Missing Soluch (12 page)

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Authors: Mahmoud Dowlatabadi

BOOK: Missing Soluch
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Salar Abdullah said, “So Mirza Khan, how much will you be able to put in yourself?”

Mirza Hassan replied, “My mother, Bibi, and I can put in fifty. If necessary, more.”

His mother’s voice sounded from the kitchen. “Mirza Khan, dinner’s ready.”

He rose and said, “Bibi, bring the embers from the kitchen and put them on the hearth here.”

Zabihollah and Salar Abdullah rose and made to put on their shoes.

“What about dinner? Aren’t you staying?”

Zabihollah said, “I need to leave. My cow is about to give birth. I think she’s overdue.”

“What about you, Salar?”

“I’m going to go to work on convincing Karbalai Doshanbeh. After all, what’s he doing sleeping on all that money and not using it?”

Mirza Hassan said, “Don’t push him too hard. He’s already said no. Anyone who’s going to be a partner on this needs to be committed.”

“Let’s see what happens.”

Salar and Zabihollah left the house, and Abbas drew himself back. Kadkhoda Norouz shouted after them, joking, “Don’t let the old man go and convince you instead, Salar!”

“Don’t be worried, Kadkhoda!”

Hajj Salem and Moslem rose before the men. Hajj Salem invoked a prayer. “May God bring good to you. May God will you good and happiness.”

Mirza Hassan came out to accompany Zabihollah and Salar to the outer gate. Moslem pulled away from his father’s grip to follow the men. But Hajj Salem grabbed him and growled, “Beast! Can’t you smell the rice? We’re due for a portion!”

At the gate, Mirza Hassan looked into the alley and said, “See you on Friday night, when we’ll all discuss how things stand.”

Zabihollah said, “My money’s ready.”

“I’ll go and see what I can get for my sheep.”

Mirza Hassan said, “In any case, Friday night, we’ll meet here again!”

“Friday night.”

Mirza Hassan returned and climbed the steps of the porch. His mother, Bibi, brought out some bread and a bowl of rice for Hajj Salem and his son, saying, “Take this outside and go eat it. Go on then! I want to shut the door.”

“Yes … Yes, Bibi.”

Bibi returned to the kitchen and Abbas crept to the gate and slid out.

Zabihollah and Salar Abdullah were still in the alley. Zabihollah was saying, “This Mirza Khan really talks up a game, doesn’t he? He makes it seem he has one hand in this world and another in the other, what with his fancy hair! But we need to watch out that there’s not something going on under the table!”

“Well, but we’re not negotiating the deal with him. We’re negotiating with the government. We’ll use our land titles as a collateral to borrow money and pay it off month to month. Over here, we need to deal with a few poor farmers who use God’s Land. We’ll toss a few scraps to them to satisfy them.”

“All I’m saying is that I hope he won’t take our few coins and waste it on his scheme!”

Zahra, Zabihollah’s sister, came running from the end of the alley, a lantern in one hand. With a trembling voice she angrily said, “Where the hell have you been? The cow’s about to die … and you … you …”

“What? It’s dying?”

“The calf won’t birth. The poor animal’s on her last legs!”

“What do you mean it won’t birth?”

“It’s a breech birth. It’s stuck!”

“What?”

“Feet first, it’s stuck!”

Zabihollah took the lantern from his sister and set out running. Zahra followed him. Abbas stepped out beside Salar Abdullah and said, “I had come to give him the same news, Salar!”

Salar turned and looked at Abbas.

“You have some nerve to even speak to me, you! God damn the devil’s black heart, and curse you!”

Abbas didn’t back away—instead, following Salar, he went along to Zabihollah’s stable. Entering the stable, the air was warm. The cow was sprawled on one side, its eyes fixed and staring into space. Zabihollah said to Salar, “What should we do, cousin?”

Salar Abdullah removed his overcoat, rolled up his sleeves, and said, “Nothing. We have to pull it out. Girl, go and prepare a pot of hot water! And you, bring the lantern over here!”

Abbas followed Zahra out of the stable, and the cow’s cries began to slowly intensify.

By the time they had prepared the hot water, Salar Abdullah had extricated the stillborn calf and tossed it to one side. They brought the warm water and Salar busied himself with washing his hands. Zabihollah was kneeling over the dead calf’s body, clasping his forehead in his hands. Zahra leaned on the wall. Abbas drew himself to the corner of the stable, hiding in the dark. The cow was still on the ground, panting.

Salar Abdullah rose, grabbed the stillborn calf’s legs, and dragged it out of the stable to the alley. The sound of a pack of stray dogs could be heard. Salar Abdullah returned and grabbed
his cousin under the arms, lifting him.

“Up! Thank God the cow’s still okay!”

Zabihollah rose and said, “This is a bad omen, cousin. It bodes badly for what we’re getting into.”

