Aunty Laila put a hand on my shoulder. Are you with us, darling? You're not upset about how I'm talking about your friend's father, are you? You know that's just the way I am. Don't you?'
Before I could answer, the phone rang and Aunty Laila's hand lifted off my shoulder, made the most graceful of arcs through the air without the slightest sign of haste, her rings catching the light at an angle that maximized their sparkle, and picked up the phone before it had completed its second ring.
âRunty, sweets!' Aunty Laila cooed down the phone, her voice entirely at odds with the exaggerated grimaces of distaste that contorted her face. I went to the kitchen to find some chutney for the pakoras, and when I came back Aunty Laila was recounting the tale of Sonia's father to Runty. â...But the guards were illiterate Pathans, so...'
I said, âWhy is the phrase “illiterate Pathan” the one constant in every variant of the story? As if he would have been any more capable of deciphering words if he were an illiterate Punjabi or Muhajir.' I threw it out as though it were a question about semantics, but really I wished I were old enough to talk to Aunty Laila as an equal and say, do you know what you reveal about yourself, and what you perpetuate with such stupidity? I've heard you talk about ethnicity, heard it when I was thirteen; it was you and Uncle Asif who first taught me how we can look at our friends and reduce them from individuals to members of some group that our group is at odds with. You made me learn how to derail or diffuse conversations when they headed down certain tracks just so I wouldn't have to feel that disgust, that disappointment, that still turns my stomach today.
âWell said, Raheen,' Aba applauded.
âCome on, Zafar,' said Uncle Asif, waggling his finger at Aba. âI know what you want to say. If he were a Muhajir there's a far greater chance he would have been literate.'
My hand, reaching for another pakora, froze. What had I gone and started?
Aba shrugged. âWell, yes, that's simple statistics. The literacy rate of Muhajirs is higher than that of other ethnic groups. I'm not saying this is the way it has to be because of some genetic reason, I'm just saying this is the way it is.'
Uncle Asif laughed. âPoor Karachiites. Living in this spacious, clean, city in '47 whenâwhap!âPartition happens and all these immigrants come streaming across the new border, convinced of the superiority of their culture, and whisk away all the best jobs from Sindhis who'd been living here for generations. I'm speaking as a disinterested third party, of course.'
My father laughed even louder than Uncle Asif had. âI'll let the disinterested bit go for the moment, Asif. But what I won't sit back and pretend to be unaware of is your obliviousness to the fact that Muhajirs came here leaving everything behind. Our homes, our families, our ways of life. We can't be blamed if someâmind you,
some
âof us came from areas with education systems that made us qualified for office jobs instead of latrine-cleaning, which is the kind of job you seem to think immigrants should be grateful for. And as for that term
immigrants...'
He never attacked anyone else, but my father could defend his own with a startling fervour. If he wasn't Muhajir would he feel their grievances as strongly? If I wasn't his daughter, would I still believe that his views were justified? What did I really know about rural Sindh, after all? Nothing. Too confusing to accept that the aggrieved could also be the aggressors. Too difficult to untangle the mess of a situation in which there weren't clear-cut rights and wrongs.
âOh, now who's forgetting history! Muhajirs loved being called Muhajirs. Loved the religious connotation of that word, linking them to the Muslims of Mecca who immigrated to Medina with the Prophet. It wasn't that you weren't welcomeâit's just that you would have died rather than be absorbed.'
I could tell Aunty Laila was following this conversation closely, her eyes narrowing unpleasantly, though she still managed to continue her conversation with Aunty Runty at the same time.
My father nodded. âI must have heard my parents say a thousand times “we came here to be Pakistani, not to be Sindhi”. I won't deny there was an attitude of entitlement. I won't even deny there's still an attitude of cultural superiority, and I'm not defending that in any way. But, Asif, even if we put aside the political marginalizationâI know you'll scoff at the term, so let's not go into that for the momentâthis quota system is wreaking such havoc on the Muhajirs who have the education and the ambition...'
I thought of the car thief. Hundreds of thousands like him in Karachi.
â...and couple that with the police brutality, Asif, and you're driving people to the point when they'll pick up guns and detonate bombs.' He took a breath. âI'm not denying that the rural parts of this province have their grievances...'
