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Kamila Shamsie: A God in Every Stone

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Kamila Shamsie A God in Every Stone

A God in Every Stone: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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July 1914. Young Englishwoman Vivian Rose Spencer is running up a mountainside in an ancient land, surrounded by figs and cypresses. Soon she will discover the Temple of Zeus, the call of adventure, and the ecstasy of love. Thousands of miles away a twenty-year old Pathan, Qayyum Gul, is learning about brotherhood and loyalty in the British Indian army. July, 1915. Qayyum Gul is returning home after losing an eye at Ypres, his allegiances in tatters. Viv is following the mysterious trail of her beloved. They meet on a train to Peshawar, unaware that a connection is about to be forged between their lives — one that will reveal itself fifteen years later, on the Street of Storytellers, when a brutal fight for freedom, an ancient artefact and a mysterious green-eyed woman will bring them together again. A powerful story of friendship, injustice, love and betrayal, A GOD IN EVERY STONE carries you across the globe, into the heart of empires fallen and conquered, reminding us that we all have our place in the chaos of history and that so much of what is lost will not be forgotten.

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— What about his turban?

— How should I know? He wasn’t wearing one. Whose coat is this? Where were you when this bullet came in?

Diwa puts her hands to her ears and turns away. She has never before noticed how tiny this room is, how oppressive its dark walls. His turban? She has no sooner thought it than she recalls how carefully he pulled the kameez over his head, with what precision. And then the hands clasped to the turban as he fell.

She must act quickly, before Zarina can stop her, or else she could be here for hours, stuck with this cowering, shrill version of her commanding sister-in-law. Before she can give herself time to reconsider, she is on the balcony railing, calling out to the startled men below.

— Catch!

For a long terrifying moment she falls. Then she is in the arms of men, and it is all too brief before they set her on her feet and urge her to go back. She hears Zarina’s voice calling to her from the balcony, but she knows this new version of her sister-in-law won’t follow. She pushes through the crowd. A man puts his hand on her shoulder to stop her — it’s the first of the men into whose mouth she sent a rope of water, the one with the strong hands — and she roars at him, a sound which might have had words in it but she’s not sure it does. His hands spring away from her as though she’s a flame. She barrels her way through the crowd, feeling herself on fire, no one must stop her, no one must even try. The men can feel it radiating off her, they step out of her way, some of them saying things she can’t hear because the roaring of the fire is in her ears.

Then she’s beneath the watch-shop awning, and he’s there. Najeeb Gul. Standing on a crate, looking around as if searching for someone or something in the crowd. There’s blood everywhere — seeping through the bandage on his head, staining his clothes. When he sees her, he steps off the crate, grimacing in pain. His feet have barely touched the ground when he almost falls over and has to loop an arm around a slim tree trunk for support.

— How bad is it?

— Nothing like it looks. A brick hit my head, and I fell over onto a bayonet. The soldier looked more surprised than me. Don’t worry, please, it’s just a flesh wound.

— What was beneath the turban?

— It doesn’t matter now.

Then he says the words which she’s been hearing for so many hours she’s stopped hearing them: Inqilaab Zindabad.

When she stood on the roof those words meant nothing to her. They belonged to that part of her brother’s life in which he turned most tedious. But down here, amidst the musk and thrum of a suspended battle, everyone waiting for a starting gun, she finds herself moved to emotions she’s never known before. She sees herself unwinding Najeeb Gul’s bloodied bandage and waving it like a flag, joining in the cry of Inqilaab Zindabad. But first she wants to know what was beneath the turban.

— Where is it? The turban?

Najeeb Gul smiles. He says, Now we have to get married.

— What?

— Think of the story we’ll tell our children. When they brought me here I saw you on that balcony, dispensing water onto the parched battlefield. There was a light shining from you, I swear it.

She feels herself blush. She doesn’t know if he’s mad, half-delirious with pain or simply as struck as she is by the day’s sense of possibility. She might agree to anything right now. She might agree to step onto a train with a man who she knows only by the scent of his clothes, the muscles of his back and the fact that he works in the same place her brothers go on school excursions. She might find herself in London with him, wearing his turban on her head. Because in London, she has heard, fashionable women wear turbans.

