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Authors: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

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BOOK: East Into Upper East
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“You've laid her ghost long ago.”

“Then what's wrong? Don't you like to be with a living person—even if she is a bit fat and old?” To prevent herself laughing, she sucked in her lips, which disappeared right into the pit of her mouth. She swept her hand over her black, black hair and coquettishly turned her profile. When he laughed, she laughed too, releasing her lips and opening that gaping pit: she looked like a hundred-year-old witch but like a temptress too, gleaming and glittering with oil and silk and gold.

“Oh my God, that
smell
!” said Minnie as usual, on entering the apartment. She was right: besides everything else, a lot of cooking
went on in there now, and volunteers had been taught by Ma herself to deep-fry fritters and breads and onions and spices. Along with hot meals, she was also glad to offer bathing facilities, expounding the benefit of oil massage for body and scalp, so that all the bathrooms were in constant use, including Tammy's, Ross's, and what had been Grace's.

“Listen,” said Minnie, “you'd better get her out of here, but quick.”

“Yes,” Ross agreed. “As soon as we've found a suitable place to buy.”

Tammy gazed at him, startled, and so did Minnie, who asked, “You're looking for a place to buy?” He nodded casually, and narrowing her eyes a bit, Minnie regarded him with more interest than she had ever shown him: “How much are you thinking to spend?”

It turned out that she was looking to sell her apartment, which her lawyer had managed to get for her as part of her divorce settlement. She hardly stayed there nowadays, spending most of her time with the Doktor, and anyway the place held horrible memories for her from her horrible marriage. But when she took Ross there to view it, it didn't seem as though it could have any memories at all. Even the paintings had been chosen by the designer, who came in regularly to check up that everything was kept as he had arranged it, including the dining table set out according to his specifications, though no one ate there any more. Minnie gave Ross a guided tour, pointing out the French wallpaper, the rugs handmade by inmates of a jail in Kabul, the Tibetan wheel of life over the king-size bed. With regard to this bed—“I cannot tell you what went on there,” she said and went on to tell in detail. “And I thought I was marrying this decent guy who liked girls.” But thank God it was all in the past—a bad dream—and if only she could get this place off her hands, off her mind, out of her life—if only someone would come up with the money . . . It was a lot of money, but Minnie could hardly let it go for less, it was owed to her, after what she had paid for it in suffering.

Ross said he would take it. After another fund-raiser, he was able to pay for it in cash. The lady from upstairs actually sold her ancestral apartment and all its contents to pay for Minnie's, so that she could move in there with Ma. Ross agreed to buy Minnie's furniture too—he knew it wouldn't be in their way, they would all just dispose themselves around it, the way they had done at Tammy's.
Tammy's furniture meanwhile—the detritus of a hundred years—was appraised, and as soon as Ma moved out, it was carried off to the auction houses. Here it was sold for a very handsome amount (the proceeds went to the Doktor's movement), for it was from a period much in fashion, and even the cracked mirror fetched a good price. Ross agreed to stay on as caretaker, though his bed and wardrobe had been sold—they were too valuable to leave behind—and he slept in a sleeping-bag Tammy lent him and kept his belongings in his two old suitcases. He was now the only occupant, for Tammy was too busy preparing for the Doktor's move to have time to come home; anyway, her bed had been sold too.

Workmen moved in—painters, carpenters, plasterers, electricians—to get the place ready for the Doktor. They stripped and purged the apartment into its furthest corners, including Ross's corner room, sweeping him out along with all the roaches, which had come scuttling out from under cracks and water pipes and broken tiles. Minnie was there to supervise the work. She had changed completely: far from the restless seeker she had been, she was now very busy, efficient, a businesswoman; only her manner had remained the same—alternately effusive and rude, depending on whom she was addressing. Tammy followed behind her; she was supposed to be taking notes but did not do it very well, so that Minnie kept snapping at her. When they reached Ross's room, Minnie found some fault in the ceiling, and stretching up to point this out to the delinquent plasterer, she stubbed her toe against Ross's suitcases. She glared at them angrily and asked, “What's this?” and when Ross acknowledged them, she glared at him: “I guess you're taking them away today? Tomorrow? When are you moving out?” Ross had bent down to take his possessions out of her way, and by the time he straightened up, she had swept on with her troupe of chastened workers. Tammy stayed behind—she helped Ross with his bags, but when she tried to put them in the closet, he said not to.

She peered into his face: “You're not really leaving?”

He was embarrassed, he shuffled his feet and said, “She needs me in the other place.”

Minnie was irritably calling for Tammy; Tammy called back that she was coming. Stepping closer to Ross, she whispered, “You can't leave me alone here.”

