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A phone rings somewhere. At first it sounds as if it is ringing in his head, the way telephones ring inside the head of a dreamer — distant and yet so near, persistent, doggedly insistent, almost otherworldly. Malik listens to the ringing, but can’t be bothered, as if imagining that it is ringing for someone else.

Then he isolates the tone, which is coming from the kitchen counter, where he left his phone to recharge when he fell asleep in the small hours. He infers, eventually, that it must be his. Cursing, he gets out of bed to answer it, his head aching.

Cambara has very bad news. Dajaal is dead.

Malik asks, “Dead? How?”

“Killed at close range by an unknown assassin,” she finally manages to say. “I am told the murderer used the most powerful handgun available on the market — I can’t remember the name, but Bile has described using such a weapon as literally overkill.”

Malik wants to know the time, as if this has something to do with Dajaal’s death. As he searches for his watch, instant guilt preys on his mind. He wishes he knew if Dajaal was killed at the very time he, Malik, was dreaming of visiting him at the hospital, as if this might lessen or intensify his own sense of self-reproach. Cambara tells him that Dajaal’s passing occurred at dawn, as he was on his way to the mosque to pray. Tearful and choking, she adds, “Nobody remembers Dajaal ever going to the mosque for the dawn prayer.”

Malik’s watch reads almost eleven.

He says, “When is the burial?”

“He’s already been buried,” says Cambara.

Malik can’t believe it. When he finds his tongue, his words run in pursuit of one another; there are gaps in his thinking, which doesn’t keep up with the speed of his speech. He says, “Dajaal died at dawn. So why the hurry?”

“Because the gun that the assassin used hacks into its victims, tearing them apart with formidable force. Given the state of his body, it was deemed best to bury him right away.”

“A death meant as a lesson to us all, perhaps?”

She says, “One hated or loved Dajaal.”

“His friends and family loved him.”

“We’ll miss him, Bile and me.”

An alien disorder seizes Malik by the throat and renders him speechless. Plenty of words come to him, but somehow his tongue won’t let go of them.

“Are you still there?” Cambara asks.

He is barely audible when he says, “Yes.”

“Qasiir made the arrangements,” she explains. “He sent the diggers out early, called the sheikh to lead the Janaaza-prayer and community to prepare the body for interment, rented the bier, and organized the other burial rituals.”

“I wonder why he didn’t call me,” Malik says.

“He said he called,” she says. “No answer.”

Malik says, “Where will all this end?”

Cambara says, “I doubt it will ever end.”

“Do we have any idea who killed him?”

“Bile — he answered the phone — asked Qasiir to come over, and the two of them were locked in the upstairs bedroom for a long time. I am not privy to their conversation. Frankly, I doubt if anyone other than Shabaab was behind it. And you can be sure Dajaal’s murder will lead to more bloodletting.”

“I’d talk to Qasiir if he were still there,” says Malik.

“He left earlier, and Bile took to bed,” she says.

Malik senses sickness spreading through his entire body. He is remembering the last altercation between Dajaal and Gumaad, and the sensation he’d had at the time — that Dajaal would pay with his life for what he said about TheSheikh.

“How is Qasiir handling it?”

“He’s devastated,” Cambara says.

“Any idea what he is planning?”

“Qasiir won’t do anything in a mad rush,” she says. “Bile says that he is very much like his grandfather in this way.”

They talk for a few more minutes. Cambara tells Malik that, in between attempts to reach him, she spoke to Jeebleh and Seamus to let them know of Dajaal’s passing. She goes on to say, “Seamus thinks that you should base yourself in Nairobi, where you can get all the news about Somalia by the minute. Things will get much worse here before they get better.”

“What did Jeebleh say?”

“That he expects you to know what to do.”

“Jeebleh hasn’t suggested that I relocate to Kenya to cover Somalia from there, like all those European journalists do?”

“He says he will trust you to know what to do.”

Before hanging up, Cambara presses him to at least think more seriously about moving in with them, and she reminds him that if he needs transportation anywhere, both Qasiir and the car are at his disposal.

He thanks her and they hang up.

Depression sends Malik back to bed. From there he makes several attempts to reach Qasiir, but each time the line is either busy or disconnected. Despondency overwhelms him.

Later, when he rises, a strain of unfamiliar sorrow stirs him out of his depressive lethargy. But he doesn’t know what to do with himself. The day stretches ahead of him. He goes to the bathroom to clean his teeth, but he cannot bear the thought of looking in the mirror, worried at what he might see.

In the kitchen, he makes breakfast for two. Then he rings Dajaal’s number, just as he used to, aware that Somalis are unsentimental about death and certain that someone will have taken over Dajaal’s mobile phone and will use it until it runs out of airtime, and then decide whether to top it up or not.

A woman answers.

“This is Malik,” he says. “To whom am I speaking?”

She replies, “I am Qasiir’s mother,” and weeps.

Malik pays his respects and tells her how much he will miss Dajaal. “He’s been very dear to me,” he says. “I wish I had been there for his burial. But you know!”

“It’s God’s will that he is gone,” she says. “I loved him more than I loved my own father, because he raised me, supported and stood by me when the attacking Americans hurt my daughter. Allah will bless him.”

“Please tell Qasiir that I called.”

“I will, I will,” she assures him.

“I hope to come around and see you before I leave.”

“May Allah be praised,” she says.

Speaking to Qasiir’s mother does him good, helping him remember his responsibility as a journalist and as a friend to Dajaal and men like him, who are often murdered for the views they hold, risking their lives for their stands against tyranny. Dajaal loved the country, and has been killed by men who cannot love Somalia until they turn it into a different country, in which they prosper and their opponents perish. He will pen a piece about the tragic eradication of a generation of Somali professionals, of whom Dajaal was a prime example.

He gets down to just doing that.

Ahl calls. Malik tells him about Dajaal’s death. Ahl, however, is consumed by the thought of the newly appointed Ethiopian ambassador to Somalia lodging in Somalia’s presidential villa as though it were an upmarket hotel, not only as a guest of Somalia’s traitorous interim government, but on the false pretext of safeguarding the state and its interim president, who was escorted to the villa with a heavily armed detachment of Ethiopian and a hundred or so Somali soldiers.

Malik is conscious of his gauche failure — giving importance to the death of an individual when he should be concerned with the current state of the nation, in apparent contrast to Ahl, who, being physically distant from the scene of the bombings and having not known Dajaal in person, can afford a wider perspective in his assessment of these events. Maybe when one lives in a city riven by civil war, one is obsessed with the immediate situation almost to the exclusion of all else, whereas when one is operating outside these stressful conditions, one has the luxury, as Ahl does, to take a broader view and to study the matter from an entirely different perspective. At the moment, Malik is so preoccupied with Dajaal’s death — with thinking and writing about it — that he needs reminding that the Ethiopians are spreading their tentacles into strategic locations in Mogadiscio.