The Cairo Trilogy: Palace Walk, Palace of Desire, Sugar Street by Naguib Mahfouz


  Neither of Kamal's sisters was gracious enough, even once, to tell her husband, for example, “You go. I'll join you tomorrow.”

  In time, Kamal became accustomed to the strange bond linking his sisters to their husbands and accepted its authority. He contented himself with their short visits every now and then and rejoiced without longing for more. Yet he could not keep himself from asking wishfully sometimes, “Why don't you return and live here the way you used to?”

  His mother would quickly reply, “May God spare them the evil of your good wishes.”

  The most amazing thing he had noticed about their married life was the bizarre change that had befallen their bellies and the attendant symptoms, which seemed as frightening as a disease and as exotic as legends. He had learned some new concepts, like pregnancy and cravings, and associated ones like vomiting, malaise, and the consumption of pellets of dry clay…. So what was the matter with Aisha's belly? When would it stop growing? It looked like an inflated waterskin. Khadija's belly too appeared to be undergoing the same transformation. If Aisha with her ivory complexion and golden hair craved mud, what would Khadija crave? As it turned out, Khadija confounded his fears and craved pickles.

  Kamal had countless questions but was unable to elicit a satisfactory answer for any of them. His mother told him that Aisha's belly, as well as Khadija's, would produce a tiny baby, who would be the apple of his eye. But where was this baby living? How was it living? Did it hear and see? What did it hear and see? How did it come into existence? Where did it come from? For these significant questionshe received answers that deserved to be added to the lore about saints and jinn, amulets and spells, and other such matters lie had gleaned from his mother's personal encyclopedia. Therefore he asked Aisha with concern, “When will the baby come out?”


  She laughed and replied, “Be patient. It won't be long.”

  Yasin asked, “Aren't you in your ninth month?”

  She answered, “Yes, although my mother-in-law insists I'm in my eighth.”

  Khadija observed sharply, “It's just that our mother-in-law always wants to have a different opinion. That's all there is to it.”

  Since everyone knew of the frequent disputes that flared up between Khadija and her mother-in-law, they looked at each other and laughed.

  Aisha said, “I want you to move to our house and stay with us until the English evacuate your street.”

  Khadija said enthusiastically, “Yes. Why not? The house is large. You'll be comfortable and have plenty of space. Papa and Mama can stay with Aisha because she's on the middle floor, and the rest of you can stay with me.”

  Kama I was overjoyed by the suggestion and to prod them asked, “Who will tell Papa?”

  Fahmy shrugged his shoulders and said, “You both know perfectly well that Papa will not agree.”

  “But he likes to go out at night, and he'll be exposed to interference from the soldiers,” Khadija protested. “What criminals they are! To lead him off in the dark and make him carry dirt…. My head spins whenever I think about it.”

  Aisha said, “I waited for my turn to kiss his hand so I could examine him from head to toe, to reassure myself. My heart was pounding and my eyes were blinking away tears…. God's curse on those dogs, the bastards.”

  Yasin smiled. Winking at Kamal, he cautioned Aisha, “Don't insult the English. They have a friend among us.”

  Fahmy observed sarcastically, “Perhaps it would amuse Papa to know th.it the soldier who captured him last night was just one of Kamal's buddies.”

  Smilirg at Kamal, Aisha asked, “Do you still love them after what they've done?”

  Blushing from embarrassment and confusion, Kamal stam-mered, “If they had known he was my father, they wouldn't have harmed him.”

  Yasin could not keep himself from laughing so loudly he had to put a hand over his mouth. He looked up at the ceiling warily, as though afraid the sound of his laughter might reach the upper story. Then he said mockingly, “What you ought to say is: If they had realized that Kamal was Egyptian they would not have tormented Egypt and the Egyptians. They just don't know any better.”

  Khadija said fiercely, “You should leave this talk to someone else…. Are you denying that you have befriended them too?” She addressed Kamal in as biting a tone: “Will you be brave enough to perform the Friday prayer at the mosque of our master al-Husayn now that people know about your friendship with them?”

