But there was something about him. He didn’t look like a member of al Qaeda either. By now I’d
seen a whole lot of Taliban warriors, and he looked nothing like any of them. There was no
arrogance, no hatred in his eyes. If he hadn’t been dressed like a leading man from
Murder up
the Khyber Pass,
he could have been an American college professor on his way to a peace rally.
He lifted up his loose white shirt to show me he had no concealed gun or knife. Then he spread
his arms wide in front of him, I guess the international sign for “I am here in friendship.”
I had no choice but to trust him. “I need help,” I said, uttering a phrase which must have shed an
especially glaring light on the obvious. “Hospital — water.”
“Hah?” said Sarawa.
“Water,” I repeated. “I must have water.”
“Hah?” said Sarawa.
“Water,” I yelled, pointing back toward the pool.
“Ah!”
he exclaimed.
“Hydrate!”
I
could not help laughing, weakly. Hydrate! Who the hell was this crazy-assed tribesman who
knew only long words?
He called over a kid who had a bottle. I think he went and filled it with fresh water from the
stream. He brought it back to me and I kept chugging away, glugging down the water, two good-
sized bottles of it.
“Hydrate,” said Sarawa.
“You got that right, pal,” I confirmed.
At which point we began to converse in that no-man’s-land
of language, the one where no one
knows hardly a word of the other’s native tongue.
“I’ve been shot,” I told him and showed him my wound, which had never really stopped
bleeding.
He examined it and nodded sternly, as if he understood the clear
truth that I badly needed
medical attention. Heaven knows how severely my left leg would be infected. All the dirt, mud,
and shale I’d inflicted on it couldn’t have done it much good.
I told him I was a doctor too, thinking it might help somehow. I knew there would likely be
savage retribution for a non-Taliban village sheltering an American fugitive, and I was praying
they would not just leave me here.
I wished to hell I still had some
of my medical gear with me, but that was lost a lifetime ago on
the mountain with Mikey, Axe, and Danny. Anyway, Sarawa seemed to believe I was a doctor,
although he seemed equally certain he knew where I’d come from. With a succession of signals
and a very few words, he conveyed to me he knew all about the firefight on the mountain. And
he
kept pointing directly at me, as if to confirm he absolutely knew I had been one of the
combatants.
The tribal bush telegraph up here must be fantastic. They have no means of fast communications,
no phones, cars, nothing. Just one another, goatherds wandering the mountainside, passing on the
necessary information. And here was this Sarawa, who had presumably
been miles away from
the action, informing me about the battle which I had helped fight the previous day.
He patted me reassuringly on the shoulder and then retreated into a kind of conference with his
fellow villagers while I talked to the kid.
He had only one question, and he had a lot of trouble asking it, trying to make an American
understand. In the end I got his drift:
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