Whenever she recalled home, it was not the painted teak pillars of the front stoop that Sowmya remembered. Not the small front gate or the patch of earth under it, smoothed and hardened by sprinkling of water, nor the daily changing pattern drawn on it with powdered rice: a blooming lotus one day, or a peacock dancing the next. Nor was it the small porch sheltered by a stoop where her father read the newspaper in the morning, although she always saw his form buried in a fragile space in her somewhere, only to tear forth in shards of glass at unexpected times.
What she remembered then of the small village of Ponmalar, by the bank of the Kaveri, was the particular way the morning light fell on the enclosed courtyard at the center of her father’s house. This light dropped no shadows. She was ten years old and her home was her world and it was still whole.
There was no sunlight that particular morning of the brand new year, 1928. Because it was a wintry January, it dawned gray and cool. Sowmya sat on the edge of the single step that led down from the main hall into the paved courtyard. She hugged her knees to her chest for warmth and watched her mother, Janaki. She was moving in the thin light, singing a familiar hymn in a barely audible voice. Her sari shifted slightly when she moved and revealed a smooth calf, and the shape of her belly swollen with the new baby. Sowmya could already imagine her little sister, a tiny hand nestled in her own as she led the child on their rounds during the winter festival. Delighted by the displays of toy people in every house in the neighborhood, they would collect the loot of sweets, ribbons, and glass bangles handed out in small sacks for the price of a song.
Janaki was now laying fresh wicks in the clay lamps arranged on a tray. She placed the lamps in the niches that were scooped out on the four sides of the urn that stood in the courtyard. This urn held the dusty green tulasi shrub. Nourished with sprinkling of water and whispered desires, it grew tender branches and tiny seedpods. Her mother claimed that the shrub bestowed conjugal bliss.
“What is conjugal bliss, Amma?” Sowmya called out to her mother.
Janaki stopped what she was doing and looked at her daughter for a moment. She bit down on the smile that rose to her lips and returned her attention to the lamps and began lighting them. Drops of brilliance lit up the urn which, with its edges scalloped and tipped with russet paint, now looked like a bride dressed in finery in that morning’s gray light.
“Sowmya! Come here, child.” Janaki called.
Sowmya approached her mother. A dot of red kumkum between Janaki’s brows brightened her face like the glow of a full moon. Janaki cupped her daughter’s chin and tilted the girl’s face, smoothed down the tiny wayward strands of hair at her brow. Sowmya smelled the odor of cut vegetables in her mother’s hands. From the kitchen behind them Aunt Meenakshi sneezed.
With a hand at her back, Janaki guided her daughter towards the shrub.
“Close your eyes, and pray. Say please. Please let me have a good husband. That is conjugal bliss.”
Sowmya closed her eyes and pressed her palms together. She rolled the word husband in her mouth. Hiding it under her tongue like sugar-candy, she imagined him. Only a few months ago, soon after her tenth birthday, the family from Thanjavur had arrived to conclude the engagement. Sowmya’s parents had exchanged flowers and fruits with the parents of the groom-to-be, known with affection as Ramki. He was seventeen. The wedding was to follow in January when the sun transitioned into Capricorn, on a day when the juxtaposition of the stars and planets were deemed perfect by the astrologer. The couple was sure to be blessed with a long and fruitful marriage, he said.
“Say it, child,” her mother’s voice urged.
Always faceless because she had glimpsed him only for a moment, Ramki appeared to her with jasmine garlands draped over his broad shoulders and chest. She felt a rumble of joy in her young breast, but she said nothing.
Soon after the engagement, Sowmya’s father, Natesan, ordered the silk saris from Kanchipuram. They were delivered in two large canvas covered bundles and would be distributed as gifts for all the women attending. The bride’s saris arrived separately, a dozen of them in deep hues, one for each occasion that was going to fill the days of the wedding. Not a single one was white.
Daily for several days before the wedding, relatives and friends of the Natesan family started arriving from the surrounding villages and towns. They came from as far away north as Madras, and even Calcutta from where Sowmya’s cousin Niru arrived with her mother.
The women helped Janaki and her younger widowed sister, Meenakshi, in the kitchen. Soon the Natesans’ house filled with the smell of syrup of jaggery, and of lentil wafers frying in sesame seed oil. Sowmya and Niru spent all their waking moments together and in the morning woke with their thin limbs intertwined.
