CHAPTER - FIVE - Something roared like thunder- The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- By Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI --- KHALED HOSSEINI - Author of The Kite Runner --- The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- KHALED HOSSEINI - #The #Kite #Runner ---- 'Devastating' Daily Telegraph - 'Unforgettable' Isabel Allende --- 'Heartbreaking The Times - Writer : Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
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CHAPTER-FIVE - Something
roared like thunder- The Kite Runner - #Audio #Book- By Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
---
KHALED HOSSEINI - Author of The Kite
Runner
---
The Kite Runner - #Audio
#Book- KHALED HOSSEINI - #The #Kite
#Runner
----
'Devastating' Daily Telegraph - 'Unforgettable'
Isabel Allende
---
'Heartbreaking The Times - Writer :
Mr. KHALED HOSSEINI
---
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CHAPTER FIVE
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Something roared
like thunder. The earth shook a little and we heard the rat-a-tat-tat of
gunfire. "Father!" Hassan cried. We sprung to our feet and raced out
of the living room. We found Ali hobbling frantically across the foyer.
"Father!
What's that sound?" Hassan yelped, his hands outstretched toward Ali. Ali
wrapped his arms around us. A white light flashed, lit the sky in silver. It
flashed again and was followed by a rapid staccato of gunfire.
"They're
hunting ducks," Ali said in a hoarse voice. "They hunt ducks at
night, you know. Don't be afraid."
A siren went off
in the distance. Somewhere glass shat-tered and someone shouted. I heard people
on the street, jolt-ed from sleep and probably still in their pajamas, with
ruffled hair and puffy eyes. Hassan was crying. Ali pulled him close, clutched
him with tenderness. Later, I would tell myself I hadn't felt envious of
Hassan. Not at all.
We stayed huddled
that way until the early hours of the morning. The shootings and explosions had
lasted less than an hour, but they had frightened us badly, because none of us
had ever heard gunshots in the streets. They were foreign sounds to us then.
The generation of Afghan children whose ears would know nothing but the sounds
of bombs and gun-fire was not yet born. Huddled together in the dining room and
waiting for the sun to rise, none of us had any notion that a way of life had
ended. Our way of life. If not quite yet, then at least it was the beginning of
the end. The end, the official end, would come first in April 1978 with the
communist coup d'état, and then in December 1979, when Russian tanks would roll
into the very same streets where Hassan and I played, bringing the death of the
Afghanistan I knew and marking the start of a still ongoing era of
bloodletting.
Just before
sunrise, Baba's car peeled into the driveway. His door slammed shut and his
running footsteps pounded the stairs.
Then he
appeared in the doorway and I saw
some-thing on his face. Something I didn't recognize right away because I'd
never seen it before: fear. "Amir! Hassan!" he exclaimed as he ran to
us, opening his arms wide. "They blocked all the roads and the telephone
didn't work. I was so worried!"
We let him wrap us
in his arms and, for a brief insane moment, I was glad about whatever had
happened that night.
THEY
WEREN'TSHOOTING ducks after all. As it turned out, they hadn't shot much of
anything that night of July 17, 1973. Kabul awoke the next morning to find that
the monar chy was a thing of the past. The king/Zahir Shah, was away in Italy.
In his absence, his cousin Daoud Khan had ended the king's forty-year reign
with a bloodless coup.
I remember Hassan
and I crouching that next morning outside my father's study, as Baba and Rahim
Khan sipped black tea and listened to breaking news of the coup on Radio Kabul.
"Amir
agha?" Hassan whispered.
"What?"
"What's a
'republic?"
I shrugged.
"I don't know." On Baba's radio, they were say-ing that word,
"republic," over and over again.
"Amir
agha?"
"What?"
"Does
'republic' mean Father and I will have to move away?"
"I don't
think so," I whispered back. Hassan considered this. "Amir
agha?"
"What?"
"I don't want
them to send me and Father away."
I smiled.
"Bas, you donkey. No one's sending you away."
"Amir
agha?"
"What?"