“Then come with me.”

Tammy sighed; she shook her head: “The work is here now, not with Ma . . . Don't look like that, Ross. You've never met him; you've never met anyone like him. I don't blame you that you don't believe me—I'd have felt the same had anyone told me what would happen; how he would change me.”

And by now she
had
changed. Her head, once hopefully raised toward a higher region, now hung from her neck like a flower wilting on its stalk. When Minnie again shouted for her, even more impatiently, she called back in apology, and letting go of the suitcases she had been trying to wrest from Ross, she began to hurry away in answer to the summons.

But now he held her back; he said, “Won't you come with me?” It was only a shy suggestion, giving her the chance to turn him down. And sadly she did so, shaking her head, turning toward where Minnie was yelling for her.

He had no words to dissuade her. Just as he could never tell her mother outright “Please don't kill yourself” but only by indirection—for instance, by making her laugh, mostly at himself—deflect her from her purpose: so now he could only catch hold of Tammy's hand to halt her in her flight from him. Her hand lay very lightly in his, so that, if she had wanted, she could have drawn it away; but she left it there, a pale, live, frail thing that could easily be crushed by a stronger hand than his.
His
hand was as small as her own, and she could nestle there till there was another call from Minnie—“Let me go,” she whispered, as though she hadn't the strength to draw away herself; so he released her and picked up his two suitcases and left.

When he arrived at Ma's new place, she had one of her song sessions going. He found all the people who used to come to Tammy's assembled here. But Minnie's interior decorator could have walked in and been perfectly satisfied that nothing had been disturbed: even the tables were still laid, and the little porcelain fruit-tarts unchipped. Ma's people had simply flowed over the design like water over a grotto, leaving it perfectly preserved while drowning it forever. Only the hi-fi system had been disassembled—there was no need for it, since Ma's voice was more powerful than any high-tech
machine; and the table on which it had stood now served as her seat or throne on which she sat as she had on Tammy's dining table, with her legs tucked under her. From here she conducted her sing-song; sometimes hers was the only voice to be heard, for the others had forgotten the words and trailed off till she started them up again. She was not totally absorbed in the performance but dropped from time to time into conversation, encouraging everyone to lift up their spirits along with their voices, or only inquiring if the lentils had been stirred. When she saw Ross entering with his suitcases, she called to him gladly and invited him to sit up front; but when he preferred to remain at the back, she explained to the others, “He's shy. And he won't sing.”

“I can't,” Ross said.

“You won't,” she said and smiled in that flirtatious way she had with him.

But now her song was ascending to its climax, and she opened her arms wide as though to sweep them up to its height. What was it that she was making them sing? No one understood the words, she had never translated or explained them. Nevertheless, they all did their utmost, gathering strength and voice to follow her lead. Only Ross sat silent. He could still feel the touch of Tammy's hand in his, and when Ma's eyes sought him out in the crowd to exhort him to sing, he shut his palm as though it held something precious that he did not want to let go. Ma was singing with all her might, so that he wanted to stop his ears against her; nor did he dare raise his eyes to her but kept them lowered to his hand balled into a fist.

“Sing, Ross, sing!” she exhorted him and sang and swayed and shone and shimmered, till he knew he could not withstand her. He scrambled up from the floor, and without a glance in her direction, he picked up his suitcases and escaped into the elevator. Her voice followed him down twenty-seven storeys and even into the street—or was that just his fancy, and fear? Anyway, he did not feel safe till he was in the opposite part of the city, the part he knew so well, and outside Tammy's apartment building and then inside that marble vault, where the doormen were all new, for the old ones had followed Ma and had lost interest in holding down their jobs.

A SUMMER BY THE SEA

Lying on the beach, I could hear their voices all day long. Sometimes they sounded like bird song, but when I opened my eyes they were all men. He—Boy, my husband—was very happy in their company. How everything sparkled on those long days on the beach: the ocean, the sky, the sand, and that group of handsome men in swim trunks, their bronzed limbs glistening with drops of water and grains of sand, scattered all over them like pearls.

Then there were the days when my mother was there with us. Those were not so good. She bothered them and she bothered me. By myself, I was happy just to lie near them, mostly with my eyes shut, and to hear their voices. I didn't expect to take part in their fun, and didn't really want to or need to. But Mother hated to be left out. She liked talking and laughing, but what she said bored them, and what they said bored her.

