ldrees spoke with mock seriousness:
- Me too I say work is a curse. It's an i nsult to human
dignity.
- You 're inviting me to be a crook, which is worse than a
curse.
- If work's a curse and crookery's worse, how's a man to
live?
Adham did not like talking to him and kept quiet. ldrees
waited for him to speak but, getting no response, he continued:
- Perhaps you want to get a living without work? But that
would be at the expense of other people.
52
Adham
Adham still kept quiet, so he went on:
- Or perhaps you want to get a living without work and still
not harm anybody? (He laughed hatefu lly. ) It's a problem, son
of a slave.
Umayma shouted furiously:
- Go home! The devil has bitten you.
His wife called him with a piercing voice, and he went the
way he had come, si ngi ng 'Strange things, my God, strange
things ! ' Umayma implored her husband:
- Don't get mixed up wi th him at any price.
- I keep fi nding him standing over me without knowing
how he came.
Silence reigned and they fou nd in it a refuge from their
anxiety. Then Umayma spoke again, gently:
- My heart tells me I ' ll make this hut into a house like the
one we've been thrown out of, including the garden and the
nightingales, and our child will know ease and pleasure in it.
Adham stood smi ling a smi le she could not see in the
darkness. He spoke sarcastically as he brushed the dust from
his jellaba:
- 'Fine gherkins! Sweet cucumbers ! ' The sweat pours from
my body, and urchins bait me, and my feet kill me, and all for
a few piasters.
He went into the hut and she followed, saying:
- But the day of wealth and happiness will come.
- If you suffered more you 'd have no time for dreams.
They both lay down on the straw-filled sacking, and she said:
- Isn't God able to turn our hut into a house like the one
we've been thrown out of?
Adham yawned.
- What I wish for is to go back to the Great House itself.
(Then, yawning more:) Work is a curse !
She whispered:
- Maybe, bu t a curse you get rid of only by working!
53
Children of Gebelaawi
l 2 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
One nightAdham woke to the sound of groaning. As he was
half asleep, i t was a little time before he made out Umayma's
voice crying: 'Oh my back! Oh my tummy! ' He sat up at once,
peering at her, and said:
- You're always in this state these days, and then it turns out
to be nothing. Light the candle.
- Light it yourself! This time it's real.
He got up, groping for the candle in its place among the
pots and pans. Having managed to find it, he lit it and set it on
the table. Umayma appeared by its feeble light, lying propped
up on her elbows, moaning and raising her head to breathe
with obvious difficulty. He said anxiously:
- That's what you say every time you feel pai ns.
Her face crumpled up.
- No, no! I'm sure it's the real thi ng this time.
He helped her to lean her back against the wall and said:
- It'll be soon anyway. Try to bear it while I go to Gemalia
for the midwife.
- Mi nd how you go! What time is it now?
Ad ham went out of the hut and looked at the sky:
- It'll soon be daybreak. I ' ll be straight back.
He hurried off towards Gemalia. When he made his way
back through the darkness he was leading the old midwife by
the hand. As they drew near to the shack, Umayma's cries
reached him, shattering the stillness. His heart pounded and
he strode faster till the midwife complained. They rushed i nto
the hut together and the woman took off her cloak and said to
Umayma, laughing:
- The worst is over. Your patience wi ll soon be rewarded.
Adham asked her:
- How are you?
She groaned:
54
Adham
- The pai n's almost killing me. My body's bursting. My
bones are breaking. Don't go !
But the midwife said:
- He must wait quietly outside.
Ad ham left the hut for the open air and caught sight of a
figure standing nearby. He knew him even before he could
make him out clearly, and his chest tightened, but ldrees put
on a polite tone and said:
- She's in labor? Poor girl! My wife went through this not
long ago, as you know; but i t's a misleading pain and soon goes.
Then you ' ll meet what the Knower of the Unseen has allotted
you, just as I met Hind - a charmi ng baby, but she's always
piddling or crying. Courage!
Adham was suffering. He said:
- God is Master of all things.
Idrees let out a harsh laugh and asked:
- Did you fetch the midwife from Gemalia to her?
- Yes.
- Dirty, greedy old woman ! I fetched her too. She asked for
too much, so I chased her off, and she still curses me whenever
she sees me go past her house.
Adham hesitated, then said:
- You shouldn't treat people like that.
- You fine fellow! Your father taught me to be rude and
tough with people.
Umayma's voice went up in a pitiful cry that seemed to echo
the rending inside her. Adham clenched his teeth on what he
was about to say and went anxiously towards the hut, calli ng
out i n a weak voice:
- Courage!
Idrees repeated his words loudly:
- Courage, sister-in-law!
Ad ham was worried about his wife hearing this voice, but he
hid his annoyance, saying:
- We'd better get further away from the hut.
55
Children of Gebelaawi
- Let's go to my place; I'll give you some tea and you can
see Hind snoring.
But Adham moved away from his hut without going towards
Idrees's, cursing him silen tly and hiding his anger. Idrees
followed him saying:
- You'll be a father before sunrise. It's an important
change in your life. One good thing is that you'll know the
bond your father breaks so easily and so stupidly.