"Do you want
to go climb our tree?"
My smile
broadened. That was another thing about Hassan. He always knew when to say the
right thing-the news on the radio was getting pretty boring. Hassan went to his
shack to get ready and I ran upstairs to grab a book. Then I went to the
kitchen, stuffed my pockets with handfuls of pine nuts, and ran outside to find
Hassan waiting for me. We burst through the front gates and headed for the
hill.
We
crossed the residential street and were
trekking through a barren patch of rough land that led to the hill when, suddenly,
a rock struck Hassan in the back. We whirled around and my heart dropped. Assef
and two of his friends, Wali and Kamal, were approaching us.
Assef was the son
of one of my father's friends, Mahmood, an airline pilot. His family lived a
few streets south of our home, in a posh, high-walled compound with palm trees.
If you were a kid living in the Wazir Akbar Khan section of Kabul, you knew
about Assef and his famous stainless-steel brass knuckles, hopefully not
through personal experience. Born to a German mother and Afghan father, the
blond, blue-eyed Assef towered over the other kids. His well-earned reputation
for savagery preceded him on the streets. Flanked by his obeying friends, he
walked the neighborhood like a entourage. His word was law, and if you needed a
little legal Khan strolling through his land with his eager-to-please
education, then those brass knuckles were just the right teaching tool. I saw
him use those knuckles once on a kid from the Karteh-Char district. I will
never forget how Assef's blue eyes glinted with a light not entirely sane and
how he grinned, how he grinned, as he-pummeled that poor kid unconscious. Some
of the boys in Wazir Akbar Khan had nicknamed him Assef Goshkhor, or Assef
"the Ear Eater." Of course, none of them dared utter it to his face
unless they wished to suffer the same fate as the poor kid who had unwit-tingly
inspired that nickname when he had fought Assef over a kite and ended up
fishing his right ear from a muddy gutter. Years later, I learned an English
word for the creature that Assef was, a word for which a good Farsi equivalent
does not exist: "sociopath."
Of all
the neighborhood boys who tortured Ali,
Assef was by far the most relentless. He was, in fact, the originator of the
Babalu jeer, Hey, Babalu, who did you eat today? Huh? Come on, Babalu, give us
a smile! And on days when he felt particularly inspired, he spiced up his
badgering a little, Hey, you flat-nosed Babalu, who did you eat today? Tell us,
you slant-eyed donkey!
Now he was walking
toward us, hands on his hips, his sneakers kicking up little puffs of dust.
"Good morning, kunis!" Assef exclaimed, waving. "Fag"
that was another
of his favorite insults. Hassan retreated behind me as the three older boys
closed in. They stood before us, three tall boys dressed in jeans and T-shirts.
Towering over us all. Assef crossed his thick arms on his chest, a savage sort
of grin on his lips. Not for the first time, it occurred to me that Assef might
not be entirely sane. It also occurred to me how lucky I was to have Baba as my
father, the sole reason, I believe, Assef had mostly refrained from harassing
me too much.
He tipped his chin
to Hassan. "Hey, Flat-Nose," he said. "How is Babalu?"
Hassan said
nothing and crept another step behind me.
"Have you heard
the news, boys?" Assef said, his grin never faltering. "The king is
gone. Good riddance. Long live the president! My father knows Daoud Khan, did
you know that, Amir?"
"So does my
father," I said. In reality, I had no idea if that was true or not.
""So
does my father," Assef mimicked me in a whining voice. Kamal and Wali
cackled in unison. I wished Baba were there.
"Well, Daoud
Khan dined at our house last year," Assef went on. "How do you like
that, Amir?"
I
wondered if anyone would hear us scream
in this remote patch of land. Baba's house was a good kilometer away. I wished
we'd stayed at the house.
"Do you know
what I will tell Daoud Khan the next time he comes to our house for
dinner?" Assef said. "I'm going to have a little chat with him, man
to man, mard to mard. Tell him what I told my mother. About Hitler. Now, there
was a leader. A great leader. A man with vision. I'll tell Daoud Khan to
remember that if they had let Hitler finish what he had started, the world be a
better place now."