“What
are
they talking about?” she would ask me. “What's all that rubbish? Giggling like a bunch of kids.” She would get disgusted with them and go off by herself, splashing in the ocean and making friends with other people. She usually joined some group, and we could hear her voice shouting above theirs and, looking over at her, we saw her—very bright in her bright bathing suit, with her gold-red hair and her jewels glistening in the sun, and her too-white skin that never tanned, and the operation scar showing over the top of her bikini.

She suffered from insomnia, and she would walk the house at night, looking for someone to talk to. Boy and I would lie very still, not daring to turn on the light or talk or read, in case she found us
awake. The nights were very long and boring whenever she was there. The days weren't so bad, because I would pretend to be busy looking after the friends, or to be asleep on the beach, so that Mother couldn't ever really get hold of me for one of her tête-à-têtes. But sooner or later she managed it, and then it would always be the same—about Boy, and our marriage, and his friends, on and on, as it always had been from the beginning and even before.

Yes, even before we were married she liked to question me about Boy. He was quite different from any son-in-law she had expected. She had disliked his family almost from the beginning—his mother and two sisters (“those crazies,” she called them)—but she could not dismiss Boy, not just because he was part of me and so part of her but because he fascinated her. His good looks and his refinement were like heirlooms that had come into the family, and she wanted to have them appraised. She could not ask me enough about him, and the longer we were married the more pressing and intimate her questions became.

Boy used to teach a course in art history, but since our marriage he's been concentrating on his own research. That leaves him with a lot of time on his hands and makes him very dependent on having friends. Hamid has been his special friend for some months—they had got very close in New York, where they both liked to go to afternoon movies—but Mother hadn't met him until she came to stay with us in this cottage on Nantucket that Boy and I usually rent in the summer. She and Hamid got on very well together. They kidded around and seemed to have the same sense of humor, and Mother really became like a girl, with all that teasing and joking they did together. He called her by her first name, Bea, and treated her as if they were the same age. Naturally, she liked that and opened up to him completely. What she didn't know is that behind her back he called her Golden Oldie, and laughed at her with Boy and the others. I tried to warn her, but of course she wouldn't listen; she knew better.

“You don't understand, Susie,” she said. “You don't know anything about these things. You never did.” I am her only daughter, and it's one of the regrets of her life that I haven't turned out to be fun-loving and sexy, like her. “He's my type,” she told me about Hamid. “We have the same chemistry.”

Hamid had a lot of chemistry. I am not usually sensitive about this (as she has told me often enough), but I could feel that. There was
a change in our circle after he entered it. Before that, it was always Boy we were all centered around—not that Boy is bossy or selfish or anything but just because we all wanted to do what he wanted and we didn't really get any fun out of anything unless he was behind it heart and soul. Perhaps this was because we all loved him so much. But I guess Hamid had a stronger personality than the rest of us, including Boy. Or maybe it was because he is a foreigner, an Oriental—someone different in an exotic way—and we kept looking at him with fascination to see what he would do next.

At first we thought he must be some kind of prince, on account of his looks, but he was too poor for that. He never had any money at all. Not that it bothered him, because there were plenty of people eager to pay for anything he needed. Boy said that maybe he came from one of those very ancient royal lines that were extinct now, except for a few last descendants working as coolies in Calcutta. Or maybe, Boy said—he has plenty of imagination and also quite a bit of oriental background, thanks to his study of art history—Hamid was a descendant of a line of famous saints, dating back to the thirteenth century and handing down their sainthood from generation to generation. When I said that I didn't think there was anything saintly about Hamid, Boy said, “Oh, no? Just have a look at his eyes.” So the next time he was near me I did, and while I had to admit they were very beautiful, I couldn't see anything in them except an eroticism so deep that he had to keep it partially curtained by lowering his black satin lashes.

Mother always got up later than the rest of us, and then it took her a long time to get herself ready to appear on the beach. “Here comes Golden Oldie,” Hamid would say to us, but when she got closer he would call out to her, “Good morning, Madame!” in a cheerful voice. “Or should I say ‘Good afternoon'?”

“You can say ‘Good evening,' for all I care,” Mother replied pertly, and they carried on from there, topping each other with childish jokes, and always looking over each other with impudent, knowing looks. The other friends would pretend to be engrossed in their own doings. One was reading Baudelaire's
Intimate Journals,
and another building something in the sand, and Boy lay face down, with his head buried in his arms. I kept my eyes shut; I didn't want to have to see Mother, with her face—so carefully made up, with green eyelids—exposed by the blazing light from sea, sun, and sand.

“Can't you stop her?” Boy sometimes asked me. I wanted to say,
“Can't you stop
him
?” For Hamid was leading her on, no doubt about that. He needed a lot of reaction from people, and although he got plenty in our house from Boy and Boy's other friends, perhaps he needed women as well. In that department, there was only Mother and me, and he had given up on me quite quickly.

