university, not for the police.â
The old man looked up at Hassan with a crooked smile. âItâs so difficult to know who to trust. I used to work my own land, now I try to survive in the city. They took everything from me, except my wife and children whom I need to feed.â He lingered on his last words to give them more meaning, but Hassan pretended not to notice.
âI know. Believe me when I say Iâve got nothing to gain from our meeting, except the pleasure of doing my work, which is to collect and catalogue all these objects.â
It was a fixed dialogue, rehearsed a thousand times and Hassan knew how to keep the upper hand. This was pretty easy when the seller was desperate and the buyer picky about what to purchase.
âLetâs go to the backroom for privacy,â said Hassan, as if all he cared for was the labourerâs reputation. They walked through to the backroom and sat down side by side on a bench. The man reached into his tattered satchel and brought out a rectangular object, tightly wrapped in a rag. He opened it carefully and Hassan, who had identified the object straight away, rolled his eyes. Yet another clay tablet. He took it slowly, pretended to read the cuneiform writing and nodded appreciatively.
âThis is a very interesting tablet youâve got here. I will take it to the university today. Thank you very much. Youâve done the right thing.â
The man looked embarrassed but was not leaving, so Hassan dug his hand in his pocket and gave him 30 US dollars. The man thanked him warmly and hurried away. Hassan turned over the object in his hands, he thought it was a little heavy for a clay tablet but did not make much more of it. He decided to call Bibuni right away.
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âYes?â asked a smooth, deep male voice.
âSalam Aleikum Mr Bibuni. How are you?â asked Hassan.
âAleikum Salam my boy. Iâm well. Iâve been told someone came to see you.â
âNews travel fast,â said Hassan, thinking back to the café owner who had been fiddling with a phone while he was sitting with the old labourer.
âSo, my boy?â asked Bibuni, unwavering.
âItâs a beautiful tablet, with cuneiform writing. Iâm sure itâs an important text.â
âScoundrel! Only a few months in the business and already trying to hustle me. Look here Hassan, find me sculptures, gold or silverware, even bronze amulets, but keep your wretched clay tablets. No-one wants to buy this stuff and those who do are more trouble than theyâre worth; before you know it, they show you an official UNESCO list of looted objects and refuse to pay up, or demand to see other tablets. You never hear the end of it.â
âSo what should I do with it then?â asked Hassan.
âWhat do I care!?â Bibuni yelled down the phone. âUse it as a chopping block, a wall decoration, whatever you want but donât try to pull that one on me again.â
âAlright Mr Bibuni, Iâm sorry.â
âHave you got anything else?â
âNothing for a couple of days, but Iâm sure something will crop up. Any chance of a small advance?â
âAdvance on what? Clay tablets? You must be joking. Call me when youâve got something decent and I will give you all the advances you could want.â
The line went dead. Hassan took a deep breath, put the tablet in his bag and left the café.
Mina and the professor walked briskly through the University campus, both tightly wrapped in traditional woollen shawls. Soon enough, they arrived at a block of flats. Mosul was a strange city: it had seen 8000 years of history and yet today, much of it was a concrete sprawl. The old city kept its charm of course, with its old Abbasid houses and romantic, meandering streets but many academics tended to live just off the campus. It was close to their workplace, cheaper and more secure than other parts of Mosul.
As soon as