Let the cash move
“Hey man, what’s up?”
“All good. What about you?”
“Not bad… going as usual,” I replied.
“So what’s happening?” I asked my friend casually.
“Just trying to finish some work — and making sure not to be
part of the rumour mills!” he laughed.
“Still staying at the same place?” I asked curiously.
“Yes, of course.”
“You mean the apartment on the ninth floor?”
“Yes,” he said.
There was a brief pause
before he added quite
calmly:
“Life is becoming more
colourful these days.
From my window, I can
occasionally see a few
missiles heading somewhere in the distance.”
“Isn’t that scary?” I
asked.
“Not really,” he replied.
“I know Bahrain is trying its best to protect us.
I have faith in the system.”
The answer came so
naturally that it caught
me slightly off guard.
“What about food?” I
asked, shifting the conversation to something
more practical.
“Talabat is active,” he
said with a laugh. “The
delivery boys are right on
time. No worries.”
“Any plans to travel back home?” I asked.
“What for?” he laughed again. “Our highways back home are
more dangerous than these missiles.”
His humour was disarming.
“So when do you think this war will end?”
“Honestly, I don’t bother about that,” he said.
I found myself quietly admiring his perspective. Just then,
he paused.
“Hold on a second,” he said.
The doorbell rang. It was the food delivery.
A minute later, he returned to the call, smiling.
“You know,” he said, “I usually give the delivery guy one dinar
as a tip. These days I give two.”
“Why the upgrade?” I asked.
“Let the cash move, man,” he laughed. “That’s my way of
supporting the economy.”
“So how do you spend your time these days?” I asked.
He turned his phone camera around. Two of his friends were
sitting in the room watching a cricket match.
“We’re just chilling,” he said.
“What do you expect will happen next?” I asked.
He thought for a moment.
“This time will also pass,” he said calmly. “Maybe one day,
instead of missiles, Iranian drones will start flying to Bahrain
carrying Fesenjan and saffron rice — or perhaps some other
delicious food.”I couldn’t control my laughter.
He started laughing too.
“Good night,” he said. “Sleep tight.”
As I pulled the blanket over my head, I heard another loud
sound in the distance — perhaps the interception of yet another
drone.
But instead of fear, I felt something else growing inside me:
a quiet sense of comfort and confidence.
And in that moment, his words echoed again in my mind.
This time will also pass.
(The author is the Chairman & Managing Director of The Daily Tribune)
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