Read The Weight of Heaven Online
Authors: Thrity Umrigar
Tags: #Americans - India, #Murder, #Psychological Fiction, #Married People, #India, #Family Life, #Crime, #Psychological, #Family & Relationships, #General, #Americans, #Bereavement, #Death; Grief; Bereavement, #Adoption, #Fiction
He had cremated her two days ago. Had ignored Anne’s and Delores’s pleas to have the body flown back to America for a decent
burial. At first he had tried to reason with them, to explain how difficult it would be logistically, how he wasn’t up to dealing with the
Indian bureaucracy at a time like this. But Anne had immediately
offered to fly to Girbaug to help. And he had recoiled at this. And
pulled out the final weapon in his arsenal. Ellie loved India, he’d
said. She had recently told me that she never wanted to leave. This—
this feels right, leaving her here. I’m just honoring her wishes. And
he didn’t know how much of this was true and how much of it was
convenience. Whether he believed his words or didn’t. Whether his
memory of Ellie saying those words was accurate or something he’d
dreamed up. And the surprising thing was, it didn’t matter. It was
all evasive, ephemeral, merely words and thoughts that floated by
as absently as clouds. The only truth that mattered was that Ellie was
dead. They could fight over her body, could bury or burn her, could
transport her body or keep it on this soil, and it wouldn’t lessen the
horror. Wouldn’t change the fact that the Ellie whom he loved, the
Ellie whose spirit rested in each one of his skin pores, the Ellie who
gave shape and meaning to his life, that Ellie was gone.
Which is why when Inspector Sharma had driven him to the
morgue fifty kilometers outside of Girbaug to identify the body, he
didn’t recognize her. His Ellie had a long, taut neck; this woman’s
neck was broken. His Ellie had eyes that shone like jewels; this
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woman’s eyes were smudged glass. His Ellie had a chest that was
smooth and uniform; this woman had two button holes down her
breast bone, where the bullets had entered. Most important of all,
his Ellie had an expression of peace and contentment when she slept;
this woman’s face was twisted with indignation and rage, as if she
was outraged by the ugliness of what had befallen her. On the way
to the morgue he had been sick with fear at what he would have
to witness, had expected to look at the body just long enough to
identify his wife. But instead, he found himself staring and staring
at this body, waiting for Ellie to emerge, much as a sculptor waits for
the sculpted form to emerge from the block of marble. He chipped
away at this torn body with his eyes, looking for his Ellie. But nothing happened. Instead, the custodian of the morgue pulled the white
sheet back over the body, and Sharma was tugging at Frank’s elbow
and escorting him out of the small room. It was only then that he
paid attention to his own trembling body and realized that he was
throwing up all over himself.
“We will catch the
badmaash
who did this, sir,” Sharma was
saying. “No fears, I promise we will get him.”
And Frank understood the true horror of his situation. He would
not be afforded even the normal diversion that accompanied most
murder cases—the search for the killer, the putting together of
clues, the choking anger and rage directed toward the unknown assassin. In his case, the killer resided within and so all his wrath had
to be directed at himself. The crime and the punishment were one
and the same.
Deepak stood beside him in an open field a few days later as he
watched Ellie’s body burn. The fire hissed and crackled as it hit fat;
the sound of Ellie’s bones popping reminded him of the sound of the
pop of his BB gun when he and Scott pelted each other with its pellets as boys. The sounds the fire made repulsed him, so that he spent
much of the time fighting the urge to throw up. But there was also
something clean and beautiful about Ellie’s body being devoured
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by fire, instead of entrusting her body to the whims and appetites of
the fat-bellied worms. Instead of lowering Ellie’s body into the dirt,
he had raised it to the heavens, to where it was escaping in large billows of smoke. It was exactly the kind of lavish, grand gesture she
would’ve loved.
Behind him, he heard a woman sob and turned his head slightly.
Nandita was convulsed with grief, bent and leaning into Shashi’s
body. Frank was grateful. He himself was unable to cry. Nandita
and Shashi were their Indian family, and Nandita’s sobs appeased
some of his guilt at having kept Ellie’s and his family at bay. They
had all wanted to rush to Girbaug, of course. But he just couldn’t
handle it. “Frank, you’re not thinking of anybody else,” Scott had
reprimanded him gently, and he was right.
“Damn straight,” he’d replied. “I—I can’t. Can’t think of anyone
else. I need to . . . this is about Ellie and me. No one else. No one
can understand.”
The wind shifted slightly, and a strange odor filled the air. He
gagged and then forced himself to stop. The breeze affected the trajectory of the flames, so that instead of shooting straight upward,
they tilted and bent a bit. In the space created by their new direction,
Frank saw the tall figure of a man standing on the other side of the
pyre, staring directly at him. His stomach dropped. It was Gulab.
And through the smoke and the flames Frank saw that Gulab was
standing ramrod straight and at attention, as if he was inspecting a
military parade.
It was the first time he had seen Gulab since the murders. He
had fantasized about running into the man and going straight for
his jugular. But now, as he watched Gulab staring back at him, a
lump formed in Frank’s throat. Gulab was here to apologize to him.
And to honor the memory of Ellie. Something about his military
bearing, his posture, conveyed this to Frank. Still, Frank couldn’t
bear to look at Gulab. Not here. Not now. He bent his head slowly
toward the ground. By the time he looked back up, there was only
Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 3 5 5
air. Gulab had vanished. Frank looked around, even as he knew that
he wouldn’t see his chief of security again.
There was a final crackle of the fire, and then it was all done.
Frank said the Lord’s Prayer for Ellie’s soul. He noticed that the
man who had been stoking the funeral pyre was walking toward
them. The man went over to where Shashi stood and whispered
something. Shashi, his eyes blood-shot, came up to Frank. “He
wants to know if you want to collect the ashes now. Or he can send
them, later.”