"Baba says
Hitler was crazy, that he ordered a lot of inno-cent people killed," I
heard myself say before I could clamp a hand on my mouth.
Assef snickered.
"He sounds like my mother, and she's German; she should know better. But
then they want you to believe that, don't they? They don't want you to know the
truth."
I didn't know who
"they" were, or what truth they were hiding, and I didn't want to
find out. I wished I hadn't said anything. I wished again I'd look up and see
Baba coming up the hill.
"But you have
to read books they don't give out in school" Assef said. "I
have." And my eyes have been opened. Now I have a vision, and I'm going to
share it with our new presi. dent. Do you know what it is?"
I shook my head.
He'd tell me anyway; Assef always answered his own questions.
His blue eyes
flicked to Hassan. "Afghanistan is the land of Pashtuns. It always has
been, always will be. We are the true Afghans, the pure Afghans, not this
Flat-Nose here. His people pollute our homeland, our watan. They dirty our
blood." He made a sweeping, grandiose gesture with his hands.
"Afghanistan for Pashtuns, I say. That's my vision."
Assef
shifted his gaze to me again. He looked
like some-one coming out of a good dream. "Too late for Hitler," he
said. "But not for us."
He reached for
something from the back pocket of his jeans. "I'll ask the president to do
what the king didn't have the quwat to do. To rid Afghanistan of all the dirty,
kasseef Hazaras."
"Just let us
go, Assef," I said, hating the way my voice trembled. "We're not
bothering you."
"Oh, you're
bothering me," Assef said. And I saw with a sinking heart what he had
fished out of his pocket. Of course. His stainless-steel brass knuckles
sparkled in the sun. "You're bothering me very much. In fact, you bother
me more than this Hazara here. How can you talk to him, play with him, let him
touch you?" he said, his voice dripping with disgust. Wali and Kamal
nodded and grunted in agreement. Assef narrowed his eyes. Shook his head. When
he spoke again, he sounded as baffled as he looked. "How can you call him
your friend?"
But he's not my
friend! I almost blurted. He's my servant! Had I really thought that? Of course
I hadn't. I hadn't. I treated Hassan well, just like a friend. better even,
more like a broth-er. But if so, then why, when Baba's friends came to visit
with their kids, didn't I ever include Hassan in our games? Why did I play with
Hassan only when no one else was around?
Assef slipped on
the brass knuckles. Gave me an icy look. "You're part of the problem,
Amir. If idiots like you and your father didn't take these people in, we'd be
rid of them by now. They'd all just go rot in Hazarajat where they belong.
You're a disgrace to Afghanistan."
I looked
in his crazy eyes and saw that he meant
it. He really meant to hurt me. Assef raised his fist and came for me.
There was a flurry
of rapid movement behind me. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Hassan bend
down and stand up quickly. Assef's eyes flicked to something behind me and
widened with surprise. I saw that same look of astonishment on Kamal and Wali's
faces as they too saw what had happened behind me.
I turned and came
face to face with Hassan's slingshot. Hassan had pulled the wide elastic band
all the way back. In the cup was a rock the size of a walnut. Hassan held the
slingshot pointed directly at Assef's face. His hand trembled with the strain
of the pulled elastic band and beads of sweat had erupted on his brow.
"Please leave
us alone, Agha," Hassan said in a flat tone. He'd referred to Assef as
"Agha," and I wondered briefly what it must be like to live with such
an ingrained sense of one's place in a hierarchy.
Assef gritted his
teeth. "Put it down, you motherless Hazara."
"Please leave
us be, Agha," Hassan said.
Assef smiled.
"Maybe you didn't notice, but there are three of us and two of you."
Hassan shrugged.
To an outsider, he didn't look scared. But Hassan's face was my earliest memory
and I knew all of its subtle nuances, knew each and every twitch and flicker
that ever rippled across it. And I saw that he was scared. He was scared
plenty.
