Deception on His Mind Page 0,42

about the visitor who had arrived with their son.

They exchanged hushed words. Akram's eyes displayed his only reaction to the visitor's identity.

Behind his glasses, they narrowed quickly.

He said, "Why?"

His wife replied, "Because of Haytham." She glanced at Sahlah with compassion in her eyes, as if in the belief that her daughter had actually come to love the man she'd been told to marry.

And why not? Sahlah realised. Under identical circumstances, Wardah had learned to love Akram Malik. "Muhannad says that your brother's son has experience in these matters, Akram."

Akram snorted. "It all depends on what 'these matters' are. You should not have let him into the house."

"He came with Muhannad," was her reply

"What could I do?"

He was with Muhannad still, seated at one end of the sofa while Sahlah's brother took the other.

Akram was in an easy chair, with one of Wardah's embroidered pillows cradling his back.

The oversize television was playing another of Yumn's Asian films. She'd muted the sound instead of dousing the picture before scuttling upstairs.

Now, over her father's shoulder, Sahlah could see two desperate young lovers meeting secretly like Romeo and Juliet. Except instead of upon a balcony, they met, embraced, and fell to the earth to do their business in a field where maize grew to their shoulders and hid them from view. Sahlah averted her eyes and felt her heart beating in her throat like a trapped bird's wings.

"I know you're not happy with everything that happened this afternoon," Muhannad was saying,

"But we've got the police to agree to meet with us daily. That'll keep us informed of what's going on." Sahlah could tell by the clipped way her brother spoke that he chafed beneath their father's unuttered disapproval and disgust. "We wouldn't have got that far in one interview had Azhar not been there, Father. He positioned the DCI so that she had no option but to agree. And he did it so smoothly that she wasn't aware of the direction he was leading her till she arrived there." He shot Azhar a look of admiration. Azhar crossed his legs, pressed the crease of his trousers between his fingers, but said nothing at all. He kept his gaze fixed on his uncle. Sahlah had never seen anyone look so composed in a situation in which he was so unwelcome.

"And this was your purpose in causing a riot?"

"The point isn't who caused what. The point is that we got an agreement."

"And you think this is something we could not have managed on our own, Muhannad?

This agreement, as you call it." Akram lifted his glass and drank some of the lassi. He hadn't glanced once at Taymullah Azhar.

"The cops know us, Father. They've known us for years. And familiarity makes people lax when it comes to fulfilling their responsibilities. Who shouts the loudest gets heard the soonest, and you know it."

These last four words were a mistake, born of Muhannad's impatience and of his aversion for the English. Sahlah understood his feelings - having also been on the receiving end of childhood torment at the hands of schoolmates - but she knew that their father did not.

Born in Pakistan and coming to England as a man in his twenties, he'd had only one experience of racism that he ever spoke of. Even that one episode of public humiliation in a London Underground station had not soured him about the people he'd decided to adopt as his countrymen. In his eyes, Muhannad had disgraced their people that day.

Akram Malik wasn't likely to forget that fact soon.

"Who shouts the loudest often has the least to say," he responded.

Muhannad's face tightened. "Azhar knows how to organise. The way we need to organise now."

"What is now, Muni? Is Haytham less dead than he was at this time yesterday? Is your sister's future any less destroyed? How does one man's presence change what is?"

"Because," Muhannad announced, and the tone of his voice told Sahlah that her brother had saved the best for last, "they've now admitted it's murder."

Akram's face grew grave. However irrationally, he'd been consoling himself, his family, and Sahlah especially with the belief that Haytham's death had been an unfortunate accident. Now that Muhannad had ferreted out the truth, Sahlah knew that her father would have to think in different terms. He would have to ask why, which might very well lead him in a direction in which he didn't wish to go.

"Admitted, Father. To us. Because of what happened at today's council meeting and in the street afterwards.

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