Salar said, “Don’t speak ill, man! These things happen all the time. Now let’s go.”

“No. No! I have to stay with the cow. I’ll stay out here tonight.”

Abbas stepped forward. “If you’d like, I’ll stay here as well. Right here, in the manger.”

“No need. I’ll stay here myself.”

Zabihollah sat at the edge of the manger, and Salar Abdullah sat beside him. Zahra left to get a blanket for her brother. There was no need for Abbas here. He walked slowly and left the stable.

The alley was still dark and cold. Hajj Salem and Moslem were struggling in the middle of the alleyway. Moslem was pulling his father with the walking stick, while Hajj Salem from time to time would say, “Beast! Beast!”

And Moslem would reply from time to time, “D … d … d …!”

Abbas set out following Hajj Salem and Moslem.

BOOK 2
1
.

The winter was passing. A slow and static winter. Like a mule stuck in mud, it toiled and pushed on. But it had become backbreaking. Cold! Cold was all there was. A dry, forsaken cold. And then the snow! That night, it snowed. A heavy snow. It was, as they say, one waist of snow. But if it wasn’t actually waist-high, it was more than knee-deep. The baked-mud domes and cupolas on the roofs of the village were smothered beneath the weight. Silent. Exhausted. Like camels weighed down with their loads. It still was snowing. But not heavily. At dawn’s break, the blow softened, and it fell more lightly. By then, it was as light as pigeon feathers. It spiraled and settled. For Mergan, the snow only brought affliction. But for the fields, and for most people in Zaminej, for those who had at least a bit of land and a cow at
the trough, the snow was as precious as gold. A few flakes of snow were equal to a thousand grains of wheat. Or a watermelon. Or a handful of cumin seeds. Or forty cotton pods. Not only for the folk of Zaminej, but also for all the people of the plains, snow meant bread. It was bread that was snowing, and how pleasingly did it snow. It made the sharp coldness bearable, and the dwindling winter provisions seemed less worrying. These worries became ephemeral. Dreams of spring and verdure lifted the spirits. Mergan knew this, as she had endured such times before. When tables are full, there would always be a little extra for her and her children to eat, but when they are empty, what but dust may come to fill them? The precarious nature of life had taught her this much. Thus, even if Mergan was hungry—which she was—she wasn’t hopeless.

Mergan was no longer a young woman. In her time, she had seen everything. She was nearly forty years old, although her drawn face was stony, cracked, and tired, and this made her seem older than her age. But her dusky hair had only recently begun to show hints of white in a few places. It was as if the serrated edge of her hair had carved wrinkles on the hard and taut skin of her forehead. Fine crow’s-feet emanated from the edges of her eyes. Her cheeks were deep and hollow. As her face aged, her wide white teeth had begun to push aside her thin and jagged lips. On either side of her mouth and chin were two deep lines. The veins on her neck stood out, and at the base of her neck, just where she fastened the safety pin to hold together the corners of her headscarf, a deep recess had set in. Her jaws were prominent, and when she bit down, her teeth were visible beneath the skin. In essence, the flesh on Mergan’s face had melted away, and it was as if nothing lay beneath the skin itself. Taut skin,
drawn over rough, persistent bones, with visible inclines and peaks. Despite all this, her eyes were beautiful. Sorrowful and beautiful. Although deeply set, her gaze had a certain brilliance. And although her bones seemed poured into her skin, her stature was not broken. She stood straight and tall.

A pained soul resided inside this worn body. But it was not defeated. This injured soul masked a hidden fight, not a pained lament. This was why Mergan’s eyes had retained their beauty. Hers was a stubborn radiance shining from an abyss of despair. Like a trembling light flickering from a lantern held in the depths of the night. Mergan was strong-boned. Not like her brother, who had a skull like a horse. But among the other women, she looked broader of shoulder, even if her bones were somewhat diminished. Destitution and constant hunger had not worn her down as they might have.

Mergan was looking outside. With the snow, the dawn seemed lighter than usual. A pleasant light, with a color that was rarely seen. It was a color that could not be seen just visually. One had to also see it with one’s soul. How does the ailing person sense a panacea? The thirsty, water? This is how Mergan perceived the color of the snow. If you were to look at her face carefully, you would see the reflection of the dawn snow within it, and with it a transformation, a new perspective. You could sense that she imagined something was about to change. Imagine that the snow that had settled on the ground was instead a bed of colorful grass seedlings just sprouted from the dirt. Imagine the movement of those seeds beneath the earth that had imprisoned them for the cold, dry, and unhappy winter; imagine this earth was transforming; imagine the sun that will shine after the snow; imagine the plough share, the
land just ploughed, the farmers; imagine the fields with their wide arms extended once again; imagine the braying of the cattle, the calls of the shepherds; imagine the smoke rising from people’s bread ovens; imagine the people’s furrowed brows vanquished by charging waves of laughter.

