I wasn’t about to let it go.
Chapter Twenty
‘Aliya!’ Younger Starch greeted me at her front door. ‘What an unexpected somersault of joy you’ve made my heart just do. Full triple lutz in my rib cage, I swear, at the sight of you. And what a lovely jora you’re wearing — such a nice change from all these other young girls today who always want to be in the height of fashion. I say a few inches here and there around your hemline isn’t worth the expense of a whole new wardrobe. Unless you’re like Kishoo, who has to look good all the time because she has a certain image, you know. And why haven’t we seen you at the dholkis? I think the Ali Shah boy is definitely interested.’
‘Oh, well, actually I know it’s time for you to go for your bridge game and I don’t want to hold you up. I was just stopping by to ask if you were free for lunch tomorrow.’ I knew she wasn’t, but the leap from discussing Taimur with Dadi to fending off matchmaking talk from a Starch was one I couldn’t make without falling into the gaping precipice of incivility, so it seemed best to terminate the conversation as quickly as possible.
‘Oh, I would have loved to, but Sunday brunch at the Club is a must. Must, must, must. Oh, now I’m so sad.’
‘Well, another time, then. But, since I’m here, I might as well say hello to Hibiscus-Eating Ayah.’
‘Who?’
‘Bua.’
‘Oh, Bua! Such names you have for people. I swear, sometimes I think you must have some private nickname for me. Of course, go and see her, but if she starts talking too much just say goodbye and walk out or she’ll go on and on and on and will not stop. What am I telling you this for? You know all there is to know about her. Okay, sweetie, must run. ‘Bye.’
She kissed the air around my cheeks and walked out. I heard her screeching for the driver outside as I walked towards her younger children’s bedroom.
Hibiscus-Eating Ayah had been my ayah, about fifteen years ago. She had come to work for us after her husband died, leaving her children to be brought up by her mother. She would go home to see them once a week, and on very rare occasions they’d come to visit her — two wide-eyed girls near my age who I recall playing with in the garden the first time we met. It was winter then. The next time I saw them it was summer and too hot to play outside, so I smiled hello and disappeared into my room. Technically speaking, it was also their mother’s room, inasmuch as there was a little mattress under the bed which she would pull out and sleep on at night, and there was a corner in my closet where she kept her belongings bundled up, but when you’re seven you know better than to pretend technicalities matter. I remember I asked Ami if I could invite them inside, but the more I think about it the more convinced I am that the memory is merely of something I considered doing. Even at that age, I knew about boundaries. No, let’s be honest. They gave the impression of being unwashed, and I didn’t want them to get fingerprints on my new, giant-sized, snow-white stuffed bunny. (And if I had invited them in? How could that have ended any way but badly? Would it have been the first time they really thought about all they couldn’t have?)
Hibiscus-Eating Ayah, known then simply as ‘Bua’, was a great improvement on her predecessor — a wizened woman who convinced me that my family would suffer not a whit if I regularly took a small amount of money from my father’s wallet and gave it to her for her supply of niswaar, that ghastly, green, tobacco-based concoction which she would spit out in my basin without properly swilling out the spatter afterwards. Her endeavours to lead me into a life of guilt-based crime did not lead to her dismissal, but her penchant for niswaar did. She spat in the wrong direction, and though Aba’s suede shoes bore no permanent mark he saw that as no reason to excuse her uncouthness. Truth is, we all disliked her and were just waiting for a reason to sack her.
Hibiscus-Eating Ayah’s good-natured youthfulness was such a pleasant contrast to Niswaar-Spitting Ayah that I would stay up at night, past my bedtime, whispering to her about the house I’d own one day when I was married. We’d draw up floor plans for the house, which varied from week to week in every detail but one: a little room for her, between my room and my children’s room, so that she could be on hand for whoever needed her to sing them to sleep.
But the plans went awry the day she ate the hibiscus.
I was in my room when I heard sounds of pandemonium in the garden, outside the dining room. On going to investigate I saw Mariam Apa, ashen, staring at Bua in disbelief, while Masood yelled. At first I didn’t know which of the two women he was yelling at, just that he was demanding, ‘What were you thinking? What have you done? What sort of bestiality is this?’ The thought that he could be addressing Mariam Apa in this manner made the blood rush to my head, until I realized, that’s impossible. He’d get fired for that. I moved closer to the dining-room window to look out, and saw that the red flowers of Mariam Apa’s hibiscus bush were lying on the grass, ripped apart. Moving closer still, I saw teeth marks in petals, saw red on Bua’s teeth when she opened her mouth to speak.
‘Look at her,’ she said, and pointed at Mariam. ‘Look at that look on her face. She shows more emotion over these flowers than over anything else. Why can’t you see that? She’s a mad woman, deranged.’
‘Aliya!’ Just as things got interesting Ami appeared, on cue, and whisked me away. That day, Bua earned a nickname and lost a job. And gained another, because Younger Starch, driving to our house, saw Hibiscus-Eating Ayah leaving and hired her on the spot. No one quite understood why Younger Starch did that until a few months later, when she announced she was pregnant. She said, ‘I told him I’m not having children until I know I have the right kind of help for those horrible first months of a child’s life, but once I found Bua I said, “Hubby, let’s go.” ’
I thought I would never forgive Hibiscus-Eating Ayah for the things she said about Mariam Apa, but Mariam was in such a good mood in the days following the insults that I concluded she hadn’t minded them at all, and I was free to continue to feel affection for my old ayah. In the fifteen years since, my affection had never died, but it had become something I never thought about unless I saw her face to face.
I opened the door to the children’s bedroom.
‘Arré, Aliya!’ Hibiscus-Eating Ayah was folding my young cousins’ clothes, but when she saw me she dropped a T-shirt on to the bed and came over to hug me and whisper prayers over my head. ‘I knew you wouldn’t let me leave without coming to say goodbye.’
‘Goodbye? Why?’
‘Didn’t anyone tell you? I’m leaving. Going to work for the Shaikh family who live near the KESC building. Three children, ages five to nine, and none of them as sweet as you were at that age.’
‘But, you mean, my aunt’s decided she doesn’t need an ayah any more? How can that be? Imdi’s only eight. How can she do this to you?’
‘Aren’t you listening? I’m leaving. She doesn’t want me to go, but she doesn’t want to pay me as much as the Shaikhs are offering either.’
‘You’re leaving only because of money? Bua, you’ve raised these children. All four, since the day they were born.’
‘Leh!’ she said, pointing at me as though I were a sideshow freak and she was directing the assembled gawkers’ attention to me. ‘Only because of money! I have two granddaughters. Their stepfather is a waster; he just wants to get them married off when they reach puberty, and my daughter — you know Khadija — has always been spineless. She said, “What can I say to him? He doesn’t want to bear the expense.” So I said, “Then I’ll bear the expense. I’ll send them to school.” The eldest is so smart, and there’s a school near where they live where they teach English and they even have computers. Ye-es. You think I’m joking? Some rich man donated all these computers to them. Only money! You think I’m going to let my grandchildren grow up to be servants?’