Read She Will Build Him a City Online
Authors: Raj Kamal Jha
‘Here’s my number,’ Kalyani says. ‘I am here each night Monday to Saturday but on Sundays when I am at home, I put the phone on silent by 9 p.m. because everyone sleeps early, we all have to wake up when it’s still dark. That’s the only time when there is no crowd at the community tap where we live, when we can bathe and fill our buckets before anyone comes.’
‘I won’t call you so late,’ he says.
Dr Chatterjee hears Orphan cry, their talking must have woken him up.
‘See you,’ he says as he turns to leave. Kalyani doesn’t say anything in reply, her back turned to him as she stands next to Orphan’s cot, reaches down to lift him up, to tell him a story to lull him back to sleep, fragments of a dream which she has once seen.
About The Mall in New City, across the street and the Metro tracks from her slum, about babies who walk through doors made of glass.
Babies Walk Through Doors Made of Glass
Far, far away from Little House, in Apartment Complex in New City next to The Mall, the largest mall in the country, there are scores of apartments, minimum four-bedroom, hall, kitchen, where, unlike in Little House, there are no orphans, where babies live with their parents, each one safe and happy.
~
Once upon a time, there is a power-cut in Apartment Complex right in the middle of the night.
Fans drone to a stop, air conditioners click, go silent.
There is full power back-up with a row of generators in the basement but something’s wrong, maybe diesel has run out, maybe the night-shift technician is drunk, he cannot be woken up.
It is July.
Very, very hot.
~
In one apartment on the top floor, in a room where each wall is painted a different colour, the ceiling like the sky, Baby gets up, drenched with sweat.
He climbs down from his bed, walks out of his bedroom.
Baby is confident. The way he walks down the steps, one by one, you would not guess that he has just learned how to walk.
Baby reaches the door.
He drags a stool, gets up on it, stands on his toes, slides the bolt open.
Through the open door, a light night wind enters the house, fans his face.
Baby walks out.
~
In the house, in the room upstairs next to Baby’s, his parents are fast asleep. So deeply that the power-cut and the heat do not wake them up.
Baby’s father spends fourteen hours at work, in the office, the mother the same time at home.
~
The lift’s working, it has emergency power.
Baby calls the lift.
Baby is now tall enough to reach 0 on the panel.
He presses 0, Ground Floor.
Down and down goes the lift.
Ground Floor, lift doors open.
Baby steps into the lobby.
It’s dark.
~
Baby walks out.
Security Guard cannot see Baby because he is out in the garden, looking up, catching cool waterdrops from the long line of air conditioners along the wall.
Into his mouth, into his dry lips. He is thirsty.
Drip, drip, drip.
~
Step by measured step, slipping into the shadows when he’s afraid he may be noticed, Baby walks out of his building, out of Apartment Complex – and is now on the street outside.
Fifty steps later, Baby reaches The Mall.
To his left, the first shop is Weekender for Kids.
Baby sees clothes coloured red, green and white.
Jeans, shirts, plastic pails, plastic spades. For the seashore that’s more than 1,300 kilometres away.
Next shop: McDonald’s.
On an iron bench, sits Ronald McDonald, his plastic lap a seat into which Baby crawls.
~
Look, look, what can you see? On the street, more babies.
Because when Baby woke up, let’s call him Baby One because he’s the first one to wake up, he is the one the story begins with, maybe he sends a thought-message to other babies. This message wakes them up, too, and all of them tiptoe out of their homes, their parents fast asleep.
And they walk towards The Mall.
Big babies, small babies, boy babies, girl babies, sleepy babies, wake-up babies.
Babies like you, babies unlike you.
They are all here.
To lie down on the steps right at the entrance to The Mall.
~
And, then, a strange thing happens.
All the babies stand up. And, led by Baby One, they walk through the glass door of The Mall.
Like light, like sound.
Like the night breeze that blows the heat around.
They are inside The Mall.
All lights are out, all shops are closed but so powerful and so big are The Mall’s air conditioners that even after they have been switched off for more than six hours, the air inside is still cool.
The babies feel it in their face, in their hair, and they smile.
The babies are happy.
~
‘Hush,’ says Baby One. ‘Let’s get to sleep without making any noise, no talking, the security guards are asleep.’
They lie down, one by one, on the cold, tiled floor.
‘I will stay up,’ says a baby who cannot sleep. ‘Because I slept in the afternoon.’
‘OK,’ says Baby One, ‘then you be our Alarm Clock Baby. When the power’s back, when you see the streetlights switch on, you wake us up.’
‘Sure, that sounds wonderful,’ says Baby Who Slept In The Afternoon who now has a new name, Alarm Clock Baby.
‘I will wake all of you up so that we can return to our homes before our parents wake up so that they do not need to worry,’ says Alarm Clock Baby.
‘Yes, yes, yes,’ all babies sing in a chorus.
‘Hush,’ says Baby One.
The babies sleep.
The Mall sleeps.
Alarm Clock Baby is the only one up.
Goodnight, The Mall.
Goodnight, babies.
Nobel Prize
On the way here, you don’t say a word, your eyes are closed, you sit still, you only move with each shudder of the taxi van as its wheels spin, lurch over the broken road. Your head rests against the window pane smudged with dust, hot to the touch. Your arm is draped over your suitcase, pressing it hard as if you are trying to stop it from growing wings and flying away.
