A houri stroked the top of Isaac’s head. “Are you truly pure?” he asked.
“We are as chaste as the sheltered eggs of ostriches.”
“How dull,” Isaac replied. “I am going to look around.”
The stunned houri burst into a magical melody, and her sisters joined her. One of the virgins took Fatima’s hand, but she shook it off. “I never lie with a woman whose breasts are more pronounced than mine.”
The song began to falter. “But we are chaste,” said one.
“We are bashful,” said another.
“Neither man nor jinn have touched us,” said another.
“You can have intercourse with us,” said another.
“We have wine,” said another.
“We have song,” said another.
“A truly overflowing cup,” said another.
“Do you not possess desire?” asked another, and Ishmael said, “No.”
“Nothing here of interest,” said a returning Isaac. “The song is in a minor key.”
And the company took to their carpets and flew.
The following day, they sat in our living room looking out of place, three men all the way from Syria. My mother had to serve them coffee, since the maid was packing.
“Are you sure this is necessary?” my mother asked. “It’s not as if anything is happening here. Lebanon will not get involved in the war.”
“The Israelis are coming, madame,” the maid’s father said. His hairy wrist extended three finger widths past the frayed sleeve of his shirt. He would not look directly at my mother. He seemed very tired, with drooping eyelids and a slack jaw. “We can hear them. The girl should be at home.”
“Fine. Fine. I’ll go see that she’s packed.” Lina and I followed her out of the room. “Last time I’m hiring an Arab girl,” my mother said as she walked into the maid’s room.
The girl wore her best dress, chlorophyll-patterned, front-buttoned, hemmed an inch below her knees, showing white calves. A canary-yellow headscarf covered her hair, her worst feature. Standing there, gazing at her open suitcase, she looked much older than thirteen.
“Let me see how you’re doing,” my mother said. She unpacked the top layer, looked underneath. “Anything else going in this suitcase?”
The girl shook her head. My mother rearranged the clothes.
Lina gave me her “I’m about to tell you something you don’t know because you don’t know anything” look. “Mom’s checking to see if she’s stealing anything,” she said in French.
“Tais-toi!” my mother snapped. She reached into her pocket, took out a hundred-dollar bill. “Listen,” she said to the girl. “I want you to have this. You’ve been very good to us. I know it’s a lot of money, but I want you to promise me something. You will hide it. It is only for you. Under no circumstances are you to show it to your father or your brothers. Not even to your husband if they marry you off. This is for you. Only for you. Do you understand?”
“Yes, madame.” She hid the bill in her brassiere. “Thank you, madame.”
“Now get the hell out of here.”
The radio moaned about betrayals, a defeated voice. The air seemed thick. I stood in the concierge’s living room looking at a family of strangers. The concierge’s wife hovered around her guests, concerned. There were four of them: a husbandless woman, a tattered version of the concierge’s wife, and her three children. The woman’s lips were pursed, her eyes blurry. She seemed not to inhabit her ghostlike face. A lethargic fan stirred the air.
“They had so many planes,” said her eldest son, almost a man. “They kept coming and coming. They lit up the skies at night and bombed everything. We didn’t have a chance. Everyone ran away.”
Elie stared. “Did you fight, cousin?”
“Fight? We didn’t have a chance to breathe. They came across so fast we barely had time to run. They used napalm. It burns your skin down to the bone before it kills you. How can we fight that with rifles?”
“We’re lost,” another cousin said. Elie walked out in a huff. I followed quietly.
I tried not to be noticed. My mother refused to look at Uncle Jihad, stilled her gaze upon the ceiling. Both sat on the divan, their legs resting on the glass coffee table. My mother’s morning demitasse remained untouched, no longer steaming.
“She’s gone, Jihad,” she said softly. “She’s gone.” My mother had found out that Madame Daoud had left in the dark of night, gone to Italy to visit family, her husband said.
“No word, no note, nothing.” My mother closed her eyes and sighed.
“Why do you think she’s not coming back?” Uncle Jihad asked. “Her husband is still here.”
My mother slowly lowered her head, opened her eyes, and gave him a “let’s-be-serious” look. “He needs to take care of things before he joins her.”
“You’re being morose.” My uncle laid his hand upon her shoulder. “She’ll always be your friend.”
“Nothing remains,” my mother said, shaking her head. “All is lost.”
“I’ve lost my childhood innocence,” Lina sighed. She was sitting on the piano stool, the upright to her back, its top lid open as if it were letting out a sigh of its own. Forlorn, she showed me her profile like a dejected Egyptian film star. She kept smoothing her skirt without looking down, a practiced, automatic gesture.
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“How can I witness the suffering of the Palestinian children and remain childhood-innocent?” She exhaled loudly. “I suffer with them. I’m no longer a child.”
“But you’re ten, stupid.”
“No longer. Because of what I’ve seen, I am now a woman.”
I shoved her off the stool and ran. She came after me.
“It’s over,” my mother said, “and our army didn’t fire a single bullet.”
“It’s not our government’s fault the war ended so quickly,” Uncle Jihad said. “They’re probably still in session, contemplating action.”
We watched the news on television in the family room, thousands of Palestinian refugees arriving in Lebanon, like the rolling, rolling, rolling cattle on Rawhide.
“This chaos is disconcerting. There are so many of them,” my mother said. “What will they do?”
“They’ll wait,” my father said.
“What’s Lebanon? Some kind of purgatory?”
“What’s purgatory?” I asked.
“Come here and I’ll tell you,” Uncle Jihad said, patting his thigh. My legs dangled over the edge of his lap. “According to Dante, there’s paradise above, inferno below, and purgatory, which is like a hospital waiting room or train station until it is decided where one will go.”
“Who gets to decide, God?”
His grin widened. His head shuddered, a noncommittal nod. “Anyone but us.”
And King Kade sent the faithless wind against them. “Now, that is more like it,” said Isaac. Thick white clouds approached. The passengers held on to the carpet hems as the winds grew stronger. A cold, swirling gust blew Jacob off. He fell a few lengths, vanished, and popped back into place. The carpets turned fractious and began to misbehave.
The company was forced to alight in a green meadow with shin-high grass. Noah folded the three carpets into wallet-sized squares and swallowed them.
“This is a lovely meadow,” said Job, “and its color perfect.”
Fatima and the imps walked north. “This is exhausting,” Elijah said. “By the time we get where we are going, I will be too tired to do anything. My hooves are sore. I think we should fly again and risk the winds.” Below them was a deep valley they had to cross to get to the second mountain.