Read Just One Year Page 19

Page 19

 

  Prateek and his uncle carry on a spirited conversation in a mix of Hindi and English, debating the merits and deficits of all three films. Finally they settle on Dil Mera Golmaal.

  The theater is an art deco building with peeling white paint, not unlike the revival houses Saba used to take me to when he visited. I buy our tickets and our popcorn. Prateek promises to translate in return.

  The film—a sort of convoluted take on Romeo and Juliet, involving warring families, gangsters, a terrorist plot to steal nuclear weapons, plus countless explosions and dance numbers—doesn’t require much translation. It is both nonsensical and oddly self-explanatory.

  Still, Prateek gives it a shot. “That man is that one’s brother but he doesn’t know it,” he whispers. “One is evil, the other is good, and the girl is engaged to the bad one, but she loves the good one. Her family hates his family and his family hates her family but they don’t really because the feud has to do with the other one’s father, who engineered the feud when he stole the baby at birth, you see. He is also a terrorist. ”

  “Right. ”

  Then there’s a dance number and a fight scene and then suddenly we are in the desert. “Dubai,” Prateek whispers.

  “Why, exactly?” I ask.

  Prateek explains that the oil consortium is there. As are the terrorists.

  There are several scenes in the desert, including a duel between two monster trucks that Henk would appreciate.

  Then the film switches abruptly to Paris. One moment, there’s a generic shot of the Seine. And then, a second later, a shot down the banks of the river. Then we see the heroine and the good twin brother, who, Prateek explains, have gotten married and fled together. They break out into song. But they’re no longer on the Seine; now they are on one of the arched bridges that span the canals in Villette. I recognize it. Lulu and I cruised under it, sitting side by side, our legs knocking against the hull. Occasionally, we’d accidentally knock ankles and there had been something electric about it, a turn-on, just in that.

  I feel it now in this musty theater. Almost like a reflex, my thumb goes to the inside of my wrist, but the gesture is meaningless, here in the dark.

  Soon the song is over and we’re back in India for the grand finale when the families reunite and reconcile and there’s another wedding ceremony and a big dance number. Unlike Romeo and Juliet, these lovers get a happy ending.

  After the movie, we walk through the crowded streets. It’s dark now, and the heat’s gone wavy. We meander our way to a wide crescent of sand. “Chowpatty Beach,” Prateek tells me, pointing out the luxury highrises on Marine Drive. They sparkle like diamonds against the slender curving wrist of the bay.

  It’s a carnival atmosphere with all the food vendors and clowns and balloon shapers and the furtive lovers taking advantage of the darkness to steal kisses behind a palm tree. I try not to watch them. I try not to remember stealing kisses. I try not to remember that first kiss. Not her lips, but that birthmark on her wrist. I’d been wanting to kiss it all day. Somehow, I knew exactly what it would taste like.

  The water laps against the shore. The Arabian Sea. The Atlantic Ocean. Two oceans between us. And still not enough.

  Twenty-three

  After four days, Yael finally has a day off. Instead of waking up from my fold-up bed to find her rushing out the door, I see her in her pajamas. “I’ve ordered up breakfast,” she says in that crisp voice of hers, the gutturalness of her Israeli accent ironed out from all the years of speaking English.

  There’s a knock at the door. Chaudhary, who seems to always work and to do every single job here, shuffles in, pushing a trolley. “Breakfast, Memsahib,” he announces.

  “Thank you, Chaudhary,” Yael says.

  He studies the two of us. Then shakes his head. “He is nothing like you, Memsahib,” he says.

  “He looks like his baba,” Yael replies.

  I know it’s true, but it’s strange to hear her say it. Though not as strange, I’d imagine, as seeing the face of her dead husband staring back at her. Sometimes when I’m feeling charitable, I’ll justify this as the reason she’s put such distance between us these last three years. Then the less charitable side of me will ask, What about the eighteen years before that?

  With a dramatic flourish, Chaudhary sets out toast, coffee, tea, and juice. Then he backs out of the door.

  “Does he ever leave?” I ask.

  “No, not really. His children are all overseas and his wife passed. So he works. ”

  “Sounds miserable. ”

  She gives me one of her inscrutable looks. “At least he has a purpose. ”

  She flips open the newspaper. Even that is colorful, a salmony shade of pink. “What have you been doing the last few days?” she asks me as she eyes the headlines.

  I went back to Chowpatty Beach, the markets around Colaba, the Gateway. I went to another movie with Prateek. I’ve wandered mostly. Without purpose. “This and that,” I say.

  “So today we do that and this,” she replies.

  Downstairs, we are besieged by the usual congregation of beggars. “Ten rupees,” a woman carrying a sleeping baby says. “For formula for my baby. You come with me to buy it. ”

  I start to pull out money, but Yael snaps at me to stop and then snaps at the woman in Hindi.

  I don’t say a word. But my expression must give me away, because Yael gives an exasperated explanation. “It’s a scam, Willem. The babies are props. The women are part of begging rings, run by organized crime syndicates. ”

  I look at the woman, now standing across from the Taj Hotel, and shrug. “So? She still needs the money. ”

  Yael nods and frowns. “Yes, she does. And the baby needs food, no doubt, but neither of them will get what they need. If you bought milk for that woman, you’d pay an inflated price, and you’d get an inflated sense of goodwill. You helped a mother feed her baby. What could be better?”