On the morning of the wedding Sowmya stood in the open courtyard when night had not entirely lifted. Aunt Meenakshi had earlier unclasped Niru’s hands from around Sowmya, woke her up, oiled her hair, and washed it with powdered sheekai pods, with a final rinse of turmeric-tinted water. Her wet hair was now finger-combed until all the snarls were undone and the damp hair hung down to her hips, heavy and fragrant with crushed herbs and seeds. Outside the musicians were tuning the pipes of the nadaswaram and the drums.
Sowmya’s eyes widened at the heavy brocade that was brought out, its color that of the sea. She turned around and around as instructed while the women tied and tucked and draped her in it. Finally when they were done with the sari she seemed to drown in it, as the bride had neither the breasts nor the hips to give shape to the sari. But she loved it nevertheless, all the attention, the glory. Her cousin Niru, still in her rumpled nightclothes, her face bearing marks of sleep, watched slack-jawed. Sowmya grinned at her with glee and a little pity. She was stepping into a world that was still half hidden and mysterious and for that reason also one of privilege, full of color and fragrances. She looked at her feet. Her toes were stained russet with marudani. Both her palms had large circles of stains as did her fingertips. The stain on her nails would glow coral for several months after everything else had faded.
The musicians blew a tune of joyful welcome through the nadaswaram. The drums beat. Sowmya tripped over the cumbersome folds as she was led to the wedding platform that was festooned with pendants of mango leaves. One of her uncles hoisted her up to the platform, where Sowmya sat beside her father. Ramki’s father flanked Ramki. Kamala, his mother, stood behind them watching their only son, their beloved, performing his most important and sacred rite. An invisible force had emptied out Kamala’s womb year after year and finally, when she was thirty-nine years old, she conceived Ramki, a miracle, the lifeblood for the family tree. Her fingers twitched to reach out and stroke his shoulder. This girl sitting across from him better fill the house once again with life.
Ramki’s handsome face was full of intent as he leaned forward and repeated the mantras the priest instructed him to chant. May the gold-winged god bring your heart to dwell within me. Let no evil eyes bring death to thy husband. May you give birth to heroes.
Sowmya thought of little boys with swords drawn against evil demons jumping out of her belly. She quickly placed a hand over her mouth, once again tested the word husband on her tongue, and moved it to the inside of her cheek.
Following the priest’s instruction whenever he called for her, Janaki stood behind her husband and poured water here, or a handful of rice there. Diamonds sparkled on her nose and ears as she bent down, her face so close to Sowmya, strands of damp hair pasted to her flushed and sweaty cheeks. The pregnancy had made her mother’s eyes sink into her cheeks, but still how resplendent she was in her new silk!
Across the courtyard aunt Meenakshi watched the festivities from behind the window-bars of the women’s room. This was where the women in the family gave birth and also where they sat out the three days of their monthly seclusion, a room of pollution. Meenakshi had cut her own hair after her husband died. She had taken a sickle to her hair one day and chopped it off in clumps. She was only fifteen at the time, five years younger than her sister Janaki. Meenakshi’s in-laws wrote that she was becoming obstinate, hiding in corners with a slate and charcoal and pretending to write. This was trouble they did not need, please come and get your sister. So Janaki and Natesan had fetched Meenakshi back to the only home she knew. Sowmya could not remember now when the barber started coming every other month to shave her aunt’s head clean.
Sowmya stroked the gold bangles Meenakshi had given her as wedding presents. These were what was left of her own dowry. They glowed among the glass bangles that were stacked on Sowmya’s wrists. A strange feeling of shame and biting sorrow tightened her throat. She looked up at Meenakshi smiling at her from the women’s room, carefully hiding herself so bad luck would not taint Sowmya. She smiled back at her aunt.
For the next three days Sowmya sat next to Ramki every morning, while he fed the sacred fire with melted butter and his chanting. Afterwards she played hopscotch and hide-and-seek with her cousins who numbered in the dozen. Small concerts were arranged for the pleasure of the guests after dinner. On the final night, a troupe from Melattur arrived to stage a musical drama in the terrace. The all male troupe was dressed in brightly colored garments and jewelry, their faces beautifully made up. By the flickering light of the oil soaked flambeaus, they mesmerized the audience with their dramatization of The Sulking of Satyabhama. Sowmya watched them dance and mime the story of Krishna, the dark-skinned god, charming the milkmaids and getting chided by his wife, Satyabhama. In between the verses the dancers would tap out rhythmic patterns to the beat of the drum. Sowmya craned her neck to see better their nimble movements and the patterns their feet made. Later, much later, when recalling the festivities of her wedding she would remember these dancers.
