And the Mountains Echoed
lugging roped-up belongings, padding along the dusty shoulders of country roads, looking for some place to land. Gholam was the head of the family now. He would have to work. He would now spend his youth clearing canals, digging ditches, making bricks, and harvesting fields. Gholam would gradually turn into one of those stooping leather-faced men Adel always saw behind plows.
Adel thought he would stand there a while in the field, watching the hills and the mountains looming over New Shadbagh. And then he thought he would reach into his pocket for what he had found one day walking through the orchards, the left half of a pair of spectacles, snapped at the bridge, the lens a spiderweb of cracks, the temple crusted with dried blood. He would toss the broken spectacles into a ditch. Adel suspected that as he turned back around and walked home, what he would feel mostly would be relief.
Eight
Fall 2010
This evening, I come home from the clinic and find a message from Thalia on the landline phone in my bedroom. I play it as I slip off my shoes and sit at my desk. She tells me she has a cold, one she is sure she picked up from Mamá, then she asks after me, asks how work is going in Kabul. At the end, just before she hangs up, she says,
Odie goes on and on about how you donât call. Of course she wonât tell you. So I will. Markos. For the love of Christ. Call your mother. You ass
.
I smile.
Thalia.
I keep a picture of her on my desk, the one I took all those years ago at the beach on TinosâThalia sitting on a rock with her back to the camera. I have framed the photo, though if you look closely you can still see a patch of dark brown at the left lower corner courtesy of a crazed Italian girl who tried to set fire to it many years ago.
I turn on my laptop and start typing up the previous dayâs opnotes. My room is upstairsâone of three bedrooms on the second floor of this house where I have lived since my arrival in Kabul back in 2002âand my desk sits at the window overlooking the garden below. I have a view of the loquat trees my old landlord, Nabi, and I planted a few years ago. I can see Nabiâs onetime quarters along the back wall too, now repainted. After he passed away, I offered them to a young Dutch fellow who helps local high schools with their IT. And, off to the right, there is Suleiman Wahdatiâs 1940s Chevrolet, unmoved for decades, shrouded in rust like a rock by moss, currently covered by a light film of yesterdayâs surprisingly early snowfall, the first of the year thus far. After Nabi died, I thought briefly of having the car hauled to one of Kabulâs junkyards, but I didnât have the heart. It seemed to me too essential a part of the houseâs past, its history.
I finish the notes and check my watch. Itâs already 9:30 P.M. Seven oâclock in the evening back in Greece.
Call your mother. You ass
.
If I am going to call Mamá tonight, I canât delay it any longer. I remember Thalia wrote in one of her e-mails that Mamá was going to bed earlier and earlier. I take a breath and steel myself. I pick up the receiver and dial.
I met Thalia in the summer of 1967, when I was twelve years old. She and her mother, Madaline, came to Tinos to visit Mamá and me. Mamá, whose name is Odelia, said it had been yearsâfifteen, to be exactâsince she and her friend Madaline had last seen each other. Madaline had left the island at seventeen and gone off to Athens to become, for a brief time at least, an actress of some modest renown.
âI wasnât surprised,â Mamá said, âwhen I heard of her acting. Because of her looks. Everyone was always taken with Madaline. Youâll see for yourself when you meet her.â
I asked Mamá why sheâd never mentioned her.
âHavenât I? Are you sure?â
âIâm sure.â
âI could have sworn.â Then she said, âThe daughter. Thalia. You must be considerate with her because she had an accident. A dog bit her. She has a scar.â
Mamá wouldnât say more, and I knew better than to lean on her about it. But this revelation intrigued me far more than Madalineâs past in film and stage had, my curiosity fueled by the suspicion that the scar must be both significant and visible for the girl to deserve special consideration. With morbid eagerness, I looked forward to seeing this scar for myself.
âMadaline and I met at mass,
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