Maya Sanyal has been in Cedar Falls, Iowa, less than two weeks. She’s come, books and clothes and one armchair rattling in the smallest truck that U-Haul would rent her, from New Jersey. Before that she was in North Carolina. Before that, Calcutta, India. Every place has something to give. She is sitting at the kitchen table with Fran drinking bourbon for the first time in her life. Fran Johnson found her the furnished apartment and helped her settle in. Now she’s brought a bottle of bourbon which gives her the right to stay and talk for a bit. She’s breaking up with someone named Vern, a pharmacist. Vern’s father is also a pharmacist and owns a drugstore. Maya has seen Vern’s father on TV twice already. The first time was on the local news when he spoke out against the selling of painkillers like Advil and Nuprin in supermarkets and gas stations. In the matter of painkillers, Maya is a universalist. The other time he was in a barber shop quartet. Vern gets along all right with his father. He likes the pharmacy business, as business goes, but he wants to go back to graduate school and learn to make films. Maya is drinking her first bourbon tonight because Vern left today for San Francisco State.
‘I understand totally,’ Fran says. She teaches Utopian Fiction and a course in Women’s Studies and worked hard to get Maya hired. Maya has a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and will introduce writers like R.K. Narayan and Chinua Achebe to three sections of sophomores at the University of Northern Iowa. ‘A person has to leave home. Try out his wings.’
Fran has to use the bathroom. ‘I don’t feel abandoned.’ She pushes her chair away from the table. ‘Anyway, it was a sex thing totally. We were good together. It’d be different if I’d loved him.’
Maya tries to remember what’s in the refrigerator. They need food. She hasn’t been to the supermarket in over a week. She doesn’t have a car yet and so she relies on a corner store—a longish walk—for milk, cereal, and frozen dinners. Someday these exigencies will show up as bad skin and collapsed muscle tone. No folly is ever lost. Maya pictures history as a net, the kind of safety net travelling trapeze artistes of her childhood fell into when they were inattentive or clumsy. Going to circuses in Calcutta with her father is what she remembers vividly. It is a banal memory, for her father, the owner of a steel company, is a complicated man.
Fran is out in the kitchen long enough for Maya to worry. They need food. Her mother believed in food. What is love, anger, inner peace, etc., her mother used to say, but the brain’s biochemistry. Maya doesn’t want to get into that, but she is glad she has enough stuff in the refrigerator to make an omelette. She realizes Indian women are supposed to be inventive with food, whip up exotic delights to tickle an American’s palate, and she knows she should be meeting Fran’s generosity and candour with some sort of bizarre and effortless counter-move. If there’s an exotic spice store in Cedar Falls or in neighbouring Waterloo, she hasn’t found it. She’s looked in the phone book for common Indian names, especially Bengali, but hasn’t yet struck up culinary intimacies. That will come—it always does. There’s a six-pack in the fridge that her landlord, Ted Suminski, had put in because she’d be thirsty after unpacking. She was thirsty, but she doesn’t drink beer. She probably should have asked him to come up and drink the beer. Except for Fran she hasn’t had anyone over. Fran is more friendly and helpful than anyone Maya has known in the States since she came to North Carolina ten years ago, at nineteen. Fran is a Swede, and she is tall, with blue eyes. Her hair, however, is a dull, darkish brown.
‘I don’t think I can handle anything that heavy-duty,’ Fran says when she comes back to the room. She means the omelette. ‘I have to go home in any case.’ She lives with her mother and her aunt, two women in their mid-seventies, in a drafty farmhouse. The farmhouse now has a computer store catty-corner from it. Maya’s been to the farm. She’s been shown photographs of the way the corner used to be. If land values ever rebound, Fran will be worth millions.
Before Fran leaves she says, ‘Has Rab Chatterji called you yet?’
‘No.’ She remembers the name, a good, reliable Bengali name, from the first night’s study of the phone book. Dr Rabindra Chatterji teaches Physics.
‘He called the English office just before I left.’ She takes car keys out of her pocketbook. She reknots her scarf. ‘I bet Indian men are more sensitive than Americans. Rab’s a brahmin. That’s what people say.’