Aunty Laila put down the phone and turned to Aba. âAren't you? You really pretend to have an objective view of things, Zafar; but scratch the surface and that's one hundred per cent Muhajir blood that pours out, isn't it?'
âThat's a pretty violent image,' Ami said. âFriends don't scratch friends, Laila. And just in case you've forgotten, I'm not one hundred per cent anything. There's a good dose of illiterate Pathan blood zipping around my veins.'
Aunty Laila squeezed Ami's shoulder. âYou're right, darling. I'm sorry.' She twirled towards the two men. âStop bickering and say something charming to me. Zafar, don't you think my hair colour is fetching? See, when I stand in the sunlight, it has an aubergine tint. Not eggplant or brinjal or baing'n. Aubergine, with that sexy “zh” sound in the last syllable.'
âZzhhhhh,' Aba purred at her, and she threw him the burlesque of a kiss. In my relief, I stirred an extra spoon of sugar into my tea without really noticing what I was doing.
Uncle Asif poked me in the ribs. âWhat do you think of all this, Raheen?'
âI think her hair looks great.'
âNo, silly. What do you think about things in Karachi?'
I stirred my tea. No way was I going to get them started again. âI think there's nothing I can do about the situation, Uncle Asif, so why waste brain cells thinking about it?'
âRaheen!' My father was staring at me, a look of shock on his face. My mother shook her head and leaned forward to say something, but before she could, Uncle Asif spoke.
âOh, come on, Zaf. She's only twenty-one. Think back to your twenties. How concerned were you withââ' He stopped, turned red, and looked down. My father bit his lip and looked at me.
What?
The phone rang again, and we all turned to look at it gratefully, except for Ami, who was looking between Aba and me and shaking her head. But the call was for herâa mutual friend of hers and Aunty Laila's was phoning to say someone from the newspaper office had been calling around, trying to get hold of my mother.
âOdd,' Ami said. âIt's only midweek.' Ami worked on the paper's weekend magazine, and we were accustomed to her colleagues trying to track her down when last-minute crises occurred. The most notable of these calls happened a couple of years ago when the magazine was running a piece on some musical evening Aunty Runty was organizing as part of a cultural festival, and an assistant at the office received a message from Runty at the nth hour, saying it was imperative that the article mention she would not tolerate âmonkey business with toothpicks at the musical evening, so ne'er-do-wellers beware'. The assistant, terrified by this ominous statement, tracked down my mother, who advised him to ignore the call and proceeded to scatter toothpicks into Runty's letter box on her way to dinner that evening. Runty didn't speak to her for weeks after that, and still hadn't explained the connection between monkey business and toothpicks.
Ami dialled her office number and said, âWhat's the toothpick?... Sonia Lohawalla? Yes, that's right, she's Raheen's best friend...in the main paper?...Can't you tell me what it is, I'm not home...oh, wait, there's a fax machine here too.'
When did the front door open without my hearing it? When exactly did the footsteps progress down the hall, and stop, as he realised my parents were inside and paused to decide: what next?
I didn't hear him, none of us did, because all our attention was focused on the drama within the room as Aunty Laila tore the paper out of the fax machine and handed it to my mother, unable to resist glancing at it first. She made a sound of disgust. âTacky, so tacky. She's best out of it if this is the kind of people they are.'
It was a paid announcement that was to appear in the next morning's paper. Ami read it out loud.
The Rana family wishes to announce that the engagement between Adel Rana and Sonia, daughter of Ehsan Lohawalla, will not take place. The Ranas hereby apologise to all those whose good counsel they did not heed earlier in this matter, and request that the Lohawalla family, and those associated with them, make no attempt to contact Adel Rana or anyone connected to him.
Ami shook her head. âOh, that poor girl. That poor, poor girl.'
Aunty Laila nodded agreement. âNo good family will want their son to marry her nowânot after both the drug charges and this slap in the face.'
With an explosion of invective, Aba crumpled up the fax and flung it against the wall. The strength of his reaction shocked me out of my own fist-clenched fury. He was fond of Sonia, certainly, but this was entirely out of character. He saw me staring at him, and his eyes panicked. âHow dare he,' he said, as though he need to explain himself. âHow dare he think he was even good enough for that darling girl? If I ever see him I'llââKarim?'
