Read Maya Online

Authors: C. W. Huntington

Maya (45 page)

But of course there is so much we don't remember or remember incorrectly. Nevertheless, this question triggered a string of other questions, for the more I puzzled over that mysterious lapse of memory, the clearer it became that there were several other peculiar things about the station. For instance, why did no one else get on or off the train? Even at the time the absolute silence of the place had struck me as odd. And why was the boy wandering all alone out there so late at night? And why would a chai shop be open at that hour, the chai wala way down there off the platform making tea for nobody? And why, it occurred to me now, would the Kashi Viswanath Express stop in the dead of the night at a tiny station in the middle of nowhere? Express trains don't make such stops.

And behind it all, suffusing these questions with an ominous, indecipherable portent, was the dream I'd had just before leaving Banaras where I was driving the bus.
I'm going to kill a boy
. The words sent chills up my spine. They had freaked me out before, but now it was a hundred times worse. And all of it seemed to go back, somehow, to the original accident in the Punjab, which could itself have been a dream. And then, as I lay on the hard mattress at the YMCA, dissecting these subtleties, I recalled a detail of my experience on the Super Fast that had until that moment entirely slipped my mind: the cut on my lip.

That night when the bus skidded, just before striking the boy, I had been thrown forward against the metal bar separating me from the driver, and I had cut my lip. The memory was still crystal clear. But later when I was cleaning up in the bathroom at the Fulbright offices I hadn't noticed any sign of the cut. No blood, no swelling or discomfort. Nothing. At the time I was too preoccupied to think about it, but it seems highly unlikely that I could have been bleeding like that on the bus and not found so much as a trace of dried blood when I looked in the mirror only a few hours later. Sitting on the bus I had distinctly seen and felt blood on my fingers and—as I now remembered—on my bag. Yes, a drop of blood had fallen on my bag. This could be confirmed.

I got up from the bed, went over and found the bag, and took it outside
on the veranda. In the bright sunlight I meticulously examined every square inch of the canvas fabric. There was no hint of the dark stain I remembered seeing that night in the Punjab. Of course the bag was dirty, and the spot could have faded with the passing of time. Or maybe in the poor light of the bus I hadn't really seen what I thought I saw.

Things are not what they seem
—memories and dreams, whole worlds that exist only in the mind—
nor are they otherwise.

It was mid morning and I had been lying in bed wrestling with this conundrum for too long when I finally gave up. I went down the hall to the communal bathroom and took a hot shower and then ordered tea through room service. I hadn't eaten a proper meal since the day before in Banaras, so when the tea was finished I left the hotel and walked across Connaught Place to the Glory—a dhaba on the outer circle, one of several among the maze of shops near Shankar Market. I found a seat among a crowd of mechanics and auto-rickshaw drivers. All around me men conversed loudly, laughing and eating with relish. It was a relief to get out of the hotel room and stop obsessing about something I could not influence, one way or another. And it felt good just to eat: I consumed a saucer of pickled red onions, a fiery plate of mattar paneer, two thick, steaming tandoori rotis, and a saucer of mung dal.

When I finished eating, I went to the back of the restaurant to rinse my hands and mouth. Bent over the small metal sink, massaging my gums with the water from the tap, everything seemed at once both familiar and remote. I was doing something I'd done dozens of times before in exactly this place. I splashed the cool water over my face and stood up from the sink feeling somewhat refreshed. Since I had no intention of looking up Nortul Rinpoche today, I had the rest of the afternoon free.

I hailed a motor rickshaw and had him drop me on the south end of Lodi Gardens, near the mausoleum of Shah Sayyid, the fifteenth-century sultan of Delhi who had claimed to be a direct descendent of Muhammad. I paid the driver and walked through the gate. It was mid afternoon now, and the sun was blistering hot. A man slouched in the shade, watering bushes, waving a nozzle aimlessly back and forth over a tangle of thorny leaves. There didn't seem to be anyone else around. I climbed the cracked masonry steps, passed under the arcade, and paused near the entrance to the tomb. The cool air of the interior smelled of stone and earth. Two mynahs swooped and soared in the shadows under the dome with its
arabesques. Beneath them the grave was marked by a heavy slab of sandstone. I sat down to rest under the high lintel and looked out over a nearby grove of eucalyptus. Behind me the faint swish of the birds' wings reverberated off the stucco walls. A peacock moaned.

I thought about those other afternoons when I used to stop here on the way back from my Sanskrit lessons with Shri Anantacharya. When the goal is liberation, he had assured me in his solemn tone, one cannot afford to exclude anything. Poetry as a path to moksha. But I was not convinced he really wanted such a liberation from cities and seas, from mountains and the passing of the seasons, and certainly not from the poems of his beloved Kalidasa. In any case, I thought, Anantacharya is gone. And his son, Krishna, will soon be married to a woman he barely knows.
Love is about how we live with what we are given
. I recalled how Penny and I had walked here one morning, after sex and coffee, exploring a newly enchanted world. We had been entertained at the foot of these very stairs by a man with two trained monkeys. The male was clothed in absurd little cotton pants, the female with a tiny frilled smock. “
Shaadi karo
!” Their master snapped an order and they pretended to “be married,” gripping each other in a furry embrace, their long tails curling upward like the handles on a vase.

