The Devil Is a Black Dog (20 page)

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Authors: Sandor Jaszberenyi

BOOK: The Devil Is a Black Dog
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“It’s OK if we smoke inside?”

“This is Egypt. We smoke everywhere. Now give me a light.”

I lit his cigarette and then my own. He smoked, but didn’t take his gaze from me for a moment.

“I don’t think I have ever seen such a pale person in all my life,” he finally said, tapping the ash from his cigarette onto the floor. “What are you doing here?”

“I’m a reporter. I want to go to Gaza.”

“Through the tunnels?”

“No. The army said the border is open.”

“The border’s closed. You can only cross by tunnel.”

“That’s not what they told me in Cairo.”

“They lied. They always lie.”

We fell silent for a bit as we smoked.

“What’s your name?”

“Daniel Marosh. I’m Hungarian.”

“I am Abdelsabur ibn Abdelkader ibn Abdelmoati abu Al Asal.”

“Pretty long name.”

“Call me Abed,” he said, then flicked the butt out the open window.

The doctor told me we’d need to wait and see if I had a concussion, so I would have to stay in the hospital for a few days. There
was no cafeteria in the building, and patients had to take care of their own meals, though this was easily solved by the nearby food stands. I think it was because he kept asking me for various favors—things he couldn’t do on account of his condition—such as bringing him food, that I became fast friends with the Bedouin.

Abed came from the Sawarka tribe. His son was a sheikh, and knew everything that was going on in the borderlands. Like everybody else in the tribe, Abed earned his living from the arms trade and people smuggling. He made no secret of this. His father ran fifteen tunnels in Rafah; and, though still young, Abed had two boys of his own. He quickly suggested that I make the crossing into the Gaza Strip through a tunnel—an offer I politely declined. I couldn’t risk getting kicked out of the country.

After that, we talked about whatever came to mind. He told me about his tribe, and how many of his family members, his brothers, were in prison without trial; about how he and others had attacked a police building during the revolution and freed them. He told me about the fragile peace forged between the tribes and about blood feuds—about how, by law, he was responsible not only for himself but also for every member of the tribe.

Our conversation was interrupted only when the doctor came by, but that didn’t happen too often. The doctor saw me just four times in my four days at the hospital. On his visits he would ask me to lie back in my bed and follow his pen with my eyes. He wrote the results in a white notebook and hummed with satisfaction.

Abed and I really talked about everything—that is, everything besides how we had each landed in the hospital. Abed avoided the topic, and I was mostly concerned with how I could best get some sleep. Luckily I’d been given some pills by the doctor to take before bed. My daily four hours were assured.

Despite this, the nights were still unspeakably long. The cement tower blocks, like the one we were in, slowly disgorged the heat that they had absorbed over the course of the day. Even with the fan running, the stiflingly humid air of the room seemed almost still.

It was on one of those nights when Abed told me about how he broke his leg. We were already in bed, but neither of us could sleep. The light from a streetlamp was shining in through an open window, so we could see still each other clearly. Unable to find a comfortable position, Abed stirred restlessly in bed.

“You know how this happened?” he asked, finally turning toward me and tapping on his cast. “I’ll tell you, but you have to promise not to laugh.”

“I promise.”

“The thing is, I have this Chinese pistol.…”

“Really?”

“Really. It’s a fine pistol, but you always have to keep it in good repair and well-oiled because of the sand.”

“Don’t tell me that …”

“Yes, I pulled the trigger. I didn’t think that there was still a bullet in the barrel. Don’t you dare laugh!”

“You were lucky.”

“The doctor said God was merciful with me. The round went straight through my leg. I didn’t even need surgery or anything.”

“You really
were
lucky.”

“God loves me.”

We went quiet. Once again it was Abed who broke the silence. “And you,
Abu Magari
”—this meant “Hungarian father”—“how did you come to be here?”

“I can’t sleep.”

“People don’t usually go to the hospital for that.”

“I haven’t been able to sleep for three months.”

“And before these three months, how could you sleep?”

“I was another person.”

“And what happened?”

“My wife abandoned me and took our child.”

“She cheated?”