Very late one night, when Hamid and Mother were sitting together out on the porch talking in low voices, Boy suddenly went rushing out there in his pajamas. I heard him say, “What are you
doing,
for Pete's sake, out here in the dark?”

“Ah-ha-ha!” replied Mother playfully, but with a hysterical note in her voice.

By the time I came out, Boy had turned on the light. There was Mother in full regalia, in a silver-spangled halter dress and actually wearing her dangling diamond earrings, and Hamid was stretched out on the painted wooden porch floor at her feet, in his very short shorts, with grains of sand still clinging to the hairs on his thighs.

“Can I speak to you?” Boy said to Hamid. “For a moment?” He seemed rather frail in his pale blue pajamas. His fair and (unfortunately) thinning hair was tousled, from drawing his hands through it in his nervousness.

Hamid sat up on the floor. He looked powerful and almost angry. We all waited for him. At last, he reacted favorably. He said, “Okeydokey,” and heaved himself up from the floor, using Boy as a support. They went in together.

“How can you
stand
it?” Mother said to me.

We could hear them arguing inside—or, rather, Boy arguing. He tried to keep his voice low, so that we couldn't hear what he said, but that just made it more intense and passionate. Hamid made only an occasional remark, in a soft voice, as if he wanted to cool him down. But Boy was not cooled down.

“Well, I can't stand it,” Mother said at last. She went down the porch steps, onto the beach, into the dark. I could see her pacing up and down there, like a firefly in her spangly dress and jewels.

I didn't want to join her but I knew she expected me to. As soon as I did, she fell on my neck and wept. She said it was for me. But that was an old story, and these tears came from somewhere new. Unexpectedly, she began to talk about Daddy. “I keep thinking about him these days,” she said. “Not like he was later, with all those tarts he had”—she pulled her familiar sour face—“but in the first years.”

Of course, I had heard all about those early years, when Daddy had been making his first million and Mother had given up a promising (she said) singing-and-dancing career to be married to him. The fun, the jokes! I never quite made out what these had been, because usually she laughed so much remembering them that she couldn't get out the words.

“How he'd have hated it here!” she said now. “He'd have been bored to death. And so am I. I don't know how you can like it.”

“You know I like it,” I said. Boy and I had chosen this house on a remote section of the beach.

“Daddy liked being by the sea, too, but only if he could look at it from the terrace of some Grand Hotel,” she said. “Sitting there with his binoculars—he looked at some other things besides the ocean, I can tell you that. Well, I guess that was his nature. He had these strong, manly appetites, God rest his soul.”

I went right to the edge of the water. I looked and listened to the waves and really enjoyed that. But she came and stood next to me.

“Can I tell you something?” She said it like a secret. “He reminds me of Daddy. Hamid. Not that they look alike or anything, but there is
something.
Maybe it's because they're both strong—strong, sexy men. He was telling me about his first experience today. He was only twelve, can you believe it? He was seduced by a servant girl, but she stank so much it put him off women for years. Everyone knows they're ambidextrous over there. It's all right over there. It's expected.”

“Can we go back in now?”

“You know something, Susie?” she said. “You're a moral coward. I wouldn't have believed it that a daughter of mine and Daddy's—Because we always did
everything
we wanted to.”

I said, “How do you know I don't?”

The next morning, Boy sat gloomily on the beach while Hamid laughed and joked with the other friends. When Mother came to join us, in a new lavender bikini and a matching headscarf, Hamid turned all his attention on her. Of course, she was delighted and reacted twice as much. Neither of them seemed to care when Boy got up and went away. After a while, I followed him into the house.
He was in the kitchen making crêpes—he tends to start cooking when he's upset.

Boy is so sensitive that when he is emotionally worked up he quivers all over. It is as if his body is just the thinnest, finest sheath around his soul, totally inadequate to protect him against the roughness of this world. That's why I feel I have to do everything to protect him, even though I know that I'm just as inadequate and unprotected. Boy hates me to see him when he is upset. He doesn't want me to know these things about him, so I have to pretend I don't.

I sat down at the kitchen table, talking to him about his damn crêpes and pretending I was interested in whether he was going to make them Suzette or Gil Blas. And he pretended that that was all he was thinking about, too, frenziedly beating the batter. But he couldn't keep it up, and finally he sat down next to me at the table and said in a low, mean voice, “Get her out of here! I can't stand her another minute.”

I knew how he felt, but I also knew how Mother felt. I murmured, “It gets awfully lonesome for her in New York.”

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