The novel's ending ingeniously ties up many of its themes. Nadia's comment about how different things might have been if they got married captures the way that, while the novel focused on Nadia and Saeed's time together, they didn't end up together or the center of each other's lives. The connection they shared was in many ways just like the connections they share with others. The novel's focus on their particular connection showed how important that connection was, but the fact that the novel also shows the connection ends implies that all of their connections were also important, or could have been similarly important, had they made different choices. Meanwhile, the odd moment when Saeed comments that they weren't having sex, and then admits rather easily that they were, is important. Saeed seems to have built for himself a narrative in which he and Nadia followed strict religious rules, and avoided sex before marriage. This narrative fits with Saeed's growing religiousness through the story: it is the narrative he needed in order to be the person he needed himself to be. But now back in his home country where the religious strife has backed down, he can suddenly admit to himself and to Nadia that in fact they were having sex. Now, in this different context, no longer a refugee, Saeed can be a slightly different, less rigid and even less religious version of himself. Finally, when Saeed offers to take Nadia to the Chilean deserts if she ever has a “free evening,” it becomes clear that travel has become so ubiquitous throughout the world that people are able to take casual trips to far-flung destinations, essentially obliterating the idea that migration across borders is something that must be controlled. And when Hamid asserts that neither Saeed nor Nadia know if their trip to the desert together will ever transpire, he once more relates uncertainty and migration, though this time the combination is imbued with a sense of possibility, not fear. At the same time, that these two people, who have had to travel under duress as refugees throughout the novel, can now talk about traveling for leisure, it makes clear that the state of being a refugee is something that comes to an end. While the rest of the world often treats refugees as nothing other than refugees, the novel insists that refugees are, in fact, humans who just happen to have been forced to flee their home.