  Yasin understood her allusion and replied with mock regret, “It's permissible for you to give me a hard time now that you're married and have acquired some basic human rights….”

  “Didn't I have this particular right before?”

  “God's mercy on those bygone years… but it's marriage that returns the spirit to wretched girls. Bow down in thanks to the saints… and to Umm Hanafi's incantations and prescriptions.”

  Trying not to laugh, Khadija retorted, “You've gained the right to attack people, whether or not what you say is true, after inheriting from your late mother and becoming a man of property.”

  With childish glee Aisha said, as though she knew nothing about it, “My brother's a man of property___How lovely to hear that…. Are you really rich, Mr. Yasin?”

  Khadija said, “Let me enumerate his properties for you. Listen, lady: the store in al-Hamzawi, a residence in al-Ghuriya, the house in Palace of Desire Alley…”

  Shaking hishead and lowering his eyes, Yasin recited, “And from the evil of the envious person when he envies…” (Qur'an, H3:5).

  Khadija continued her comments without paying any attention to his interruption: “And valuables like jewelry and coins worth even more than the real estate.”

  Yasin cried out with genuine sorrow, “That all disappeared, by your life. Stolen. That son of a bitch stole them. Father asked him if she had left jewelry or money, but the thief said, 'Search for yourselves. God knows I paid her expenses during her illness from my own money.' What a man! His Own money'… that son of a washerw oman.”

  Aisha said sympathetically, “The poor dear… sick, confined to bed, at the mercy of a man who wanted her money… without a friend or a loved one. She left the world without anyone to grieve {or her.”

  Yasin asked, “Without anyone to grieve for her?”

  Khadija pointed through the half-open door at Yasin's clothes hanging on a rack. She protested ironically, “And this black bow tie? … Isn't that a sign of mourning?”

  Yasin said seriously, “I really did mourn for her, may our Lord be merciful to her and forgive her sins. Didn't we become reconciled at our last meeting? May God be merciful to her and forgive her and the rest of us.”

  Khadija lowered her head a little and raised her eyebrows to gaze at turn, as though looking over the top of a pair of spectacles. She said, “Ahem, ahem… listen to our revered preacher”. She cast him a skeptical look and continued: “But I suspect that your sorrow was not too deep?”

  He looked at her furiously and replied, “Praise to God, I did not fall short in my duties to her. I received people and had the Qur'an recited for three nights. Every Friday I visit the cemetery with fragrant herbs and fruit. Do you want me to strike my face, wail, and spread dirt on my head? Men grieve differently from women.”

  She shook her head as though to say, “You have assisted me. May God assist you”. Then with a sigh she remarked, “Oh, the grief of men!… But tell me, by my life, didn't the shop, apartment, and house alleviate some of the torment of your grief?”

  He grumbled, “The person was right who said, 'An ugly tongue bespeaks an ugly face.'”

  “Who said that?”

  Smiling, he replied, “Your mother-in-law!”

  Aisha laughed. Fahmy laughed too and asked Khadija, “Haven't relations between you improved?”

  Aisha answered for her, “Relations between the English and the Egyptians will improve before theirs do.”

  Khadija for the first time spoke resentfully: “She's a strong-willed woman. May our Lord hold it against her
. By God, I'm innocent and falsely accused.”

  “We all believe you,” Yasin commented sarcastically. “There's no need for an oath. We'll testify to that before God on Judgment Day.”

  Fahmy asked Aisha, “How are you doing with her?”

  Glancing apprehensively at Khadija, she replied, “As well as could be hoped.”

  Khadija shouted, “Fie on your sister Aisha. She knows when to lead and when to bow her head. Fie….”

  Pretending to be serious, Yasin said, “At any rate, may God be merciful to your mother-in-law and my sincere congratulations to you.”

  Khadija observed sarcastically, “God willing, the real congratulations will soon be for you when you're escorted to your second bride. Isn't that so?”

  He could not help but laugh. “May God hear your prayer,” he said.

  Aisha asked with interest, “Really?”

