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Authors: Shyam Selvadurai

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Once Amrith had showered and changed, he went across the front courtyard and into the living room. There was a large barrel now under the hole in the roof to catch rain that fell through. He made his way past the barrel to the dining room and then through to the kitchen. Jane-Nona had kept his breakfast under a fly-cover in the pantry. Amrith perched on a tall stool and munched on his cold scrambled eggs and toast, staring out at the kitchen garden. The light that came in through the window puddled and rippled on the fridge and spice cupboard. Selvi and Mala had left for their various activities a while ago, and a quiet reigned throughout the house, broken only by Jane-Nona pounding something in the mortar — a rhythmic
thump-thump
— followed by the scraping of a metal spoon against stone, before the process was repeated. His holiday stretched before him with nothing to do and a gloom settled over him like a heavy cape.

The school year, which began in January, was divided into three semesters, separated from one another by month-long holidays in April, August, and December. Of all the holidays, August was the dullest. In April, the hottest month of the year, Amrith and the Manuel-Pillais, like almost everyone else in their social circle, escaped to the chalets and cottages of the cool hill country. In December, there was the excitement of Christmas, with its endless rounds of dinners and social visits. In August, however, there were no such distractions. This vacation was going to be particularly tedious because, due to his and the girls’ schools being used as exam centers, their holiday would stretch to six weeks.

Amrith sighed. Already, more than half of 1980 was over and, despite his hopes that this first year of the new decade would bring exciting changes to his life, there had been none. Things went on in their boring way. At fourteen, it often seemed to him that his life was already set, with nothing much to look forward to.

Once he had dawdled over his breakfast, Amrith went to stand at the gate, peering down the deserted road, as if he expected something to materialize beyond the shimmering tar. A group of neighborhood boys came out of a house, on their way to a field nearby. They were carrying cricket bats, wickets, fielding gloves, and a ball. Their voices were raised in gruff competition and two of them were scuffling. Amrith hurried back inside, not wanting them to see him.

In the courtyard, Eva, Zsa Zsa, and Magda had gathered around the jak tree, their snouts twitching upwards as they
listened to a squirrel scampering through the branches. Recently, a squirrel had missed its footing and fallen. Eva had captured it in her jaws, but Zsa Zsa and Magda had fought her for it, tearing bits of the live squirrel from her mouth. They saw Amrith and came rushing over, their tails manic metronomes. He waved them off.
“Shoo
, get away, you disgusting old things.” They crept back to the tree, hurt.

“Amrith?”

The door to the master bedroom was ajar. Uncle Lucky was knotting his tie in front of the full-length mirror on the almirah door. Without turning around, he crooked his finger at Amrith, who went and stood by the almirah.

Uncle Lucky was tall and lean and very dark-skinned. He had angular features that were set in a customarily severe expression — an effect heightened by the fact that his heavy-lidded eyes were magnified by his square, black, plastic-framed glasses. All his family and staff, however, were quite aware of the person behind this facade. Uncle Lucky, though he was always accusing his wife of being gullible to any hard-luck story, was far easier to touch up for money and favors than Aunty Bundle.

“Amrith,” Uncle Lucky said, frowning down at him, “isn’t there any boy from your drama society you’d like to have come and spend the day?”

Amrith felt the heat rising in his neck. There wasn’t. Though he was respected for his acting talent, at the same time, none of the boys had ever made overtures of friendship towards him.

Uncle Lucky cocked his foot on a cane side chair and began to retie his shoelaces. “This won’t do, Amrith.” He lowered his foot with a snap and stood, legs apart. “The other day I was at the Inter-Continental Hotel, waiting to meet a client, when I got chatting with this foreigner from an American organization that is setting up skills-training centers in poor areas. I asked him, ‘Sir, what do you think is the most important skill a young man should have for his future life?’ Do you know what he answered? ‘Typing.’ Typing! Evidently, in ten years, computers will be running everything. Not knowing how to type will be like not knowing how to add. Can you imagine? And people here think typing is infra dig, just for clerks and steno-girls. So,” Uncle Lucky picked up a stack of files, “this holiday, I want you to come every morning and study typing at my office.”

