by Anita Nair
I see Unni looking at us. Behind that blank expression, I know Unni must be straining his ears to hear very word, making a note of every gesture, every smile, every detail, from the cut of my blouse to Chris’s footwear. Suddenly I feel overwhelmed by Shyam’s presence. His walls, his people, his ambitions, his ruthlessness, they press in on me.
‘Let’s go to the restaurant,’ I say. I want to be some place where we are not the focus of attention.
‘Who are these people?’ Chris asks, rising from the sofa. He points to the cluster of photographs. ‘Your family? Sham’s?’
I try not to smile. Despite our best efforts, Chris still can’t say Shyam.
‘This,’ I say, pointing to a studio portrait of a couple, ‘is one set of my grandparents. The man, by the way, is Sethu. Sethu from Uncle’s story. These,’ I say, pointing to another one of a boyish young man and a girl with her hair in a little bun and a great deal of jewellery, ‘are my parents. This is their wedding photograph.’
I move my finger to the left and point to the photograph of a man in uniform. ‘This is Shyam’s father. He was in the army.’
‘And the others? Are they your extended family?’
‘I really don’t know who they are. Some minor royalty, I guess.’ There are photographs of men in turbans and women with stone-studded brooches pinned to their saris. In the centre is a largish photograph of an imperious man seated on a straight-backed chair. He is holding a walking stick and the fingers of the hand holding the stick are studded with rings. A dog is sitting by the chair; both man and beast stare into the camera’s eye. ‘Shyam bought them from an old photo studio and had them framed and mounted.’ I try to hide my embarrassment.
Chris is quiet. I can almost hear what he is thinking. I am thinking it too: He really is a sham. Old photographs are one thing. But what kind of man puts up strangers’ pictures on his wall and pretends they are family?
We walk into the restaurant and sit at a table in the corner. The river is visible from here. We make desultory conversation. Chris drums his fingers on the table. ‘I have never seen rain like this. Not even in Indonesia, which is very much like Kerala.’
‘You should see the October storms. They are frightening. Thunder comes rolling in, and lightning tears the skies.’
It occurs to me then, that he may not be here to see the October storms.
I see that he is thinking the same.
His fingers brush mine. ‘No,’ I say, moving my hand away. ‘Someone will see us.’
‘Later,’ I add, afraid that I have upset him.
He crinkles his eyes again and asks, ‘Will there be a later?’
I drop my eyes.
I toy with the food on my plate. He eats with the absorption he seems to imbue his life with.
‘Aren’t you hungry?’ he asks, forking a piece of chicken from my plate.
I see Pradeep staring at us from across the room. More notes to take to the master, I think. I decide to brazen it out. I catch Pradeep’s eye. He rushes forward. ‘Anything else, madam?’
‘The Sahiv can’t seem to get enough of our cooking,’ I joke in Malayalam with an inflection that suggests indulgent mockery. I know what I am doing. I am wilfully drawing little walls around Chris, segregating him from me. Pradeep grins. I see his eyes clear. Suspicion dissolves.
Chris frowns. ‘What did you say?’
‘I told him that you are enjoying the food very much.’
‘Don’t do that. When you speak your language, I feel so excluded.’ Chris leans forward.
‘Do you want dessert?’ I ask.
‘Mocha Radha.’ His eyes glint.
I smile, but look away. His flirtatious banter amuses me. It also scares me. He seems to do it so effortlessly.
‘Do you have the tape for me?’ I ask as we stand in the doorway. I can see that Chris is hesitant to suggest we go back to the cottage.
‘It’s in the cottage,’ he says.
‘In which case, I’ll go with you.’ I start walking.
‘Are you sure?’ he murmurs.
I know that he is not talking about walking to the cottage with him.
It had rained all afternoon and suddenly at dusk the skies had cleared. The night is resplendent with the stars in the skies and the fireflies in the trees. His hand reaches for mine. I let my fingers remain in his clasp.
Is this what it means to take your life into your hands?
I feel a shiver curl my heart into a roll of ash, grey-rimmed and crumbling. Cold that burns. Flames that freeze. I feel …I don’t know what it is I feel any more.
