Chapter 24

Chapter 242,143 wordsCompleted

Under a walnut tree on a cool evening, Abu al‑Raad and his men gather around a fire, drinking sage tea and listening to a radio report about U.S. arms shipments to Israel. He draws a crude map and orders an ambush on buses carrying laborers. As night falls, the guerrillas hide behind rocks, waiting for the first bus. When the bus approaches, Abu al‑Raad shouts “Fire!”, a bomb detonates, the vehicle is hit, and many workers are thrown from the burning bus. Zuhdi is wounded in the shoulder by shrapnel. A second bus is also attacked; bullets and shrapnel strike it, forcing the remaining buses to retreat.

The soldiers arrive in jeeps, illuminate the area with searchlights, and broadcast surrender demands over loudspeakers. The guerrillas retreat further into the hills. Amid the chaos, Zuhdi finds himself alone, crouching near a rock as machine‑gun fire rattles overhead. A soldier steps directly above him; urged by a voice to use his screwdriver, Zuhdi lunges, thrusts the screwdriver into the soldier’s head, and pulls the weapon free. He drags the dead soldier’s body, contemplates his lack of power, and, urged by the voice, fires the captured machine‑gun, killing another soldier whose grenade then explodes. Zuhdi is left covered in blood and shrapnel, muttering prayers to God and reflecting on his transformation into a “shawka” (a thorn).

Usama, hearing the battle, shouts commands, misidentifying the enemy as “Jews” and urging a retreat. He is later shot multiple times; his stomach is split open, his entrails spill, and he collapses on the ground, reaching for the soil. In his final moments he reflects on love, exile, and the country’s fate, while a distant reed flute continues to play. The chapter ends with Usama’s death, his blood mixing with the fire’s glow, and the lingering scent of burning dung and bread, while the surviving guerrillas hide and the night soundscape of frogs and cicadas persists.