It was not a request, and Amrith felt relieved.

Uncle Lucky held up his hand. “Five minutes. Run and put on something nice. I don’t want you coming like a beggar. No Bata slippers, please.”

When he came out to the car, Uncle Lucky was already seated in the back. His driver, Soma, smiled companionably as Amrith got into the front seat beside him.

Uncle Lucky’s aquarium was in the town of Negambo because it was close to the airport and also by the sea. Amrith and the girls had been there many times. The fish tanks were housed on four open corridors that formed a rectangle around a courtyard. This allowed for a maximum amount of sunlight, and the circulation of air.

Uncle Lucky’s office, however, was in Colombo’s Fort, on historic Chatham Street, with its colonial buildings from the last century — whitewashed facades with pillars and arches and colonnaded arcades.

When they went shopping in Fort, Aunty Bundle often brought them by the office. Uncle Lucky would take them to Pagoda for pastries or, if times were particularly good for him, to the Grand Oriental Hotel, for lunch in the Rainbow Room overlooking the harbor.

Once Soma had dropped them and gone to park, Amrith looked up and down Chatham Street. Things were very much the same — still the crush of pedestrians jostling by, the street hawkers selling everything from mothballs and combs to cheap Chinese leather goods and windup toys; the cacophony of horns and cars backfiring, the hot oily smell of diesel fumes.

The broad stairs, which led up to Uncle Lucky’s office on the second floor, were in need of polishing, the intricate Moorish tiling of the foyer cracked and chipped. After the street, there was a stately silence, a coolness. Their footsteps echoed as they went up the broad stairs.

A panel fronted the landing of the second floor. Its bottom half was golden brown wood; the top half, frosted glass. A door in the panel led to Uncle Lucky’s office. A gold plate on the door carried the inscription,
Ceylon Aquariums
, in large curving letters, and below it the name of the proprietor,
Lukshman Manuel-Pillai
.

They entered into the lively sound of typewriters and chatter, the clinking of teacups against saucers. Uncle Lucky’s presence did not bring silence, rather it was as if someone had turned down the volume on a radio. As Amrith followed Uncle Lucky towards his cubicle — the only one in the office — he looked around, nodding and smiling shyly to the familiar faces.

There were four workers in all. The steno-girls, Mangalika and Susanthika, wore flowered frocks and had waist-length hair, which they wore in a plait. Mr. Balasunderam, the accountant, was rapidly losing his hair, but had chosen not to go gracefully into baldness. He grew out the sides and pasted the graying strands across his bald head. Amrith and the girls were fond of him — when they were younger, he always had Delta Toffees for them — but it made them giggle to watch those strands gradually slip off the top of his head and plop down onto his shoulders.

Miss Rani was the office manager. She wore bright nylon saris that rustled like plastic sheeting when she moved about. Her hair was parted in the center and tied in a bun at the back. Being deeply devout, she always had a vermilion stain at the front of her parting and a dusting of white ash on her forehead, from having gone to the temple in the morning. Miss Rani carried a handkerchief tucked into the strap of her wristwatch, which she used to delicately wipe the sweat off her upper lip and temples. There was a burnt smell to her of synthetic fabric that had been
ironed at a too-high temperature. She was from the Tamil capital of Jaffna, in the north of Sri Lanka.

Uncle Lucky’s relationship with Miss Rani was different from that with any of his other workers. He had a certain reverence towards her, yet, at the same time, a brotherly interest in her welfare. He paid for any business courses she wanted to take and was always terribly proud of her achievements. If he needed advice, he talked to Miss Rani.

