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Chapter 14

Chapter 148,052 wordsCompleted

Weeks have passed and Usama has failed to carry out any sabotage; he agonizes over the dilemma of blowing up Egged buses while his childhood friend Adil now works for the Israeli contractors. Determined to persuade Adil, Usama enters the evening workers’ cafe. The room is noisy with back‑gammon, cheap cigarette smoke, and bitter conversations among workers such as Zuhdi, Abu Nawwaf and others about wages, patriots, and the occupation.

Shahada, a flamboyant businessman with a gold ring and a fur‑collared jacket, arrives, orders coffee and water‑pipes for everyone, and engages in a curt exchange with Adil—Shahada flaunts his wealth, Adil politely declines then accepts coffee. Usama repeatedly interrupts, demanding Adil’s loyalty to the resistance. Their dialogue escalates: Usama accuses Adil of betrayal, cites the revolutionary duty to blow up the buses, and condemns Adil’s “shameful” employment; Adil replies that his father’s illness and personal circumstances force his choices, that Shahada’s ostentatiousness is meaningless, and that he will not abandon his work.

Usama drags Adil into a dark alley, pleading for an “understanding”. He presses Adil to see the moral cost of his labor, while Adil retorts with sarcasm about “contentment” and mocks the idea that a pipe‑smoking man can define dignity. Their argument remains unresolved.

Suddenly, gunfire erupts from the hills; tanks roll into the town, artillery shells strike nearby houses, and a curfew is declared. Usama hears the roar of tanks, sees explosions, and the street descends into chaos. Children scramble under soldiers, some are hauled into patrol cars; a house collapses under an explosive blast, its owner cries “Allahu Akbar” and neighbors chant “Palestine!” amidst the smoke. The old man on a neighboring roof sounds the adhan, while women and girls beat rhythm on empty tins.

When the fighting subsides and the curfew lifts, workers emerge. Basil, Abu Sabir, and others discuss the recent arrests of Hamada and Basil, lament the loss of comrades, and resume their daily routine of boarding Egged buses for construction work. Dialogue returns to economic grievances: complaints about wages, the price of bread, and the futility of “patriotic duty” under occupation.

Throughout the chapter, Usama’s internal conflict deepens. He remains unable to sway Adil, watches the city’s violence erupt, and ends the night still torn between his revolutionary ideals and his personal bond with his friend.

Running Summary
Cumulative summary through the selected chapter (not the full-book final summary).
Through chapter 14

Usama travels by taxi toward the Jordan Valley, encounters Abu Muhammad who shares his family's exile history, a Kuwait‑bought watch, and his son Khalid’s torture; the group anticipates a checkpoint, while Usama wrestles with his training‑induced disillusionment and deep yearning for home. Usama is detained at a checkpoint, subjected to a humiliating strip‑search and intensive interrogation by a Polish soldier, recounts his work and family‑reunion history, witnesses abuse of other detainees, and is finally released onto a taxi that returns him to the West Bank. Usama’s return taxi becomes a micro‑cosm of occupation‑era dissent: passengers argue over Israeli‑made cigarettes, “protective tariffs,” and resistance; a fort‑armed woman in her forties challenges a bombastic nationalist, introduces the legend of Zarqa al‑Yamama, and later reappears healed; the barren landscape outside is described, and the vehicle finally stops in the town square. Usama returns to his hometown, reunites emotionally with his mother, learns of family expectations about marriage, visits the ancestral mansion where he encounters his uncle Abu Adil, foreign journalists, and French cameramen discussing occupation‑related employment; he meets cousin Nuwar, discovers Adil’s deteriorating health and the house’s lack of servants, and promises to investigate Adil’s condition. Usama’s mother urges him to take a job on his uncle’s farm and hints at marrying his cousin Nuwar, noting that there are no government or UNRWA positions available; despite his commitment to the resistance, Usama promises to visit the farm, deepening his personal dilemma. Usama goes to his uncle’s abandoned farm, confronts the aging former farmhand Abu Shahada, learns that the farmhands now work in Israel and that the land belongs to a landlord Effendi, experiences the old man’s denial and anger, assaults him, and leaves the orchard in despair. Adil travels with a convoy of Palestinian laborers to Tel Aviv, where a night‑time bus ride reveals their dire economic conditions, intra‑group tensions, and nostalgic grievances; an accident leaves elder worker Abu Sabir gravely injured, and Adile’s desperate attempts at first‑aid expose the lack of legal protections for undocumented laborers. Um Sabir and her husband Abu Sabir grapple with a severe injury (loss of part of his right hand), mounting medical costs for his dialysis machine, and the oppressive economic and political environment; Adil reflects on his own crushing burdens while the family prepares to leave home, invoking folk remedies, religious verses, and references to the broader occupation. Usama meets Nuwar’s friend Lina, learns Adil is still on the farm, listens to Basil’s friends deliver a scathing monologue on the Palestinian education system and emigration, observes Nuwar crying over Salih, and departs the house to look for Adil. Adil, drunk and disoriented, roams the night streets of Nablus with Usama, confronting his personal and collective anguish; he recounts Abu Sabir’s brutal hand injury, the insufficiency of medical care, the oppressive presence of patrol cars, and the endless cycle of suffering and false hopes, while debating the meaning of freedom and hunger with Usama. Usama confronts a bread seller over Hebrew‑stamped, stale bread on a muddy street, then seeks refuge in Haj Abdullah’s grocery where he observes heated debates about inflation, labor exploitation, and political activism, meeting characters such as Basil, Hani, Radwan, and the shopkeeper while learning about the daily pressures on ordinary Palestinians. Usama meets Adil and his colleague Zuhdi; Zuhdi recounts his multiple migrations, harsh labor conditions, exploitation by Jewish workers, and debates leaving the country, while mentioning Abu Sabir’s accident and the concept of “lishka” jobs, deepening the portrait of economic and political frustration. Usama visits his injured cousin Abu Sabir; the family’s cramped courtyard reveals poverty, a silent four‑year‑old girl, and Abu Sabir’s wife. Adil presses for compensation for Abu Sabir’s work injury despite lacking a work permit, while the group argues about the prospect of war, occupation, and internal versus external responsibility. Usama, increasingly depressed, declares a vague future war, then abruptly leaves, prompting heated accusations and remorse among Adil, Zuhdi and Abu Sabir. Usama confronts Adil in a workers’ cafe, trying to pull him away from his job in Israel; a heated exchange reveals their diverging loyalties and personal grievances. The encounter is interrupted by a sudden military clash—tanks, artillery, curfew, and a house explosion—followed by a chaotic street scene with children, soldiers, and an adhan. After the curfew lifts, workers resume their Egged‑bus duties while discussing recent arrests, and Usama remains torn between revolutionary duties and his bond with Adil.