A Chatterji has to be a Bengali brahmin—last names give ancestral secrets away—but brahminness seems to mean more to Fran than it does to Maya. She was born in 1954, six full years after India became independent. Her India was Nehru’s India: a charged, progressive place.
‘All Indian men are wife beaters,’ Maya says. She means it and doesn’t mean it. ‘That’s why I married an American.’ Fran knows about the divorce, but nothing else. Fran is on the Hiring, Tenure, and Reappointment Committee.
Maya sees Fran down the stairs and to the car which is parked in the back in the spot reserved for Maya’s car, if she had owned one. It will take her several months to save enough to buy one. She always pays cash, never borrows. She tells herself she’s still recovering from the U-Haul drive halfway across the country. Ted Suminski is in his kitchen watching the women. Maya waves to him because waving to him, acknowledging him in that way, makes him seem less creepy. He seems to live alone though a sign, ‘The Suminskis’, hangs from a metal horse’s head in the front yard. Maya hasn’t seen Mrs Suminski. She hasn’t seen any children either. Ted always looks lonely. When she comes back from campus, he’s nearly always in the back, throwing darts or shooting baskets.
‘What’s he like?’ Fran gestures with her head as she starts up her car. ‘You hear these stories.’
Maya doesn’t want to know the stories. She has signed a year’s lease. She doesn’t want complications. ‘He’s all right. I keep out of his way.’
‘You know what I’m thinking? Of all the people in Cedar Falls, you’re the one who could understand Vern best. His wanting to try out his wings, run away, stuff like that.’
‘Not really.’ Maya is not being modest. Fran is being impulsively democratic, lumping her wayward lover and Indian friend together as headstrong adventurers. For Fran, a Utopian and feminist, borders don’t count. Maya’s taken some big risks, made a break with her parents’ ways. She’s done things a woman from Ballygunge Park Road doesn’t do, even in fantasies. She’s not yet shared stories with Fran, apart from the divorce. She’s told her nothing of the men she picks up, the reputation she’d gained, before Cedar Falls, for ‘indiscretions’. She has a job, equity, three friends she can count on for emergencies. She is an American citizen. But.
Fran’s brahmin calls her two nights later. On the phone he presents himself as Dr Chatterji, not Rabindra or Rab. An old-fashioned Indian, she assumes. Her father still calls his closest friend, ‘Colonel’. Dr Chatterji asks her to tea on Sunday. She means to say no but hears herself saying, ‘Sunday? Five-ish? I’m not doing anything special this Sunday.’
Outside Ted Suminski is throwing darts into his garage door. The door has painted-on rings: orange, purple, pink. The bull’s-eye is gray. He has to be fifty at least. He is a big, thick, lonely man about whom people tell stories. Maya pulls the phone cord as far as it’ll go so she can look down more directly on her landlord’s large, bald head. He has his back to her as he lines up a dart. He’s in black running shoes, red shorts, he’s naked to the waist. He hunches his right shoulder, he pulls the arm back; a big, lonely man shouldn’t have so much grace. The dart is ready to cut through the September evening. But Ted Suminski doesn’t let go. He swings on worn rubber soles, catches her eye in the window (she has to have imagined this), takes aim at her shadow. Could she have imagined the noise of the dart’s metal tip on her windowpane?
Dr Chatterji is still on the phone. ‘You are not having any mode of transportation, is that right?’
Ted Suminski has lost interest in her. Perhaps it isn’t interest at all; perhaps it’s aggression. ‘I don’t drive,’ she lies, knowing it sounds less shameful than not owning a car. She has said this so often she can get in the right degree of apology and Asian upper-class helplessness. ‘It’s an awful nuisance.’
‘Not to worry, please.’ Then, ‘It is a great honour to be meeting Dr Sanyal’s daughter. In Calcutta business circles he is a legend.’
