him.

โ€œNot that I would,โ€ he said. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t.ย Nay.ย Probably not. You know

me.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re despicable,โ€ Laila said.

โ€œThatโ€™s a big word,โ€ Rasheed said. โ€œIโ€™ve always disliked that about you. Even when you were little, when you were running around with that cripple, you thought you were so clever, with your books and poems.

What good are all your smarts to you now? Whatโ€™s keeping you off the streets, your smarts or me? Iโ€™m despicable? Half the women in this city would kill to have a husband like me. They wouldย killย for it.โ€

He rolled back and blew smoke toward the ceiling. โ€œYou like big words? Iโ€™ll give you one: perspective.

Thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m doing here, Laila. Making sure you donโ€™t lose perspective.โ€

What turned Lailaโ€™s stomach the rest of the night was that every word Rasheed had uttered, every last one, was true.

But, in the morning, and for several mornings after that, the queasiness in her gut persisted, then worsened, became something dismayingly familiar.

ONE COLD, overcast afternoon soon after, Laila lay on her back on the bedroom floor. Mariam was napping with Aziza in her room.

In Lailaโ€™s hands was a metal spoke she had snapped with a pair of pliers from an abandoned bicycle wheel.

Sheโ€™d found it in the same alley where she had kissed Tariq years back. For a long time, Laila lay on the floor, sucking air through her teeth, legs parted.

Sheโ€™d adored Aziza from the moment when sheโ€™d first suspected her existence. There had been none of this self-doubt, this uncertainty. What a terrible thing it was, Laila thought now, for a mother to fear that she could not summon love for her own child. What an unnatural thing. And yet she had to wonder, as she lay on the floor, her sweaty hands poised to guide the spoke, if indeed she could ever love Rasheedโ€™s child as she had Tariqโ€™s.

In the end, Laila couldnโ€™t do it.

It wasnโ€™t the fear of bleeding to death that made her drop the spoke, or even the idea that the act was damnableโ€”which she suspected it was.

Laila dropped the spoke because she could not accept what the Mujahideen readily had: that sometimes in war innocent life had to be taken. Her war was against Rasheed. The baby was blameless. And there had been enough killing already. Laila had seen enough killing of innocents caught in the cross fire of enemies.

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