“I believe so. Many times.”

“And what did you do?”

“I don’t know. That’s probably why I can’t sleep.”

“No, I mean what did you do when you found out she cheated?”

“I came back to Africa.”

“Why didn’t you put a bullet in her head?” he asked with sincere outrage.

“That’s not a custom with us.”

“If you had shot her in the head, at least you could get some sleep.”

Abed wouldn’t let anybody visit because he was embarrassed that he had shot himself in the leg. On the fourth day, however, when it was time for him to be released, his brothers came.

That morning the doctor had told Abed that he could go, but the cast needed to stay on his leg for a few more weeks. I don’t know if it was because we were together in the room, but the doctor also told me I could leave. There was just one problem with this: the bus that would take me to my hotel in Cairo wouldn’t leave until evening.

It was around ten, and we were just picking over the remains of a late breakfast, when two teenagers in track suits stepped into the ward, sandals on their dirty feet. They grinned as they went over to Abed’s bed and greeted him. They spoke in the Bedouin dialect, so I didn’t understand a word. They helped Abed up from the bed, pressed a crutch into his hand, and then, at the man’s order, began to pack his stuff from the wardrobe.

Abed changed into his brown jellabiya, then looked over at me.

“Get ready, Abu Magari, because you are coming with us,” he said with a smile.

“Why?” I asked, though I reflected that the question should really be,
Why not?
For three months it had been my policy to strike the word “no” from my vocabulary.

“Does it really matter where you can’t sleep?” Abed asked.

“When it comes down to it, not so much.”

“So get your stuff together. Come with me. We’ll have a good meal and I’ll show you the desert.” The two teenagers quickly picked up on the situation. The boys each shook my hand and introduced themselves. They were called Muhammad and Ahmed. I quickly packed my stuff, threw my backpack over my shoulder, and headed out with them.

It took us a while to make our way down the hospital steps, because of Abed’s cast. Waiting in front of the building was a white Mitsubishi pickup. One boy flipped open the vehicle’s tailgate, jumped in, and helped Abed up, then moved into the front seat and started the ignition.

“Now what is it, Abu Magari, are you waiting for night to fall?” yelled the grinning Abed. I climbed in next to him. “Move the rifles if you need more space.”

Three weather-beaten AK-47s lay next to where Abed sat. I pushed them aside, took a place next to the Bedouin, and hung on. With his palm, Abed hit the side of the vehicle. The back wheels churned up dust and in no time we were on the road to Sheikh Zuweid.

Abed the Bedouin lived in a large cement house with his family. Next to the house stood a white tent, which was always full of the men of the Sawarka tribe. Although Abed’s father lived a few miles away, he walked over every day so he could discuss business affairs with the tribal elders. They had much to talk about: for instance, they couldn’t make sense of the civil law book and
didn’t understand why it would be a criminal matter if they sold arms to their Muslim brothers in the Gaza Strip—not a day went by without a dispute with the local authorities. And, at the market, they bickered with other tribes over customers.

The men received me with a great show of affection after Abed explained the situation. Later that same day the two boys took me to show me the tunnels in Rafah. They proudly chattered in the front seat as we drove past the collapsing, sagging houses on the dirt road, beneath which ran the tunnels.

By the time we’d returned from Rafah, the men were getting ready for dinner. Everything had been set out in the tent for twenty people.

We ate together, in Bedouin fashion: without utensils, and using the right hand to scoop up the food, then washing the hand clean in a common bowl once finished.

After the meal, the lively gathering continued in the tent; the conversation lasted until eleven. Many of them joked that they would take a Hungarian woman as a second wife no matter what the cost. After midnight, however, the men began to trickle home.

“I’ll show you your room,” said Abed, when it was just us two. “You are a good person, Abu Magari, and I am glad you are here. Stay for as long as you want; you are always welcome as my guest.”

“Thank you.”

The Bedouin led the way to my floor. In the room was a single bed that Abed’s wife had made up with a fresh sheet.

“Tomorrow we’ll go shooting,” he said. Then, with his crutch under his arm, he shuffled away.

I lay in bed for two hours, trying to sleep. I closed my eyes and waited for a dream to arrive. But none came.