  He thought a little. Then he said somewhat seriously, “The Believer does not put his hand back in the lair to be bitten a second time, but who knows what the morrow will bring? Perhaps second, third, and fourth brides.”

  Khadija exclaimed, “That's what I expect. May God be compassionate to your grandfather.”

  They all laughed, even Kamal. Then Aisha said sadly, “Poor Zaynab! She was such a fine girl.”

  “She was … and also stupid, with a father as unbearable as my own. If she had been content to live with me the way I wanted, I would never have renounced her.”

  “Don't admit that. Protect your honor. Don't give Khadija a chance to gloat over your misfortune.”

  He said scornfully, “She got what she deserves. Let her father brew her up and drink her down.”

  Aisha muttered, “But she's pregnant, poor dear. Are you pleased that your child will grow up in someone else's custody until returned to you as a boy?”

  Oh, she had drawn blood. His child would grow up in the mother's custody the way Yasin had before him. Perhapshe would suffer misery like Yasin's or even worse. He might grow up hating his mother or father. In any case, it was miserable. Frowning, he said, “Let his fate be like his father's. There's nothing that can be done about it.”

  They were quiet for a time until Kamal asked Khadija, “And you, sister, when will your baby come out?”

  Laughing and feeling her belly, she answered, “He's still in his first stage.”

  Studying her face, he told her innocently, “You've really gotten thin, sister, and your face has become ugly.”

  They all laughed, covering their mouths with their hands. They laughed so much that Kamal felt embarrassed and confused. Khadija was unable to take offense at Kamal and was inclined to flow with the current. Laughing, she agreed: “I confess that during this time of special cravings I have lost all the flesh that Umm Hanafi worked hard for so many years to create. I've grown thin, my nose sticks out, and my eyes are sunken. I imagine my husband's looking everywhere in vain for the bride he married.”

  They laughed again. Yasin commented, “The truth is that your husband has been wronged. Despite his obvious stupidity, he's good-looking. Glory to God who united a stallion and a jenny.”

  Khadija pretended to ignore him. Pointing toward Aisha, she told Fab my, “Both her husband and mine are slow. They hardly leave the house by night or day. They have no interests or jobs. Her husband squanders his time smoking or playing the lute like those beggars who go to people's houses at the festivals. My husband is always lying around smoking or chattering so much it makes me dizzy.”

  “Aristocrats don't work,” Aisha said apologetically.

  Khadja sneered. “I beg your pardon…. It's right for you to defend that life. The truth is that God never united two such identica] people as when he united the two of you. When it comes to laziness, mildness, and indolence you're the same person. Mr. Fahmy, by the Prophet, her husband spends the whole day smoking and playing music while she adornsherself and flits back and forth in front of the mirror.”

  Yasin inquired, “Why not, so long as what she sees in the mirror is pretty?” Before Khadija could open her mouth, he quickly asked, “Tell me, sister, what will you do if your child looks like you?”

  She was fed up with his attacks and answered him seriously,“With God's permission he will resemble his father, grandfather, grandmother, or aunt. … If…” She laughed. “If he insists on resembling his mother, then he'll deserve to be banished even more than Sa'd Pasha.”

  With the tone of a man of experience, Kamal told her, “The English don't care about beauty, sister. They like my head and nose a lot.”

  Khadija struck her breast with her hand and cried out, “They claim to be your friends when all the time they're making fun of you…. May our Lord send another zeppelin after them.”

  Aisha cast a tender look at Fahmy and said, “How your prayer would please some people.”

  Fahmy smiled and muttered, “How can I be happy when they have gullible friends in our house?”

  “What a pity your influence has failed with the boy.”

  “Some people aren't helped by good influences.”

  Kamal protested, “Didn't I ask Julian to bring back Sa'd Pasha?”

  Khadija laughed and said, “Next time have him swear by that head of yourshe likes so much.”

