âHey, come and look at this,' he called out.
Without hesitation or even the slightest lurch of fear, I walked round to the branch just below the one on which Karim was standing, and stood up on my toes, resting my chin just inches from his feet. On the tree trunk someone had written âZ+M', the letters biting deep into the bark.
Zia, I stupidly thought. Who's this âM'?
Karim sat down, straddling the branch, and ran his thumb through the thick grooves of the letter âM'. âMama told me Asif was a regular member of their gang back then. They all spent one New Year here. Must have been 1970, though she didn't tell me that part of it.'
Oh.
I looped my arm around the branch above me, and looked at my father's flamboyant âZ'. He must have sat on the branch that Karim was now astride, leaning towards the tree trunk, hammer and chisel in hand. How long had it taken to gouge so deep a mark of devotion to Karim's mother? I pulled myself up so that I was sitting just behind Karim, and reached out to cover the âZ' with my palm, pressing harder until I could feel the letter leave its mark on my skin. Karim did the same with the âM', our hands separated by a+.
Oh.
I couldn't even begin to imagine them togetherâmy father and Aunty Maheen. The only pairing that made less sense was my mother and Uncle Ali. Although perhaps it was just that I couldn't imagine my parents and Karim's parents as anything other than my parents and Karim's parents.
I pulled my hand away, and then pulled Karim's hand away. We had first heard about the fiancé swap when we were ten and our mothers told us they hadn't mentioned it before because it might have seemed too weird. They knew, they said, how sensitive kids can be about their parents. On the contrary Karim and I saw the news as thrilling proof that our friendship was destined, and spent many hours, over the years, drawing up lists of the foibles and the talents the other possessed, under the heading âThose Genes Could Have Been Mine'âthough for a long time we used âThings' instead of âGenes'. Until that moment on the tree, it had never bothered me at all to consider the way things might have been, the way things once were. But that he should have chiselled the letters so deeply, my father who hated exertion, that he should have done that for someone, and for that someone to not be my mother, was nothing less than an abomination.
I scrambled off the branch. âCome on,' I said to Karim. âLet's go somewhere else.' But he stayed where he was, running his fingers over the letters, again and again. âStop it,' I called out from the base of the tree. âStop doing that.' But he ignored me, and I could not stay to argue for the queasiness in my stomach.
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. . .
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Uncle Chaperoo was supposed to accompany us back to Karachi when our three weeks in RYK were up, but he decided to elope instead. At least, that's what he wanted everyone to believe, but Uncle Asif saw things a little differently. I was having tea with Uncle Asif in front of the fireplace when Uncle Chaperoo called with the news, and Uncle Asif put the call on his newly acquired speaker-phone.
âBhai, Umber and I have eloped,' Uncle Chaperoo said.
âWhat? You've married her! Wonderful. And about time.'
âWe've eloped!'
âLet me speak to her. I want to welcome her to the family.'
âWe love each other. We don't care what anyone else says.'
âExcellent. Where's the honeymoon? When you return we'll throw a huge reception for the two of you.'
âWe're prepared to live on love!'
âI'll get Laila on the line right away. She'll be so happy.'
âWe've eloped, damn you!'
Uncle Asif hung up, and shook his head. âSuch assumptions, such assumptions! From my own brother.' He threw another log on to the fire and watched the sparks fly. âAt a time like this, Raheen, should I care about anything other than whether he's happy? Have I not always said that I wish to be the most unfeudal feudal in this country?'
âYou don't seem very decadent to me,' I said by way of comfort. âThough it's true you live in luxury and don't seem to spend a lot of time doing anything that looks even a little bit like work.' I tilted my head and looked at him sideways. âI could see you lying on a couch in a toga, eating peeled grapes. Uncle Ali said that's the real definition of decadence.'
He threw back his head and laughed. âYou are your father's daughter, aren't you? It requires a certain genetic disposition to say something like that at the age of thirteen and yet manage to be utterly charming.'
âI'm not the charming one,' I said, putting my feet up on the coffee table. âThat's Karim. He's got natural charm. I mean, you see him across a room and you know you'll like him.'
âAnd you?' Uncle Ali said. âWhat do people think when they see you across a room?'
âI don't know,' I said slowly. âBut usually if I'm in a room I'm with Karim, Sonia, Zia. One or all of them. And then you'd notice Sonia, because she's gorgeous, and you'd notice Zia because he's completely cool, and you'd notice Karim because you can't help but notice Karim. Me, I guess you'd notice that all three of them choose to be my friends. And that must say something.' It was true; I knew quite well that there was nothing remarkable about me. This is not to say I suffered insecurities because of everything I lacked. There wasn't a great deal that I did lack. I was intelligent enough, attractive enough, witty enough, cool enough. On sports day I won silver medals and even, occasionally, a gold; in school concerts I got speaking parts rather than being relegated to âa rock' or âcrowd scene'; when teams were picked for anything, anything at all, I was never, ever, the last to be chosen; I knew all the words to all the songs on Whaml's âMake It Big' album, and had been the one to inform a group of sixteen-year-olds that the line from âWake Me Up' was not âYou make the sun shine brighter than the darkest day', which made no sense at all, but rather âYou make the sun shine brighter than Doris Day'. I could do a dead-on imitation of Qabacha from âTanhaiyan'; Qadir, not Imran, was my favourite bowler. And perhaps all this might have meant that I was remarkable for being a perfect blend of admirable traits, except for the fact that there were other things blended in, colder things. I didn't know how to embrace the world, the way Karim did; I didn't know how to make strangers feel at home, the way Sonia did; and I didn't know how to embody a loyalty so fierce it meant putting myself at risk for others in any fight, even the fights that seemed absurd, the way Zia did.
