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Authors: Mitali Perkins

Secret Keeper

BOOK: Secret Keeper
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A
LSO BY
M
ITALI
P
ERKINS

Monsoon Summer
The Not-So-Star-Spangled Life of Sunita Sen
Rickshaw Girl
First Daughter Novels
White House Rules
Extreme American Makeover

For Sonali and Rupali

ONE

A
SHA AND
R
EET HELD THEIR FATHER’S HANDS THROUGH THE
open window. The train picked up speed slowly, and Baba jogged, then ran alongside it. As his fingers slipped from their grasp, the girls turned and watched him dwindle and disappear into the Delhi haze.

“Watch your head, Osh!” Reet cried suddenly, pulling her sister inside before the train sliced into a tunnel.

The train swerved in the darkness, and Asha grabbed her sister’s arm. Usually their mother would have issued the warning long before Reet had. But sometimes Ma was in the clutches of the Jailor, the girls’ label for the heavy gloom that often fell over her like a shroud. Was she already so remote that the possibility of her daughter’s decapitation couldn’t rouse her?

When the train chugged out of the tunnel, Asha could
hardly believe what she saw. Their mother’s face was buried in her hands, and tears-wet, salty tears-were staining her powdery cheeks in widening brown stripes.

What was happening? This had to be a mistake-there was no way Sumitra Gupta could be crying. The girls had seen their father get choked up many times, even while Ma or Reet sang about rain, grief, or heartache. But their mother never cried, retreating instead into stony silence that could last for hours, days, weeks. Even months, as it had after she’d read the telegram telling of her own mother’s death.

But now Ma
was
crying. She was actually crying. The girls exchanged shocked looks. Then Reet sat down and gathered their mother in her arms.

Asha watched in amazement. This was
Ma,
who had ruled their household-and the entire social circle of Bengali families in Delhi-for years. To see her weeping on Reet’s shoulder felt like watching a fortress crumble into a million pieces. And yet there was Reet-holding and comforting Ma as though their mother had become someone else altogether.

Asha sat down on the other side of her sister, an unusual sensation of pity softening her heart. Although she didn’t touch Ma or say anything, she could feel the ache of missing Baba drawing them together.

She remembered Baba’s last- minute request the night before: “If your ma gets like, well, like she does sometimes, I’m counting on you girls to lift her spirits. Promise me you’ll take care of your mother and each other until you join me.”

“We will, Baba,” Reet had said, but her voice had sounded as doubtful as Asha felt.

“Keep this money and use it to buy her favorite sweets, Tuni,” Baba had added, handing a small purse to Asha, who tucked it into her bag. Tuni was her childhood nickname, short for Tuntuni bird, the hero of a host of Bengali folktales.

Once the train was far out into the countryside, Ma pulled away from Reet’s arms and sat up. She wiped the last trace of powder from her cheeks with one end of her saree and tucked loose wisps of hair back into her bun. “Forgive my sorrow, girls,” she said in a low voice, still not looking at them. “I’ve only been away from your baba twice since our marriage day.”

“We understand,” Asha said.

Reet nodded. “This is the worst thing that’s happened yet,” she said, shifting the conversation from Bangla into English. The girls had fallen into the habit of speaking English to each other, like most Bishop Academy students. “Why couldn’t we have all left for America together?”

“That would have been wonderful,” Asha said wistfully. “I wouldn’t have minded losing the flat, or selling the furniture, or even saying goodbye to the school if we could have gone to New York straightaway with Baba.”

“Leaving school was hard, though, Osh,” Reet said. “You looked heartbroken when Baba told us we couldn’t afford the tuition anymore.” Osh was Asha’s nickname at school, and Reet had taken to using it. Asha, too, called her sister Reet, which was their schoolmates’ way of shortening the more formal Amrita.

“Don’t say anything about money in front of the relatives,” Ma said sharply, sounding like herself again and yanking the conversation back into Bangla. “Your father will find a job soon; there’s no use worrying your grandmother.”

The word was that while England was flooded with Indian job candidates, American companies were just starting to hire foreign engineers. Asha only hoped that people all the way on the other side of the world realized that the Indian economy was in shutdown after months of strikes and protests, and that being jobless for four months wasn’t Baba’s fault. She wasn’t sure she could survive a long stay in Calcutta with her father’s side of the family. This would be their third visit from Delhi, the first without a scheduled departure date-and none of Baba’s jokes to smooth over the tension.

Judging by the heavy silence, Reet and Ma were also imagining the bleakness of a Baba- less visit to Calcutta. One glance at Ma’s face told Asha that the Jailor was threatening to close in again. Quickly she leaned forward, using Bangla so she could give her mother an honorific “you” to convey an extra measure of respect. “Why don’t
you
tell us how you and Baba met, Ma? He tells his side, but we’ve never heard yours.”

To Asha’s relief, Ma nodded, slipped off her sandals, and settled herself into a cross- legged position. Their mother’s toenails were painted pale pink, matching the tiny flowers embroidered on the border of her saree. Her sandals were gold, echoing the thread that made the silk shimmer with her graceful moves. She certainly looked the part of a
refined, prosperous, urban housewife; any traces of a village girl had disappeared long ago.

“We were visiting relatives in Calcutta,” Ma started, keeping her eyes fixed on the blur of rice paddies outside. “One afternoon, I was on the veranda combing out my hair. It was long then, down to my knees, and thick as a shawl. I was singing; I remember the song still, it was a Tagore love song I’d learned only weeks before.”

She began to hum, and then sing in her low, rich voice: “Light, my light, the world- filling light, the eye- kissing light, heart- sweetening light! Ah, the light dances, my darling, at the center of my life; the light strikes, my darling, the chords of my love; the sky opens, the wind runs wild, laughter passes over the earth …”

The song trailed off, and Asha held her breath, motioning to her sister to be still. After a few moments, their mother gathered up the skein of the memory: “Suddenly I felt somebody’s eyes on me, and I turned quickly. There he was, holding his briefcase and staring as though I was …” The train entered another tunnel, and Ma faltered, losing her place in the story.

“The ‘queen of his dreams,’ ” Asha prompted in the darkness. That was what Baba always called his wife. Asha counted, one, two three, and then risked it: “What happened next, Ma?”

“He fought for me,” Ma responded immediately, gazing at her reflection in the window. “His parents wept and pleaded, but he wouldn’t give in. They’d handpicked their other daughter- in- law; she brought teak furniture, jewelry, money, and sarees galore as her dowry, but they accepted
the two silk sarees and half a dozen gold bangles that
my
parents sent. What could they do? It didn’t matter to their son that he’d graduated at the top of his class or that he was the son of an esteemed university professor, while I’d never gone to college. The second time I saw him, it was our wedding day. A bride is supposed to cry because she’s leaving her parents, but I couldn’t do it. Your baba had such love in his eyes as we exchanged garlands-”

The train burst into daylight again. Even though Asha flashed her sister a warning look, Reet interrupted Ma’s story. “But what about leaving your parents? Wasn’t that hard?”

Ma started, as though waking in the deepest part of a dream. She turned from the window, which was a square of sunshine now. “No use talking about the past,” she said briskly. “That life is gone.”

BOOK: Secret Keeper
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