Everyone's head turned towards the doorway, at which my father was staring in a mixture of disbelief and joy. I heard Ami get to her feet with a whispered, âOh, there he is. At last!' but as soon as I saw Karim's face I knew something horrible was going to happen, because nothing was moving in the unblinking, unsmiling mask that had settled on his face like a second skin.
âIf you ever see him you'll what, Zafar?' He didn't just cut the appellation âUncle' from his form of address; he cut every tie to his past relationship with my father.
I caught Uncle Asif by the sleeve and whispered, âPlease do something. Get him out of here.'
âKarim.' My father held open his arms, though it should have been so obvious that Karim was not in an embracing mood.
âIs that what you'll do when you see Adel Rana, Zaf?'
I saw Ami flinch at the way he spat out that last syllable. But was that anxiety or a glimmer of excitement in Aunty Laila's eyes?
âIs it, Zaf? Will you, Zaf, when you see him, Zaf, hold your arms open, Zaf, and say, “Welcome, brother, welcome to the club”? The break-a-heart-too-good-for-you-you-cowardly-bastard club.'
âKarim.' Ami started walking towards him, he held his hand up.
âI don't want anything to do with you either, I'm sorry, Aunty Yasmin. Please stay away.'
Something in my life was about to be destroyed. I could feel it. âKarimazov, go away.'
He turned to me. âAre you going to stand by him, and call that loyalty?'
âKarim, can we go somewhere and talk?' My father took a step towards Karim, his arms still spread wide, though now it was in the manner of a man holding his arms away from his body to prove he's not about to reach for concealed weapons.
âWe'll talk here!' Karim roared. He caught my father by the shoulder and pushed him down in a chair.
In sheer terror, I caught him by his ear lobe and yanked at it. He spun around, cursing. I watched my hand form into a fist and fly at his jaw. He sidestepped, and my fist smashed into a glass ornament on the shelf behind him. Explosion of glass. I turn my face away. Karim turns his face away. Scrunch shut my eyes. Impact against my cheekbone. Not glass. The tinkle of shards falling to the ground. I open my eyes and there is Karim's hand moving away from my face. Karim's hand, which slapped me.
Face stinging, hand miraculously unharmed, I stepped away from him. âYou bastard,' I said.
âHe didn't slap you.' It was Aba. He took his shoes off his feet and handed them to me, as I stood barefoot amid the broken glass. âHe didn't slap you. He was shielding your eyes from glass splinters. He just moved a little too fast. Panic. But it was instinctive. He shielded your eyes before his own.' He ran his fingers through his hair, glanced at Ami, and then looked back at Karim. âShe doesn't know, Karim. Raheen doesn't know.'
Steel hooks latched on to the weightlessness of the air when he said that. A stillness infected everyone, even me, though I didn't understand the remark. Looking around, I saw I was the only one who didn't understand it. Uncle Asif and Aunty Laila were standing together, holding hands like little children. Ami just looked at my father and in the sadness of her expression I heard her voice echoing from years away.
Zafar, sometimes I think I love you more than I should.
And Karim had recoiled, his eyes moving all around the room, settling momentarily on every face except mine, his voice, staccato, saying âbut if' and âthat time' and âhow' and âso why did' and, finally, as he turned to look at me, âOh God, what have I done?'
âI did this, not you,' Aba said. âRaheen, look at me. It's time you heard the truth.'
I closed my eyes and, half-turning, leaned against the wall. The white paint was cool against my cheek and tongue. All my life I'd visited this house and never thought to taste the walls. What an odd and misleading thing familiarity is; so ready to disguise itself as intimacy.
âIt was soon after the war ended,' Aba began. âMy neighbours, in those days, were the Mumtazes. A lovely couple, and their sons Bilal and Shafiq. Shafiq and I had been at school together. Bilal was a year younger. He was in East Pakistan, Bilal was, when the war broke out. His parents had been telling him for a long time to come home and he'd said he would but he kept delaying his return. Rumour was there was a girl there.' Aba's voice was strange, a monotone. I reached out to touch his sleeve, but something in Karim's glance made me drop my hand.