‘You know how it is with children, Doctor. Somebody might have said something to him – he might be brooding.’
‘No problem at school?’
‘No.’
‘At home?’
‘No.’
The doctor hid her scepticism. There was something different about both Arjun and his mother, but there was only so much a medical practitioner can do.
‘If he does not get better, we shall have to do a series of tests. Meanwhile put him on this course of vitamins and calcium. Make sure he drinks lots of milk, eats dahi, eggs or fish, two katoris of wholegrain dals . . .’
In these eleven years Shagun knew the list of the doctor’s preferred foods by heart. She paid and left.
On their way home, Shagun asked, ‘Is something bothering you, beta? The doctor thought you might be upset and that is why you have a slight discomfort in your leg. Mind and body are one, you know.’
‘I hate school.’
Every time Arjun said anything about school he was exploring territory new to him. School was what drew his mother’s attention. That and the pain in his leg.
Arjun couldn’t imagine being allowed to malinger in his old house, whatever aches he might have had. His sense of the possibilities in his present life took on a different dimension.
When Ashok became aware of the situation he suggested stronger measures. It was unhealthy for the child to get his way in this manner.
And though Shagun was not unwilling, it proved impossible to effect. Arjun refused to get up; if she dragged him off the bed, he refused to brush his teeth, or have a bath, or put on his clothes, or eat his breakfast. Each step was a battle, only given up when it was too late to enter the school gates without a medical certificate.
These morning struggles were accompanied by tears on the part of the mother, while the daughter, looking on, cried in sympathy.
Whenever Shagun tried to reason with her son, or coax him into compliant behaviour, he would stubbornly look away. The pain this caused her filtered through to Ashok, forcing him to devote a whole evening to discussing Arjun’s problems. At the end of Shagun’s long narrative, he looked thoughtful and said poor bugger.
Why?
The boy probably can’t stand me – I possess the mother’s love, and I am not even the father. His leg is probably paining because he wants your sole attention. I don’t blame him. My leg would pain too in such circumstances.
Don’t say that.
Why not? It’s probably true.
The doctor asked if there were any changes in the family, and I said no. I didn’t want her to think—
Ashok snorted into the dim light. Probably some tight-assed judgemental doctor. What would she know? But there was always boarding school.
Boarding school? Her son? No. Never. Boarding schools were for children whose parents did not love them.
And then Ashok really started. The child was reflecting his mother’s guilt – she had to recognise that. It would probably do him good to be away. The world had no patience with these kinds of imaginary illnesses. He was basically a good kid, the right circumstances would make a man out of him. He himself had had to fight for all he got, including her. Success didn’t come just like that – there was a connection between upbringing and achievement.
His own DPA years were the best of his life. He still remembered his school number 7901, marked on all his possessions.
Were he a son of his, he went on, when Shagun interrupted, everything he had said about Arjun weighing on her heart. She understood he could never feel for the boy, it was her fault for leaving the child’s father, she would pay for her sins for the rest of her life.
It was their first serious fight, and they were still not talking to each other when Ashok left for Bombay next morning.
Ashok’s two-day trip to Bombay produced no change in Arjun’s willingness to get up. On his return, and another long talk later, Shagun approached Arjun’s bed where he lay, leg hurting, staring at the wall.
‘Beta, would you like to go to boarding school?’
‘Why?’
‘I don’t think you are very happy here,’ continued his mother, putting her arms around him. ‘Ashok Uncle is finding out about the Dehradun Public Academy. He himself went there. It is rated one of the best schools in India. Didn’t you say a classmate of yours was studying for the entrance test?’
Arjun turned his head away. She stared at his back. Ashok had said, don’t push, just drop the idea in his head, this is not going to work if he doesn’t want to go. And leave him alone, don’t entertain him, don’t mollycoddle him.
Someone else was determining, directing, deciding. It felt strange. But her own method had failed.
She got up and left the room.
Fed up with legal delays, Raman decided to meet his son at school. Driving towards Vivekananda Vidyalaya, he told himself that even a glimpse would satisfy him. His hands tight on the wheel, he thought of the many restless moments spent over Shagun during courtship and marvelled that not one of those could match his present torment.
