Authors: Kamila Shamsie
âAnd that didn't stop you loving her?'
âOh no.'
For a little while we both sat where we were, looking straight ahead. Then I went over and sat down beside her. âThank you.'
âFor what?'
I leaned back and breathed in deeply. âFor loving her unreservedly after Omi died. I've thought she didn't have that from anyone.'
âOh, darling. She had it from you.'
âWe both know that isn't true.'
Shehnaz Saeed sighed. âShe understood. She said adolescence is horrible enough without having to deal with a mother unable to cope with the world and a father-figure brutally killed.'
âShe talked to you about me?'
âOf course she did.' She rested her palm on the top of my head. That was one of my mother's gestures of affection, but somehow I knew this time that Shehnaz wasn't imitating, merely replicating a gesture she'd learnt from my mother and made her own through using it unselfconsciously. âShe talked to everyone about you. You were the world to her.'
âThe Poet was the world to her.' Despite everything, that particular scar still bit down into my bones.
Her hand slipped off my head. âThey were mythic,' she said. âThe Poet and the Activist. They walked into a room and crowds parted for them. The sea itself would have parted for them if they'd so demanded. That's how we felt, all of us who were their audience.' She looked down at her finger nails, and pushed a cuticle back to reveal a tiny sliver of a half-moon between her nail polish and skin.
âTell me,' I said. âTell me about her. Tell me about you and her.'
âYou sure this doesn't make you uncomfortable?'
âWhy should it?' And then I knew: Ed. The Others, he had spat out. âIt's your son, isn't it? He's the one who called it unnaturalness?'
âDon't think badly of him for it. If there'd been other men in my life he wouldn't have been any happier. Oh, and I dealt so badly with it. It wasn't until several years after my divorce that I was able to face the truth about myself, and then I was ashamed, Aasmaani, of who I was. Ed was such a sensitive child. I think he picked up that feeling of shame from me. And of course I wasn't going to tell him outright. So I lied and sneaked around. Made him spend the night at the homes of cousins he didn't like. I don't even know when or how he found outâbut one day in his adolescence he hurled it at me. You're not a real woman, he said.'
I could see him saying it. And I could see him hating himself for saying it afterwards.
âHe was angriest about your mother. He thought we were having an affair and I never denied it.'
âWhy let him think something that would make him so angry if it wasn't true?'
âBecause it wasn't any of his business. That's what Samina taught meâthat it wasn't anyone's business and no one had a right to question me about it and demand answers. She was, you know, the person who finally made me dispense with all feelings of shame. My husband was largely responsible, too, but it was Samina who took that final filament of shame off my skin and just blew it away.'
âHow?'
âI delivered some tortured monologue to her one evening. About desire and identity and what we admit to ourselves and what we admit to others and how do we know when reining in desire is repression and when it's just good manners? I went on and on about this. And when I finally stopped to draw breath, Samina shrugged and said, “I've never liked mangoes. People say it means I'm not a true Pakistani, but I've never liked mangoes. Nothing to be done about it, and frankly I don't see why I should bother to try. The way I see it I'm just expanding people's notions of what it means to be Pakistani.” And that was the entire conversation for her, right there.'
Mama. Always a woman who could cut to the quick of things.
âI do wonder sometimes,' Shehnaz Saeed went on. âDid I love her enough to love her unselfishly, really unselfishly? If she'd pulled out of her depression and found herself in a frame of mind to consider being with someone else, and that someone else wasn't me, would I have been able to accept it?'
âWe're back to the depression storyline, are we? The one which meets with such high viewer approval it's going to keep running for ever.'
âYou don't accept that she suffered depression?' She was looking at me as though I'd just told her the world was flat.
I shrugged. âShe stepped out of her character.'
âShe did what?'
âNothing. Nothing. Forget it.'
âStepped out of her character?' I didn't know if she was ignoring me or if I hadn't actually spoken aloud. âThat's an interesting way of putting it, I suppose. Though it's more a question of your character stepping out of you, isn't it? Or of the different parts not holding together, or one part overwhelming the rest. There's still so little we understand about it, isn't there, for all the strides science has made in the last decade and a half?'
