Tuesday 25 February 2020

Fishy Chronicles 54: Trouble At Uncle’s Place


“Did Aunty ask you to cook?” Anjali asked, her body pressing into mine in the kitchen. I could feel her breath on the back of my neck. Despite the discomfort I ignored her and concentrated on the curry bubbling in front of me. I was acutely aware of Genie, leaning against a wall and watching me. At least he wasn’t increasing my feeling of suffocation.

I had been feeling low and disturbed about the impending weekend with my cousins. The jokes of the past few days made me feel worse and Anjali and Genie stopped eventually. Yesterday, I disappeared. I took the car and did not answer my phone. I drove to the beach and walked about. I sat in the sand, watching amorous couples and then wet my feet in the sea. When the sunlight and heat got brutal, I drove to the market and bought vegetables and groceries, having written out most of my list while sitting at the beach. Nearer home, I bought the meat.

Elsa Aunty was in a state of tension when there were guests at home. I was merely continuing my mother’s tradition of cooking in bulk so that there would be lots of food left over for the guests for days. Aunty always looked relieved at the sight of the food. Roma often told me they ate the meat leftovers sparingly to make sure they lasted as long as they could without spoiling. Now Roma and her kids usually wiped out the dish with a piece of bread, which is what we cousins did when we were little and spent the holidays at my home. The gravy that had dried out and stuck to the sides of the pan tasted the best.

The aroma of the cooking meat made me feel better. At our ancestral home in Kerala, my paternal grandmother had made me cut the meat. She had sat on a chair, made me sit in the light near a window and, perched on a tiny stool with a very sharp knife wedged between my toes with the sharp side facing upwards, I had trimmed away fat and parts unwanted and done as she said. My mother, cooking in the kitchen, would look my way often but didn’t interfere.

Grandmother was old school and made me stand near her when she used up every part of the animal. She explained things, made me fetch vessels, masalas and herbs and made me wash all of them. And wash them again if I hadn’t done it right the first time. She used hooves, tails, tongues and body parts that I have never seen Syrian Christians use since. The family had many farm animals then. My cousins gagged at the sight of raw meat and blood, but I lingered, enthralled by the sights, smells and processes. I was amenable, and my grandmother loved it.

I grabbed two handfuls of purple Madras onions from a tray, a big bunch of cilantro, ginger and garlic and pushed them into Anjali’s hands. “Peel and clean these and come back,” I indicated at the sitting room. But Anjali didn’t move. She began to peel the ginger standing near me. Genie took the cilantro, removed the decaying leaves and washed them thoroughly.

“You didn’t say,” Anjali muttered.

“What?”

“If Aunty asked you to cook for them.”

“She doesn’t have to. I will cook for them whether they want me to or not.”

“That’s impolite. That might annoy your cousins. Smacks of interference.”

“Not with a large group involved. Plus, Rajiv’s wife doesn’t help in the kitchen. Does nothing at all, which annoys Roma big time. And Elsa Aunty doesn’t move as fast as she used to. Gets tired quickly, and you know how Upappen* shouts. The whole business makes her very nervous.”

“Hasn’t Roma gone over to help?”

“Yes.”

“And?”

“She nearly bit my head off when I called her to ask her something.”

“Oh! What about Rita?” Rita was Roma’s younger sister.

“Doesn’t pitch in for anything and makes fleeting visits.”

“Oh, then maybe it wasn’t a good idea agreeing to stay.”

“Oh, no. Aunty has never had a problem with you or me. You know that! If she had to choose from the guests, she would choose to keep us. Aunty is genteel.”

“Say it.”

“What?”

“She’s too good for Uncle.”

“Never. What makes you think he’s not good for her.”

That silenced Anjali. Uncle was short tempered, but still charmed us. He was generous to a fault and when we were kids we had often hung around him and badgered him for treats – out of sight of our fathers.

I looked at Genie from the corner of my eye. He had listened to our conversation quietly. Despite the undercurrents and their misconceived notions about him, my uncle and aunt liked Genie very much. 