I hear a hovering voice of caution: Uncle’s. Is this why he is telling us the story of Sethu and Saadiya? Is he asking me to be prudent?
But Saadiya was only sixteen. At that age, the word ‘consequence’ has no bearing. I am thirty-two. I know where all this might lead. Yet, like Saadiya, perhaps like Sethu, I don’t know what I can do to trim this fury of passion.
The cottage is dark. We walk hand in hand and it is in darkness that we take each other’s clothes off. The night heightens every sound. Is it his breath, or mine that is rasping?
He is gentle. Very slowly, he turns me to him. His mouth erases the humiliation, eases the ache in my soul.
I reach for him, eager and hungry. His spine is knobbly under my fingers, the curve of his buttocks cold and smooth. Hair crackles. Static electricity. His mouth douses and then feeds the fires. I feel again that I am an instrument in his hands. Luring him with my curves and hollows, yet compelled to do his bidding.
An owl hoots. Sheets rustle. And I welcome him into me, again and again, a countless times.
Fireflies come in through the window. A firefly emits light as it sits on the bed frame. Another one is trapped in my hair. Yet another wings its way through the room, a darting green gem.
Chris reaches across and catches the one in my hair. ‘Are you squeamish?’ he asks.
I look at him. ‘Why?’
‘Don’t be,’ he says and lets the insect loose on my body.
It lights a path which Chris follows with his mouth and hands. He is Ravana, the demon king who sets aside his pride and confesses his longing to his wife Mandodari. He is Ravana, with twenty arms and ten heads, who cannot touch me enough, kiss me enough; his hands and mouths vie with each other to be the first to explore me. In their explorations I know the extent of desire. I feel within me joy, sheer joy. Then I know a sudden sorrow, for how long can this last? This fury of passion, how it thunders in my veins, daring obstacles, letting courage lead the way. Stop thinking, the voice in my head complains. Just be …Beacon-bearing insect and insatiable man: I feel every nerve end wake up and sing. I tremble. I ache. I reach for him again, unafraid to show how much I desire him.
The firefly flees into the night.
Chris looks at me. He is propped on his elbow.
‘What do you call them?’ he asks.
‘Minnaminungu,’ I say.
He tries to repeat it. But he can’t get his tongue to curl around the word. The consonants weave in and out like the firefly’s arc of light. ‘I give up,’ he chuckles.
‘I think that’s what I will call you. That’s what you are. My min-min … whatever …’ He traces my profile with the tip of his finger.
In the dark I glow, a blaze of green brilliance.
I rise from the bed. His bed. Our bed.
Chris lies with his limbs sprawled all over the bed. His arms rest on the pillow; his elbows form a parenthesis around his face. One of his legs is stretched out, the foot turning outward. The other is bent at the knee. A sheet, twisted and bunched, covers the top of his thighs. Wrinkles flare on either side of him.
I pause from picking up my clothes on the floor and look at him again. He is a painting, I think. A portrait of satiation, of a night of abandon. A moment of languor frozen. I feel a joy: he is mine.
I dress quickly. I see bruises on my neck and thighs. I touch them. My love lives on my skin. The fury of a passion I hav
e never known before.
I sit by his side. I run my fingers through his hair. ‘Where are you going?’ His voice is soaked with sleep and sex.
‘I have to go,’ I whisper.
‘Do you have to?’ His fingers run up the inside of my arm and splay on my waist. I shiver.
‘I have to go,’ I say. ‘I am sorry.’
‘Okay, will you give me the eye cloth? It’s somewhere here.’
I search for the eye cloth, a full-length sleeve scissored from an old flannel shirt.
‘That’s my eye cloth. I can’t bear light in the morning. It makes my eyes water,’ he had said when I first offered it to him to wipe his cello, thinking it was a rag he kept for the purpose.
‘If you stay …I could drape your hair over my eyes and sleep with my arms around you …and when the sun gets stronger, I could hide my face between your thighs.’
I shiver again.
I drape the eye cloth over his eyes, switch off the light and walk to the door. I pause again. Good night, I whisper and, only for a moment, a small voice in me murmurs: you could have stayed awake till I left.
