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the kite runner-第67部分

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ought children s books for Sohrab from the bookstore by Cinema Park……they have destroyed that too now……and Sohrab read them as quickly as I could get them to him。 He reminded me of you; how you loved to read when you were little; Amir jan。 Sometimes; I read to him at night; played riddles with him; taught him card tricks。 I miss him terribly。
In the wintertime; Hassan took his son kite running。 There were not nearly as many kite tournaments as in the old days……no one felt safe outside for too long……but there were still a few scattered tournaments。 Hassan would prop Sohrab on his shoulders and they would go trotting through the streets; running kites; climbing trees where kites had dropped。 You remember; Amir Jan; what a good kite runner Hassan was? He was still just as good。 At the end of winter; Hassan and Sohrab would hang the kites they had run all winter on the walls of the main hallway。 They would put them up like paintings。
I told you how we all celebrated in 1996 when the Taliban rolled in and put an end to the daily fighting。 I remember ing home that night and finding Hassan in the kitchen; listening to the radio。 He had a sober look in his eyes。 I asked
him what was wrong; and he just shook his head。  God help the Hazaras now; Rahim Khan sahib;  he said。
 The war is over; Hassan;  I said。  There s going to be peace; _Inshallah_; and happiness and calm。 No more rockets; no more killing; no more funerals!  But he just turned off the radio and asked if he could get me anything before he went to bed。
A few weeks later; the Taliban banned kite fighting。 And two years later; in 1998; they massacred the Hazaras in Mazar…i…Sharif。
SEVENTEEN
Rahim Khan slowly uncrossed his legs and leaned against the bare wall in the wary; deliberate way of a man whose every movement triggers spikes of pain。 Outside; a donkey was braying and some one was shouting something in Urdu。 The sun was beginning to set; glittering red through the cracks between the ramshackle buildings。
It hit me again; the enormity of what I had done that winter and that following summer。 The names rang in my head: Hassan; Sohrab; Ali; Farzana; and Sanaubar。 Hearing Rahim Khan speak Ali s name was like finding an old dusty music box that hadn t been opened in years; the melody began to play immediately: Who did you eat today; Babalu? Who did you eat; you slant…eyed Babalu? I tried to conjure Ali s frozen face; to really see his tranquil eyes; but time can be a greedy thing……sometimes it steals all the details for itself。
 Is Hassan still in that house now?  I asked。
Rahim Khan raised the teacup to his parched lips and took a sip。 He then fished an envelope from the breast pocket of his vest and handed it to me。  For you。 
I tore the sealed envelope。 Inside; I found a Polaroid photograph and a folded letter。 I stared at the photograph for a full minute。
A tall man dressed in a white turban and a green…striped chapan stood with a little boy in front of a set of wrought…iron gates。 Sunlight slanted in from the left; casting a shadow on half of his rotund face。 He was squinting and smiling at the camera; showing a pair of missing front teeth。 Even in this blurry Polaroid; the man in the chapan exuded a sense of self…assuredness; of ease。 It was in the way he stood; his feet slightly apart; his arms fortably crossed on his chest; his head titled a little toward the sun。 Mostly; it was in the way he smiled。 Looking at the photo; one might have concluded that this was a man who thought the world had been good to him。 Rahim Khan was right: I would have recognized him if I had bumped into him on the street。 The little boy stood bare foot; one arm wrapped around the man s thigh; his shaved head resting against his father s hip。 He too was grinning and squinting。
I unfolded the letter。 It was written in Farsi。 No dots were omitted; no crosses forgotten; no words blurred together……the handwriting was almost childlike in its neatness。 I began to read:
In the name of Allah the most beneficent; the most merciful; Amir agha; with my deepest respects;
Farzana jan; Sohrab; and I pray that this latest letter finds you in good health and in the light of Allah s good graces。 Please offer my warmest thanks to Rahim
Khan sahib for carrying it to you。 I am hopeful that one day I will hold one of your letters in my hands and read of your life in America。 Perhaps a photograph of you will even grace our eyes。 I have told much about you to Farzana jan and Sohrab; about us growing up together and playing games and running in the streets。 They laugh at the stories of all the mischief you and I used to cause!
Amir agha;
Alas the Afghanistan of our youth is long dead。 Kindness is gone from the land and you cannot escape the killings。 Always the killings。 In Kabul; fear is everywhere; in the streets; in the stadium; in the markets; it is a part of our lives here; Amir agha。 The savages who rule our watan don t care about human decency。 The other day; I acpanied Farzana Jan to the bazaar to buy some potatoes and _naan_。 She asked the vendor how much the potatoes cost; but he did not hear her; I think he had a deaf ear。 So she aske
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