The man with the hose was down on his hands and knees now, pulling grass from around the flowering plants. Seeing him there, an image of the boy in the station flickered into my mind. All over again he was crawling at my feet, groping for coins, his face contorted with panic and confusion. And I wondered, all over again, if it really might have been a dream. The mere fact that I could imagine such a possibility seemed altogether too fantastic. I must be losing my mind even to consider such a thing. And then I remembered what Mickey had said about how life is a war zone, and a big part of the battle is waged in the effort just to live with yourself—with the guilt, as he put it, of being here at all. So is that what this is about? Guilt? If so, I asked myself, then just how much am I willing to doubt or to believe or to simply
forget
in order to avoid confronting the consequences of my own pride and arrogance? There is no way to calculate the extent of our obfuscation, no way to know who or what might already have been sacrificed simply in order to keep going. No way to know how deeply I could be fooling myself. Or trying to fool myself, by turning an actual child into a bloodless fantasy.

But then, it occurred to me, maybe it's not that far-fetched. The border
between memory and imagination is notoriously porous. This business about fooling oneself is a double-edged sword. Don't I fool myself every night when I dream without knowing I'm dreaming? And that's the least of it. In Banaras I had dreamed of waking up and gotten all the way downstairs before I even suspected I was still in bed asleep. So if I can be that wrong about a dream, then why couldn't I be wrong about a memory—the memory of a dream?

“Sahab.” I looked up and the man was standing directly in front of me, his arm extended, a key dangling from his fingers, addressing me in Hindi. “Is it yours?”

It was the key to my hotel room. But how I had managed to drop it in the grass I don't know. I took it from him, thanking him profusely, and stuck it back in my pocket as I stood up. He remained where he was, motionless, palms joined. It took me a second to realize that he was waiting for baksheesh. I dipped into my pocket and dug out a few coins and dropped them into his outstretched hands, then walked quickly down the stairs and out to the road, where the auto rickshaw I had come on was still parked.

On an impulse I decided to stop by the Fulbright offices, and ten minutes later I was walking through the front gate. The chaukidar was someone new; he raised his palms in greeting. Where was Mahmud? I pushed open the door and entered the lounge, where I immediately succumbed to an array of conflicting emotions. The first thing that hit me was the frigid air-conditioning. Such ostentatious, technologically controlled comfort immediately suggested everything good and bad about the institutionalized world of academia—all of it bound up with money. Work hard, play by the rules, publish, and network and—if you're among the fortunate few to be anointed with tenure—your future is secure. No one was anywhere to be seen. I recalled that on this very day Morarji Desai was being sworn in as prime minister; the staff probably had the afternoon off. I stood and surveyed the all-too-familiar room. To my left was the couch where I had sat talking with Margaret Billings on our first meeting. The sound of her patient, maternal voice still lingered in the air, advising me on strategies for professional success. And that grueling conversation at the party, with Frank Davis cross-examining me about the dissertation.

I peered down the hall to the director's office, the scene of debauchery. I was overwhelmed with an old sensation that I had not experienced
since moving to Banaras. All over again I was the child, the clown, the intruder—the one who must wear a mask. The one who does not belong. Suddenly I wanted out. Out before I had to shake hands with anyone. Out before I had to answer a single pointed question about my research.

I turned to leave and my eye came to rest on the row of mailboxes by the door. I stepped over and peered into the one marked “H.” There was a pile of envelopes. I drew it out and began to sort through the various letters and cards. Surely there couldn't be anything here for me, not after all this time.

Wrong.

There, on the bottom of the stack, was an airmail envelope from the States, addressed to Stanley Harrington. I thrust the rest of the letters and cards back into the box and scrutinized the sky-blue paper, the row of canceled US postage stamps, as if I were holding an artifact that had somehow been carried over intact, through the bardo, from a previous life. On the back of the envelope, in a scratchy, grade-school hand that I immediately recognized, was the return address: Judith Harrington, 85 West Division Street #15, Chicago, IL, U.S.A. I dropped onto the couch and simply gazed at the writing for several more seconds before teasing open the flap.

The letter inside was dated December 28, 1975. One month before the fateful telephone conversation in which I first acknowledged my intention to stay on in India. One and a half months before I next heard from her when she wrote suggesting we file for divorce. How could I have missed it? I used to rifle through this box two, often three, times a day. Nothing could possibly have escaped my attention. I turned the empty envelope over in my hand and examined the postmark: September 14, 1976. There could only be one explanation. It must have been lost in the post office here in Delhi for several months—or held up by the censors—then eventually processed and delivered sometime after I had gone. And ever since then the envelope had been lying here in this box. Waiting. I slumped back into the couch, unfolded the translucent stationary and began to read.

             
Dearest Stanley,

             
So, Christmas is over. Our first Christmas apart. I know how much you hate all the commercial hype, but it's still a time when families are supposed to get together and I've missed you.
Will it really be four more months before we see each other again?

