Hope & Other Dangerous Pursuits (15 page)

Read Hope & Other Dangerous Pursuits Online

Authors: Laila Lalami

Tags: #Adult, #Contemporary

BOOK: Hope & Other Dangerous Pursuits
7.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I wish I had been there in his last days,” Aziz said.

“The entire derb came to his wake,” Zohra said.

Aziz got down on his knees and took out a brush from Zohra's bag. He started clearing the dead leaves from the headstone. “I wish I had been there,” he said again.

Zohra kneeled next to him. “I don't want the same to happen to us. We should be together.”

Aziz took a deep breath. He had waited for her to make up her mind, and now that she seemed to agree with him, he didn't feel the sense of joy he expected. When they left the cemetery, he told Zohra that he wanted to go for a walk before dinner, so while she took the bus home he headed downtown, to the Avenue des Forces Armées Royales. At the Café Saâda he peeked inside and saw the patrons standing at the bar or sitting in groups, huddled over their beers and gin tonics. On the
terrace, customers sat indolently over their mint tea. He chose a seat outside, in the sun, and ordered an espresso. He looked around. Something struck him as odd, but he couldn't quite put a finger on it. It wasn't until the waiter came back with his coffee that he realized there were no women at all.

Some of the men played chess, others smoked, many read the newspaper. Those who sat closest to the stream of pedestrians passed the time by watching people, whistling every now and then if they saw a pretty girl. Aziz wondered why the place was so packed in the middle of the afternoon on a Wednesday, but the serious expression on everyone's face provided an answer to his question. They were unemployed. Aziz finished his coffee and left a generous tip before walking down the avenue. The fancy shops displayed leather goods, china, silk cushions, souvenirs, expensive wares that he knew most people in his neighborhood could never afford.

By the start of his second week in Casablanca, Aziz had seen every sibling, cousin, neighbor, and friend. He had heard about the weddings, births, and deaths. He had been appropriately shocked at how much his nieces and nephews had grown. But he found little else to do. The movie theaters showed films he'd already seen. He'd have
liked to go to a nightclub, but he couldn't imagine Zohra going with him or even letting him go. Most of the programs on TV bored him, and unlike all their neighbors, Zohra refused to have a satellite dish. “No need to bring filth into the house, there's enough of it on the street” was how she put it. So he sat at home, on the divan, and waited for time to pass.

O
N THE EVE
of his departure, Aziz took his suitcase out of the armoire and began packing. Zohra sat on the bed, watching him. When he finished he took out a stack of bills from the inside pocket of his suitcase. He put the money in her hand. “This is all I have.”

Zohra didn't move. She kept looking at him.

“I'll save more,” he said, “and then I'll come back.”

There was a skeptical look in Zohra's eyes, and it made Aziz feel uncomfortable. What did she expect of him? He couldn't give up an opportunity to work just so he could be at home with her. Did she have any idea what he'd gone through to make it in Spain? He couldn't give it all up now. He
had
to go back.

The grandfather clock chimed the hour.

“When are you sending me the papers?” she asked, at last.

“I don't know,” he replied.

Zohra started crying. Aziz tapped her shoulder, in an awkward attempt at consolation. He couldn't imagine her with him in Madrid. She was used to the neighbor's kid pushing the door open and coming in. She was used to the outdoor market where she could haggle over everything. She was used to having her relatives drop in without notice. He couldn't think of her alone in an apartment, with no one to talk to, while he was at work. And he, too, had his own habits now. He closed his suitcase and lifted it off the bed. It felt lighter than when he had arrived.

The Storyteller

M
URAD WAS SITTING
behind the counter, reading a book, when the two women came in. It had been a quiet afternoon, disturbed only by the metronomic sound of the crackling radio at his feet, yet he'd had a hard time losing himself in the imagined world of the novel, even though it was set in Tangier. Or maybe it was because it was set in Tangier that he hadn't been able to reconcile the fictional world he was reading about with the one he experienced every day. He'd caught himself editing the author's prose—correcting an inaccurate reference and rewording the characters' dialogue—but that wasn't it. Something was missing. He'd gotten the book from the American Language Center, where neither of the overworked
clerks bothered to check his long-expired membership card before stamping the book and handing it to him. He spent many hours there after work, trying to find something in the fiction section he hadn't yet read. There was another reason for his frequent visits to the center—a slender girl with lovely brown eyes who smiled at him over her copy of
Heart of Darkness
the first time he saw her. They'd just started seeing each other a couple of months ago. In time, Murad thought, he could introduce her to some of his favorite novels, the one in his hands at the moment not qualifying for that list.

