Choice by Neel Mukherjee
Author:Neel Mukherjee
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2024-05-15T00:00:00+00:00
III
Data, n., pl. of datum, that which is given.
The truth is always concrete.
â V.I. Lenin (ish)
I
She is to arrive in a tempo on an early afternoon in spring, when the weather has already turned too hot, but it is still a good while from the sowing of aus paddy. Mira and Sahadeb have been sitting since dawn in a patch of shade that keeps moving with the sun â they know she is going to come in a tempo today, and they are more curious about the tempo because they have never seen a motor car in their short lives. There are no roads in Nonapani. There are no roads anywhere near Nonapani, youâd have to go nearly twenty miles east, near the border village of Dhopabari, to see a tar-Âand-Âcrushed-Âstone-Âchips road. How the tempo is going to come to the childrenâs hut is a big question, but it doesnât occur to them. It evidently doesnât cross their mother Sabitaâs mind either, for she comes out of the hut frequently and, under the guise of chivvying the children, lingers outside on each occasion and looks into the distance, the way she does when she is expecting the childrenâs father to return. In a way, she is looking for him, for he too is expected to arrive in the tempo. Thatâs what he had said when he had left yesterday: âWe will return riding in a motor car, a big one, maybe a tempo, or even lorry, because a motor car would be too small.â He knows all these things because he works in cities and towns. He is gone for months and months, then comes back for a few days, occasionally for a few weeks, when he is in between jobs, then ups and leaves again. The children call him Baba, of course, and are happy when he arrives, largely because of the presents he brings â lawjens wrapped in shiny cellophane or plastic; little painted tin boxes that once must have held something, they do not know what; shirts and short pants for Sahadeb, frocks for Mira, clothes for both children too loose and big on them (âYouâll grow into them,â he would say, âbetter to have something ready for the future than clothes you no longer fit into and will have to discard in a few months; what a waste of moneyâ); plastic balls, and plastic dolls with pale pink-Âorange skin and red-Âpainted lips; once even a wind-Âup tin rooster that stopped working after one day. These things brought excitement and novelty to the childrenâs unvarying days, but they were formal and aloof with their father, shy, as they would be with a distant relative or a stranger. Their mother would have to say to them sometimes, âGo, sit with your babaâ, or âGo talk to Baba, heâs here for only a few days, you wonât see him for a long time after he leaves.â Mira and Sahadeb would try to get out of these directives, but when they couldnât, a sense of stilted dutifulness marked their actions, not easy affection.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
In Control (The City Series) by Crystal Serowka(36143)
The Wolf Sea (The Oathsworn Series, Book 2) by Low Robert(35134)
We Ride Upon Sticks by Quan Barry(34430)
Crowbone (The Oathsworn Series, Book 5) by Low Robert(33523)
The Book of Dreams (Saxon Series) by Severin Tim(33305)
The Daughters of Foxcote Manor by Eve Chase(23517)
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh(21517)
Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman(20371)
Shot Through The Heart (Supernature Book 1) by Edwin James(18851)
The Secret History by Donna Tartt(18840)
The Girl from the Opera House by Nancy Carson(15721)
All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda(15561)
American King (New Camelot #3) by Sierra Simone(15452)
Pimp by Iceberg Slim(14378)
Sad Girls by Lang Leav(14311)
The Betrayed by Graham Heather(12746)
The Betrayed by David Hosp(12651)
4 3 2 1: A Novel by Paul Auster(12281)
Still Me by Jojo Moyes(11167)