On Sunday she is ready by four-thirty. She doesn’t know what the afternoon holds; there are surely no places for ‘high tea’—a colonial tradition—in Cedar Falls, Iowa. If he takes her back to his place, it will mean he has invited other guests. From his voice she can tell Dr Chatterji likes to do things correctly. She has dressed herself in a peach-coloured nylon georgette sari, jade drop-earrings and a necklace. The colour is good on dark skin. She is not pretty, but she does her best. Working at it is a part of self-respect. In the mid-seventies, when American women felt rather strongly about such things, Maya had been in trouble with her women’s group at Duke. She was too feminine. She had tried to explain the world she came out of. Her grandmother had been married off at the age of five in a village now in Bangladesh. Her great-aunt had been burned to death over a dowry problem. She herself had been trained to speak softly, arrange flowers, sing, be pliant. If she were to seduce Ted Suminski, she thinks as she waits in the front yard for Dr Chatterji, it would be a minor heroism. She has broken with the past. But.
Dr Chatterji drives up for her at about five-ten. He is a hesitant driver. The car stalls, jumps ahead, finally slams to a stop. Maya has to tell him to back off a foot or so; it’s hard to leap over two sacks of pruned branches in a sari. Ted Suminski is an obsessive pruner and gardener.
‘My sincerest apologies, Mrs Sanyal,’ Dr Chatterji says. He leans across the wide front seat of his noisy, very old, very used car and unlocks the door for her. ‘I am late. But then, I am sure you’re remembering that Indian Standard Time is not at all the same as time in the States.’ He laughs. He could be nervous—she often had that effect on Indian men. Or he could just be chatty. ‘These Americans are all the time rushing and rushing but where it gets them?’ He moves his head laterally once, twice. It’s the gesture made famous by Peter Sellers. When Peter Sellers did it, it had seemed hilarious. Now it suggests that Maya and Dr Chatterji have three thousand years plus civilization, sophistication, moral virtue, over people born on this continent. Like her, Dr Chatterji is a naturalized American.
‘Call me Maya,’ she says. She fusses with the seat belt. She does it because she needs time to look him over. He seems quite harmless. She takes in the prominent teeth, the eyebrows that run together. He’s in a blue shirt and a beige cardigan with the K-Mart logo that buttons tightly over the waist. It’s hard to guess his age because he has dyed his hair and his moustache. Late thirties, early forties. Older than she had expected. ‘Not Mrs Sanyal.’
This isn’t the time to tell about ex-husbands. She doesn’t know where John is these days. He should have kept up at least. John had come into her life as a graduate student at Duke, and she, mistaking the brief breathlessness of sex for love, had married him. They had stayed together two years, maybe a little less. The pain that John had inflicted all those years ago by leaving her had subsided into a cozy feeling of loss. This isn’t the time, but then she doesn’t want to be a legend’s daughter all evening. She’s not necessarily on Dr Chatterji’s side is what she wants to get across early; she’s not against America and Americans. She makes the story—of marriage outside the brahminic pale, the divorce—quick, dull. Her unsentimentality seems to shock him. His stomach sags inside the cardigan.
‘We’ve each had our several griefs,’ the physicist says. ‘We’re each required to pay our karmic debts.’
‘Where are we headed?’
‘Mrs Chatterji has made some Indian snacks. She is waiting to meet you because she is knowing your cousin sister who studied in Scottish Church College. My home is okay, no?’
Fran would get a kick out of this. Maya has slept with married men, with nameless men, with men little more than boys, but never with an Indian man. Never.
The Chatterjis live in a small blue house on a gravelly street. There are at least five or six other houses on the street; the same size but in different colours and with different front yard treatments. More houses are coming up. This is the cutting edge of suburbia.
Mrs Chatterji stands in the driveway. She is throwing a large plastic ball to a child. The child looks about four, and is Korean Cambodian. The child is not hers because she tells it, ‘Chung-Hee, ta-ta, bye-bye. Now I play with guest,’ as Maya gets out of the car.
Maya hasn’t seen this part of the town. The early September light softens the construction pits. In that light the houses too close together, the stout woman in a striped cotton sari, the child hugging a pink ball, the two plastic lawn chairs by a tender young tree, the sheets and saris on the clothesline in the back, all seem miraculously incandescent.
‘Go home now, Chung-Hee. I am busy.’ Mrs Chatterji points the child homeward, then turns to Maya, who has folded her hands in traditional Bengali greeting. ‘It is an honour. We feel very privileged.’ She leads Maya indoors to a front room that smells of moisture and paint.
