The Ghala accident
At twenty-three, Faiz took on a job to air-condition an entire warehouse in the Ghala industrial zone, on the outskirts of Muscat. Tight budget, two-week deadline, July. On day eleven, a badly soldered copper pipe burst. R-22 gas without a mask. He kept working for twenty minutes because there was only one joint left. He collapsed on the stairs.
Two days in the emergency room. When he got out, the client had hired another company. Twelve hundred rials in debt. Eight months sleeping in the van. Eating as little as possible. The AM radio as his only company between two and six in the morning, when Muscat is asleep and the heat eases just enough to breathe with the windows down.
Somewhere in those months, Faiz understood something he'd rather not have understood: that financial shame and his father's shame were the same shame. That Ibrahim hadn't left Barka out of cowardice but because he didn't know how to stay while owing something. He understood it, and that was worse than the debt.