With the three tight knots that Ramki tied in a yellow string necklace, Sowmya became his wife. He kneeled in front of her, lifted her middle toe and slipped on the silver toe-rings. She looked down at his naked young shoulders revealed by the sliding garlands, gleaming as though oiled. When Ramki straightened he stood barely two inches taller than Sowmya. From this day onwards she would use only the formal form of address when she spoke to him. This thought and the downy moustache growing on Ramki’s face made her want to tease him. She grinned. Ramki broke into a smile and then quickly composed his face into a serious frown.
Later that night the wedding party arrived at the temple for a propitiation ceremony for the deity. At the end of the offerings, just before they returned home, a devadasi appeared for the final Offering of the Lamps. Sowmya had grown sleepy by this time but was struck by the woman who was about the same age as her mother, but from a different world. Her spine straight, chin up, the woman walked tall as she went past them. Her long braid, which she had trimmed with tassels decorated with flowers, swung to and fro across her hips in a way her mother would have never allowed. Musicians accompanied her. She sang a prayer, crouched down on her knees to touch the floor and then her eyelids. Her feet together and toes angled in opposite directions, on slightly bended knees, the woman began to dance to the sprightly beat of the mridangam. With combinations of steps where she struck her heels on the floor, flexed and crossed them, she moved in intricate patterns, tapping the ground with such lithe grace that it seemed effortless. Her arms formed angles, her fingers gestured, she moved her shoulders and neck. Sowmya stood up, ignoring people tugging at her skirt to make her sit down. Finally the woman sang, bidding the Lord of the Temple on the Hills to retire for the night. She picked up the seven layer lamp that was lit with dozens of tiny flames and waved it in the air for the deity.
As Sowmya walked home that night with her cousins she stuck her arms out and imitated the steps and gestures the devadasi made. Immediately she felt Janaki’s firm grip on her shoulder, stopping her. “Behave!”
But when she was alone in the bathing room Sowmya continued to try out the movements of the dancer and discovered an exquisite bubble that filled her chest when she danced.
The wedding canopy came down. Ramki departed with his family and entourage to Thanjavur to wait for Sowmya to come of age. After the ceremonial bath to mark her first bleeding, she would join Ramki at his parents’ house and begin her life as his wife.
For a long time after Ramki’s departure, Sowmya recalled the fun and festivities of the wedding days, remembered every detail of the myriad kinds of sweets, the colorful new saris, and the varieties of her new jewelry, the dancers and the dance. But the smoke in the wedding altar that had made her eyes smart seemed to have also obliterated part of her memory because, try as she might, she found she could not recall her husband’s face. Yet, the recall of the brown of Ramki’s arm, and the firmness of his clasp as he led her around the fire, would suddenly overwhelm her with its clarity. A small pocket of air would expand right between her ribs. She would gaze down at the toe-rings that shone with new polish and wonder if this was conjugal bliss.
Six months after the wedding, Ramki came to Ponmalar with his father, Hariharan. There was a revenue dispute that needed to be settled. They sat with Sowmya’s father on the front porch and strategized ways to approach the British officer over this matter.
In a small alcove below the staircase in the front hall, Sowmya was dressing her two wooden dolls in red velvet. She placed them in the horse cart. Her cousin Niru, who was visiting, brought out the English doll and her porcelain tea set from Calcutta. The two girls planned the dolls’ wedding.
Words such as Swaraj and Simon Commission reached them through the window above Sowmya’s head. A woman called Parvati Devi was charged with inciting riots over the Commission’s arrival and took her baby with her to jail. Ramki’s response to her father made Sowmya pause. His voice was full of sweetness and manliness. Earlier, at dawn, the three men had performed their morning prayers in the courtyard. Holding the tips of their right fingers to the nose, eyes closed, the men sat erect and recited the Gayatri Mantra. When Sowmya brought the water for their ceremonial offering, she was struck by the handsome shape Ramki’s arms and shoulders made. The bright white line of his sacred threads that angled down from left to right across his sand colored chest aroused a giddy curiosity in her.
From the street the vegetable vendor called: Fresh and tender greens, amma!
Sowmya walked over and stood in the dim corridor that connected to the front porch and peered into the street. Dust swirled in a column of sunlight that angled in and fell in a rectangle on the floor. In that glare of bright morning light a man’s left foot dangled. From the way he jiggled it and the rosy color of his young toenails, she knew it was her husband’s. It was not quite clear to her yet as to how she was supposed to relate to him, and it remained an unresolved mystery when, later that afternoon, young Ramki died.