homework.
Meenaâs schoolwork, Sarala had noticed, was one of the few things that could tear Abhijat away from his study in the evenings. As she loaded the dishwasher, she watched with pride the patient way he explained the things Meena struggled with, the way he listened carefully to each of her questions, even as, she knew, he was already beginning to craft his response. These were the moments in which Sarala loved Abhijat best, in which she best knew that he loved both her and Meena.
Rose encouraged Lilyâs intellect, enrolling her in summer enrichment courses in art, music, science, and math. By ten, Lily had a laypersonâs grasp of Heidegger, an unflagging interest in Freudian psychoanalysis, and had begun compiling a list of her own criticisms of Frederick Jackson Turnerâs frontier thesis.
On weekends, Lily divided her time between the public library and the YMCA, where she could be found among the aging patrons, swishing along on the rowing machine.
On her bedroom mirror, Lily kept a photograph of her father, blue turban wound round his head, skin darkened and worn by the sun, beard closely cropped, indicating the beginning rather than the end of an expedition (which was itself distinguished by the presence of a long, tangled, and unkempt beard her mother insisted he trim immediately down to a refined Van Dyke). The photo had been taken in the Sahara, where he had joined a salt caravan and, in native dress, led his camel by a rope through the desert. Lily loved to hear again and again the story of the light-handed pickpocket Randolph had met there, who had offered to help Randolph negotiate a suitable bride price for the lady of his choice. âOh, Iâve already got a lovely bride, thank you,â he had replied, pulling out the photo of Rose and Lily he kept on him always, brandishing it with pride.
Randolph came home during the holidaysâChristmas, Lilyâs birthday, and Roseâsâbut these were short trips, temporary. The house was a house of womenâLily and her mother, their nights spent together, Rose reading to Lily from the letters Randolph sent from his expeditionsâNorth Africa, the Greek Isles, New Guinea.
Rose kept one room on the first floor of the house, just off the foyer, as a study for Randolph, a dark-paneled room with a sidebar on which sat a bottle of whiskey and a polished silver seltzer dispenser. Here, she kept his leather-bound expedition journals arranged chronologically on the bookshelves along the wall. Above the bookshelves hung framed photographs of Randolph and Rose on safari, of their trusted porter on a trip to Nepal, and an impressive collection of rare maps. An imposing mahogany desk, which Rose kept polished to a high gloss, sat in the center of the room, and facing the desk, two leather wing chairs. The whole setup suggested an office that, in addition to being regularly occupied (which it was not), also hosted regular visitors (which it did not), who might occupy the wing chairs, admire the photos, and flip through the expedition journals. In fact, with the exception of Lily, who liked to curl up in one of the deep leather armchairs, a framed photo of a pygmy nuthatch hanging over her head as she applied herself conscientiously to her schoolwork, the room was almost always empty.
Sarala and Abhijat had always attended Meenaâs parent-teacher nights together, Abhijat asking most of the questions about Meenaâs performance and making notes on the small pad of paper he kept in the breast pocket of his jacket. This year, however, heâd been scheduled to present at a conference, so Sarala had promised to take detailed notes and report back on all pertinent information when Abhijat returned.
She dropped Meena off in the schoolâs library, where Meena made a beeline for the low shelf of books near the librarianâs desk, and Sarala made her way down the wide hall toward Meenaâs classroom: Mrs. Hamilton, Grade 3,
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