In imagining all this, Mergan had been renewed with new sensations. The kind of sensations that adolescent girls overflow with, the same ones that Mergan herself had while crossing the wasteland of puberty, drunken and confused, some twenty years ago. Those days when she felt she could wrap all the men in the world into a single embrace, when Mergan had spring fever. She felt it in her laughter, her jokes, her dancing and drumming, her idleness, her breadmaking, and her ginning, with her gleaning with the men at harvest. It was in her cotton spinning, and when she spent long winter nights spindling with the other girls, gatherings that culminated in waves of laughter and giggling. It was in the songs and poetry recitals; the whispers about what the men, the young men, were saying; in breasts heaving and hearts filled with joy; the flow of blood in the veins and the occasional taste of love; a love that was hidden, not yet emerging. It was in just being. In being at work, in the home, in bed, in the fields. Being in love. A tie in a stalk. In having children, in becoming pregnant. In breast-feeding. Singing a cradlesong. In swaddling the child. Washing the child in lukewarm water, under the mild midday sun. In the sensation of desire. He’s ticklish! Laughter. Laughter. Water. Sun. Laughing. The pure laughter of the child. The flowering of the bud. A feeling in between laughter and crying. In loving everything. The man’s firm shoulders. The sweet scent of underarm sweat. Soluch’s shirt, a mix of sweat and dust. The boy playing
in the water of the water pot. Kisses. Kisses on the head and feet of the boy, whose teeth have not come out yet, but who is ticklish. How he laughs, the little bud! He flowers. Ah …

The fields are brimming with wheat. The fields are golden, raining gold. The summer sunlight. The sounds of people calling. The gossip of the gleaners: girls, women, children. Bringing water jugs to the shelter of the haystacks, sleeping on the banks of the brook, a shade made from a saddle from the landowner’s horse. Bread and tea and dates. Young men. The men. A silk handkerchief. The young men tie a silk handkerchief around their necks, with hair styled high with no hat. Sweat pours down under the handkerchief, passing the space between the shoulders to be caught on the tight belt, then spreads to each side. Wheat chaff the color of sugar, adhering to the sweat of a body, on a shirt. Shirts drenched with sweat. The mix of sweat and dust, and shirts in between. Sweat and dust, dust and sweat. The upper arms, the shoulders in motion. The forearm and hands in action. The scythes and sickles shine in the sun. The threshers gather handfuls to make bushels, and bushels to make stacks. The women and girls follow the threshers, gathering the stalks that have fallen aside while the wheat stalks grow into armfuls, and then bushels, and when they are placed onto a bushel bearer to be taken to where the stacks are gathered.

Mergan was among the threshers. She was sitting on the edge of the fields watching Soluch harvesting. Soluch had made a name for himself as a harvester. He was neither tall nor strong, nor particularly audacious, but he worked honestly and vigorously. Compact and capable, Soluch crouched on his heels and pivoted, clearing the land of the long and leaning stalks of wheat. An efficient harvester, Soluch enjoyed making an extra
effort to clear a wider berth of wheat than was usual. The landowner of the field approved of this, even though he knew that Soluch was clearing the extra stalks for Mergan to gather. This was a kind of ritual. It was a secret agreement between the harvester, the landowner, and the woman gleaner. If a young man who was working as a harvester liked a woman, it was his right to employ his scythe in such a way as to leave more of the dry, soft stalks on the ground behind him. The pouch tied around the woman’s waist had to be filled. As a sign of his love, Mergan had to return from the fields with her arms full of wheat. And so she did. So what of the gossip, the innuendoes? Let them say what they want! Mergan paid no mind. The talk only showed what was in their hearts. And so what if some hearts were not on Mergan’s side?! There are always people who will use gossip to express their own frustrations. They don’t realize that rather than seeming clever they seem twofaced. They lack the courage to be sincere. And what would be said at the end? That Mergan of the camel herder’s family and Soluch of the mud-plasterer’s desire one another? Let them gossip! What harm could come of it? What sin? Let everyone in the village climb on their roofs and sweeten their mouths by telling each other the news. Who could stop them from being engaged? No one. Mergan only had one brother. Her father was dead, and her mother was housebound. What would Aman say? He himself was under the spell of Gisou. Yes, Molla Aman! He was even more deeply ensnared by his own love. He was infatuated with her. He would walk aimlessly, composing verses of poetry for her. He had one foot in the stars. The fable of Molla Aman and Gisou gained renown with everyone. What’s a brother like this say to Mergan? After all, Mergan was drunk
with Soluch, with only him. What could Molla Aman, who was infatuated with Gisou, say about this? And even if he did?! If he resorted to threats and kicks and beatings? What could he do? Mergan couldn’t be killed by kicking and whipping; only being apart from Soluch could kill her, being apart from the mud-plaster’s son.

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