Read No God in Sight Online

Authors: Altaf Tyrewala

No God in Sight (16 page)

KHWAJAS

Twenty minutes later, Minaz is driving us to Colaba. She insists she is perfectly capable, even on a day like this, of maneuvering her Wagon-R through the city’s treacherous
traffic. We’re strapped down in our seats, our faces chilled by the conditioned air blasting from the vents on the dashboard. Her parents assumed I had come to collect their daughter for yet another harmless day out. Minaz is honking too much; she is beeping at anything that moves on the road. I glance at her repeatedly. She once claimed her left profile was more flattering. Right now I doubt she cares what angle I see her from. We are not talking. There is nothing left to say. We are driving past VT toward Fountain. Colaba is ten minutes away. We are not sentimental fools. Neither of us wants to become a parent like this—under duress, with regret. Besides, after this morning, I know how unprepared I am for fatherhood. ‘You brought your license?’ Minaz asks, with an eye on the rearview mirror. ‘Yes,’ I say. I will be driving us back to Agripada from the nursing home. There is an inferno in my underwear; I have only now begun to realize to what extent I had injured my penis. And there is gratitude—a shameful and hopeless gratitude toward Minaz for consenting to the desecration of her body in order to salvage our shining futures.

We reach Colaba and park the car near the post office. Minaz and I start walking toward Pasta Lane. Someone seems to be holding a magnifying glass over the city this afternoon. The sun’s heat has never been this intense, this punishing.

Love is known to strengthen after a single shared event
of intolerable grief—a partner’s infidelity, the demise of a child. I suppose it’s the price people have to pay to remain together. Minaz and I have been together for eight fun-filled, giddy-headed months. After this afternoon, after we have paid our price, I suppose she and I will become inseparable.

‘We’re here,’ she says and starts to enter Shamma Nursing Home. I don’t follow her in. I want to hug her. But I don’t want to offend her.

Minaz comes out to the footpath and gives me her trademark tough stare—the look that has no one fooled.

‘Okay?’ I ask. She snorts.

We step into the dimly lit waiting room. Minaz’s heartbeats are hitting me like sonic booms.

A man is standing with his back to us. He is gazing at the frosted pane of a closed window. There is no one else in here. Distracted by our entry, he turns to look at us.

Is he?

Could this be?

No.

No. Clearly not.

This can’t be the doctor. This man is wearing a striped shirt and black pants. There is nothing remarkable about him—no tortured eyes, no dark circles or blotchy skin, nothing to indicate that he is the doer of the deed that Minaz and I have been agonizing over day and night for the past three weeks. This man looks like a shopkeeper.

I ask, ‘You… you are the doctor?’

I am half-expecting a shorter, fatter, darker, and older individual to sneak out from the adjoining room and announce in a coarse, phlegmatic voice, ‘No, I am the doctor.’

I lose my bearings when the man in the striped shirt nods to indicate that he is, in fact, the doctor. That he is, in fact, the nadir of our lives. That he is, in fact, the abortionist.

 

Everybody, sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences.

