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I burst into bitter, oppressed sobs that would become fa¬miliar to me in Lella Bashira's house. But I want you to know, Hind, that I don't hold any resentment toward your great-grandmother. I forgave her from my heart the day she asked for forgiveness, lying on her deathbed, and that day I shed more tears for her than I had over the death of my own mother. She was a second mother to me, despite everything.
Did she, after that question, slap me on the face once or twice for a sin I hadn't committed? I don't remember. But I do remember that Lella Zbaida stopped shaking and came to her senses as soon as Hedda placed a heavy iron key in her hand (I don't remember where she got it from). A smile and rosy glow returned to my beautiful little Lella's face, and she went right back to chasing bees before I had even stopped sobbing, both from my personal distress and my concern for her. That incident was the beginning of a series of seizures that began to slowly space out until they had almost disappeared. This was thanks to the blessings of the holy saints that Lella Bashira vis¬ited and gave offerings to behind her husband Sidi Hajj Ali's back. Meanwhile, Lella Bashira learned how to heal her daughter with that metal tool. After her marriage, I brought the tool hidden in her trousseau; I showed her husband Sidi Mohsen where it was and taught him how to use it. So he knew to ask me for it on the dawn of that ill-fated day.
Excerpted from A Calamity of Noble Houses by Amira Ghenim. Copyright © 2025 by Amira Ghenim. Excerpted by permission of Europa Editions. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Give me the luxuries of life and I will willingly do without the necessities.
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