
Humaria lay against Shereen's breast, veils and hair disordered. Inas knelt by the end table, placed
the tray, and poured tea.
"Here, sweet love," Shereen cooed, easing Humaria away from her shoulder. "Our dear sister Inas
offers tea in your own pretty cup. Drink, and be at peace."
Shivering, Humaria accepted the cup. She bent her face and breathed of the sweet, narcotic steam,
then sipped, eyes closed.
Shereen sat up, and put her head scarf to rights, though she left the ubaie—the facial veils
—unhooked and dangling along her right jaw.
"Our young Inas is fortunate, is she not, sister?" Humaria murmured, her soft voice blurry with the
combined effects of weeping and the tea.
"How so?" asked Shereen, watching her closely, in case she should suddenly droop into sleep.
"Why," said Humaria, sipping tea. "Because she will remain here in our home with our father, and
need never marry. Indeed, I would wonder if a husband could be found for a woman who reads as well
as a man. "
Shereen blinked, and bent her head, fussing with the fall of the hijab across her breast. Inas
watched her, abruptly chilly, though the night was warm and no breeze came though the windows that
stood open onto the garden.
"Certainly," Shereen said, after too long a pause. "Certainly, our father might wish to keep his
youngest with him as long as may be, since he shows no disposition to take another wife, and she knows
the ways of his books and his studies."
"And certainly," Humaria said, her eyes open now, and star-ing at Inas, where she knelt, feeling
much like a mouse, and not so bold, so bold at all.
"Certainly, on that blessed day when the gods call our father to sit with them as a saint in Heaven,
my husband will inherit all his worldly stuffs, including this, our clever sister Inas, to dispose of as he will."
At her father's direction, Inas had read many things, includ-ing the Holy Books and domestic law.
She knew, with a scholar's detachment, that women were the lesser vessel and men the god-chosen
administrators of the universe the gods had created, toyed with and tired of.
She knew that, in point of law, women were disbarred from holding property. Indeed, in point of
law, women were themselves property, much the same as an ox or other working cattle, subject to a
man's masterful oversight. A man might dispose of subject women, as he might dispose of an extra brood
cow, or of an old and toothless dog.
She knew these things.
And, yet, until this moment, she had not considered the im-pact of these facts upon her own life
and self.
What, indeed, she thought, would Safarez the merchant's son do with one Inas, youngest daughter
of his wife's father? Inas, who read as well as a man—a sinful blot so dire that she could not but be
grateful that the Holy Books also stated that the souls of women were small, withered things, of no
interest to the gods.
Humaria finished the last of her tea, and sat cradling the blue cup in her plump, pretty hands, her
eyes misty.
"There now, sweet, rest," Shereen murmured, capturing the cup and passing it to Inas. She put arm
around Humaria's shoulders, urging her to lie down on the couch.
Inas arose and carried the tray back to the cooking alcove. She washed and dried the teapot and
cup, and put the biscuits back in their tin. The sventi she left out.