And the Mountains Echoed
thatâs true.â
âYou are honest,â she says. âAt least you are honest.â
âI just think these people, everything theyâve been through, we should respect them. By âwe,â I mean people like Timur and me. The lucky ones, the ones who werenât here when the place was getting bombed to hell. Weâre not like these people. We shouldnâtpretend we are. The stories these people have to tell, weâre not
entitled
to them ⦠Iâm rambling.â
âRambling?â
âIâm not making sense.â
âNo, I understand,â she says. âYou say their stories, it is gift they give you.â
âA gift. Yes.â
They sip some more wine. They talk for some time, for Idris the first genuine conversation he has had since arriving in Kabul, free of the subtle mocking, the vague reproach he has sensed from the locals, the government officials, those in the aid agencies. He asks about her work, and she tells him that she has served in Kosovo with the UN, in Rwanda after the genocide, Colombia, Burundi too. She has worked with child prostitutes in Cambodia. She has been in Kabul for a year now, her third stint, this time with a small NGO, working at the hospital and running a mobile clinic on Mondays. Married twice, divorced twice, no kids. Idris finds it hard to guess at Amraâs age, though likely sheâs younger than she looks. There is a fading shimmer of beauty, a roughshod sexuality, behind the yellowing teeth, the fatigue pouches under the eyes. In four, maybe five years, Idris thinks, that too will be gone.
Then she says, âYou want to know what happen to Roshi?â
âYou donât have to tell,â he says.
âYou think I am drunk?â
âAre you?â
âLittle bit,â she says. âBut you are honest guy.â She taps him on the shoulder gently, and a little playfully. âYou ask to know for right reasons. For other Afghans like you, Afghans coming from West, it is likeâhow do you say?âstretching the neck.â
âRubbernecking.â
âYes.â
âLike pornography.â
âBut maybe you are good guy.â
âIf you tell me,â he says, âI will take it as a gift.â
So she tells him.
Roshi lived with her parents, two sisters, and her baby brother in a village a third of the way between Kabul and Bagram. One Friday last month, her uncle, her fatherâs older brother, came to visit. For almost a year, Roshiâs father and the uncle had had a feud over the property where Roshi lived with her family, property which the uncle felt belonged rightfully to him, being the older brother, but which his father had passed to the younger, and more favored, brother. The day he came, though, all was well.
âHe say he want to end their fight.â
In preparation, Roshiâs mother had slaughtered two chickens, made a big pot of rice with raisins, bought fresh pomegranates from the market. When the uncle arrived, he and Roshiâs father kissed and embraced. Roshiâs father hugged his brother so hard, his feet lifted off the carpet. Roshiâs mother wept with relief. The family sat down to eat. Everyone had seconds, and thirds. They helped themselves to the pomegranates. After that, there was green tea and small toffee candies. The uncle then excused himself to use the outhouse.
When he came back, he had an ax in his hand.
âThe kind for chopping tree,â Amra says.
The first one to go was Roshiâs father. âRoshi told me her father never even know what happened. He didnât see anything.â
A single strike to the neck, from behind. It nearly decapitated him. Roshiâs mother was next. Roshi saw her mother try to fight, but several swings to the face and chest and she was silenced. By now the children were screaming and running. The uncle chased after them. Roshi saw one of her sisters make a run for the hallway,but the uncle grabbed her by the hair and wrestled her to the ground. The other sister did make it out to the hallway. The uncle gave chase, and Roshi could hear him kicking down the door to the bedroom, the screams, then the quiet.
âSo Roshi, she decide to escape with the little brother. They run out of the house, they run for front door but it is locked. The uncle, he did it, of course.â
They ran for the yard, out of panic and desperation, perhaps forgetting that there was no gate in
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