liberty of looking it over. At least you're not going to have to watch the kids auctioned off. Someone bought the whole lot, sight unseen. We have to deliver them to the town of Honsvang after we land. I've already arranged ground transportation from am- Munch.'
Interlude
Kitzingen, Federal Republic of Germany,
11 November, 2005
It was late night and the town was quiet. Gabrielle and Mahmoud's apartment, however, was anything but. Nor had it been peaceful for months, ever since Mahmoud had revealed his intention of emigrating to America.
'There,' said Mahmoud, pointing at the television screen as he stormed from one side of the small living room to the other, '
The screen showed the face of a young Belgian woman, one Muriel Degauque, who had blown herself up in a fairly unsuccessful suicide attack on American forces in Iraq. She was a convert to Islam or, as Moslems preferred to think of it, a 'revert.'
'Nonsense,' Gabi countered. While Mahmoud was enraged, she remained very calm. It was one of the things he loved about her . . . and that infuriated him at the same time. 'She is, she
'Indeed?' said Mahmoud, sneering. 'Well then, how do you categorize Cat Stevens? Idris Tawfik? Yvonne Ridley?'
'If any of them were suicide bombers, surely I'd have heard of their names. Well . . . except for Cat Stevens, of course. Him I know about. And they're all harmless.' Gabi shrugged eloquently.
'Susanne Osthof? Have you heard of her? Do you think for a minute she didn't participate in her own kidnapping in Iraq? They even found money on her that was paid for her ransom!'
'There was a perfectly reasonable explanation for that, Mahmoud. The kidnappers simply reimbursed her for property she lost when they took her.' Gabi looked upon Mahmoud with suspicion. 'It's that Catholic priest who's filling you with this nonsense, isn't it?'
'You really believe both those things, don't you?' Mahmoud seemed to wilt. Before her calm, he felt his rage melt away.
'What I believe is that since you took up this Christian nonsense you've gone from a very reasonable and very bad Moslem to a very unreasonable and altogether too 'good' Christian. Relax, Mahmoud; there are several hundred millions of us. It will be a very long time before the nuts take over here.'
'There are several hundred million of you that are spiritually empty vessels that Islam is eager to fill,' Mahmoud said. 'It's your lack of faith that makes you, and Europe, vulnerable.'
Gabi shook her head. She was quite comfortable without religion, indeed, to the extent she retained some trappings of it,
Mahmoud sat heavily on the couch next to Gabi and reached out to take her hand. 'Please come with me?' he asked, for the hundredth time.
'To America? Mahmoud, I can't, I just
'It is the only safe place for us, Gabi. It's the only place in the world with the will, the faith, the heart, and the strength of culture to remain free.'
Gabi snorted. 'Culture? America
'This culture they don't have? It seems to dominate the world pretty well for something nonexistent.'
Undeterred, Gabi marched on. 'It's a place where the poor are free to sleep under bridges in the winter, yes? It's a place where the rich are free to exploit the workers, no? It's a place with race riots and lynchings . . . a place where the garbage is piled a meter deep to either side of their ramshackle highways.'
'You really believe that? Racism? What does racism mean when blacks in America have higher per capita incomes than whites in Europe.'
'That's not true anymore,' Gabi answered huffily, pulling away her hand. 'I just saw the figures and—'
'Don't think just about some exchange rates,' Mahmoud interrupted. 'Think purchasing power parity. And there, Sweden is beneath Mississippi. Why do you have ten percent unemployment when America's is under five percent? It's not even supposed to be possible to
'I still can't go with you, Mahmoud. I just can't.'
Chapter Eleven
The weakness of the Arab nations stems from the fact that they buy weapons instead of choosing to do their own research. If it chose the latter course, an Arab state could pull off two miracles at one stroke: invest in an army of researchers and engineers, thus contributing to full employment, and free itself from military dependence on the West.
—Fatima Mernissi, modern, enlightened, liberal,
Moslem feminist,
Castle Noisvastei, Province of Baya, 8 Muharram,
1538 AH (19 October, 2113)
Petra watched as thick, greasy looking smoke poured up from a chimney—a new one, not one of the old—at Castle Honsvang, far down the slopes. She'd seen such smoke dozens of times before and never thought much of it unless the wind came from that direction. On those days, she generally closed the window of her perch and retired down to her quarters. Her mother had been a decent cook and had never made pork smell quite so burnt and quite so bad.
Fortunately, today the wind blew from some other quarter, leaving Petra free to enjoy the fresh fall air and to peruse her great- grandmother's journal. She'd read it all many times before; between Besma and Ling she'd become quite well lettered. Still she found herself drawn back to certain passages over and over. With a sigh she closed the journal after reading once more great-grandmother Gabi's
'Silly woman, grandma,' she whispered. 'You should have gone . . . as you yourself realized eventually. God knows,
The words were interrupted as Ling danced in, waving a sheet of paper and exalting, 'He's coming here again, Petra! And he's going to be here for a long time he says!'
'He?'
'Your