《the kite runner》

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the kite runner- 第97部分


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 gracious as His book says He is。 I bow to the west and kiss the ground and promise that I will do _zakat_; I will do _namaz_; I will fast during Ramadan and when Ramadan has passed I will go on fasting; I will mit to memory every last word of His holy book; and I will set on a pilgrimage to that sweltering city in the desert and bow before the Ka bah too。 I will do all of this and I will think of Him every day from this day on if He only grants me this one wish: My hands are stained with Hassan s blood; I pray God doesn t let them get stained with the blood of his boy too。
I hear a whimpering and realize it is mine; my lips are salty with the tears trickling down my face。 I feel the eyes of everyone in this corridor on me and still I bow to the west。 I pray。 I pray that my sins have not caught up with me the way I d always feared they would。
A STARLESS; BLACK NIGHT falls over Islamabad。 It s a few hours later and I am sitting now on the floor of a tiny lounge off the corridor that leads to the emergency ward。 Before me is a dull brown coffee table cluttered with newspapers and dog…eared magazines……an April 1996 issue of Time; a Pakistani newspaper showing the face of a young boy who was hit and killed by a train the week before; an entertainment magazine with smiling Hollywood actors on its glossy cover。 There is an old woman wearing a jade green shalwar…kameez and a crocheted shawl nodding off in a wheelchair across from me。 Every once in a while; she stirs awake and mutters a prayer in Arabic。 I wonder tiredly whose prayers will be heard tonight; hers or mine。 I picture Sohrab s face; the pointed meaty chin; his small seashell ears; his slanting bambooleaf eyes so much like his father s。 A sorrow as black as the night outside invades me; and I feel my throat clamping。
I need air。
I get up and open the windows。 The air ing through the screen is musty and hot……it smells of overripe dates and dung。 I force it into my lungs in big heaps; but it doesn t clear the clamping feeling in my chest。 I drop back on the floor。 I pick up the Time magazine and flip through the pages。 But I can t read; can t focus on anything。 So I toss it on the table and go back to staring at the zigzagging pattern of the cracks on the cement floor; at the cobwebs on the ceiling where the walls meet; at the dead flies littering the windowsill。 Mostly; I stare at the clock on the wall。 It s just past 4 A。M。 and I have been shut out of the room with the swinging double doors for over five hours now。 I still haven t heard any news。
The floor beneath me begins to feel like part of my body; and my breathing is growing heavier; slower。 I want to sleep; shut my eyes and lie my head down on this cold; dusty floor。 Drift off。 When I wake up; maybe I will discover that everything I saw in the hotel bathroom was part of a dream: the water drops dripping from the faucet and landing with a plink into the bloody bathwater; the left arm dangling over the side of the tub; the blood…soaked razor sitting on the toilet tank……the same razor I had shaved with the day before……and his eyes; still half open but light less。 That more than anything。 I want to forget the eyes。
Soon; sleep es and I let it take me。 I dream of things I can t remember later。
SOMEONE IS TAPPING ME on the shoulder。 I open my eyes。 There is a man kneeling beside me。 He is wearing a cap like the men behind the swinging double doors and a paper surgical mask over his mouth……my heart sinks when I see a drop of blood on the mask。 He has taped a picture of a doe…eyed little girl to his beeper。 He unsnaps his mask and I m glad I don t have to look at Sohrab s blood anymore。 His skin is dark like the imported Swiss chocolate Hassan and I used to buy from the bazaar in Shar…e…Nau; he has thinning hair and hazel eyes topped with curved eyelashes。 In a British accent; he tells me his name is Dr。 Nawaz; and suddenly I want to be away from this man; because I don t think I can bear to hear what he has e to tell me。 He says the boy had cut himself deeply and had lost a great deal of blood and my mouth begins to mutter that prayer again:
La illaha il Allah; Muhammad u rasul ullah。
They had to transfuse several units of red cells…… How will I tell Soraya?
Twice; they had to revive him……I will do _namaz_; I will do _zakat_。
They would have lost him if his heart hadn t been young and strong……
I will fast。
He is alive。
Dr。 Nawaz smiles。 It takes me a moment to register what he has just said。 Then he says more but I don t hear him。 Because I have taken his hands and I have brought them up to my face。 I weep my relief into this stranger s small; meaty hands and he says nothing now。 He waits。
THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT is L…shaped and dim; a jumble of bleeping monitors and whirring machines。 Dr。 Nawaz leads me between two rows of beds separated by white plastic curtains。 Sohrab s bed is the last one around the corner; the one nearest the nurses  station where two nurses in green surgical scrubs are jotting notes on clipboards; chatting in low voices。 On the silent ride up the elevator with Dr。 Nawaz; I had thought I d weep again when I saw Sohrab。 But when I sit on the chair at the foot of his bed; looking at his white face through the tangle of gleaming plastic tubes and IV lines; I am dry…eyed。 Watching his chest rise and fall to the rhythm of the hissing ventilator; a curious numbness washes over me; the same numbness a man might feel seconds after he has swerved his car and barely avoided a head…on collision。
I doze off; and; when I wake up; I see the sun rising in a buttermilk sky through the window next to the nurses  station。 The light slants into the roo
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