i nto his father's eyes, si lent and motionless. All power to speak
or thi nk or move deserted him. Gebelaawi commanded him:
- Out!
Bu t Adham was unable to move. Utterly hopeless, he stayed
where he was, like a lifeless object, except that an object cannot
feel despair. His father shouted:
- Out!
Terror aroused him from his paralysis and he moved. His
father stepped aside from the doorway, and Adham left the
private chamber, the candle sti ll flickering in his hand. He saw
Umayma standi ng speechless in the middle of the room, tears
streaming down her face. His father motioned to him to stand
beside her, then addressed him coldly:
- You wi l l answer my questions truthfully.
Ad ham 's expression conveyed his willi ngness. Gebelaawi
asked:
- Who told you abou t the book?
Adham answered wi thout hesi tation, like a broken vessel
pouring out i ts contents:
- ldrees.
- When?
- Yesterday morni ng.
- How did you meet?
- l-Ie slipped in wi th the new tenants and waited till we were
alone.
- Why didn't you throw him out?
- I cou ld n't bring myself to throw him out, Father.
Gebelaawi said sharply:
- Don't call me 'Father'.
Ad ham gathered all his strength and said:
- You're sti ll my father in spite of your anger and my
stupidity.
- Is he the one who made you do this?
39
Children of Gebelaawi
U mayma answered, though he had not addressed the ques-
tion to her:
- Yes, sir!
Gebelaawi shouted:
- Quiet, vermin! (Then to Adham:) Answer me!
- He was desperately unhappy and repentant, and he
wanted to feel secure about his children's future.
- And you did this for him!
- On the contrary ... I apologized and told him I couldn't.
- What made you change your mind?
Adham sighed i n despair, and muttered:
- The Devil.
Gebelaawi asked cruelly:
- Did you tell your wife what had passed between you?
At this point Umayma began to wail. Gebelaawi silenced
her, then motioned Adham to answer:
- Yes !
- And what did she say to you?
Adham kept quiet and swallowed hard. His father shouted:
- Answer me, you wretch!
- She was keen to fi nd out your will, and thought i t would
harm nobody.
Gebelaawi glared at him with utter contempt:
- And that is how you consented to betray the one who
preferred you to your betters?
Adham said with a groan:
- It's no use my maki ng excuses for my crime; but your
mercy is greater than any crime or any excuses.
- So you plot against me wi th Idrees whom I expelled for
your sake?
- I didn't plot with Idrees. I 've done wrong, and my only
hope is your mercy.
Umayma implored him:
- Sir. ..
- Quiet, vermi n!
40
Adham
He looked from one to the other, frowning,then said i n a
terrible voice:
- Get out of the house!
Adham appealed:
- Father!
In a brutal voice Gebelaawi said:
- Get out of the house before you are thrown out!
9 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The great gate opened again, this time to see the expulsion
of Adham and Umayma. Adham carried a bundle of clothes,
and Umayma followed with a second bundle, some pots and
pans and a little food. They left, crushed and hopeless. When
they heard the gate close behind them their voices rose to a
wai l, and Umayma said between her sobs:
- I deserve worse than death.
Adham 's voice faltered:
- For once you 're telling the truth; but I deserve worse than
death too.
They had gone hardly any distance from the house when a
drun ken laugh rang out. They looked i n that direction, and
there they saw ldrees in front of the hut he had built of
flattened cans and pieces of wood. His wife Narciss sat quietly
spinning, and ldrees was laughi ng spitefully, enjoying their
misery. Adham and Umayma were astonished and stood staring at him. ldrees started dancing and snapping his fingers, annoying Narciss who retreated into the hut. Adham watched,
his reddened eyes filled with tears of rage. He saw at once the
trick ldrees had played and its monstrous wickedness. He
realized too his own immense naivety and stupidity, on account of which the vi llai n was dancing with m alicious joy. This 41
Children of Gebelaauri
was the real ldrecs, the i ncarnation of evil. Adham's blood
boiled and his mind was darkened. He picked up a handful of
earth and threw it at him, shou ti ng, in a voice distorted by fury:
- Damned shil! You're worse than a scorpion.
l drees's answer was to dance still more vigorously, wagging
his head from side to side and jerking his eyebrows up and
down, still snapping his fingers. Adham's rage mou nted stil l
further and he bellowed:
.
- Bloody, lousy, low-down .. � liar ... cheat. . . !
ldrees began swayi ng his body as skillfully as h e was wagging
his head, sniggering silently. Ad ham took no notice ofUmayma
who was tryi ng to pull him away, but yelled:
- You 're worse than a tart, you filthy scum!
ldrees started wriggling his behind, spinning round slowly
and provocatively. Adham was blind with fury. He threw down
h is bu ndle, pushed away Umayma who tried to hold him back,
rushed at him and seized his throat with all his strength. ldrees
took no notice of the attack, bu t went on dancing slowly and
artfully. Adham, by now qu ite mad, rai ned down blows, but
l drees only made more fun of him, chanting:
Rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief.