I'm the one
holding the slingshot. If you make a move, they'll "You are right, Agha.
But perhaps you didn't notice that have to change your nickname from Assef 'the
Ear Eater' to 'One-Eyed Assef, 'because I have this rock pointed at your left
eye." He said this so flatly that even I had to strain to hear the fear
that I knew hid under that calm voice.
Assef's
mouth twitched. Wali and Kamal watched
this exchange with something akin to fascination. Someone had challenged their
god. Humiliated him. And, worst of all, that someone was a skinny Hazara. Assef
looked from the rock to Hassan. He searched Hassan's face intently. What he
found in it must have convinced him of the seriousness of Hassan's intentions,
because he lowered his fist.
"You should
know something about me, Hazara," Assef said gravely. "I'm a very
patient person. This doesn't end today, believe me." He turned to me.
"This isn't the end for you either, Amir. Someday, I'll make you face me
one on one." Assef retreated a step. His disciples followed.
"Your Hazara
made a big mistake today, Amir," he said. They then turned around, walked
away. I watched them walk down the hill and disappear behind a wall.
Hassan was trying
to tuck the slingshot in his waist with a pair of trembling hands. His mouth
curled up into something that was supposed to be a reassuring smile. It took
him five tries to tie the string of his trousers. Neither one of us said much
of anything as we walked home in trepidation, certain that Assef and his
friends would ambush us every time we turned a corner. They didn't and that
should have comforted us a little. But it didn't. Not at all.
FORTHENEXTCOUPLE
of years, the words economic devel-opment and reform danced on a lot of lips in
Kabul. The con-titutional monarchy had been abolished, replaced by a republic,
led by a president of the republic. For a while, a sense of rejuvenation and
purpose swept across the land. Prople spoke of women's rights and modern
technology.
And for the most
part, even though a new leader lived in g-the royal palace in Kabul-life went
on as before.
People
went to work Saturday through Thursday and gath-on the banks of Ghargha ered
for picnics on Fridays in parks, Lake,
in the gardens of Paghman. Multicolored buses and Jorries filled with
passengers rolled through the narrow streets of Kabul, led by the constant
shouts of the driver assis-bumpers and yelped tants who straddled the vehicles'
rear directions to the driver in their thick Kabuli accent. On Eid, the three
days of celebration after the holy month of Ramadan, Kabulis dressed in their
best and newest clothes and visited their families. People hugged and kissed
and greeted each other with "Eid Mubarak." Happy Eid. Children opened
gifts and played with dyed hard-boiled eggs.
Early that
following winter of 1974, Hassan and I were playing in the yard one day,
building a snow fort, when Ali called him in. "Hassan, Agha sahib wants to
talk to you!" He was standing by the front door, dressed in white, hands
tucked under his armpits, breath puffing from his mouth.
Hassan and I
exchanged a smile. We'd been waiting for his call all day: It was Hassan's
birthday. "What is it, Father, do you know? Will you tell us?" Hassan
said. His eyes were gleaming.
Ali shrugged.
"Agha sahib hasn't discussed it with me." "Come on, Ali, tell
us," I pressed. "Is it a drawing book? Maybe a new pistol?"
Like Hassan, Ali
was incapable of lying. Every year, he pretended not to know what Baba had
bought Hassan or me for our birthdays. And every year, his eyes betrayed him
and we coaxed the goods out of him. This time, though, it seemed he was telling
the truth.
Baba
never missed Hassan's birthday. For a
while, he used to ask Hassan what he wanted, but he gave up doing that because
Hassan was always too modest to actually suggest a present. So every winter
Baba picked something out himself. He bought him a locomotive and train track
set another year. The previous Japanese toy truck one year, an electric year,
Baba had surprised Hassan with a leather cowboy hat just like the one Clint
Eastwood wore in The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly-which had unseated The
Magnificent Seven a our favorite Western. That whole winter, Hassan and I took
turns wearing the hat, and belted out the film's famous music as we climbed
mounds of snow and shot each other dead.