The turn leading to VV was lined with buses, and Raman had to park on the main road. As he walked the remaining distance, he could see drivers and conductors standing around, waiting for one fifty.
The bell rang and 1,500 white and navy blue-clad children surged through the porch towards the gate. His eyes slid over every emerging boy roughly his son’s height, but no Arjun, no Arjun, no Arjun. If he had known some of the boy’s friends, he could have enquired about his whereabouts, but all the socialising had been through the mother, and he recognised no one.
The stream thinned, buses began to pull out, conductors banging on the sides.
So – either his son had not come or he had become a car child. How could he find out? How much did the school know about Arjun’s new situation? To ask at the office might expose him as the unfortunate offspring of warring parents, and he preferred to wait a bit more before he did that.
He started the car and drove dully back to office, a heavy weight on his heart. Seeing his son was not going to be as simple as a trip to the school gates.
Once home he phoned Mrs Sabharwal. ‘Why wasn’t Arjun in school today?’
‘He was feeling a little unwell, nothing serious. Leg is paining, also headache, body ache,’ she improvised valiantly. Raman, hearing the panic in her voice, immediately decided he could no longer trust his mother-in-law. Blood was thicker than water: in any conflict she would be on her daughter’s side, no matter the years of caring between them.
‘I want to talk to him.’
‘He will just call you back.’
‘Make sure he does,’ said Raman, putting the phone down on Mrs Sabharwal’s gentle, unsteady notes.
He waited and waited, but his son did not phone.
The idea of going to a place where no one would know his parents had separated, where he would not have to avoid friends who had once visited him at home, where he would not have to read pity and curiosity in the glances of the people around him, that idea gradually began to seem like a good one to Arjun.
But how could he not live in Delhi? No matter how uncomfortable he was in this unfamiliar house, he was afraid of leaving his mother with that man. When they left their home Shagun had said she would explain everything, but instead of any explanation she behaved as though the shift from Raman Kaushik to Ashok Khanna was as natural as changing clothes.
From time to time she informed her son that he would understand the situation when he grew up. People often said this when they wanted to stop questions, and he did stop his questions. He had no desire to stress his mother, afraid of the few times she had seemed on the verge of tears.
For a moment he envied Roohi, whose interactions with people were so simple. All she had to do was begin to cry and her mother ran to her. ‘Darling, what is the matter? Tell Mama, are you hurt?’ And darling would cry ten times louder to prove that indeed she was hurt. He hated all this, including himself in this hatred. His heart felt like lead, and he wished he had never been born.
One week later his mother asked him whether he had thought further of the Dehradun Public Academy. No one would force him, but if that was not an option, he simply had to go to VV, in a wheelchair if necessary.
The boy’s face remained inscrutable.
‘I do not know why you are behaving so strangely,’ continued the desperate mother. ‘I cannot tolerate all this unhappiness. Don’t you love me? Can’t you see I am doing everything for your own good?’ Here tears began to fall.
‘I didn’t say I didn’t want to go,’ mumbled Arjun.
That it was the right response he could see from her brightening face. ‘Once you make up your mind, I don’t see why you will not do well in the entrance tests – you always have been successful in exams,’ she sniffed, already looking less traumatised.
His mother’s pleasure extended into the days after, and Arjun wondered whether it was his grudging ‘I didn’t say I didn’t want to go’ that had made the difference in the atmosphere of the house. His leg felt better, it didn’t hurt as much when he walked.
When the uncle was in Delhi, his mother and he spent a long time in the drawing room after dinner, both of them drinking. The room smelled of liquor and tobacco. His father hadn’t smoked, this man did, and there was the smell of cigarettes everywhere, and his mother didn’t object as she used to with guests in their old house.
His own departure began to preoccupy him, and soon not a day passed when he did not visualise a different setting for himself.