                   
I am chez parents—since a few days before Christmas. I don't know how much longer I can stand it. The place is insane as ever. Mom insists that Dad is putting on weight and she rides him about it constantly. Of course he ignores her. Since I've been here (for the last week) he's spent most of his time sitting in front of the TV with a bowl of Cheetos watching football. Matt came home for Christmas, but he's leaving tomorrow to go back to school early to meet some new girlfriend—the second one in the past six months.

                   
It's been okay, I guess, but it does seem pretty strange not to have you here.

                   
Thanks so much for the gifts. You must have mailed them months ago! I love the perfume. Really. Even the bottles are exotic. Sealed with wax, no less. I hated to open them. But the silver necklace you sent—I don't know what to say. It's absolutely beautiful. Thank you, Stanley. Mom is so happy with the silk scarf, and the wallet is perfect for Dad. You know how he is. He immediately emptied out his old one and put everything into the one you sent. He couldn't get over the idea that it's made out of water-buffalo leather. I heard him telling one of his friends on the phone. And the shirt was ideal for Matt. It's loose enough that it fits great. A “kurta,” right? (I'm sure you're happy to see that I've picked up a few Hindi words from your letters.) Anyway, thanks for being so kind. Now I feel more guilty than ever for not sending you a Christmas present. But remember—you told me not to!

                   
Mom and Dad haven't said much, but it's obvious they want to know what's going on. I've been thinking a lot about us lately, and the only thing I know for sure is that I still love you. In spite of everything, this love I have for you is still there. You're my husband and I can't seem to get beyond that fact. We agreed to spend the rest of our lives together, and it does mean something. “The bondage of holy matrimony,” as you used to say. You are the most perverse man on earth. How many times did you refuse even to give me a hug or a kiss when I asked? It had to be “spontaneous” (whatever that means) or you couldn't do it.

                   
So here we go again . . . I'm so tired of raking back over all the horrible stuff we've been through. I wish I could just forget all those times you turned away from me, and how angry it still makes me. Sometimes I think you never really wanted to be married. Or at least that you regretted it within a week.

                   
Look, I'm sorry, but it's true. It seems like you did everything you could to deny we ever got married. I'll never forget your toast the night of the rehearsal dinner: “In sixty years everyone at this table will be dead.” I know it was supposed to be a joke, but it was still a horrible thing to say the night before our wedding. And you weren't even pretending to joke when you told me that as far as you were concerned marriage was just a word. A “legal fiction,” you said. “And who could commit their life to a fiction?” Your obsession with some kind of capital “T” Truth was like a big steamroller crushing every scrap of romance out of our marriage. The whole thing makes me feel so helpless.

                   
Stop, Judith. Just stop it.

                   
I start thinking about this stuff, and I get very angry all over again. And I don't want to get angry. There's no point. First of all, it's over and done with. I mean the past. The past is over. Even more important, though, I need to remind myself constantly that the shit we went through was not entirely your fault. For one thing, I could have told you how much the things you said and did really hurt me. Maybe I didn't even know myself how old fashioned I am in some ways. I know now that it was a big mistake to keep my feelings to myself, but I was so afraid that you would get claustrophobic if I was completely open about how much getting married meant to me. That's why I didn't argue when you refused to get rings, even though I wanted them. And that's why I went along with it when, later on, you threw away all our wedding pictures—so we could “start over,” you said. I guess I thought that I had to go along with it. I don't know what I thought. I guess I loved you too much. I probably still do.

                   
Honestly, when I look back at what I've just written, I don't even know how much of it is true. I mean how much of it is true for you. I've never had your side of the story, really. Maybe sometime we can actually talk about all of this.

                   
Speaking of capital “T” Truth—Bruce and I got into a
terrible argument a few weeks ago. He found one of your letters—the last one, where you talked about coming back in the spring. It's not like I've lied to him or anything—he knows very well that I haven't given up on us. I've been totally honest with him about my feelings. It was a beautiful letter, though. All your writing has given me such hope for us. I tell myself that I'm a fool to open up to you again. But this time you really do seem to have changed, and in spite of myself I'm beginning to believe all over again that you love me.

                   
I can hardly wait for you to see my new place. It's tiny, but it's a real home. A room of my own (ha ha)—something I've needed for a long time. So when you come back we'll have dinner here together. I'm still no fabulous cook, but after a bottle of wine it won't matter. Maybe we really can start over.

                   
Oh Stanley, as the months pass I find myself remembering mostly all the wonderful, magical adventures we've shared. Like the time we were hitchhiking in Tennessee and got picked up by that guy driving the refrigerated truck, and he had us sell cold watermelons at all the rest stops. Remember? He took us out to dinner with the money! I'm almost scared to say it, but lately I've been feeling more and more that we will work this out. Somehow we'll make it.

                   
Well, I'm tired and it's time for bed. I love you dearly, husband of mine. It's true. And I miss you. I miss your hair on the pillow “like a sleeping golden storm.” I miss the undeoderized smell of your body. I miss your touch. God help me, but I even miss those horrible conversations about suffering and death. I know this time apart is good for us—another adventure, I guess—but I do wish you could be here with me tonight. Is that okay?

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