What do you have in that suitcase? You can show me later.
I sit next to the driver, I keep turning round to look for hints of the past, immediate and distant, in your face. In the way your hair falls over your forehead, straight, in the way only two of your nails are stained with half-moons of red polish, the faint smudge below your eyes marking, possibly, the line of your tears.
The rest of you is a puzzle with a million pieces that I neither have the skill nor the time to put together.
~
When you walk into the house, breakfast is ready.
The cook, who comes in once a day, made egg curry, your favourite. I have told her what you like to eat. But the food remains untouched as you sleep right through whatever is left of the morning, the afternoon, evening, even a bit of the night.
You are awake now, I think, because I hear you cry. Let me know if you need anything, an extra blanket or something.
It’s so clear how helpless I am, how useless. All I can offer, after all these years, to you, my daughter, are the assurances of room and board. I am little more than a motel, old and run-down.
~
A few days earlier, I get your call.
‘I need a place to stay for a while,’ is the first thing you say.
A million questions tie my tongue.
‘Ma, are you there?’
‘Yes,’ I say.
‘I need to visit you, can I come over? Just for a few days, not more than a week.’
‘Of course,’ I say.
I move the phone away, I am crying, I don’t want you to listen to the noises I make.
‘On one condition, Ma. Are you OK with that?’
‘What condition?’ I swallow my tears, I steady my voice.
‘You don’t ask me anything. No questions.’
‘Where are you calling from?’ I ask.
‘I am calling from New City.’
‘What kind of a name is that, where is this place?’
‘I told you, Ma, no questions.’
‘OK, fine.’
Of course, it’s not OK, it’s not fine, but what else can I say?
‘Can I, at least, ask when you are coming? I need to put some things in order, prepare the house for you.’
‘Ma, is there a room for me?’
‘What do you mean?’
‘A room, where no one will disturb me?’
‘Of course there is, no one will disturb you.’
‘I need to rest. Is it quiet?’
‘From your room, all you see is an empty field, barren at this time of year. There is the highway but the windows keep out the sound of traffic.’
‘You have someone to help you?’
‘You don’t worry, you don’t have to do a thing. I told you there’s this woman who cooks and cleans. Her son is Neel, a bright boy, he wants to be a doctor. He helps me with errands, you will like them.’
‘Ma, are you still teaching at the school?’
‘No, I left the school, I retired, I am very old, you know.’
‘You stay at home the entire day?’
‘Yes, but I won’t get in your way.’
‘Are you sure? Or are you just saying that?’
‘You don’t worry about me, my students gave me a beautiful farewell gift, a set of three books. They told me, ma’am, you don’t know how to use the Internet so we have ordered them for you. Three books written by Nobel Laureates, each for a very important year in my life. The first one is by Henri Bergson, Nobel, 1927, the year your father was born. I was born in 1945, the year it went to Gabriela Mistral, so the second book is a book of poems by her. You were born in 1973, that’s the year for Patrick White, the third book is a novel by him. You should read them too.’
‘Ma, I am not interested in the books you have, I have no wish to read. You read, I am not coming there to read a book.’
‘I was just telling you…’
‘Bye, Ma,’ you say. ‘See you at the station.’
You are rude but, no, this isn’t the time to tell you that.
Indeed, this isn’t a time to ask you any of the questions I want to ask:
Why haven’t you called me all these years?
What have you been up to?
Why does a smart young woman want to return home?
Are you hurt? Are you ill?
Is there something, someone you are running away from?
No, I don’t ask any of these questions.
‘Have a good trip,’ is all I say instead. ‘I will see you soon. I will get a taxi van if you have luggage.’
I speak to the dial tone.
~
So let it be your way.
I will ask no questions.
We are two people in 1 billion plus if you take this country, 7 billion if you take the world, and, of course, whatever happened to you, my child, whatever happened to me, your mother, whatever happens to us from now on doesn’t matter to anyone except us. Because look around, near and far, everywhere else, outside this house, beyond its darkness and its tears, its walls, its floors, and you will see the healthy, the happy, the young, the old, the quiet and the noisy live on, unaware that we even exist. You will see traffic move down streets, the sun rise up in the sky. Trace your finger on a globe, close your eyes and stop – if it’s land you can be sure that if someone is crying there, someone is laughing as well.
That’s why, my child, the only thing that matters is my love for you even if I have made such a mess of it, even if I don’t know who you are now or what secrets you have dragged here with you.
With this as comfort, I will try to drift away to sleep, to the sound of tears, yours and mine, to the rustle of strange creatures that wake up some nights in this house.
If we are lucky, you may see some of them.
Funny little dogs with flesh-coloured wings pinned to their backs.
Rainbirds that fly through thick sheets of falling water, the rest of the time they sit on branches, their wings closed and dripping.
Fireflies that enter your head, through your eyes. To light up the darkest of your dreams.
Google Maps
His three friends are lucky.
Sukrit Sharma is in Singapore (Orchard Road), Aatish Patil is in New York (Park Slope), Arsh Pervez is in Paris (rue du Bac). He explores their neighbourhoods on Google Street View, cursor-walks up and down their cross-streets, right and left. Zooms in to examine a store, patch of pavement. Each one’s neighbourhood is far far superior to his, there’s absolutely no comparison.