âUh-huh.'
Shehnaz Saeed walked over to her bookshelf and pulled out an armload of books. âHere. Take these home. Read them.' She opened her arms and the books fell on to the sofa with a thomp! which released a spray of dust from the sofa cushions. I looked at the titles.
Living With Depression. Brain Chemistry. What Can We Do? Virginia Woolf: Diaries and Letters
.
I looked up at her, my eyebrow arching. âVirginia Woolf ? Oh, come on.'
She sat down again. âSometimes, near the end, I didn't see her for days or weeks because she couldn't even come to the phone or get out of bed. I used to go to your house in the morning, while you were at school, and just sit by her bedside talking to her, or not talking, just sitting there. Some days she'd come over and all she'd do was weep. Your stepmother and I, we convinced Samina she should get professional help. But we were both so clueless. We just saw a sign outside a clinic saying “PSYCHOTHERAPIST” and we took her there. Without a single reference. The man was a complete nightmare. He told her that what she was experiencing was delayed guilt about having an extra-marital relationship for all those years. She saidâit was one of her stronger daysâshe said, “Doctor, then I'm afraid things are going to get much worse for me. Because I think I might do it again, and this time it might even be with a woman.”'
âThere you go. She was making fun of him. And of the whole process. Because she knew it wasn't depression. She knew she didn't need to seek out professional help.'
âIt was one of her periods of reprieve. That's what she called them. She always knew they wouldn't last very long.'
I hated those periods most of all. Those moments, those days, sometimes weeks, when she reverted to her old self and became the Samina of
grazia
again. I didn't understand then what she was doing, what was happening to her, what she was making happen. And so those days were just reminders of what I'd lose when she retreated into her self-imposed darkness again.
Incandescent. Aflame. Those were the words we all used about her. She was supposed to be the Olympic torch, the fire that never burnt out. I would have thrown myself into that fire to keep it alight, but that power was never mine. So all I could do in those last two years was watch with dread each time she emerged into brilliance.
âThat was the cruellest thing she did. Remind us what she used to be like, what she could be like.'
Shehnaz Saeed closed her eyes for a long moment. âIt was like watching beautiful, fragile butterfly wings exploding out of a chrysalis. It could never be anything but short-lived.'
Stay believing that, I thought. Keep loving her without anger. I won't be the one to tell you the truth.
âCan I ask you something?'
âOf course,' she said. âAnything.'
âWhy did you stop acting? It wasn't because you were planning to have more children, was it?'
âI don't know how that story got started. I never publicly gave any reason. Well, I suppose that is how the story got started. People need reasons, don't they? If you don't give them one, they'll pick one for you. I just stopped. That's it.'
âSo it's just coincidence that it happened just a few months after the Poet died? No correlation there?'
She stood up and walked towards the windows. It was dark now. She drew the heavy silk curtains. âI was offered a part which would have required being away from Karachi for several weeks. I didn't want to leave her. And I was recently marriedâhe'd put this house in my nameâso my bank account didn't require me to work any more. Things snowballed in my mind after that.'
âYou quit acting so that you could be around for my mother at all times?'
âYes. But don't think of it as a sacrifice. It was entirely self-serving.'
âTell me another. I know how difficult it was to be around her in those days.'
âWhat was difficult was the jealousy, in the beginning. Before I understood the way depression works. What was difficult was the period in which I'd think, why can't I make you stop going mad with grief over him? Why does he have such complete power over you, even in death?'
Hearing her say that was like flipping through an old family album and finding one of your own featuresâthe one you most despiseâon the face of someone who's turning deliberately towards the camera at an angle designed to pronounce that exact feature. And looking beautiful doing it.
âAnd then what? You just learned to live with it?'