In her new, deliquescent mood, Maya allows herself to be backed into the best armchair—a low-backed, boxy Goodwill item draped over with a Rajasthani bedspread—and asks after the cousin Mrs Chatterji knows. She doesn’t want to let go of Mrs Chatterji. She doesn’t want husband and wife to get into whispered conferences about their guest’s misadventures in America, as they make tea in the kitchen.
The coffee table is already laid with platters of mutton croquettes, fish chops, onion pakoras, ghugni with puris, samosas, chutneys. Mrs Chatterji has gone to too much trouble. Maya counts four kinds of sweetmeats in Corning casseroles on an end table. She looks into a see-through lid; spongy, white dumplings float in rosewater syrup Planets contained, mysteries made visible.
‘What are you waiting for, Shantana?’ Dr Chatterji becomes imperious, though not unaffectionate. He pulls a dining chair up close to the coffee table. ‘Make some tea.’ He speaks in Bengali to his wife, in English to Maya. To Maya he says, grandly, ‘We are having real Indian Green Label Lipton. A nephew is bringing it just one month back.’
His wife ignores him. ‘The kettle’s already on,’ she says. She wants to know about the Sanyal family. Is it true her great-grandfather was a member of the Star Chamber in England?
Nothing in Calcutta is ever lost. Just as her story is known to Bengalis all over America, so are the scandals of her family, the grandfather hauled up for tax evasion, the aunt who left her husband to act in films. This woman brings up the Star Chamber, the glories of the Sanyal family, her father’s philanthropies, but it’s a way of saying, I know the dirt.
The bedrooms are upstairs. In one of those bedrooms an unseen, tormented presence—Maya pictures it as a clumsy ghost that strains to shake off the body’s shell—drops things on the floor. The things are heavy and they make the front room’s chandelier shake. Light bulbs, shaped like tiny candle flames, flicker. The Chatterjis have said nothing about children. There are no tricycles in the hallway, no small sandals behind the doors. Maya is too polite to ask about the noise, and the Chatterjis don’t explain. They talk just a little louder. They flip the embroidered cover off the stereo. What would Maya like to hear? Hemant Kumar? Manna Dey? Oh, that young chap, Manna Dey! What sincerity, what tenderness he can convey!
Upstairs the ghost doesn’t hear the music of nostalgia. The ghost throws and thumps. The ghost makes its own vehement music. Maya hears in its voice madness, self-hate.
Finally the water in the kettle comes to a boil. The whistle cuts through all fantasy and pretense. Dr Chatterji says, ‘I’ll see to it,’ and rushes out of the room. But he doesn’t go to the kitchen. He shouts up the stairwell. ‘Poltoo, kindly stop this nonsense straightaway! We’re having a brilliant and cultured lady-guest and you’re creating earthquakes?’ The kettle is hysterical.
Mrs Chatterji wipes her face. The face that had seemed plump and cheery at the start of the evening now is flabby. ‘My sister’s boy,’ the woman says.
So this is the nephew who has brought with him the cartons of Green Label tea, one of which will be given to Maya.
Mrs Chatterji speaks to Maya in English as though only the alien language can keep emotions in check. ‘Such an intelligent boy! His father is government servant. Very highly placed.’
Maya is meant to visualize a smart, clean-cut young man from south Calcutta, but all she can see is a crazy, thwarted, lost graduate student. Intelligence, proper family guarantee nothing. Even brahmins can do self-destructive things, feel unsavoury urges. Maya herself had been an excellent student.
‘He was First Class First in B.Sc. from Presidency College,’ the woman says. ‘Now he’s getting Master’s in Ag. Science at Iowa State.’
The kitchen is silent. Dr Chatterji comes back into the room with a tray. The teapot is under a tea cozy, a Kashmiri one embroidered with the usual chinar leaves, loops, and chains. ‘Her nephew,’ he says. The dyed hair and dyed moustache are no longer signs of a man wishing to fight the odds. He is a vain man, anxious to cut losses. ‘Very unfortunate business.’
The nephew’s story comes out slowly, over fish chops and mutton croquettes. He is in love with a student from Ghana.
‘Everything was A-Okay until the Christmas break. Grades, assistantship for next semester, everything.’
