"I'm sorry to have bothered you," Mariam said, weeping soundlessly into the phone.
She
saw Jalil waving to her, skipping from stone to stone as he crossed the stream, his
pockets swollen with gifts. All the times she had held her breath for him, for
God to
grant her more time with him. "Thank you," Mariam began to say, but the man at the ot-
her end had already hung up.
Rasheed was looking at her. Mariam shook her head.
"Useless," he said, snatching the phone from her. "Like
daughter, like father."
On their way out of the lobby, Rasheed walked briskly to the coffee table, which was
now
abandoned, and pocketed the last ring
of jelabi. He took it home and gave it to Zal-
mai.
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