The women's entry into Botbol Bazaar and Gifts provided a welcome distraction, and so he stood up, tossing the book aside. Anas, the other salesman, was slouched on a chair in the corner, snoring softly, as he did most afternoons. The owner was in Agadir on vacation, and Murad had been given the keys to the shop, much to the dismay of Anas, who'd been working there longer. Still, Murad got along reasonably well with him, mostly because he didn't mind when Anas took long breaks from the shop under the guise of going to get cigarettes or when he spent the afternoon asleep. Anas's head bobbed and jolted him awake. He looked around at the shop, saw the two women, and snapped to attention.

The women were both young, perhaps in their late twenties. One wore jeans and a loose henley shirt and a burlap bag whose strap crossed her chest, separating her breasts. Her strawberry blond hair was secured with a chopstick at the back of her head. Her friend, a dark-haired, heavy-set girl, was breathing heavily, having just come up the steep hillside street outside. Her blue shirt was stained under her arms, and she carried a handbag with the designer's name boldly proclaimed on the side. She walked straight to the jewelry case, where silver earrings were displayed next to coral-inlaid bracelets and amber bead necklaces. “How about something like this, Sandy?”

Sandy stood over the display case, looking bored and in a hurry to leave. “Jewelry is so personal,” she said. “Your cousin might not like what you pick.”

“Let's just take a look. How about that bracelet?”

“Oh, Chrissa,” Sandy said, her shoulders dropping slightly. “I don't think it'd be appropriate for a wedding gift. Why don't you get her something for the house?”

Chrissa sighed dramatically, as though she'd been rushed by Sandy all afternoon and had had enough. “Fine,” she said, walking from the jewelry case to the tables laden with souvenirs and knickknacks. Spotting a set of wooden tablets on a shelf, she squealed, “Look!”

Murad had purchased the tablets himself, on his boss's behalf, at an estate sale a few weeks before. They had been used in Quranic schools until the 1940s, but now, of course, it was increasingly rare to find any. The back of one tablet bore the name of the boy who'd used it (Taher) and the date (1935). It was unusual to have identifying details like this because the tablets were often returned when children finished school and reused by other students. On the front, the boy had written a verse from Sura 96, the very first verse to be revealed to the Prophet: “Read, in the name of thy Lord, who created.” Murad had often wondered about the boy whose tablet had ended up at Botbol Bazaar and Gifts, whether he finished Quranic school and went on to public school or whether he'd been sent into an apprenticeship. He'd imagine Taher's life, making up parents and friends for him—a father who'd fought on the side of Abdelkrim in the Rif rebellion; a mother who desperately wanted a daughter; five older brothers; a sebsi-smoking neighbor who taught him the flute and the guenbri at night; a crush on a girl who lived up the street from him.

Chrissa picked up the tablet and held it up to the light to examine the writing. “The calligraphy looks beautiful,” she said.

“I just love how the letters curve,” Sandy said approvingly.

“It's an antique, I think.”

Stuffing her hands in her jeans pocket, Sandy whispered, “Don't show too much interest, Chrissa, or they'll jack up the price.” She affected a look of utter disinterest for the benefit of Anas, who sat in the corner watching them.

“Sorry,” Chrissa said. She seemed like the kind of woman who always apologized for something. She carefully put the tablet down on the table, then grabbed at her long hair and peeled it from her neck, wiping the sweat with her hand. “It might work, don't you think,” she whispered in a conspiratorial tone, “above the console in the entrance?”

Sandy nodded in approval. “I bet your cousin will like it.”

But after staring at the tablet for a while, Chrissa moved on, Sandy shuffling behind her. “What's wrong? You don't like it anymore?” she asked.

“Sorry,” Chrissa said. “I just want to see what else they've got.”

“When we're done here, let's go check out Paul Bowles's house,” Sandy said.

