shivered. The stump of his mutilated tail wagged wildly, and he tap-danced like he was treading on hot coal. He pranced happy circles around her. All day the dog shadowed Pari, sniffing at her heels, and at night, when they parted ways, he lay outside the door, forlorn, waiting for morning.
âAbollah?â
âYes.â
âWhen I grow up, will I live with you?â
Abdullah watched the orange sun dropping low, nudging the horizon. âIf you want. But you wonât want to.â
âYes I will!â
âYouâll want a house of your own.â
âBut we can be neighbors.â
âMaybe.â
âYou wonât live far.â
âWhat if you get sick of me?â
She jabbed his side with her elbow. âI wouldnât!â
Abdullah grinned to himself. âAll right, fine.â
âYouâll be close by.â
âYes.â
âUntil weâre old.â
âVery old.â
âFor always.â
âYes, for always.â
From the front of the wagon, she turned to look at him. âDo you promise, Abollah?â
âFor always and always.â
Later, Father hoisted Pari up on his back, and Abdullah was in the rear, pulling the empty wagon. As they walked, he fell into a thoughtless trance. He was aware only of the rise and fall of his own knees, of the sweat beads trickling down from the edge of his skullcap. Pariâs small feet bouncing against Fatherâs hips. Aware only of the shadow of his father and sister lengthening on the gray desert floor, pulling away from him if he slowed down.
It was Uncle Nabi who had found this latest job for FatherâUncle Nabi was Parwanaâs older brother and so he was really Abdullahâs stepuncle. Uncle Nabi was a cook and a chauffeur in Kabul. Once a month, he drove from Kabul to visit them in Shadbagh, his arrival announced by a staccato of honks and the hollering of a horde of village kids who chased the big blue car with the tan top and shiny rims. They slapped the fender and windows until he killed the engine and emerged grinning from the car, handsome Uncle Nabi with the long sideburns and wavy black hair combed back from his forehead, dressed in hisoversize olive-colored suit with white dress shirt and brown loafers. Everyone came out to see him because he drove a car, though it belonged to his employer, and because he wore a suit and worked in the big city, Kabul.
It was on his last visit that Uncle Nabi had told Father about the job. The wealthy people he worked for were building an addition to their homeâa small guesthouse in the backyard, complete with a bathroom, separate from the main buildingâand Uncle Nabi had suggested they hire Father, who knew his way around a construction site. He said the job would pay well and take a month to complete, give or take.
Father did know his way around a construction site. Heâd worked in enough of them. As long as Abdullah could remember, Father was out searching for work, knocking on doors for a dayâs labor. He had overheard Father one time tell the village elder, Mullah Shekib,
If I had been born an animal, Mullah Sahib, I swear I would have come out a mule
. Sometimes Father took Abdullah along on his jobs. They had picked apples once in a town that was a full dayâs walk away from Shadbagh. Abdullah remembered his father mounted on the ladder until sundown, his hunched shoulders, the creased back of his neck burning in the sun, the raw skin of his forearms, his thick fingers twisting and turning apples one at a time. They had made bricks for a mosque in another town. Father had shown Abdullah how to collect the good soil, the deep lighter-colored stuff. They had sifted the dirt together, added straw, and Father had patiently taught him to titrate the water so the mixture didnât turn runny. Over the last year, Father had lugged stones. He had shoveled dirt, tried his hand at plowing fields. He had worked on a road