I am young, but my future is destroyed, just as Othman’s future is destroyed, and Father’s, too — I could surrender, give voice to the scream inside, release my bowels — this is my fantasy. But where would the money come from — the money for my stents, my injections?
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The lights went out and Father rested a hand on her forehead. I tried to force her mouth open with the spoon. I wanted to get it over, get the ice chips in — I wished I hadn’t started. Her mouth so dry — our patient parched — I wanted her to be comfortable. She choked on the ice, hacking, shrieking, as it slid down her throat. Father and Othman looked on. There was nothing they could do, it was only an ice chip, it wouldn’t kill her QZ9E23,WFL05JQ QQR2EV-0M #X B /
I snapped the oxygen mask back in place.
Just then the claw at my back fell away. Perhaps the deranged woman, the lunatic in the next bed, had finally croaked, would no longer clutch at me, as she had been clutching at me since my arrival.
There is nothing here but filth, I thought, and I have locked it in place. I thought: I have failed to succor the dying.
Othman and I live apart now, as we must. Yesterday, Othman, on the phone: Live your life, go away, our future is destroyed. Go where? I wanted to ask. He knows I cannot leave, the necessary papers out of reach, infinitely so, still he pretends I can escape — first I will escape, then he will escape. He pretends love is keeping me here, or loyalty, or foolishness, or hope. You must end this foolishness, stop traveling to Kadhimiya hospital, it makes no difference, Othman said. He said, And they’ll kill you.
Fine, I said, let them.
He cursed me. And I knew this without seeing — his eyes rolled u EAM3 G2XE,0ABH AS1ET=LUEWN T 0EWZ
The victims of the latest bomb lay torn on rude cots or slumped against the wall when we rushed into the hospital, and it seemed to me, as Father wrenched my arm to propel me forward, that I passed nothing but the legs of children, legs peppered and flayed and seeping, and though I knew that these legs were attached to bodies, to faces crying out in pain, all I saw as Father dragged me to the stairs were children’s legs — so many dark bloody legs, the trousers cut away.
I see these legs now, in this foul little room. Two smeared windows, eight beds, the three of us the only visitors, all other patients abandoned, ours — our patient before us — the fortunate one, I suppose, if visitors bring fortune and not mere darkness.
But I am evading the main point.
My lesson for today — today’s new truth.
The filth — how I forgot it; how could I have?
When we entered the hospital this morning we gaped at the stench. But then, as if we were victims of some spell, the stench vanished — or rather, it vanished from our minds.
Though we speak on the phone most nights, it had been months since I’d seen Othman. Our patient had been here eleven days, this Othman’s first visit, the drive too risky in the face of those Kadhimiya checkpoints, we didn’t embrace.
And why didn’t we? Was it the filth? Othman stood and sat back down quite smoothly, as though our touching — ever touching again — was perfectly out of the question.
Othman’s cheekbones have grown sharper and his beard has thinned; when I first saw him I wanted to ask him to finish pasting on this new stage beard of his. There was as well a swelling and discoloration under his left eye, which neither Father nor I have asked about.
Meanwhile in the past weeks — it struck me only now, as I took inventory of my husband’s altered countenance — Father’s face too had changed, losing all definition, flesh swelling beneath a shiny skin> SEFRNH AM KH38T RPXW.= XGX2
A cramped space, a fetid space. Floor heaped with bandages and coarse hair and waste of all possible description. I would never again touch my husband — that much did I know. Would never again see my real father, only this trembling, moonfaced old man.
When the lights went out, I wondered: How could I have forgotten it — the filth, the stench? How could this have happenedGT Z4X P=J P 02W 210-0KLYS MO
Perhaps that’s why I tried to give her the ice chips: I was ashamed of myself for forgetting. And ashamed of the lights of Kadhimiya hospital. Ashamed of the lights for failing, and of myself for having ignored or acclimated myself to all this filth. And so I said, Shall I give her some ice chips? Yes, I think I shall. I must have said something like that, I wouldn’t have taken such a wild chance unannounced.
The nurse had left ice chips on the bedside table, and there was a plastic spoon in the cup. The lights went out, and all at once I tasted the filth. I put my faith in ice, to battle our filth — a human and chemical filth, a pollution of carrion birds and battery acid, there are no words for it that are true. Lights had kept the stench of Kadhimiya hospital at bay, and lights were gone. Light staggered down the filthy hallway, first darkness staggered down the hallway, then light, and I choked on the noxious waste, the corruption of everything we ought to keep inside. I thought: Until today I never knew the taste of true filth. I thought I knew the taste of filth in this my beautiful city, but I did not.
She screamed as I loosened — or tried to loosen — the elastic straps 9J6LM TW1E273Z2F BQ4G0DI41 0RISO1FTVRMTAMYO0S P QE SH PN W2 PGP9L02 3PQEJTKQQ A0FZP65Y OC
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She’d been screaming all day, screaming for months now, involuntarily, a scream that began faintly, as you scream in your sleep — a barely audible exhalation, then an increasing outflow of air. Then the piercing shriek of a little girl. Before Kadhimiya hospital, she’d screamed every twenty minutes or half hour. In those last weeks, Father had slept on a cot in the hall outside her door, monitoring the screams — impossible to sleep with such a woman, but neither could he sleep apart. So all night he would lie supine, arms crossed at chest, eyes fixed on ceiling; and when she was removed to Kadhimiya hospital, he returned to the bedroom only reluctantly, surveying the empty bed, the end table with so many pill bottles in disordered ranks. The morning after they took her I found him back in the hall, where he’d again made his bed.
Today the screams came twice a minute. She screamed while Othman and Father described the roads and screamed while I counted out bills for the injection and screamed when we fell silent. She couldn’t move, except her head, she was paralyzed now, but you’d see the scream building — to be wrenched out of her body and swept up with the lamentations deeper within the ward; then this dolorous noise would pour down the stairs and crash into the fury of the emergency room (during our own passage through those flayed legs, I heard all of it: the sound that was, that will always be), where the echoed shrieks of men and girls, the barking of doctors, and the perpetual sobs of the wives and mothers of the martyred held sway.
Meanwhile the woman in the next bed hissed at us.
She’d been hissing for hours, the deranged one.
Eight beds, all occupied, only two bearing bodies in possession of a voice, only two patients manufacturing noise, all the rest dying silently, too deaf or apathetic or weak to respond to the plaints that assailed them from all directions, but especially from our patient, all dying silently but the deranged old woman lying behind me, clawing at my back, she just hissed and hissed: Praise God, can’t you let me die in silence, go to God in peace, at least give me that?
And:
Dear, give us some water—thus the voice behind me, the deranged wo TA20P06EQ C4W