                                  ******
This is a fictional series about the 30-something narrator, who has been invited to stay at her uncle's home for the weekend. Genie, her parents' former manservant, and Anjali, the narrator's best friend, have been invited too. 
She finds unexpected visitors. Things become unpleasant. 
                                   ******
I filled my three largest Tupperware containers with the beef olathea. The kids helped us carry it into Uncle’s flat. I had made a salad and a couple of vegetable dishes too. Elsa Aunty hugged me in relief and smiled. Going by the surly faces around me, it was probably for the first time today.

I hugged Rajiv’s children Ira and Samir and Roma’s son Aditya. I kissed 11-year old Aarav’s head against his will and grinned.

I turned and got my biggest shock of the day. I tried to back out of the door, but I could feel Genie’s hard, muscled body stall my escape. 

An old woman glared at me from the other end of the hall, while her tiny husband's eyes twinkled. Why hadn't Joy Uncle told me his first cousin was going to be there?

The memory of an early thrashing returned. It had coloured my opinion of her forever, even though the memory had faded over time. The cause of that thrashing, my cousin Rajiv, was tucked comfortably into her capacious armpit. His wife Beauty stood up and moved to hug me. I felt someone shove me into the room and I fell into Beauty's arms.

When we had first got wind of Beauty, we had joked that it was a good thing that she was pretty and, hence, could live up to her name. She also had a second name she never used publicly – the old-fashioned Mariamma, or Beautymol Mariamma Chandy. Roma and I decided that she was called Beautymol because she was an only child and her parents had gone overboard as first-time parents.

Elsa Aunty pushed me forward and I walked unwillingly towards my aunt. I shook hands with her husband and then her, silently. Rajiv smirked at me and I stepped on his toe. He howled in pain.

"Ayaaah, I'm so sorry, Rajiv. I didn't see your foot there." I heard a laugh behind me and sharp intakes of breath. I had already started annoying people. 

“You careless girl, so absent minded. Can’t do anything right!” Betsy Aunty said, looking down at Rajiv’s foot and trying to bend over her enormous girth to touch it, and failing. Her husband’s expression became serious, but I thought he winked at me. How they had lived together for over 50 years was unfathomable. He was probably deaf. Or the sex was great. Some of my like-minded cousins, the ones she disliked and who disliked her back, called her Beasty. It rhymed well with Betsy and even if anyone heard we were unlikely to get into trouble.

“Massage his foot, you!” she hollered at the floor.

Aiyyo, no. Chee! Him and his dirty feet,” I backed away into a hard chest and turned around to glare. I saw Genie’s face without expression, but his mouth turned down and his moustache quivered a little. Anjali was smiling broadly. No one in the world scared her. Including Beasty. 

I felt hands dig into my arm and pull me away – a very pissed-off Roma. She wasn’t pissed at me. Just at everyone else.

She dragged me into the kitchen and I hissed at her, “Why didn’t you warn me Beasty was going to be here!”

“Daddy knew you wouldn’t turn up and told us not to tell you.”

“When has that ever stopped you?”

“I’m sorry, sweetie. I couldn’t stand the idea of being alone with all these crackpots.”

“But why drag Genie and Anjali here?”

“That was Daddy’s idea. Frankly I don’t know why. You know how Anjali goes out of her way to say the wrong thing and rub Beasty and Rajiv the wrong way.”

“Is Uncle becoming a masochist?”

“Hey, that’s my dad you’re talking about!”

“True… maybe I’ll ask him later.”

“He’ll bite your head off.”

“So what’s new. Who’s the new banda* in the hall?” I asked.

“I don’t know.”

I turned to look at Roma. Liar! “You don’t know who’s in your house? Rajiv and Beauty are talking to him and Beasty is being the very essence of sunshine.”

I turned back to the hallway to look at the lean, handsome man, who seemed to be staring at Anjali. She was seated on a sofa with Genie. Plus, it looked like the man’s parents were with him. I felt a sense of déjà vu.

Genie tilted his head at the seat next to him, where Aditya was sitting now.

He nodded his head and gestured too many times for my relatives not to be annoyed and I quickly went over and sat on the sofa, stalling Aditya’s protests by picking him up and putting him on my lap. I looked up to see the man’s gaze on me and I smiled involuntarily. He smiled back.

“Aren’t you going to introduce us, Uncle?” I said, when the room had been silent for too long and it looked unlikely no one would make the introductions.

“About time,” Anjali mumbled.

