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And the Mountains Echoed

And the Mountains Echoed

Titel: And the Mountains Echoed Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Khaled Hosseini , Hosseini
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breathtakingly thoughtless, my daughter. If she knew the life she would have had to endure, if not for me …
    EB: Is your daughter a disappointment to you?
    NW: Monsieur Boustouler, I’ve come to believe she’s my punishment.
    One day in 1975, Pari comes home to her new apartment and finds a small package on her bed. It is a year after she fetched her mother from the emergency room and nine months since she left Julien. Pari is living now with a nursing student named Zahia, a young Algerian woman with curly brown hair and green eyes. She is a competent girl, with a cheerful, unfrazzled disposition, and they have lived together easily, though Zahia is now engaged to her boyfriend, Sami, and moving in with him at the end of the semester.
    There is a folded sheet of paper next to the package.
This came
for you. I’m spending the night at Sami’s. See you tomorrow. Je t’embrasse. Zahia
.
    Pari rips the package open. Inside is a magazine and, clipped to it, another note, this one written in a familiar, almost femininely graceful script.
This was sent to Nila and then to the couple who live in Collette’s old apartment and now it is forwarded to me. You should update your forwarding address. Read this at your own peril. Neither of us fares very well, I’m afraid. Julien
.
    Pari drops the journal on the bed and makes herself a spinach salad and some couscous. She changes into pajamas and eats by the TV, a small black-and-white rental. Absently, she watches images of airlifted South Vietnamese refugees arriving in Guam. She thinks of Collette, who had protested the American war in Vietnam in the streets. Collette, who had brought a wreath of dahlias and daisies to Maman’s memorial, who had held and kissed Pari, who had delivered a beautiful recitation of one of Maman’s poems at the podium.
    Julien had not attended the services. He’d called and said, feebly, that he disliked memorials, he found them depressing.
    Who doesn’t?
Pari had said.
    I think it’s best I stay clear
.
    Do as you like
, Pari had said into the receiver, thinking, But it won’t absolve you, not coming. Any more than attending will absolve me. Of how reckless we were. How thoughtless. My God. Pari had hung up with him knowing that her fling with Julien had been the final push for Maman. She had hung up knowing that for the rest of her life it would slam into her at random moments, the guilt, the terrible remorse, catching her off guard, and that she would ache to the bones with it. She would wrestle with this, now and for all days to come. It would be the dripping faucet at the back of her mind.
    She takes a bath after dinner and reviews some notes for an upcoming exam. She watches some more TV, cleans and dries the dishes, sweeps the kitchen floor. But it’s no use. She can’t distract herself. The journal sits on the bed, its calling to her like a lowfrequency hum.
    Afterward, she puts a raincoat over her pajamas and goes for a walk down Boulevard de la Chapelle, a few blocks south of the apartment. The air is chilly, and raindrops slap the pavement and shopwindows, but the apartment cannot contain her restlessness right now. She needs the cold, the moist air, the open space.
    When she was young, Pari remembers, she had been all questions.
Do I have cousins in Kabul, Maman? Do I have aunts and uncles? And grandparents, do I have a
grand-pére
and a
grand-maman?
How come they never visit? Can we write them a letter? Please, can we visit them?
    Most of her questions had revolved around her father.
What was his favorite color, Maman? Tell me, Maman, was he a good swimmer? Did he know a lot of jokes?
She remembers him chasing her once through a room. Rolling her around on a carpet, tickling her soles and belly. She remembers the smell of his lavender soap and the shine of his high forehead, his long fingers. His oval-shaped lapis cuff links, the crease of his suit pants. She can see the dust motes they had kicked up together off the carpet.
    What Pari had always wanted from her mother was the glue to bond together her loose, disjointed scraps of memory, to turn them into some sort of cohesive narrative. But Maman never said much. She always withheld details of her life and of their life together in Kabul. She kept Pari at a remove from their shared past, and, eventually, Pari stopped asking.
    And now it turns out that Maman had told this magazinewriter, this Étienne Boustouler, more

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