‘I blame the college. The office for foreign students arranged a Christmas party. And now, baapre baap! Our poor Poltoo wants to marry a Negro Muslim.’
Maya is known for her nasty, ironic one-liners. It has taken her friends weeks to overlook her malicious, un-American pleasure in others’ misfortunes. Maya would like to finish Dr Chatterji off quickly. He is pompous; he is reactionary; he wants to live and work in America but give back nothing except taxes. The confused world of the immigrant—the lostness that Maya and Poltoo feel—that’s what Dr Chatterji wants to avoid. She hates him.
Dr Chatterji’s horror is real. A good brahmin boy in Iowa is in love with an African Muslim. It shouldn’t be a big deal. But the more she watches the physicist, the more she realizes that ‘brahmin’ isn’t a caste; it’s a metaphor. You break one small rule, and the constellation collapses. She thinks suddenly that John Cheever—she is teaching him as a ‘world writer’ in her classes, cheek-by-jowl with Africans and West Indians—would have understood Dr Chatterji’s dread. Cheever had been on her ever since the late afternoon light slanted over Mrs Chatterji’s drying saris. She remembers now how full of a soft, Cheeverian light Durham had been the summer she had slept with John Hadwen; and how after that, her tidy graduate-student world became monstrous, lawless. All men became John Hadwen; John became all men. Outwardly, she retained her poise, her brahminical breeding. She treated her crisis as a literary event; she lost her moral sense, her judgment, her power to distinguish. Her parents had behaved magnanimously. They had cabled from Calcutta: what’s done is done. we are confident YOU WILL HANDLE NEW SITUATIONS WELL. ALL LOVE. But she knows more than do her parents. Love is anarchy.
Poltoo is Mrs Chatterji’s favourite nephew. She looks as though it is her fault that the Sunday has turned unpleasant. She stacks the empty platters methodically. To Maya she says, ‘It is the goddess who pulls the strings. We are puppets. I know the goddess will fix it. Poltoo will not marry that African woman.’ Then she goes to the coat closet in the hall and staggers back with a harmonium, the kind sold in music stores in Calcutta, and sets it down on the carpeted floor. ‘We’re nothing but puppets,’ she says again. She sits at Maya’s feet, her pudgy hands on the harmonium’s shiny, black bellows. She sings beautifully, in a virgin’s high voice, ‘Come, goddess, come, muse, come to us hapless peoples’ rescue’.
Maya is astonished. She has taken singing lessons at Dakshini Academy in Calcutta. She plays the sitar and the tanpura, well enough to please Bengalis, to astonish Americans. But stout Mrs Chatterji is a devotee, talking to God.
A little after eight, Dr Chatterji drops her off. It’s been an odd evening and they are both subdued.
‘I want to say one thing,’ he says. He stops her from undoing her seat belt. The plastic sacks of pruned branches are still the corner.
‘You don’t have to get out,’ she says.
‘Please. Give me one more minute of your time.’
‘Sure.’
‘Maya is my favourite name.’
She says nothing. She turns away from him without making embarrassment obvious.
‘Truly speaking, it is my favourite. You are sometimes lonely, no? But you are lucky. Divorced women can date, they can go to bars and discos. They can see mens, many mens. But inside marriage there is so much loneliness.’ A groan, low, horrible, comes out of him.
She turns back toward him, to unlatch the seat belt and run out of the car. She sees that Dr Chatterji’s pants are unzipped. One hand works hard under his Jockey shorts; the other rests, limp, penitential, on the steering wheel.
‘Dr Chatterji—really!’ she cries.
The next day, Monday, instead of getting a ride home with Fran—Fran says she likes to give rides, she needs the chance to talk, and she won’t share gas expenses, absolutely not—Maya goes to the periodicals room of the library. There are newspapers from everywhere, even from Madagascar and New Caledonia. She thinks of the periodicals room as an asylum for homesick aliens. There are two aliens already in the room, both Orientals, both absorbed in the politics and gossip of their far-off homes.