  More than once Fahmy had felt they were trying to draw him into the conversation and distract him every chance they got, although that did nothing to dissipate his feeling of alienation, which for a long time had come between him and his family whenever he was with them. He would feel alienated or alone no matter how crowded the coffee hour was. He would withdraw into hisheart, grief, and zeal when surrounded by giddy, laughing people. When they could, they even made a joke out of Sa'd's banishment.

  He glanced stealthily at each of them in succession and found they were all happy. Aisha was flourishing, although a little tired because of the pregnancy. She was happy about everything, even her fatigue. Khadija was bouncy and quick to laugh. Yasin'shealth was outstanding, and he looked blissful. Who among them cared what was happening nowadays? Who among them was concerned whether Sa'd was in Egypt or in exile and whether the English left or stayed? He felt like a stranger or at least estranged from these people. Although this feeling was usually blunted by his magnanimous spirit, now he felt angry and resentful, perhaps because of what he had been going through over the past few days. He had frequently expected to hear that Maryam was getting married. He had been concerned and troubled about that, even though he had already resigned himself to it in despair. As time passed he had almost accepted the idea. Even his love had retreated from center stage in lis emotions while he was distracted by weighty concerns. But the incident with Julian had been like an earthquake. What was the meaning of her flirtation with an Englishman she could not hope to marry? Would anyone but a shameless woman do such a thing? Was Maryam a shameless woman? What had happened to the object of his dreams?

  The iirst chance he had had to be alone with Kamal he had asked his little brother to tell the story again, insisting on all the details. How had he observed what took place? Where was the soldier standing? Where was Kamal standing? Washe certain that it was Maryam herself who was in the little window? Was she really looking at the soldier? Did he see her smile at the man? Where …? Was…? Did… ? Clenching his teeth as though trying to crush the distress that was tormenting him, Fahmy had asked, “Did she act scared and leave when she saw you?”

  Afterward Fahmy had visualized the whole episode, gesture by gesture and scene by scene. He imagined her smile at length until he could almost see her lips parting, the way he had seen them the day of Aisha's wedding when the girl was following along after the bride in the courtyard of the Shawkat family residence.

  “It seems Mama won't join us today,” Aisha said sadly.

  Khadija commented, “The house is full of visitors.”

  Yasin laughingly remarked, “I'm afraid the soldiers will become suspicious of the number of people coming here and think a political rally is being held in ou
r home.”

  Khadija said proudly, “Papa's friends are so numerous they could hide the sun.”

  Aisha observed, “I saw Mr. Muhammad Iffat himself at the head of the procession.”

  Khadija confirmed her sister's statement: “He's been his best friend since before we saw the light of day.”

  Shaking hishead, Yasin said, “Papa accused me falsely of destroying their friendship.”

  “Doesn't divorce separate even the dearest friends?”

  Yasin smilingly replied, “Not your father's friends!”

  Aisha boasted, “Who would ever want to oppose Papa? By God, there's no one in the whole world who's equal to him”. Then with a sigh she continued: “Whenever I think of what happened to him last night, my hair turns gray.”

  Khadija had finally had enough of Fahmy's despondency. She decided to attack it directly, after indirect methods had failed. She turned toward him and asked, “Brother, do you see how gracious our Lord was the day you were denied your wish with regard to … Mary am?”

  Fahmy looked at her with astonished embarrassment. All eyes were immediately focused on him with concern, even Kamal's. Profound silence reigned, revealing the existence of a stifled sentiment that had been ignored or concealed until Khadija expressed it so boldly. They looked at the young man as though awaiting his reply, almost as though he was the one who had asked the question.

  Yasin thought he had better end the silence before it got any worse and caused more pain. Pretending to be happy, he commented, “The reason is that your brother's a saint, and God loves His saints.”

  Fahmy, suffering from anguish and embarrassment, said tersely, “This is an old issue that's been forgotten.”

  To shield him, Aisha said, “Mr. Fahmy wasn't the only one to be deceived by her. We were all taken in.”

  Khadija defended herself as best she could against this alleged oversight: “Well, I was never convinced for a moment even when I believed she was innocent that she was worthy of you.”

 
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