  I don’t say anything, because I’ve been giving them money every day and now I feel foolish for it.

  “As soon as you walk away, the milk’s returned to the shop. And your money? The shopkeeper gets a cut; the crime bosses get a cut. The women, the women are indentured, and they get nothing. As for what happens to babies . . . ” She trails off ominously.

  “What happens to the babies?” The question pops out before I realize I might not want to know the answer.

  “They die. Sometimes of malnutrition. Or sometimes of pneumonia. When life is so tenuous, something small might do it. ”

  “I know,” I say. Sometimes even when life isn’t that tenuous, I think and I wonder if she’s thinking the same thing.

  “In fact, the day you arrived, I was late because of an emergency with one of those very children. ” She doesn’t elaborate, leaving it for me to put the pieces together.

  Yael’s non-admission manages to make me feel retroactively guilty for faulting her—there was something more important—and bitter—there always is something more important. But mostly it makes me tired. Couldn’t she have just told me and saved me the trouble of my guilt and bitterness?

  Then again, sometimes I think that guilt and bitterness may be Yael’s and my true common language.

  Our first stop is the Shree Siddhivinayak Temple, an ornate wedding cake of a temple that is being attacked by a tourist horde of ants. Yael and I take our place among the masses and push into a stuffy gold hall, wending our way to a flower-covered statue of the elephant god. He’s beet-red, as if embarrassed, or maybe he’s just hot, too.

  “Ganesha,” Yael tells me.

  “The remover of obstacles. ”

  She nods.

  All around us, people are laying garlands around the shrine or singing or praying.

  “Do you have to make an offering?” I ask. “To get your obstacles removed?”

  “You can,” she replies. “Or just chant a mantra.


  “What mantra?”

  “There are several. ” Yael doesn’t say anything else for a while. And then, in a low and clear voice, she chants: “Om gam ganapatayae namaha. ” She gives me a look, like that’s enough of that.

  “What does it mean?”

  She cocks her head. “Roughly I’ve heard it translated as: ‘Wake up. ’”

  “Wake up?”

  She looks at me for a second, and though we have the same eyes, I really have no idea what she sees through hers.

  “It’s not the translation that matters with a mantra. It’s the intention,” she says. “And this is what you say when you want a new beginning. ”

  After the temple, we hail a rickshaw. “Where to now?” I ask.

  “We are meeting Mukesh for lunch. ”

  Mukesh? The travel agent who booked my flights?

  We spend the next half hour in silence as we weave through more traffic and dodge more cows, finally arriving at a sort of dusty shopping center. As we’re paying the driver, a tall, broad, smiling man in a voluminous white shirt comes barreling out of a place called Outbound Travels.

  “Willem!” he says, greeting me warmly, grasping both my hands. “Welcome. ”

  “Thank you,” I say, looking back and forth between him and Yael, who’s decidedly not looking at him, and I wonder what exactly is going on. Are they together? It would be just her way, introduce the idea of a boyfriend by not introducing him as her boyfriend and leaving me to figure it out.

  Mukesh tells our driver to wait and then goes back into the travel agency to pick up a plastic bag, and then we climb back in and drive through fifteen more minutes of traffic to the restaurant.

  “It’s middle eastern,” Mukesh says proudly. “Like Mummy. ”

  Mukesh pushes the menu aside and calls over the waiter, ordering platters of hummus and grape leaves, baba ghanoush and tabouli.

  When the first platter of hummus arrives, Mukesh asks me how I’m liking Indian food so far.

  I explain about the dosas and the pakoras I’ve been eating off the stands. “I still haven’t had a proper curry. ”

  “We will have to arrange that for you,” he says. “Which is why I’m here. ” He reaches into the plastic bag and pulls out a number of glossy brochures. “You don’t have so much time here, so I suggest you pick one region—Rajasthan, Kerala, Uttar Pradesh—and explore that. I have taken the liberty of coming up with a few sample itineraries. ” He slides me over a computer printout. One is for Rajasthan. It has everything. Return flights to Jaipur, transfers to Jodhpur, Udaipur and Jaisalmer. There’s even a camel trip. There’s a similar packed itinerary for Kerala, flights, transfers, river cruises.

  I’m confused. “Are we taking a trip?” I ask Yael.

  “Oh, no, no,” Mukesh answers for her. “Mummy has to work. This is a special trip for you, to make sure your time in India is tip-top. ”

  And then I understand the guilty look. Mukesh isn’t the boyfriend. He’s the travel agent. The one enlisted to bring me here. The one enlisted to send me away.

  At least I know why I’m here. Not for new beginnings. A hasty invitation that was foolish to issue, foolish to accept—and most foolish of all to solicit.

  “Which trip do you prefer?” Mukesh asks. He seems unaware of the thorny dynamic he’s stumbled into.

  My anger feels hot and bilious but I keep it bottled until it doubles back and I’m mad at myself. What’s the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.

  “This one,” I say, flicking the brochure on top of the pile. I don’t even look where it goes to. It hardly seems the point.

  Twenty-four

  MARCH

  Jaisalmer, India

  It’s ten o’clock in Jaisalmer and the desert sun is beating down on the sand-colored stones of the fortress city. The narrow alleys and staircases are thick with heat and smoke from the early morning dung fires, and that, along with the ever-present camels and cows, gives the city a particular aroma.