She goes straight to the newspapers from India. She bunches her raincoat like a bolster to make herself more comfortable. There’s so much to catch up on. A village headman, a known Congress-Indira party worker, has been shot at by scooter-riding snipers. An Indian pugilist has won an international medal—in Nepal. A child drawing well water—the reporter calls the child ‘a neo-Buddhist, a convert from the now outlawed untouchable caste’—has been stoned. An editorial explains that the story about stoning is not a story about caste but about failed idealism; a story about promises of green fields and clean, potable water broken, a story about bribes paid and wells not dug. But no, thinks Maya, it’s about caste.
Out here, in the heartland of the new world, the India of serious newspapers unsettles. Maya longs again to feel what she had felt in the Chatterjis’ living room: virtues made physical. It is a familiar feeling, a longing. Had a suitable man presented himself in the reading room at that instant, she would have seduced him. She goes on to the stack of India Abroads, reads through matrimonial columns, and steals an issue to take home.
Indian men want Indian brides. Married Indian men want Indian mistresses. All over America, ‘handsome, tall, fair’ engineers, doctors, data processors—the new pioneers—cry their eerie love calls.
Maya runs a finger down the first column; her fingertip, dark with newsprint, stops at random.
Hello! Hi! Yes, you are the one I’m looking for. You are the new emancipated Indo-American woman. You have a zest for life. You are at ease in USA and yet your ethics are rooted in Indian tradition. The man of your dreams has come. Yours truly is handsome, ear-nose-throat specialist, well-settled in Connecticut. Age is 41 but never married, physically fit, sportsmanly, and strong. I adore idealism, poetry, beauty. I abhor smugness, passivity, caste system. Write with recent photo. Better still, call!!!
Maya calls. Hullo, hullo, hullo! She hears immigrant lovers cry in crowded shopping malls. Yes, you who are at ease in both worlds, you are the one. She feels she has a fair chance.
A man answers. ‘Ashoke Mehta speaking.’
She speaks quickly into the bright red mouthpiece of her telephone. He will be in Chicago, in transit, passing through O’Hare. United counter, Saturday, 2 p.m. As easy as that.
‘Good,’ Ashoke Mehta says. ‘For these encounters I, too, prefer a neutral zone.’
On Saturday at exactly two o’clock the man of Maya’s dreams floats toward her as lovers used to in shampoo commercials. The United counter is a loud, harrassed place but passengers and piled-up luggage fall away from him. Full-cheeked and fleshy-lipped, he is handsome. He hasn’t lied. He is serene, assured, a Hindu god touching down in Illinois.
She can’t move. She feels ugly and unworthy. Her adult life no longer seems miraculously rebellious; it is grim, it is perverse. She has accomplished nothing. She has changed her citizenship but she hasn’t broken through into the light, the vigour, the bustle of the New World. She is stuck in dead space.
‘Hullo, hullo!’ Their fingers touch.
Oh, the excitement! Ashoke Mehta’s palm feels so right in the small of her back. Hullo, hullo, hullo. He pushes her out of the reach of anti-Khomeini Iranians, Hare Krishnas, American Fascists, men with fierce wants, and guides her to an empty gate. They have less than an hour.
‘What would you like, Maya?’
She knows he can read her mind, she knows her thoughts are open to him. You, she’s almost giddy with the thought, with simple desire. ‘From the snack bar,’ he says, as though to clarify. ‘I’m afraid I’m starved.’
Below them, where the light is strong and hurtful, a Boeing is being serviced. ‘Nothing,’ she says.
He leans forward. She can feel the nap of his scarf—she recognizes the Cambridge colours—she can smell the wool of his Icelandic sweater. She runs her hand along the scarf, then against the flesh of his neck. ‘Only the impulsive ones call,’ he says.
The immigrant courtship proceeds. It’s easy, he’s good with facts. He knows how to come across to a stranger who may end up a lover, a spouse. He makes over a hundred thousand. He owns a house in Hartford, and two income properties in Newark. He plays the market but he’s cautious. He’s good at badminton but plays handball to keep in shape. He watches all the sports on television. Last August he visited Copenhagen, Helsinki and Leningrad. Once upon a time he collected stamps but now he doesn’t have hobbies, except for reading. He counts himself an intellectual, he spends too much on books. Ludlum, Forsyth, MacInnes; other names she doesn’t catch. She supresses a smile, she’s told him only she’s a graduate student. He’s not without his vices. He’s a spender, not a saver. He’s a sensualist: good food—all foods, but easy on the Indian—good wine. Some temptations he doesn’t try to resist.
