Raja Alem - The Dove's Necklace

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The Dove's Necklace: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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When a dead woman is discovered in Abu Al Roos, one of Mecca's many alleys, no one will claim the body because they are ashamed by her nakedness. As we follow Detective Nassir's investigation of the case, the secret life of the holy city of Mecca is revealed.
Tackling powerful issues with beautiful and evocative writing, Raja Alem reveals a city-and a civilization-at once beholden to brutal customs, and reckoning (uneasily) with new traditions. Told from a variety of perspectives-including that of Abu Al Roos itself-
is a virtuosic work of literature, and an ambitious portrait of a changing city that deserves our attention.

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“In case you’re finally tired of acting solo, I’ll choose the audience from now on.” When the elevator reached the ground floor, the air inside was thick, tense, then the doors parted with a cinematic flourish to reveal the reception desk and every eye in the lobby. Piano music drifted toward them from the end of the corridor. As the door opened — it felt like it was taking ages — he stripped off his overcoat roughly. She didn’t make a move; her arms were pressed firmly against her sides so he wrapped it around her tightly and growled, “Keep defying me and you won’t even find a rag to cover yourself with.”

His voice was colder than the wind that pummeled them when they walked out of the hotel. She saw a darkness in his face that reminded her of Death in the background of The Burial of the Count of Orgaz . She looked away, provoking the resentment that held him in its thrall. He grabbed the back of her head and kissed her hard and when she opened her eyes again she found herself in the back of his large Mercedes. As soon as the door was shut, they were off. Rafa could taste the blood in her throat all the way from where he was standing, out of sight, in a pool of yellow beneath a streetlight.

Paper Tree

N ASSER WAS EXAMINING THE LAST SHEET OF PARCHMENT FOR A TRACE OF THE family tree when Yusuf grabbed it out of his hands. “Don’t waste your time looking for the family tree. It isn’t here. You should be helping me look for the remains of the fort.”

“What kind of fort do you think could survive centuries of erosion?”

Mushabbab made them go back over the testament from the beginning, but no matter how much they searched they couldn’t identify where the ruins of Ka’b ibn al-Ashraf’s fort should be. Mushabbab pulled out a bunch of maps for Yusuf. “My friends went to great pains to produce these maps and they were reviewed for accuracy by the Center for Hajj Studies and Muflih al-Ghatafani, may he rest in peace. They give us a rough idea of the fort’s location. It was the fourth side of a square formed on three sides by the Mudhaynib Valley, Ranuna Valley, and the Qaba Mosque.” There were some rough schematic drawings, which showed the fort at the intersection of the line running south from Baqi Cemetery and the line running northeast from the Qaba Mosque at a proportion of two to one. That is, the distance between the cemetery and the fort was twice the distance between the fort and the mosque. The two of them combed the entire area, though the city had begun to encroach, spreading out in every direction. It was like searching for a needle in a haystack of fourteen hundred years.

Bundug

T HE AIRPLANE MADE A HALF-CIRCLE OVER THE MOUNTAINS THAT BLOCKED OUT the horizon as it prepared to land. Nora looked out over the peaks, which pointed menacingly into the sky like devil horns. Her heartbeat quickened and she began to tremble, as though she was expecting something horrible to happen.

The plane touched down lightly on the primitive airstrip in the middle of the empty desert. From the ground, the mountains blocked any view of the horizon and Nora felt like she was being held captive behind the devil’s cloak. She looked around as she descended the steps to the runway; there was no sign of life anywhere. The only thing she could see was a pair of signs in the road: one pointed to Khamis Mushayt and the other to Najran. On the six-hour journey, Nora had listened as the sheikh talked to his assistant about maps and plans and budgets for a deal they were about to sign. He was ignoring her on purpose. He was still angry, and he wore his anger was like a layer of fire immediately beneath the skin. It singed her even though he was focused elsewhere. As soon as she stepped onto the plane, everything about Madrid disappeared. Nora was used to it. Every time she hit the ground she was born anew, her memory wiped clean.

What she gleaned from their conversation was that they were about to meet someone very important. Someone they called the Building Crow. She was half-asleep when she heard the sheikh mocking the man, though he obviously envied him. “Our competitor’s a beast. You know he has several different citizenships. He’s a multinational citizen and he’s out of any one nation’s reach. He could get his hands on Satan’s property if he wanted to.”

“Well they don’t call him the Building Crow for nothing.”

“We need to think like devils to get him on board so we can complete this stage of the project. We can use his greed to get our hands on the whole world. Whatever property he wants, he gets. He could shake the ground beneath us. He’s this century’s King Shahriyar. He always gets the most beautiful women: he marries them and then when he divorces them, he gives them a house to be heartbroken in. If we want him to get on board, we have to go to him, all the way out to the Devil’s Horns where he’s hunting and camping.”

“Don’t worry, sir. We’ve made sure to bring him a mouthwatering bit of prey,” the assistant said, winking at the two female flight attendants waiting on them. “He has a soft spot for Egyptian sweets.”

Human falcon eyes tracked the motorcade of Mercedes as they entered the small, nameless village, disappearing between the run-down two-story buildings at the side of a pothole-ridden asphalt road. Nora shut her eyes in the face of all that decay, which had the power to revive buried fantasies. As far as she could see, the fruit orchards and beautiful mud-brick houses had given way entirely to soulless cement cubes, but the few orchards that remained at least gave the town a familiar feel.

By ten p.m., the town was dead and the only sounds they could hear were the rush of the river and the creeping thick night. She wouldn’t see the sheikh for three days; her assistant told her that he had to stay with the Crow at his camp. This was confirmed by a train of Land Rovers that drove into town, kicking up a dust storm against the evening sky and carrying her sheikh along with the Crow’s son to a nighttime hunt. A cacophonous show of walkie-talkies, blindfolded falcons and their trainers whistling, clanking rifles, and reckless driving. The women ate the party up with wheat bread and butter and the procession of Land Rovers invaded the dreams of the children sleeping inside the town’s dark houses.

It was clear to Nora that she would be spending the evening alone in the midst of that silence. After a long shower, she went back to her room, barefoot, a red bath towel wrapped around her. She’d been getting ready for bed when she heard a few soft knocks at the door. So soft she felt the knocking must’ve risen up from her distant memories. She turned away from the door and faced the bed: a five-star hotel in a village, it was clean but without an ounce of taste. Everything smelled like abandonment. The knocking got louder and she forgot she’d ever been sleepy. “Who’s there?”

Out of all the people it could’ve been, Nora never would have expected to open the door and find the head flight attendant standing there in an embroidered red silk dress with a plunging neckline. “Get dressed. You’ve been invited to dinner at the Building Crow’s camp.”

“Oh, but I’d rather sleep.”

“He sent for you specifically. No one turns down an invitation from the Building Crow. You’d never be forgiven.”

“But I’m not ready for a party. The only clothes I have with me are pajamas and a pair of jeans. My bags are still on the plane.”

“That’s not a problem. Just put on some makeup. You need some bright red lipstick. I’ll be right back.” The woman was gone before she had a chance to object, and a few moments later there was a fancy set of underwear and a hand-embroidered, brilliant gold caftan laid out on the bed waiting for her. Nora couldn’t get her head around anything. She knew that the sheikh would never forgive her if she turned down the invitation. A few moments later, she was sitting beside the two flight attendants in the back of a black Mercedes, dressed in an outfit conjured up by goodness knows what magic wand, as the desert night ushered them to the campsite.

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