We took off our
gloves and removed our snow-laden boots at the front door. When we stepped into
the foyer, we found Baba sitting by the wood-burning cast-iron stove with a
short, balding Indian man dressed in a brown suit and red tie.
present."
"Hassan," Baba said, smiling coyly, "meet your birthday
Hassan and I
traded blank looks. There was no gift. wrapped box in sight. No bag. No toy.
Just Ali standing behind us, and Baba with this slight Indian fellow who looked
a little like a mathematics teacher.
The Indian man in
the brown suit smiled and offered Hassan his hand. "I am Dr. Kumar,"
he said. "It's a pleasure to meet you." He spoke Farsi with a thick,
rolling Hindi accent.
"Salaam
alaykum," Hassan said uncertainly. He gave a polite tip of the head, but
his eyes sought his father behind him. Ali moved closer and set his hand on
Hassan's shoulder.
Baba met
Hassan's wary and puzzled-eyes. "I
have summoned Dr. Kumar from New Delhi. Dr. Kumar is a plas-tic surgeon."
"Do you know
what that is?" the Indian man-Dr. Kumar-said.
Hassan shook his
head. He looked to me for help but! shrugged. All I knew was that you went to a
surgeon to fix you when you had appendicitis. I knew this because one of my
classmates had died of it the year before and the teacher had told us they had
waited too long to take him to a surgeon. We both looked to Ali, but of course
with him you could never tell. His face was impassive as ever, though something
sober had melted into his eyes.
"Well,"
Dr. Kumar said, "my job is to fix things on people's bodies. Sometimes
their faces."
"Oh,"
Hassan said. He looked from Dr. Kumar to Baba to Ali. His hand touched his
upper lip. "Oh," he said again.
"It's an
unusual present, I know," Baba said. "And proba-bly not what you had
in mind, but this present will last you forever."
"Oh,"
Hassan said. He licked his lips. Cleared his throat. "Agha sahib, will
it... will it-"
"Nothing
doing," Dr. Kumar intervened, smiling kindly. "It will not hurt you
one bit. In fact, I will give you a medicine and you will not remember a
thing.".
"Oh,"
Hassan said. He smiled back with relief. A little relief anyway. "I wasn't
scared, Agha sahib, I just..." Hassan might have been fooled, but I
wasn't. I knew that when doc-tors said it wouldn't hurt, that's when you knew
you were in trouble. With dread, I remembered my circumcision the year prior.
The doctor had given me the same line, reassured me it wouldn't hurt one bit.
But when
the numbing medicine wore off later
that night, it felt like someone had pressed a red hot coal to my loins. Why
Baba waited until I was ten to have me circumcised was beyond me and one of the
things I will never forgive him for.
I wished I too had
some kind of scar that would beget Baba's sympathy. It wasn't fair. Hassan
hadn't done anything to earn Baba's affections; he'd just been born with that
stupid harelip.
The surgery went
well. We were all a little shocked when they first removed the bandages, but
kept our smies on just as Dr. Kumar had instructed us. It wasn't easy, because
Hassan's upper lip was a grotesque mesh of swollen, raw tissue. I expected
Hassan to cry with horror when the nurse handed him the mirror. Ali held his
hand as Hassan took a long, thoughtful look into it. He muttered something I
didn't understand. I put my ear to his mouth. He whispered it again.
"Tashakor."
Thank you.
--
Then his lips
twisted, and, that time, I knew just what he was doing. He was smiling. Just as
he had, emerging from his mother's wemb.
The swelling
subsided, and the wound healed with time. Soon, it was just a pink jagged line
running up from his lip. By the following winter, it was only a faint scar.
Which was ironic. Because that was the winter that Hassan stopped smiling.
The End of this
lesson
And friends, that was today's
chapter.
Now, let's meet again in the next
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and May you always remain happy,
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Thanks to you, Namaskar, Jai Hind,
Jai Bhaarath.
Reviewed by Shiv Rana RCM
on
जून 07, 2026
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