Adham gave vent to his feeli ngs:
- This talk is an noying me.
- Maybe, bu t there's nothing else to occupy us.
Adham hesitated, then said:
- Idrees, why do you follow me about, when you know
there's no love between us?
Idrees guffawed loudly.
-What a shameless child you are! Your wife's cries woke me
from a delicious sleep, but I didn't let it annoy me. On the
contrary, I've come to help you if you need any help. Your
father must have heard her cries as clearly as I did, but he just
went back to sleep as if he had no heart.
Adham said curtly:
- The fate he's decreed for us is bad enough; can't you
ignore me as I ignore you?
- You hate rne, Ad ham, not because I was the cause of your
being thrown out, bu t because I remind you of your weakness.
You hate your own rotten self i n me. Now I no longer have any
reason to hate you. On the contrary, today you're my comfort
and consolation. Don' t forgetwe're neighbors, the first people
to live in this desert. Our chi ldren will crawl here side by side.
- You enjoy tormenting me.
ldrees said nothing for a while, so that Adham hoped for
release, but then he went on, asking in a serious voice:
- Why can't we agree?
Adham said with a sigh:
- Because I'm a street trader, as my circumstances require,
56
Adham
and you 're a man whose pleasure is i n attacking people.
Umayma's cries became louder again, and Adham looked
up at the sky implori ngly. He noticed at once that the darkness
was less intense and that day was breaking over the Jebel. He
shouted:
- Pain is a curse.
ldrees said laughing:
- Such softness is charming. You were made for managing
the Trust and playi ng your flute.
- Make fu n of me as much as you like; I'm suffering.
- Why? I though t it was your wife who was suffering.
Adham shouted:
- Leave me alone !
ldrees asked wi th ag!,JTavating cal mness:
- Are you hoping to become a father wi thout paying for it?
Adham kept qui et, breathing heavily, and ldrees spoke
enticingly:
- You're a sensible man. I've come to propose a job by
which you cou ld bring happiness to your future children. The
event you can hear being announced is the first but not the
last. Our desires wi ll be satisfied only by bui lding a mountain
of screaming children. What do you thi nk?
- It's almost day. Go back to bed!
The cries came agai n, continuously, till Adham could no
longer bear to stay where he was and returned to the hut from
which the darkness was lifting. He reached i t as Umayma let
out a deep sigh like the dying away of a sad song. He came to
the door, asking:
- How are things with you?
He heard the voice of the midwife telling him to wait. He
prepared to relax, for the voice seemed to him to be triumphant. Very soon the wo man appeared at the door, saying:
- You 've been blessed wi th two sons.
- Twi ns? !
- May God provide for them!
57
Children of Gebelaawi
From behind him came Idrees's ear-splitting laugh, and he
heard him saying:
- Now ldrees is father to a girl and uncle to two boys .. .
A n d he went o ff to his hut singing:
Where is luck, where's fate?
Tell me where, of late !
The midwife spoke again:
- Their mother wants to call them Qadri and Humaam.
Buoyant wi th happi ness, Adham murmured:
- Qadri and Humaam ! Qadri . . . and Humaam ...
1 3 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Qadri sai d as he wiped his face on the corner of hisjellaba:
- Let's sit down and eat.
Humaam stood looki ng towards the sun, which was starting
to sink.
- Yes, time's been flying.
They sat down cross-legged in the sand at the foot ofjebel
Muqattam. Hu maam undid the knot in the striped red handkerchief, revealing bread, falafel and leeks. They fell to, glancing from time to time at their sheep, some of which
wandered about while others stood chewing peacefully. There
was nothing in the twi ns' features or build to distinguish them,
except that Qadri had a defi nite hu nter's look in his eye, which
gave him a disti nctive sharpness of expression. Qadri spoke
again, chewi ng a huge mouthful:
- If only this whole desert belonged to us alone, we could
graze our sheep wi thou t any worries.
Humaam said wi th a smile:
- But this is where shepherds come from Otoufand Kafr el-
58
Adham
Zaghari and 1-lusseinia. IL's best to be friendly with them and
avoid trouble.
Qadri laughed scornfully, spitting out a shower of crumbs,
and said:
- Those places have only one answer for anybody who tries
to be friendly: punches!
- But. . .
- There's n o but I only know one way; I grab the man by
hisjellaba and bang his head ti ll he falls on his face - or his
back for that matter.
- And that's why we can hardly count our enemies.
- Who asked you to count them?
Humaam was serious and seemed very far away. He whistled
to himself, then stopped and fell back i nto a reflective silence.
He picked out a leek, stroked it with his fingers, put i t in his
mouth with relish, smacked his lips and said:
-That's why we're alone and have to go a long time wi thou t
anybody to talk to.
- What need is there for you to talk when you 're always
singi ng?
Humaam looked at him trustingly and said:
- It seems to me that this loneliness gets you down sometimes.
- I'll always fi nd a reason to be gloomy, whether it's
loneliness or something else.
Silence fell, broken by the smacking of lips. Far away
appeared a group going back from the jebel towards Otouf,
singing a song, one leading and the others chanti ng the
responses. Humaam said:
- This part of the desert is in our district. If we went off to