Once Uncle Lucky was seated in his office, he called on Miss Rani to take over Amrith. She installed him at an old typewriter in the corner, put a book of typing exercises in front of him, and showed him how to keep his hands on the keys, his wrists curved upwards. As Miss Rani bent over him to demonstrate the first exercise —
ff jj ff jj dd kk dd kk ss ll ss ll aa;; aa;;
— he looked at her and wondered, as he often had, about the nature of her relationship with Uncle Lucky. Amrith was sure she was not his mistress because Uncle Lucky adored his wife and considered men who had mistresses to be cads. Also, Aunty Bundle heartily approved of his generosity towards Miss Rani. (And besides, Amrith could not imagine Miss Rani, with the ash on her forehead, being anyone’s mistress.) It was Uncle Lucky’s peculiar reverence for her, as if Miss Rani was a treasure that he had discovered by accident and looked after with great care, that puzzled Amrith.

Miss Rani came by occasionally to offer words of encouragement and to correct his errors. The precision and effort it took to gain command over his fingers was so absorbing that Amrith was surprised when there was a
stirring amongst the staff, the clang of tiffin carriers being opened up, the smell of rice and curry in the air. He had really enjoyed his time in this cool high-ceilinged office with its hum of activity; really enjoyed the challenge of mastering the typing exercises.

When they were standing on Chatham Street, waiting for Soma to bring the car around, Amrith glanced at Uncle Lucky and felt a great love for this man, who had always looked out for his interests.

During that terrible time of his mother’s funeral, Uncle Lucky had stood behind him like a rock, while Aunty Bundle, in her grief and guilt, had fallen to pieces. It was Uncle Lucky who had told him how his parents had died — the awful and mysterious circumstances surrounding their death. But, before Uncle Lucky had done so, he had put his hands on Amrith’s shoulders, looked him keenly in the eyes, and said, “I want to make you a promise, son. You will never, ever, be a stranger in my house.”

4
The Barrier of the Past

A
mrith’s black mood returned with greater ferocity that afternoon, from having been held in abeyance for a few hours at Uncle Lucky’s office.

Storm clouds had been gathering all through lunch and, finally, just when the family began their afternoon rest, there was a crash of thunder, a burst of lightning, and the rain poured down from the skies without any preliminary drizzle (as it often did during a monsoon). Amrith lay on his bed, his hands cupping the back of his neck, his room darkened by the torrent outside. He felt that familiar inner blackness come in and sweep him out, like a current. Once again, he was helpless against its power — like being held underwater in the salty murkiness of a churned-up sea.

These black moods were quite recent and they frightened him. They had started about a year ago, around the time he turned thirteen. With his changing body, it seemed
that a change had occurred within. When he thought of himself before he was thirteen, it was as a dashing-about child, with no thoughts distinct from the dictates and actions of his body. As he passed into his teenage years, his mind seemed to separate more and more from his body, causing him to see himself from a distance. And this detachment, paradoxically, had brought a great flooding of emotions. In the past, his sense of sadness over the loss of his mother had been confined, for the most part, to her death anniversary and, perhaps, a little at Christmas. But now he felt dejected quite often. Her absence made him aware that he had no real family. His relatives on both his father’s and mother’s sides wanted nothing to do with him. His parents had married against the wishes of their families and they had eloped to do so. The child of such a marriage was often rejected by his relatives.

Amrith sat up in bed and drew his legs to his chest. As he rested his chin on his knees, a memory arose of a visit two women had paid Aunty Bundle a few months ago.

They were old school friends. One of them lived in Colombo and kept in touch with Aunty Bundle occasionally. The other had just come back from Australia to settle in Sri Lanka. She had been living abroad for the past ten years with her daughters.

Amrith had immediately disliked the woman from Australia and he could tell that Aunty Bundle was less than delighted to see her again. She was a hawkish-looking woman, with a beak of a nose and closely set eyes. Amrith
was the only other family member home and, since he and the girls were expected to greet visitors, he had gone out to the courtyard where the women were seated with Aunty Bundle.

BOOK: Swimming in the Monsoon Sea
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