At three I got out of bed and opened my backpack to look for my medicine case. When I found it, I spilled the entire contents on the floor, in the hope that I might find a few stray Xanax
pills, because in the hospital they had confiscated the lot of them. There were none to be found.

Right then I caught sight of an old book under the bed. It was in German, published in 1936, written by one Hans Alexander Winkler, entitled
Die reitenden Geister der Toten.
A handwritten dedication on the title page, in black ink, read: “
Für Abd el Radi mit Liebe. Hans Alexander, Cairo, 1938.

To distract myself from my torment, I began to read. It was an anthropological study about a certain man named Abd el Radi, who was a ghost rider. People like him were called ghost riders because allegedly they could mount the spirit of a dead person, who could then communicate with the living through them. The book dealt at length with how the
Bakhit
, or spirit, bound people with or released them from curses, tying such knots and untying them, and how it conjured up vengeful fire spirits from ash and blood.

By six the next morning I had finished the book. My nerves were on fire.
Devil take me
, I thought. And that didn’t seem like a bad idea.

The machine gun crackled in my hands. In the distance, clouds of sand shot up far from the soda bottles we had set out as targets.

“Try again,” said Abed. “Use your shoulder to better brace the gun.” I did as he said and fired again. This time the sand cloud rose closer to the bottles.

We were by Mount Halal, somewhere in the middle of the desert. The sun was blazing; I was faint with sleeplessness.

“You can’t concentrate.”

He took the gun from my hand. The wood stock of the Czech Kalashnikov gleamed in the sun.

“Well, no,” I said and wiped my brow. Squinting, I watched how the Bedouin fumbled with his bad leg to position himself for the shot. He took a long time to aim, and then pulled the trigger.
His shot didn’t find the target either. He swore loudly, and then secured the gun.

“It seems I can’t either,” he said with a grin. “Now, come, Abu Magari, let’s go back to the city and have something to eat.”

We walked back to the truck. Unperturbed, Abed drove with his bad leg, though for this he needed to push the seat all the way back. He floored it past the villages, and slowed the vehicle only when we drove past the ruins of an Israeli airport, where, in the distance there appeared the metal fence and palm trees that lined the base of the international peacekeeping force.

“I found this last night,” I said to Abed, pulling the book from my pants pocket and placing it on the table. We were sitting in a small restaurant in Arish, eating roast chicken. “It’s dedicated,” I pointed out.

“Yes. My grandfather’s younger brother was Abd el Radi. Where did you find it?”

“Under the bed.”

“My father must have left it there when he stayed with us.”

“He knows German?”

“No.”

“Then why did he have it?”

“There are pictures in it. Sometimes he’d look at them. We don’t have many pictures of my grandfather and Abd el Radi.”

I listened as I pushed rice around with my fork.

“I’d like to go see a ghost rider,” I said.

“For what?” asked Abed. “Because of your wife, right?”

I nodded.

“You should have shot her and been done with it.”

“But I didn’t.”

“Age-old mistake.”

We went quiet. Abed picked his teeth with a bone, and then pointed to the book.

“That was a long time ago. Since then things have changed. There aren’t many ghost riders left. Let’s drive a little then watch some TV. Or we could find somebody with an Internet connection. For the other stuff, you need to be a Bedouin.”

“It was just an idea.”

“A bad idea.”

We left it like that and went back to the house. Abed had to take care of some things in the afternoon; I left him to it and wrote an article about the Egypt-Israeli border, the tunnels that ran under Rafah, and the Bedouins who ran them.

Abed returned around sunset. After eating dinner with the men, my host introduced me to his two small sons.

Both boys were five. The Bedouin introduced me like I was a film star, after which the boys hung on me and pulled at my hair. They simply couldn’t believe I had blonde hair.

I began to feel increasingly tense, however, as bedtime neared. The melting of days into each other, one of the first symptoms of chronic insomnia, is still bearable, especially in company. The hell begins when you find yourself alone in the night.

By morning my eyes were totally bloodshot. When Abed found me I was sitting on the floor, so I could watch the sun rise from between the hills of the desert.

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