There were a couple of guilty looks exchanged and Beasty Aunty looked away embarrassed. Baby Uncle, her husband, looked at her in irritation and then smiled at me. “Mol, this is my nephew Aby, his wife Mercy and their son Danny. Also, Beautymol’s mother is Mercy’s cousin and we wanted you to meet Danny and talk to him.”

I stared in shock at Danny, who looked uncomfortable at being sprung on me. I opened my mouth to protest. But nothing came out. I had been hijacked, ambushed, bamboozled! I looked for Roma but she had disappeared and I felt rage bubble up.

There had to be a catch. I couldn’t remember my last marriage proposal. All of them had been divorced.

“Are you d-d-divorced?” I said.

Danny nodded.

“Maybe you should go down to the garden and have a private chat,” Joy Uncle suggested, trying to smile but failing. I felt my spirits plummet. This was not how I hoped to find love a second time. 

“Brilliant idea, Uncle! I’ll chaperone. Come on, darling. Let’s go.” Anjali grabbed my arm and pulled me to my feet. I hung on tightly to Aditya, my head fuzzy. Genie’s face was steely. He stood up too. I set Aditya on his feet gently.

“No need for your servant to go too. Why did he come along anyway?” Beasty found her voice.

I whirled around. “First, he was never our servant. Second, Uncle invited Genie and Anjali, so ask him why privately. If you know how to?”

There was a commotion and furious faces. “Don’t talk to your aunt like that!” Joy Uncle said angrily.

Mol, none of that. Don’t be rude. She’s an elder. Listen and don’t react,” Elsa Aunty had her arm around me and was whispering in my ear above the angry noises. I turned to look at Beasty. She had heaved her overly healthy frame out of the sofa and it had sprung back up into its former shape.

I felt bad immediately. “Sorry, for being rude, Betsy Aunty. But there’s no need to insult my friends. They wouldn’t have turned up if Upappen hadn’t invited them.” I looked at Danny, who was standing now. “Come on, Danny. Let’s take a walk.”

I pushed my way out of the door, with Genie, Anjali, the kids and Roma following. I knew the others would spy on us from the sitting room window which overlooked the garden. I walked ahead to the garden and waited for Danny. He smiled, “We certainly ambushed you.”

I pointed at the gate and said, “Let’s go out.”

“What… and not let them spy on us?” 

This man surprised me. “Yes. They shouldn’t have all the fun. In fact, let’s take a drive.” I fished about my purse and found my keys. I led him quickly to my car and unlocked the doors. I could see Anjali doubled up and laughing, an unfathomable expression on Genie’s face and Roma and Beauty running towards us. 

Hurry, Danny, get in!

I jumped behind the wheel and locked the doors as soon as Danny shut his. Roma banged the windows of the car, startling him. I drove further into the building complex.

“I think the gate is behind us.”

“I know! I need to turn the car, and at the rate Roma is chasing us I won’t be able to turn around without running her over. What to do, she’s my cousin! Plus, when she’s not pissing the shit out of me, I love her madly.”

I stopped the car, reversed sharply and sped towards the gate. This time everyone jumped out of the way, including the kids. I pressed the horn wildly for double effect and sailed smoothly out of the building’s gate. I turned onto the highway and took a deep breath to relax.

I forgot the potential serial rapist/murderer sitting next to me until he spoke. “Is this like an everyday thing for you?”

My heart almost jumped out of my mouth. I glanced at Danny, “My life is boring. But the cast back there can guarantee fireworks every time they get together. Where would you like to go?”

“I’m not from Mumbai, so maybe you should decide.”

“How about the beach?”

“Sounds good.”

At a traffic signal, I tried to take a better a look at the man beside me.

I was surprised at my childish behaviour too. There would be hell to pay when I returned. A sudden thought occurred. “Will your parents be angry that we took off this way?”

“Maybe. It will be new for them. I’ve never been kidnapped by a prospective bride.” My mouth turned downwards. This was all going south. Danny kept talking, and smiling, “But, to be honest, they do not have expectations where Betsy Aunty is concerned. So, let’s just chat and enjoy the sea breeze and go back when it is time.”

“The beach is about 15 kilometres away... a-and there’s traffic.”

“All the better.”

                                   ******

* Banda is Mumbai slang for man
* Upappen is father’s brother in Malayalam

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