And I, she wants to ask, do I tempt?
‘Now tell me about yourself Maya.’ He makes it easy for her. ‘Have you ever been in love?’
‘No.’
‘But many have loved you, I can see that.’ He says it not unkindly. It is the fate of women like her, and men like him. Their karmic duty, to be loved. It is expected, not judged. She feels he can see them all, the sad parade of need and demand. This isn’t the time to reveal all.
And so the courtship enters a second phase.
When she gets back to Cedar Falls, Ted Suminski is standing on the front porch. It’s late at night, chilly. He is wearing a down vest. She’s never seen him on the porch. In fact there’s no chair to sit on. He looks chilled through. He’s waited around a while.
‘Hi.’ She has her keys ready. This isn’t the night to offer the six-pack in the fridge. He looks expectant, ready to pounce.
‘Hi.’ He looks like a man who might have aimed the dart at her. What has he done to his wife, his kids? Why isn’t there at least a dog? ‘Say, I left a note upstairs.’
The note is written in Magic Marker and thumb-tacked to her apartment door. ‘Due to personal reasons, namely remarriage, I request that you vacate my place at the end of the semester.’
Maya takes the note down and retacks it to the kitchen wall. The whole wall is like a bulletin board, made of some new, crumbly building material. Her kitchen, Ted Suminski had told her, was once a child’s bedroom. Suminski in love: the idea stuns her. She has misread her landlord. The dart at her window speaks of no twisted fantasy. The landlord wants the tenant out.
She gets a glass out of the kitchen cabinet, gets out a tray of ice, pours herself a shot of Fran’s bourbon. She is happy for Ted Suminski. She is. She wants to tell someone how moved she’d been by Mrs Chatterji’s singing. How she’d felt in O’Hare, even about Dr Rab Chatterji in the car. But Fran is not the person. No one she’s ever met is the person. She can’t talk about the dead space she lives in! She wishes Ashoke Mehta would call. Right now.
Weeks pass. Then two months. She finds a new room, signs another lease. Her new landlord calls himself Fred.
He has no arms, but he helps her move her things. He drives between Ted Suminski’s place and his twice in his station wagon. He uses his toes the way Maya uses her fingers. He likes to do things. He pushes garbage sacks full of Maya’s clothes up the stairs.
‘It’s all right to stare,’ Fred says. ‘Hell, I would.’
That first afternoon in Fred’s rooming house, they share a Chianti. Fred wants to cook her pork chops but he’s a little shy about Indians and meat. Is it beef, or pork? Or any meat? She says it’s okay, any meat, but not tonight. He has an ex-wife Des Moines, two kids in Portland, Oregon. The kids are both normal; he’s the only freak in the family. But he’s self-reliant. He shops in the supermarket like anyone else, he carries out the garbage, shovels the snow off the sidewalk. He needs Maya’s help with one thing. Just one thing. The box of Tide is a bit too heavy to manage. Could she get him the giant size every so often and leave it in the basement?
The dead space need not suffocate. Over the months, Fred and she will settle into companionship. She has never slept with a man without arms. Two wounded people, he will joke during their nightly contortions. It will shock her, this assumed equivalence with a man so strikingly deficient. She knows she is strange, and lonely, but being Indian is not the same, she would have thought, as being a freak.
One night in spring, Fred’s phone rings. ‘Ashoke Mehta speaking.’ None of this ‘do you remember me?’ nonsense. The god has tracked her down. He hasn’t forgotten. ‘Hullo,’ he says, in their special way. And because she doesn’t answer back, ‘Hullo, hullo, hullo.’ She is aware of Fred in the back of the room. He is lighting a cigarette with his toes.
‘Yes,’ she says, ‘I remember.’
‘I had to take care of a problem,’ Ashoke Mehta says. ‘You know that I have my vices. That time at O’Hare I was honest with you.’
She is breathless.
‘Who is it, May?’ asks Fred.
‘You also have a problem,’ says the voice. His laugh echoes. ‘You will come to Hartford, I know.’
When she moves out, she tells herself, it will not be the end of Fred’s world.