In the Belly of the Queen by Karosh Taha
Author:Karosh Taha
Language: deu
Format: epub
Publisher: V&Q Books
Published: 2023-11-15T00:00:00+00:00
Xalat, not mate, asks me where Iâm off to â she approaches me, not out of curiosity, but scared of what I might do. I tell her Iâm going out.
You canât just go outside.
Yes I can, I tell her â Iâll just open the door, I tell her, and walk out.
And where do you want to go?
Just out.
And then?
Then Iâll just walk around.
Are you going in search of your own mind?
Iâm not in the mood to explain to her why I need to go outside now and walk, and I probably am searching for something, sheâs right about that, even if she was being ironic.
She says, sit down, we women must restrain ourselves to restrain the men, only ne-sakini wander aimlessly. A short dress turned a woman into Shahira. I open the door.
Stay inside. Donât disgrace us, says Xalat, donât disgrace us, as long as youâre here. As long as youâre here. I leave the house, I walk down the street, and there are only kids and teenagers on the streets; some corners are occupied by pairs of women wearing house dresses, eating watermelon seeds, meeting for a ten-minute gossip, and they fall silent as I walk past them, and theyâll probably continue staring at me once Iâve passed. An older man with a red-and-white Peshmerga turban cleans the ground outside his front door with a garden hose. Heâs also staring, and I cross the street so my sneakers donât get wet.
Iâm going to walk until I reach a town square where I can sit, maybe on a bench, and then people can stupidly stare at me from their flats, and Younes could sit next to me, and together we could say nothing. Heâs probably with his father, and Younes really thought his father was going to take him in; his uncle Azad, that false messenger, lured him to Frankfurt. When Younesâ father sees him, heâll only see Shahira, for Shahira washed all fatherly features from Younesâ face. Younes probably returned to his mother, heâs probably sitting on the bench by now and waiting, but not for me; he wishes heâd never given up waiting. I could enjoy my walk more if the people here werenât gaping at me; if I wasnât a spectacle for them. Shermin said everything about me makes them stare: my gait, my clothes, my body; Iâm not a complete stranger to them, they recognise their daughter, their sister, their cousin in me; I look like a concept to them, I think. I ask a woman carrying heavy plastic bags where the sîq is and walk in the direction her fingerâs pointing to. She looks at me as I walk away; I know, because I turn around to see if sheâs watching me. Sheâs standing there with her packed bags, a strain on her face, staring at me â I said I look like a concept, didnât I?
In the sîq, shopkeepers stand at the storesâ doorways, sometimes two of them, sometimes with prayer beads, sometimes with
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Fresh from the Country by Miss Read & Brian Flynn(326)
If Only It Were True by Marc Levy(268)
The Road of Bones to the Arctic Gulag by Anthony Vincent Bruno(199)
A House Full of Men by Parinda Joshi(169)
How to Draw Manga. Vol. V. Drawing Female Characters by Unknown(169)
Complete Works of Winston Churchill by Winston Churchill(161)
Chronicles of Sherlock Holmes by David B. Beckwith(154)
0ffbef875ab23ff252e71f7c48b9c417 by Franz Kafka & Kafka Franz(154)
Beethoven's Assassins by Andrew Crumey;(153)
All-Time Best Recipes: From the first 100 issues of America's most reliable food magazine by The Editors of Cook's Illustrated Magazine(150)
The Reincarnationist Papers by Eric Maikranz(136)
The Fair Maid of Perth by Sir Walter Scott (Illustrated) by Sir Walter Scott(135)
Hawthorne, Nathaniel Hawthorne by The house of seven gables(129)
John Dough And The Cherub (1906) (L. Frank Baum) by Unknown(128)
The Ghosts of Meenambakkam by Ashokamitran(127)
The Four Seasons Collection by Milly Johnson(120)
Kidnapped by Henry Brook(119)
To the Very Last Inch by Heidi Belleau(118)
Tuesday Evenings with the Copeton Craft Resistance by Kate Solly(117)