In response, Frank walked over to the pyre and picked up a pinch
of Ellie’s ashes. He rubbed the ash in his gray hair and then wiped
his right hand on his left. She was on his skin, part of him now. Inseparable. Always.
He turned to face Shashi. “I don’t want her ashes. I—I wouldn’t
know what to do with them.” He stopped, struck by a thought. “In
fact, if you don’t mind, maybe I can ask you guys to sprinkle it in the
countryside, after I’m—gone? She’d like that.”
He saw them glance at each other. Nandita spoke first. “We
will.”
The three of them walked away from the smoldering pyre
toward where Shashi’s car was waiting. And then Frank saw them,
huddled together and standing to the left, under the shade of a
large tree. A group of men from his factory and other villagers he
didn’t recognize, including some children and teenagers. They were
standing with their heads bowed and their hands folded. So they had
come to pay their final respects to Ellie. He was surprised at how
touched he was. Glancing at Nandita and Shashi, he walked up to the
group. “Thank you,” he said simply. His eyes filled with tears, and
there was a lump in his throat the size of a baseball. “I—I sincerely
thank you.”
They looked at him blankly. He folded his hands and bowed his
head and from their sudden smiles knew that he’d made a connection.
“Ellie, miss, great lady,” one young boy said. “She teaching me.”
3 5 6 Th r i t y U m r i g a r
A young woman held out her hand and showed Frank a cheap
golden bracelet. “She gave to me. From her hand.”
Then they all spoke at once, and he felt overcome both by their
obvious gratitude and loyalty to Ellie and by his realization that
he had been blind to what Ellie had meant to them. What he had
thought of as a fanciful indulgence on her part, the bored housewife
volunteering her time, had changed something in the lives of these
people. He felt a profound loneliness for what he had missed, an
aspect of his wife that these people had known that he did not. He
stood surrounded by the jabbering villagers, as each of the adult
men took his hand in both of theirs and held it up to their foreheads,
in a gesture he supposed was an offering of condolence.
Shashi and Nandita drove him home from the funeral. They
parked in front of the house, and he knew that good manners demanded that he ask them in, but he didn’t. Couldn’t. He simply
turned and said that he’d come by their house to say his final goodbye before he took off for America a few days later. “Don’t leave
without seeing us, okay?” Nandita said gently, and he smiled and
assured her he wouldn’t.
He turned the key and walked into the kitchen and saw it at once.
A blue envelope on the floor. He knew what it was even before he
picked it up. His heart thudding, he slit open the envelope with his
index finger. And there was the bearer check that he had handed
to Gulab almost two weeks ago. Upon his instructions, Frank had
left the date blank and had made the check payable to bearer, which
meant that its recipient could cash it. Harder to trace that way, Gulab
had explained to him. So Gulab had left the funeral and driven here
to slip the check under the door. It was his way of apologizing for
how terribly wrong things had gone. And perhaps also to cover his
tracks. Refuse to accept blood money, since the wrong blood had
been shed. Frank had heard about honor among thieves. Now he
realized that there was honor among murderers, also. He held the
check up, eyeing his signature with distaste. He remembered how
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badly his hand had shaken when he’d signed this check—no, this
death warrant. And yet, he’d done it, hadn’t he? He had not woken
up from his obsession with Ramesh, from the long dream of replacing one son with another, had not heeded the calls of his conscience
because those calls had been covered by the incessant chatter of his
desperate need.
Now, running along the side of the sea under the watchful eye
of the overhead sun, he remembered the check. He had resisted the
temptation to tear it into a hundred little pieces and had instead left
it on top of the dresser in his bedroom, where it could torment him
every time he walked by. One more way to flog himself, to feel the
pinch of stinging guilt. In the days following Ellie’s death he had
flirted with the idea of turning himself in to the authorities. But the
truth was, the thought of life in an Indian prison terrified him. So he
told himself that he could devise far more exquisite tortures for himself. Also, the crime was his alone, and he didn’t want others to pay
for it. Both his and Ellie’s families were devastated enough. Even
Gulab—Gulab’s sin was nothing compared to his. Gulab didn’t deserve to hang for his, Frank’s, sins. No, the tortures the world had in
store for him were plenty. Like walking into a room and calling out
for Ellie. And the lurching disappointment that followed as realization seeped in like black poison. Or rolling in bed in the middle of
the night and his hand groping its way toward where Ellie should
be. And wasn’t. A million, trillion pinpricks of memory and forgetfulness, so much more painful than the swift slash of a knife.
He looked at his watch. It was 1:30 p.m. Satish would arrive soon.
The plan was to stop at the Hotel Shalimar to say his good-byes to
Nan and Shashi and then drive to an airport hotel in Bombay and rest
for a few hours before catching the night flight to America. Looking
down at his watch, sweat dripping from his forehead, he remembered Ellie’s large, men’s watch. She had been wearing it the night of
the murders. The glass plate was shattered when the police handed
it to him. She must have hit it against something—or something
3 5 8 Th r i t y U m r i g a r
must have hit it. The broken dial had conveyed the brutality of the
violence against his wife more than even her battered body had. So
he had saved it, too. Placed it on top of the dresser, next to the check.
Felt its shattered face watching him, accusing him, like a woman
with a black eye.
The memory of the two objects on the dresser made him turn and
begin the run back home. As he ran closer to the water, the waves tickled his ankles. A few of the bolder ones splashed his shins. He peeled
off his wet sneakers outside the house and left them there. He would
not need them again. He walked immediately into the bathroom and
took a shower. His last shower in Girbaug. Then he changed into the
silk kurta that he had found gift wrapped in his closet, after Ellie had
died. He pulled on his blue jeans and went to inspect himself in front of