âI learned to understand what she was going through.' She gestured to the books beside me. âWhat an odd breed humans are. We climb mountains, delve beneath the sea, discover how to leave the planet entirelyâbut the ultimate zone of exploration, the unknown country more mysterious even than death, is right here.' She tapped my head. âRight within us. We use only ten per cent of our brain, and that figure is high compared to how much of it we actually understand. We think it's a part of us, and it is, but it also controls us. It's smarter than us, so much smarter. Always several hundred steps ahead. Some of its decisions, it lets us in onâother decisions it simply executes and we never know about them even as they shape our entire lives.'
âThe tyranny of character,' I whispered.
âTyranny. Yes, that's a good word. All power dynamicsâall instances of repression and authoritarianism and manipulationâare just failed metaphors for the ways our own brains interact with us. That was the grand irony of your mother's lifeâshe could fight all those external tyrannies, but not the internal one.'
âWait. What?'
âThe Poet's death released it. Released something in her brain. Something that ate her up. And once it was released, it stopped having anything to do with the Poet. That's the thing I needed to understand. That's what you must understand, Aasmaani. Understand the tyrant within her.'
âHow do you know you're not just making up a story that's bearable?'
âDarling, there was nothing bearable about watching your mother go through that. Near the end she even said, “I would give anything to believe this is about his death. I would give anything to have something to which I could attach this. If there's a cause I can grapple with it. If there's a reason, there's a way out.” But in the end, that's what she couldn't believeâthat there was a way out.' There were tears in her eyes now.
âYou tell yourself one story, I'll tell myself another. Either way, Mama is lost to both of us. Does it really matter how we get to that bottom line?'
âIt isn't the bottom line, Aasmaaniâit's the starting point of how we learn to live without her. She didn't kill herself because you weren't reason enough for her to stay aliveâthat's not why she did it. And it isn't that she was leaving you for the Poet. Those aren't the reasons. You must accept those aren't the reasons. She hung on to an intolerable existence for two years because of you. Not meâI've always known that. She didn't hang on for me. She did it for you. She did it until she simply couldn't do it any more.'
I stood up. I couldn't even be angry with her for consigning my mother to the role of suicide victim. If that was the panacea she needed to cope with Mama's disappearance, let her have it. âI really have to go.'
Someone blew a car-horn outside the gate. âThat's Ed. He's home. Please, don't let me make you leave. He won't forgive me for that.'
I nodded. âDid he hate my mother? If he believed you were having an affair...' The enormity of what he had kept concealed from me was only just beginning to register.
âOh no. Not at all. He adored her. He hated me for what he believed was my seduction of a grieving woman. Or used to. But it's the funniest thing. Sometimes there's almost a symmetry in the world, isn't there? The other day, just after he'd spent an evening with you, he came into my room and he said, “Amma, I'm beginning to understand love.”' She stood up, put her arms around me and kissed my forehead. âThank you for that. Now, go on, go up and wait for him. Tell him as much or as little as you want about our conversation. I advise the former. And Aasmaani, borrow these books and read them.' She gestured back to the pile on the sofa. âThat's all I'm asking.'
I embraced her without answering and then ran up the stairs to the second floor. I stopped at the first door on the left. It was a linen closet. I laughed softly to myself and opened the second door, which led into a TV lounge. I was about to walk in when I changed my mind and stepped through the third door into his bedroom.
It was a long room, with a bed at one end, next to a window which looked out on to the garden. At the other end was a built-in wardrobe and a desk with a laptop computer on it. There were bookshelves along the length of one wall. I walked over to the bedside table. A lamp, a copy of Rafael Gonzales's
Umbrellas
, which I had been urging him to read, a framed picture of a very young Ed hugging his mother. I opened
Umbrellas
. A bookmark fell out. I picked it up and saw it was a picture of me, which he'd taken from my flat two days earlier when he'd come over to watch the second episode of
Boond
. We'd stayed up talking until late that night, and I'd fallen asleep on the sofa with his arms around me. I'd woken up the following morning to find myself in bed; on the pillow beside me were buds of raat-ki-rani which had filled my dreams with gardens and moonlight.