Murad wondered if it would ever be possible to get away from Bowles, from the dozens of tourists he seemed
to inspire to come to Tangier, nostalgic for an era they never even knew. Was it his friendship with Kerouac and Ginsberg? The aura of mystery surrounding his marriage and his affairs? The myths he liked to create? Above all, Murad suspected, it was Bowles's stories that brought them, year after year. There had been a time in Murad's life when he'd used the author as bait, to lure tourists into guided tours of the city, but over time he'd grown weary of it.

He leaned with his elbows on the counter and opened his book again. He wanted to give the impression that he was lost in his reading, and he hoped that Anas, who was just now standing from the stool where he'd been perched, would take care of the two women so he wouldn't have to.

“I hope it's open to the public. Maybe we can take a picture there,” Sandy said. Tapping her burlap bag, she added, “I brought the camera.”

“I don't feel very photogenic today.”

“Oh, stop it. You look fine.”

“You know, I don't even think I've read anything by Bowles.”

“Are you serious? Not even
The Sheltering Sky
?”

Chrissa shook her head. “Sorry.”

“Wow. Then we really should go. It'll be fun, you'll see.”

“So he lived here in Tangier?”

“Yep. Came here in the 1930s. It was Alice B. Toklas who advised him to go to Morocco,” Sandy said. “And Gertrude Stein agreed, so he ended up here.”

“Oh, really?” Chrissa said, absentmindedly. “Check this out.” She pointed to a solid brass, horseshoe-shape mirror that hung from the wall, and seeing her reflection, she brushed her brown hair away from her face and pulled at her shirt.

Murad had a hard time keeping up the pretense, the lines blurring again before his eyes as he caught himself eavesdropping on the women. He hadn't indicated that he understood English, and even though Anas spoke Berber, Arabic, and Spanish, his English was limited to hello and good-bye. Eventually, Murad knew, if the women decided to buy something, he would have to disclose that he understood them, but for now he kept his eyes on his book even as he listened in.

“He lived here until his death.”

“Who?”

“Bowles!” Sandy replied, her tone rising with her exasperation.

“Sorry,” Chrissa said. “So he knew Morocco pretty well, then.”

“Better than the Moroccans themselves.”

W
HEN HE WAS
a little boy, Murad remembered, his father would sit down at night, cross-legged on the raffia mat, his back to the wall, and tell stories for him and for his sister Lamya. This was when the family still lived in the apartment downtown, before the birth of the twins and baby brother, before his father died and they had to move to the one-bedroom in the medina. He remembered the stories only in fragments, names like Juha and Aisha rising to his consciousness now, pieces of a puzzle that he couldn't reconstruct. Realizing this, he felt at once angry and sad, as though he had just discovered that a part of him was missing. He stared at the page for a long time, trying to bring back the memory of a single story.

Childhood images of ogres and jinns flickered in his mind's eye, but he could not hang on to any of them. His father started every story with “Kan, ya ma kan,” “Once there was and there was not.” The timeless opening line was fitting, it seemed to him, to the state he found himself in now, unable to ascertain whether the tales he remembered were real or figments of his imagination. The deep baritone of his father's voice echoed in his ears, strong and reassuring, and finally one story slowly unraveled for him, the tale of Aisha Qandisha. For days after his father had told the story, Murad had had nightmares that the
goat-footed ogress was running after him, calling out his name in a sweet voice, and he was tempted to turn around and look at her, but he couldn't because he knew she would cast a spell on him.

“What do you think about this?” Chrissa asked. She pointed to a Berber rug hanging from the ceiling.

“It's beautiful,” Sandy said. “Nice workmanship, too.”

“I just love the animal patterns,” Chrissa said. “It would be perfect as a wedding gift, wouldn't it?”

“Careful, you're being too eager,” Sandy said.

“Hello,” Anas said.

“See,” Sandy said. She smiled at Anas, but with a distance that suggested she was not interested so please don't even start. Anas smiled blithely, the extent of his English having been exhausted. He wore a football shirt and washed-out jeans, and he shuffled in his yellow belgha to the light switch, which he turned on, illuminating the display cases. He gestured with his hand that the women were welcome to explore the merchandise upstairs, but they remained where they were, undecided about the rug.

Other books

Rugby Spirit by Gerard Siggins
Trapped by Rose Francis
Trigger by Julia Derek
A deeper sleep by Dana Stabenow
Just Fall by Nina Sadowsky
Death of a Teacher by Lis Howell
Rhythm of the Spheres by Abraham Merritt