Uncle
I hear her come in. She is humming under her breath.
I glance at the clock on the wall. It is a quarter past eleven. Did she walk here by herself? Or did Chris walk with her? Which is worse? I don’t know. Shyam will hear about this. He has eyes everywhere. Informants who keep their lord and master posted about all that goes on in his absence. My poor Radha. Does she realize what she is taking on with this new love she has found?
All day yesterday I worried about Radha. I was disturbed by what I had seen just before we went to the kathakali performance—Radha and Chris in each other’s arms.
The next evening, Radha and Shyam had come to see me. Radha looked tired and wan. Her limbs dragged and her face was wiped clean of all animation. Could this be my Radha?
On the night of the performance, Radha had blazed with a thousand suns lighting her from within. She had been resplendent in her silks and new-found love. But the Radha before me was a woman crouching in a shell. A woman suffering. What could it be? Guilt or hopelessness? I felt anxiety cloud my eyes. Daylight had a way of leaching magic away.
Then I saw Shyam. He was smiling. It was a smile filled with arrogance and triumph. It was the smile of a conqueror.
He was Ravana in Bali Vadham. The ultimate picture of haughtiness. Ravana assesses his own success by asking himself: Why shouldn’t I be happy with myself? I appeased the Lord Creator Brahma and made him offer me boons that I needed. I defeated kings and gods and founded an empire. I wrested away the heavenly chariot Pushpak from my half-brother Kubera, the god of wealth, and I amused the supreme destroyer, easy-to-anger Shiva by flinging the mountain Kailash down. My fame has spread everywhere and in all three worlds, there isn’t anyone who doesn’t know me or my powers.
The arrogance on Shyam’s face worried me. It was Ravana’s face reproduced: the face of a man who takes what he wants. Every fibre of his body pulsed with the measure of conquest. What had he done? What had he done to Radha?
Shyam flung himself into a chair. ‘We met some of your comrades this morning,’ he said.
I stared at him. Comrades. I had forgotten all about that period of my life. My brothers had hunted in the forests and drunk illicit liquor and experimented with marijuana; I experimented with communism. I wasn’t a card-carrying member, but I was a sympathizer who believed enough in the movement to transport pamphlets and posters and other ‘inflammatory materials’ as the government called them. It was a risk, but I was willing enough.
No one suspected me, a dancer, of being connected with the movement and we had even evolved a password. A comrade would come backstage and ask, ‘Is there a chuvanna-thaadi vesham tonight?’
Chuvanna-thaadi was red-beard and signified the vilest of characters, but the password worked, and it was only when I moved to Madras for a while that my comrades and I parted ways.
‘Why do you look as if you have seen a ghost?’ Shyam asked. ‘I was referring to Kesavan. Didn’t he perform with you?’
I nodded. ‘How is he?’ I asked.
‘Well enough. His son is in Muscat, he told us.’
Shyam rose to leave. He looked at the table on the veranda, on which a few magazines were strewn about. He tidied the table and stacked the magazines into a pile. I watched him. I knew that sense of disquiet again. Why did he feel the need to lay his imprint on everything? Was he the same with Radha? What would he do if he ever found out about Radha and Chris?
When Shyam left, I asked Radha, ‘Are you unwell? Or did Shyam and you quarrel? You look wrung out.’
‘Shyam never quarrels. He has other ways of making his point,’ she said. ‘No, it’s nothing.’ Even her voice bore the fatigue that was in her eyes. I wondered again if it was fatigue or hopelessness.
I saw her eyes dart to the gate. I heard her start at every footstep. I knew she was waiting for Chris.
Then Chris lifted the latch of the gate and walked in. I saw Radha emerge again. Radha, alive and aware.
Their eyes met and locked. I saw the burden of waiting rise and dissipate.
I rise and walk to the window. I cannot sleep. I feel too wound up. In the morning, Maya will be here. I am not sure if I am prepared to cope with all the emotions that will rise to the surface when I see her again.
I hear a long-drawn yawn. Radha. She can’t sleep either, I think. Should I go and talk to her? Perhaps it is best that I leave her with her thoughts. She is a woman in love again. I can see that. I think of what I said to her earlier. Of how there is only now.