— When he pulled the bayonet out I fell. The turban rolled off my head.

— Where did you fall?

— Near the armoured car. It rolled beneath the wheel, just past where my arm could reach. The turban doesn’t matter now. Stay here. Tell me your name.

But the fire is too much inside her. She tells him her name and lightly touches his wrist — it’s some kind of promise, she feels — and rejoins the crowd. Moving forward gets harder as she nears the front. The men here are on fire themselves, and don’t want to yield an inch of ground. But she keeps insisting she has a message for someone, it’s important, she has to deliver it in person, and they let her go either because she’s convincing or because their attention is elsewhere or because they see they’ll physically have to carry her away and no man wants to be the one to lay a hand on her.

She understands so little of what’s going on here. It has been an age since the bullets stopped, but everyone is still here, waiting. The man who was standing on the fire-truck has gone now, and now that she’s near the front she hears an English voice say, This is your last chance. Disperse. A Peshawari voice replies, with exquisite courtesy, After you.

She can see nothing past the shoulders of the men in front of her. Then, amazingly, a space opens up and she sees it: the long-tailed turban, resting against the wheel of the foremost armoured car. She pushes her way through the tiny space, and steps out into the middle ground between her people and the English, a space wider than any valley, wider than the sky. The startled eyes of men turn to her, voices of different accents and different languages tell her to retreat, in a tone which makes it clear she is nothing but disruption. She is amazed by her own fearlessness. She darts forward, picks up the turban and places it on her head. It’s a little loose, but only a little. As she pushes it down onto her skull her palms encounter some kind of band between the fabric and the hard cap. Very slowly — head up, eyes meeting the eyes of an Indian soldier with his gun trained on her — she steps back into the battalion of Peshawari men. One of the men, his beard white, pats her shoulder.

— I’m sorry for your loss. But go now. Quickly.

He thinks mourning has propelled her here, the turban a memento of a fallen brother or father. Or husband, if she appears old enough for a husband.

The men are content to step aside and let her through now that she’s retreating. As she approaches the watch shop she sees that Najeeb Gul is moving towards her, his eyes on her turban, then on her face, his expression telling her she is a miracle. Diwa runs towards him. So full of elation she doesn’t understand the cracking noises, the screams, the sharp pain in her spine; there is only time to wonder if Najeeb Gul’s arms are reaching for her or the object on her head as he, too, stumbles and falls.

23–25 April 1930

Standing on the balcony between shards of earthenware Zarina watches Diwa charge through the crowd, straight towards the wounded man. The sun catches the mirrorwork on her sleeves, light leaps up from her arms. The man speaks to her and points, she nods in acceptance and, too far away to hear Zarina’s loud cries, pushes her way to the space between the troops and protestors. If Zarina tries to follow her onto the street she’ll lose sight of her just as she lost sight of her husband earlier in the day when she left the rooftop to call him back home. So there is nothing to do but watch as Diwa picks up a fallen turban — it has to be the one the wounded man had been calling out for earlier — places it on her head and disappears back into the crowd. For a few seconds Zarina loses her. Machine-gun fire rips the air; sprays of light; there she is, near the watch-shop awning, there she is.

Did she trip? Did someone pull her down below the line of fire? Did she veer away in the time it took Zarina to blink? The street is in chaos, a chessboard overturned. Some men run towards the side alleys, some fall, some move towards the bullets to help their fallen brothers. Diwa! She draws the name out from deep in her belly, but even so her voice is a thread falling limply onto the street where panic itself is a sound. She is barefoot, but there is no question of taking the time to find her shoes before running down the stairs and out into the alley, through which soldiers are chasing Peshawari men. The ground is hot, sticky; the men run past her as if she isn’t there. She rounds the corner onto the Street of Storytellers where the gunfire is so loud it’s as if each bullet is being fired into her ear. And the smell! Fresh blood, and hours-old blood, and something else, more rank — men, terrified, have been losing control of their bodies. The flies are thick, fearless.

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