âHmmm...' Uncle Asif stared down at his toes and made them wiggle. âBut I notice you, even when there's no one else around.'
I smiled at him. âThat's because I really like you, and you know it.'
âAh, there's that charm again.' He picked up a poker and smiled at me. âI liked all my parents' friends when I was your age. Then I grew up and began to understand what kind of people they were and, you know, a lot of them just weren't very nice. Maybe one day, when you're old enough to see beneath the smiling veneer, you won't like me any more.'
Unsure if he was serious or not, I curled on to the sofa and looked at the framed black-and-white photograph on the coffee table of Uncle Asif baring his teeth in half-grimace, half-leer, at a camel which had pushed its snout to within inches of his face. âDoubt it,' I said.
He waved the poker in my direction. âAn aphorism from the middle-aged to the extremely youthful: you can only know how you feel in the here and now, not how you'll feel years, months or even days down the line.'
The tree carving hadn't been far from my mind since I'd seen it; the memory of it gave rise to an uneasiness in my stomach. âWhy didn't my father marry Karim's mother?'
Uncle Asif turned away and poked the fire with vigour. Sparks flew up and leapt over the grate. âThat's not my story to tell.'
âIn other words,' I said to Karim later that night, as I sat in the bay seat of his bedroom window, âthere is a story there.'
He nodded and brought two bowls over to the window from his bedside, liquid sloshing against the sides as he walked. Green dye in one and purple in the other. âI got them from one of the nomad boys. In exchange for my marbles. Because green and purple seemed like map colours. But now I don't know what to do with them.'
I looked down at the ceramic bowls uneasily. I had the strong suspicion they were expensive items of art; I had a stronger suspicion the dye might not wash off very easily. âGood you got rid of the marbles. They were beginning to give me the creeps.' They really were. They looked too much like the eyes of the nomads' mad goat with its twisted horns that resembled dried leaves curling in on themselves.
Karim tore a piece of paper out of a legal pad and sat down across from me. Jackals howled in the distance. I dipped my hand in green dye and pressed it against the paper. Karim dipped his hand in purple dye and pressed it over my palm print. Karim's hand was smaller but his fingers were broader. Some of the lines of our hands ran together for a while in purpleâgreen, then veered off in different directions. I half-expected the letters âZ' and âM' to appear on the paper.
âHow do you think it happened?' he asked.
âI think the mad goat's father came untethered and chased your mother around the dunes, and your father came by and saved her. And over on the other side of the farm a crazy bull was chasing my father and my mother waved her red sari at it to make it change course and,
olé!
Love swap!'
Karim laughed shortly. âMy father's not the kind of guy to walk out into the dunes. Sand in his shoes. He wouldn't like that.' He pushed his hair off his face, leaving a purple smudge, like a bruise, on his forehead.
âOK, so what's your version?' I wiped my hands on his jeans.
âI don't know. I can't think of any reason why someone would marry my father rather than yours.' He furrowed his brow and I ran my thumb over the creases that appeared between his eyes, leaving green streaks that dribbled down his nose. âMaybe your mother saw she was getting the bad end of the bargain and whisked your father away.'
âDon't be silly.' I walked over to the bathroom to wash my hands. âMy mother would never do a thing like that to your mother. And if she had, they wouldn't still be friends, would they?'
We dropped the topic then, but I couldn't get his words out of my mind and later that night I crept down to the drawing room in search of old photographs. Or, rather, one old photograph, which was framed and prominently displayed in both Karim's house and mine. A few days earlier I had come upon a copy of it, along with stacks of other pictures, in the rosewood cabinet in Laila and Asif's drawing room.
I switched on the table lamp, trying to suppress the feeling that I was doing something sneaky, and rummaged through the images of my parents and their friends, partying and holidaying and hamming it up in black-and-white. Picture of my father planting a kiss on Uncle Ali's cheek, as Uncle Aliâlooking unexpectedly like Karim, with his wide grinâheld up an aubergine to the camera. Age had made them more restrained. Towards the world, or towards each other? I found the photograph I was looking for, and sat on the sofa with it in my hand, first tilting the lampshade slightly so that light fell directly on the picture.
Taken at Karim's parents' wedding, it showed my parents flanking the bride and groom, all four of them laughing. There was no such photograph at my parents' wedding, which had taken place just months earlier, because Aunty Maheen hadn't been present. She'd been in the newly created nation of Bangladesh, spending her last weeks as a single woman with her family there. At least, that was the version I'd always been told.
As I looked at the photograph, I began to distrust their laughter. Were they laughing together, as a foursome? Or had the photographer said something amusing to make each of them, as individuals, laugh? They were not looking at one another, not at all; Aunty Maheen was not resting a hand on my mother's wrist to say âI get it, I get it. Too funny, darling', and Aba was not half-turning towards Uncle Ali to see his own laughter mirrored in his best friend's face, and though Aunty Maheen was leaning towards Uncle Ali in what I had always taken as a sign of intimacy, perhaps she was really just leaning away from my mother.
The next morning, I went looking for Karim to show him the photograph. I found him in Uncle Asif's study, looking at the atlas again.
âKarimazov, where've you been?' I shut the door behind me with what I hoped was a conspiratorial air. âWe have to talk. I've been wondering about your parents' marriage.'
He looked up at me, blew out air from his cheeks, nodded, gulped, nodded again. âOK,' he said, putting the atlas down and clutching the edge of the desk with both hands. âOK.'