What I failed to tell her was that the walls of ‘now’, her ‘now’, demand that they be built on deceit. The reality of deceit is that it has a way of sneaking into the past and the future. Will Radha be able to cope?
The curse of deception is that we can never erase it from our minds. I haven’t led an exemplary life. It isn’t as if I have a clear conscience. I have been deceitful. And I know the price I have had to pay for it.
I think of the only vesham in kathakali I have never been enthusiastic about. That of Rama in Bali Vadham. It isn’t an important role, nevertheless the degree of deception that the role demands unnerves me. In fact, the whole episode makes me uncomfortable. There is nothing inspiring or redeeming about it. Frankly, this is a section that ought never to have been made so much of. Everything in it reeks of chicanery and connivance.
I close my eyes and think of the chapter that is drawn from the Ramayana. Bali, the monkey-king, ruled Kishkindhya, a kingdom in the southern part of India. When Bali was very young, his father Indra, the king of gods, blessed his son that no matter who battled with Bali, the opponent’s powers would be reduced by half and would shift to Bali during the battle. That was the first deception.
Soon, no one could vanquish Bali. Once, the demon Dundupi challenged Bali to a duel. Furious at the demon’s effrontery, Bali decided to teach him a lesson. He began to wrestle with Dundupi. But the demon managed to free himself from Bali’s clutches and flee. Bali, not about to let him go, chased the demon into a cave. He stood at the mouth of the cave and called to Sugriva, his younger brother, ‘I am going after the demon and when I get him in my hands, I will break every bone in his body. I want you to wait here till I come back. If milk flows out, you will know that I have succeeded. But if blood flows out, you must leave immediately and protect our families and kinsmen.’
Sugriva waited outside the mouth of the cave. Some time later he heard Bali yelling, ‘Help! Help! I’m being killed!’ Then, to Sugriva’s horror, he saw a rivulet of blood flowing out of the cave and he knew that his brother had been vanquished. What had really transpired was that the demon, realizing he was about to die, had played a final trick. As he struggled, he called out in a voice like Bali’s, and when he saw Bali invoke a rivulet of milk, he conjured it to look like blood. That was the second act of deception.
In anger and grief, Sugriva sealed the m
outh of the cave with a mighty rock. Then he went back to the kingdom and assumed the role of the king.
Bali was unaware of the trick and set about beating the life out of Dundupi. After killing the demon, he came to the mouth of the cave and found a huge rock blocking his way. He stared at the rock in surprise and then pushed it aside. ‘Where are you, Sugriva, my dear brother?’ he called. But there was no one there. Bali began to get anxious. He rushed to his palace and there he found his brother seated on the throne.
Suddenly Bali knew what had happened. His brother Sugriva had wanted to kill him and had sealed the mouth of the cave to ensure this. He stared at his brother angrily. ‘So this is what you wanted. All this while you were pretending to be a loving brother and in your head you were plotting my downfall. You are a traitor!’ he said. Bali must have nurtured a secret fear of his brother wanting the throne for himself. Isn’t that why he was so easily deceived into thinking that his fear had come true? What then was the reality of the love he had for his brother? That was the third deception.
Bali banished Sugriva from the kingdom and Sugriva went to the forest with a band of faithful followers, which included Hanuman, the son of Vayu.
Later, when Rama and Lakshmana passed through the forests seeking Sita, they met Sugriva, who told them the story of his banishment. He narrated how Bali had seized the throne back and, to make matters worse, had married Sugriva’s wife, thereby depriving him of his home and family.
‘Everything I have is yours. But I have nothing to offer you,’ Sugriva told Rama.
‘Do not lose heart. I shall ensure that you find justice,’ Rama said.
‘No one can defeat Bali, he is so powerful,’ Sugriva said. ‘Besides, his father’s boon ensures that in a battle his opponent’s powers will be reduced by half.’
‘Listen to me. I have a plan. This will not be a battle in the conventional sense,’ Rama said.
The fourth scene of deception. It is here that I feel ashes coat my tongue. This righteous man, the epitome of all that is good and noble, wasn’t above deceit.