Eight Months on Ghazzah Street

Eight Months on Ghazzah Street by Hilary Mantel Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Eight Months on Ghazzah Street by Hilary Mantel Read Free Book Online
Authors: Hilary Mantel
much else to do.”
    “How do people get to see their friends?”
    “I suppose they must come to some arrangement. Some of the women hire their own drivers. I don’t think we can afford that.”
    “Are there buses? Can I go on the bus?”
    “There are buses.” He had found the piece of paper he wanted and was reading it. “But I don’t think it’s advisable to take them.”
    “What’s wrong?” she said. “What’s the matter?”
    “Oh, nothing. Just a bad day.”
    “Can’t you tell me?”
    “No, I don’t think I could begin to explain.” He tossed the papers back into his briefcase and snapped it shut. Need we sound so much like a husband and wife? she wondered. We have never had this conversation before. It is as if it came from some central scripting unit.
    Andrew crossed the room and threw himself into an armchair. She followed him. This big decision again; none of the chairs was so
placed that they suited two people who wished to sit companionably, and talk to each other. It would seem unreasonably portentous to start moving the furniture now; although it was true that he had been in the house for ten minutes, and had not looked at her once, and this in itself seemed unreasonable. She chose a chair, rather at an angle from his own, and leaned back in it, trying consciously to relax; or at least to capture the appearance of it.
    “I was tidying up,” she said, “filing papers away. I couldn’t find your passport.”
    “It’s in the safe at the office. Turadup keep it. I’ve got this identity document, it’s called an iquama. ” He produced it from his pocket and tossed it to her. “I have to carry my driver’s license too. If the police stop you and you haven’t got your documents they take you off to jail till it’s sorted out. They’re very keen on establishing who people are, you see, because of illegal immigrants. People come in at the end of the summer to do their pilgrimage to Mecca and then they try to get a job. I think there’s some kind of black market in servants. They try to make a few bucks and get back to Kerala or wherever before the police catch up with them.”
    “I can’t think that the police would mistake you for somebody’s illegal houseboy.”
    “Well, what are you saying? That they should only stop people with certain colors of skin?”
    “That would be the practical recommendation.”
    “Oh, there’s no color prejudice in Saudi Arabia. At least, that’s the theory. Somebody told me that when marriage settlements are negotiated the girl’s skin is a major consideration. If the bloke’s never seen her without her veil, I suppose he has to weigh up her brothers’ pigmentation and take it on trust … What were we talking about?”
    “Your passport. Can’t you bring it home? You never know … suppose something went wrong and we had to leave suddenly?”
    “Having a passport wouldn’t be any use. You can’t go out of the country just like that. You have to apply for an exit visa. You need signatures. An official stamp.” Andrew pushed his iquama back into
his pocket. He didn’t mean to be parted from it. “If you want to leave you need permission from your sponsor. My sponsor’s His Royal Highness the Minister. Your sponsor is me. If you wanted to go to another city even, I’d have to give you a letter.”
    “Would you? And that would be true if I were a Saudi woman?”
    “Oh yes. You can’t just move around as you like.”
    “It reminds me of something,” she said. “The pass laws.”
    “It’s not that bad. A lot of countries have these rules. It’s just that we’ve spent most of our lives subject to a different set. This isn’t a free society. They haven’t had any practice at being free.”
    “Freedom isn’t a thing that needs practice,” she said. “If you have it, you know how to use it.”
    “I don’t know. Perhaps.” He sounded very tired. “We’re not quarreling, are we? I can’t do anything about the system, we’ll

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