And the Mountains Echoed
overdue appreciation of their work.
Sadly, however, a shadow hovers over this present issue. The artist featured this quarter is Nila Wahdati, an Afghan poet interviewed by Ãtienne Boustouler last winter in the town of Courbevoie, near Paris. Mme. Wahdati, as we are sure you will agree, gave Mr. Boustouler one of the most revealing and startlingly frank interviews we have ever published. It was with great sadness that we learned of her untimely death not long after this interview was conducted. She will be missed in the community of poets. She is survived by her daughter.
Itâs uncanny, the timing. The elevator door dings open at preciselyâpreciselyâthe same moment the phone begins to ring. Pari can hear the ringing because it comes from inside Julienâs apartment, which is at the head of the narrow, barely lit hallway and therefore closest to the elevator. Intuitively, she knows who is calling. By the look on Julienâs face, so does he.
Julien, who has already stepped into the elevator, says, âLet it ring.â
Behind him is the standoffish ruddy-faced woman from upstairs. She glares impatiently at Pari. Julien calls her
La chèvre
, because of her goatlike nest of chin hairs.
He says, âLetâs go, Pari. Weâre already late.â
He has made reservations for seven oâclock at a new restaurant in the 16th arrondissement that has been making some noise for its
poulet braisé
, its
sole cardinale
, and its calfâs liver with sherry vinegar. They are meeting Christian and Aurelie, old university friends of Julienâsâfrom his student days, not his teaching. Theyare supposed to meet for aperitifs at six-thirty and it is already sixfifteen. They still have to walk to the Métro station, ride to Muette, then walk the six blocks to the restaurant.
The phone keeps on ringing.
The goat woman coughs.
Julien says, more firmly now, âPari?â
âItâs probably Maman,â Pari says.
âYes, I am aware of that.â
Irrationally, Pari thinks Mamanâwith her endless flair for dramaâhas chosen this specific moment to call to trap her into making precisely this choice: step into the elevator with Julien or take her call.
âIt could be important,â she says.
Julien sighs.
As the elevator doors close behind him, he leans against the hallway wall. He digs his hands deep into the pockets of his trench coat, looking for a moment like a character from a Melville
policier
.
âIâll only be a minute,â Pari says.
Julien casts a skeptical glance.
Julienâs apartment is small. Six quick steps and she has crossed the foyer, passed the kitchen, and is seated on the edge of the bed, reaching for the phone on the lone nightstand for which they have room. The view, however, is spectacular. It is raining now, but on a clear day she can look out the east-facing window and see most of the 19th and 20th arrondissements.
âOui, allo?â
she says into the receiver.
A manâs voice answers. â
Bonsoir
. Is this Mademoiselle Pari Wahdati?â
âWho is calling?â
âAre you the daughter of Madame Nila Wahdati?â
âYes.â
âMy name is Dr. Delaunay. I am calling about your mother.â
Pari shuts her eyes. There is a brief flash of guilt before it is overtaken by a customary dread. She has taken calls of this sort before, too many to count now, from the time that she was an adolescent, really, and even before thatâonce, in fifth grade, she was in the middle of a geography exam, and the teacher had to interrupt, walk her out to the hallway, and explain in a hushed voice what had happened. These calls are familiar to Pari, but repetition has not led to insouciance on her part. With each one she thinks,
This time, this is the time
, and each time she hangs up and rushes to Maman. In the parlance of economics, Julien has said to Pari that if she cut off the supply of attention, perhaps the demands for it would cease as well.
âSheâs had an accident,â Dr. Delaunay says.
Pari stands by the window and listens as the doctor explains. She coils and uncoils the phone cord around her finger as he recounts her motherâs hospital visit, the forehead laceration, the sutures, the precautionary tetanus injection, the aftercare of peroxide, topical antibiotics, dressings. Pariâs mind flashes to when she was ten, when sheâd come home one day from school and
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