Then he stopped, ravi ng and cursing, and shoved Adham i n
the chest with a force that sent h i m staggering. He lost his
balance and fell on his back. Umayma hurried over to him,
helped him up and brushed the dirt off his clothes, saying:
- Why bother with this savage? Let's get right away.
He picked up his bu ndle wi thout a word, and she took hers,
and they made their way to the other side of the Great House.
Adham was already tired and he threw down the bundle and
sat on i t, sayi ng he wan Led a rest. His wife sat down facing him,
crying again. They heard ldrees's voice once more. He stood
looking defiantly at Lhe house, thu ndering:
- For the sake of your most despicable child you threw me
42
Adham
out, and you see how he treated you? And now you've thrown
him into the dirt - and yourself with him. Tit for tat - and the
one who acts first ends worst. This is so that you shall know that
ldrees can 't be beaten. Stay alone wi th your useless, spi neless
sons. You won ' t have any grandsons except those who will run
about i n the dirt and roll i n the filth. Tomorrow they'l l be
peddling sweet potatoes and melon seeds. Tomorrow they'll
be at the mercy of the strongmen in Otouf and Kafr ei-Zaghari.
Soon your seed wi ll be mixed with that of the lowest of men.
You 'll sit alone in your room, changi ng things in your book i n
anger and frustration. You 'll grow old alone i n the shadows
and, when the end comes, you 'II fi nd nobody to cry for you.
Then he turned to J\d ham and continued his crazy shouting:
-And you, blacky Adham, you weakli ng, how are you going
to face life on your own? You have no strength to help you,
nobody strong to rely on. In this desert what's the use of your
reading, writing and ari thmetic? 1-Ia! 1-Ia! 1-Ia!
Umayma wen t on weeping till it got on Adham's nerves and
he sai d wearily:
- Stop cryi ng!
She dried her eyes.
- I'll often be crying, J\dham. I'm to blame for all this.
- I'm just as much to blame. If I hadn ' t been so weak and
cowardly it wouldn ' t have happened.
- It's all my fau lt.
He shoutE.d angri ly:
- You're only blaming yourself to prevent me from blammg you.
She lost her eagerness for self-reproach and sat for a while
wi th bent head. Then she went on in a fai nt voice:
- I never thought he could be so hard.
- I know him; I have no excuse.
She hesitated a while, then said:
- How can I live here when I'm pregnant?
43
Children of Gebelaawi
- After the Great House we must live i n this desert. If only
tears could help ! There's nothing for i t but to build ourselves
a hut.
- Where?
He looked rou nd, and his glance fell for a second on
Idrees's hut.
-We can 'tgo too far from the Great House, even ifit means
living near to Idrees. Otherwise we'd die, all alone on the edge
of this desert.
Umayma though L for a while, then bowed her head in
acquiescence.
- Yes, and we should stay in sight of your father in case he
softens towards us.
Adham sighed.
- I'm going to die of grief. Ifyou weren't here with me I'd
think this was a nightmare. Have I lost h is love for ever? But I
shan't figh t back at him li ke Idrees. Oh no! I'm not at all like
Idrees, so how can I be treated the same?
Umayma said bi lterly:
- Nobody rou nd here has ever known a father like yours.
- When wi l l your Longue stop wagging?
- For goodness' sake, I haven't committed a crime. Tell
anybody what you've done and how you've been rewarded; I
bet you anything they won 't believe it. My God ! There's never
been a father like yours.
- The world has never seen so fine a man. This jebel, this
desert, and the sky itself bear witness to that. Anybody else
wou ld have shrunk back from the chal lenge.
- With his tyranny soon none of his sons will be left in the
house.
- We are the first to go, and we are the worst.
She denied it angrily:
- I'm not - we're not.
- The truth comes out only at times of trial.
They fel l silent. In the desert there was no living thing to be
44
Adham
seen, except a few people moving about far away at the foot of
the Jebel. The sun beat down cruelly from a cloudless sky,
drenching the vast expanse of sand, in which glinted a few
stones or bits of glass. The only things that broke the monotony were the Jebel on the horizon, a great rock that lay to the east like the head of a body buried in the sand, and ldrees's
miserable hovel, planted defiantly to the east of the Great
House. The whole atmosphere was harsh, dreary and frightening.
Umayma heaved a deep sigh and said:
- We're going to have a hard time of it, making life
comfortable.
Adham looked at the Great House and said:
- We'll have an even harder ti me wai ting till that gate
opens agam.
1 0 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Adham and Umayma set about putting up a hut for themselves, to the west or the Great House. They fetched stones from M uqattam and collected slates from the foot of the Jebel,
and they picked up pieces of wood around Otouf, Gem alia and
Bab el-Nasr. They soon realized that building a hut would take