XV
By the time Ishita was thirty she had been working with Jeevan for three years with the search for a groom continuing alongside. Mrs Rajora’s desperation drove her to mention her daughter’s situation to practically everybody she met in the building, and fate did throw up a solitary offering, the brother of B-3/106, forty years old, an IPS officer, divorced with one issue.
Ishita rolled her eyes. ‘What does he want? A housekeeper or a mother for his child?’
‘Neither. He wants a companion, as does everybody. His wife has their daughter.’
‘Why did he get divorced?’
‘She got bored and left.’
‘You believe that?’
‘Arre, give him a chance. Otherwise what is going to happen to you after we die?’
‘I can look after myself. You think all married women have their husbands caring for them. Look around you.’
The mother’s face crumpled. ‘We made one mistake, doesn’t mean we have to make another.’
‘Mummy,
please
. All this makes me feel terrible. You keep pinning your hopes on one meeting after another, and they are all the
same
. The
same
.’
‘Beta, it is our duty to settle you. Just don’t talk too much during the first meeting.’
‘If the man doesn’t like my daughter talking, he can go elsewhere,’ put in Mr Rajora.
‘Only for
now
. Later she can say all she likes – but let us first get to that stage.’
Mr Rajora thought of his first encounter with his own bride, and how he had to strain to hear the few words that had barely passed her lips. How much had India really changed, that a silent woman was still considered more desirable?
The man came. His paunch flowed gently over his belt, his round face was divided by a thick glossy moustache. His sister sat next to him looking pleased. They talked of his IPS job, of his small-town postings, of his loneliness. They talked of movies.
Had she seen
Titanic
? the man asked.
Yes, replied Ishita.
What did she think of it?
‘It is a romanticised exposé of class distinctions,’ she said boldly, plagiarising Mrs Hingorani.
The man looked startled.
‘We all loved it,’ said Mrs Rajora hastily.
‘I saw it with my sister just yesterday. Very nice hall.’
‘We went to Cineplex,’ explained the sister. ‘No malls in Bhavnagar.’
‘You will be happy in a small town, no?’ asked the suitor.
Ishita’s non-committal smile showed her exceptionally pretty teeth. The suitor brightened.
When the door closed the mother was triumphant. ‘I am sure he liked you. Even though you gave a very strange reply to that
Titanic
question.’
‘I also knew he would like Ishu,’ said the father fondly. ‘Arre, let her say what she likes. She is an intelligent, thinking girl, why should she not speak?’
The proposal came. They wanted early marriage, dowry was not an issue, but Ishita could only come to Delhi when her husband got leave.
‘I knew sooner or later we would find a suitable man,’ cried Mrs Rajora. ‘Good qualifications, good salary, sister same building, simple early wedding. He doesn’t want you to travel without him because his first wife had affairs – but once he knows you, that will change.’
Ishita glanced at her. It was the closest they had come to an acceptable proposal and in agreeing she would make many people happy. She shut her eyes.
‘Beti, what is it?’
‘Why does he want to marry me?’
‘Is that a problem, silly girl?’
‘It is, because I don’t like him.’
Mrs Rajora was appalled: Ishu didn’t know what she was talking about, feelings grew between man and wife, look at her and Papa, nobody she knew started out with love, it wasn’t practical to expect it.
But Ishita did not budge.
She was very sorry for all the trouble she was causing, but she could not marry a man she didn’t even find interesting. If a lonely life was the consequence, she would rather be lonely.
The sister took the rejection personally and Mrs Rajora was afraid she had made an enemy.
‘Avoid looking in the building, it can lead to this kind of trouble,’ said the father.
So Mrs Rajora went on circling ads, sending Ishita’s bio-data and photograph, front and side, to the suitable-sounding at various PO boxes. Though there was occasional interest shown, the IPS man remained the best they had come across. If Ishita had known this would be the case, would she have behaved differently? mused the mother sadly.
She wondered where Mrs Kaushik was. Poor Leela Kaushik. Things were going badly for her, it showed there was no certainty in life. Five days and nights she had spent outside the ICU where her son was recovering from a heart attack. Since then she had taken to disappearing for the whole day to his house, she who hardly used to go.