—Robert Louis Stevenson

GLOSSARY
Aana
a unit of currency formerly used in India, equal to one-sixteenth of a rupee
ammi
mother
appu
the name of the baby elephant that was the mascot of the 1982 Asian Games
arrey
hey!
ayah
maid
azaan
Islamic call to prayer, recited by the muezzin
bandobast
roadside security
batata-vada
deep fried potato dumplings
beta
son
bhaiya
elder brother
bhengcho
a variant of the curse word ‘bhenchod’ or sister-fucker
bhediya
wolf
bindi
a dot, traditionally worn on the forehead by Hindu women
burkha
the veil worn by Muslim women
chappal
slipper
chapatti
an Indian bread made of dough and puffed up with steam
charpoy
string cot
choot
an abbreviation of ‘chutiya’ or idiot
dharma
generally refers to religious or social duty and correct conduct
dhobi
washerman
dhoti
a garment worn around the waist and legs by men
dua
a Muslim prayer
Eid
or Eid-ul-Fitr, is an Islamic holiday that marks the end of Ramazan, the month of fasting
Gurkha
an ethnic group from Nepal famous for their history of service as foreign soldiers in the Indian Army
haanh
yes
haathi
elephant
hai-hai
an expression of shock or shame
halaal
an Islamic-Arabic term meaning “permissible,” but most commonly used to refer to food that is permissible according to Islamic law
halwa
a confection having the consistency of very thick pudding
haraamzaadi
the female variant of ‘haraamzaada’ or bastard
havaldar
guard
hutt
move
jhatka
to get jerked
kameez
a long shirt or tunic, worn by men and women
kattha
catechu; it is the red paste used in paans
khuda-haafiz
a term of farewell (literally, “may god be your guardian”)
khutt-khutt
fuck
kurta
long, loose shirt worn by women and men
kya
what
lakh
unit of measurement equalling 100,000
lungi
a cotton garment worn around the waist by men and women
maar usko
hit him
madakcho
a variant of ‘madarchod’ or mother-fucker
mangalsutra
a necklace of gold and black beads worn by Hindu women as a symbol of marriage
masjid
Arabic word for ‘mosque’
maulvi
Muslim preacher
memsaab
term of respect for female employer
miya
term of respect for a Muslim male
Moharram
variant of ‘Muharram’, the first month of the Islamic calendar
morcha
a protest march
mottee
fatso
mowli-ali-madada
term of greeting, literally ‘Oh Ali, assist!’
muezzin
a servant at the mosque who leads the call to Friday service and the five daily prayers
Murgh-e-Aazam
‘murgh’ is the Urdu word for bird or chicken; ‘Murgh-e-Aazam’ is a variant of the Hindi film titled Mughal-e-Aazam
namaaz
the Muslim prayer offered five times a day
namakool
good-for-nothing
namaste
a form of greeting often accompanied with a slight bow with palms joined together
paan
an after-dinner mouth-freshener comprising various fillings wrapped in the leaves of the Betel pepper
paani-puri
an Indian snack consisting of dough balls filled with chick peas and spicy sauce
paanwallah
a paan seller
paratha
a flatbread, usually made with whole-wheat flour
patni
wife
puja
prayer
Ram
the dominant heroic figure from Hindu mythology, considered to be the seventh avatar of Vishnu
Ramazan
a variant of ‘Ramadan’, the ninth month of the Islamic calendar
saab
master
saala
rogue
saali
the female variant of ‘saala’ or rogue
salaam-aaley-kum
a greeting used by Muslims (literally, “may peace be with you”)
shalwar
loose pajama-like trousers worn by men and women
sherwani
a close-fitting coat-like garment worn by men
shikari
hunter
shyaa
an expression of dismissal
sindoor
a red powder applied by Hindu women to the parting of their hair as a sign of marriage
sixer
derogatory term referring to eunuchs
tandoori
a North Indian cuisine cooked in a cylindrical clay oven
thoo-thoo
an expression of disgust
tonga
a horse-drawn carriage
Tuntun
the screen-name of the late Uma Devi, an obese Hindi-film singer and comedienne
Umaah
the Muslim community
UP
Uttar Pradesh, a state in northern India
uttha lein?
should we pick her up?
ya-ali-madad
a term of greeting, literally ‘Oh Ali, assist’
yaar
friend
About the Author

ALTAF TYREWALA
lives in Bombay and Mumbai. He has worked as a cashier, a telemarketer, a clerk, and an instructional writer. This is his first novel.

Copyright © 2006 Altaf Tyrewala
First published in the United States by MacAdam/Cage Publishing
Anchor Canada edition 2007

All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication, reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system without the prior written consent of the publisher—or, in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a license from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency—is an infringement of the copyright law.

Anchor Canada and colophon are trademarks.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication has been applied for.

eISBN: 978-0-385-67332-7

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Published in Canada by Anchor Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited

Visit Random House of Canada Limited’s website:
www.randomhouse.ca

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