RecoverySys, had his personal assistant, Mrs. Melwani, call Anjali on the Banerjis' land line. Would Miss Bose care to have Mrs. Melwani initiate the setting up of 'a chat' with Mr.D. K.Jagtiani, the deputy in charge of human resources (a younger brother of Mr. K. K., she assumed, in a Sindhi-owned business, if family names are any indication), to take place after his return from his business trip to California and Michigan? If so, Mrs. Melwani would request Mr.D. K. Jagtiani's personal assistant, Miss Lalwani, to get in touch directly with Miss Bose to squeeze her into his calendar.
In the Bose family hierarchy of Indian groups to avoid all dealings with, Sindhis usually ranked near the top.
Anjali summoned all of her 'phone poise.' 'Certainly, if I am still available then,' she said. 'And I'd prefer Miss Lalwani to call me on my cell phone. Let me give you that number.'
Mrs. Melwani stopped her. 'Not to worry; we have it on file. Telephone numbers, current address, resume.'
Resume? She had no job experience. Mr. GG must have taken liberties with truth when he'd pitched her to his friend. If Miss Lalwani called to set up the meeting with her boss, she would instruct her to spell her first name as Anjolie. A day could start with guilt and grief but end in hope. Let Citibank Srinivasan aim for nirvana; she was happy to be mired in maya.
PARVATI OFFERED TO coach Anjali for the upcoming interview. If the delinquent debtors were like Thelma Whitehead, her fictitious caller from Arkansas, they would probably resent being dunned by an agent with a detectable Indian accent. She sounded excited. 'Thanks for alerting CCI to this brand-new outlet. Debt recovery, how exciting.' Anjali would be her guinea pig for a training manual for pay-up-or-else phone specialists. For RecoverySys, Anjali's voice would have to project authority. Start with compassionate authority, shift to credit-score damage, then to legal intimidation. Parvati had met K. K. Jagtiani at a couple of fund-raisers, she added, but not his son or cousin or brother, D. K. Jagtiani. At the time of their meeting, Mr. K. K. Jagtiani had been exploring an intercontinental cremation-and-ash-scattering service for overseas Indians.
'I guess that Hindu NRI corpse-disposal scheme didn't get off the ground,' Auro laughed. He too volunteered to help Anjali get interview-ready. 'If you're going to be dealing with Sindhis, how about we watch some episodes of
After dinner the next night, he sat Anjali and Parvati down on either side of him on the widest sofa in the living room and started playing the first of three seasons of
'Who needs the mafia,' Auro joked, 'when you've got an Indian extended family?'
'Is that a dig at the Bhattacharjees?' Parvati demanded. 'Let me tell you, Anjali, Tony's mother reminds me of Auro's mother.'
'That's totally out of bounds!' Auro fumed.
'Okay, okay, mother-in-law jokes are funny only on TV.'
Anjali went to bed at dawn and dreamed of ducks bobbing in the swimming pool. It didn't matter that Anjali didn't know how to swim because in her dream she was Meadow Soprano.
RABI CUT SHORT his scouting trip for his next photo assignment by three days. 'Orders from Baba, Parvati Auntie,' he announced. 'Ma, Baba, and Kallie will be here in two weeks, and I'm supposed to line up properties for Baba to view.'
Auro faked exasperation. 'Oh, oh, you know what that means, Anjali, don't you? Less time for us. Much less time for Carmela and Tony. Once the two sisters start their adda, there's no stopping. I'll need a vacation from them!'
Adda. Bangla talk-talk over endless tea. Or, in Dollar Colony, over white wine.
The comfort zone of make-believe family in the Banerjis' home collapsed suddenly. She wasn't Parvati's and Auro's daughter; she wasn't even their houseguest; she was their rescue project, like a street dog. Parvati's excitement swirled around her. 'Rabi, do you think I should put your mother and the baby in Bhupesh's suite?' 'Auro, remember to lay in a lot of beer. Bish likes his Kingfisher, but not warm the way we drink it.' 'I'll get the mali's wife to come in once a day and take care of the extra laundry.' 'Oh, I can't wait to have a baby in the house. It's a first for your graying auntie!'
Anjali didn't want to share Parvati and Auro. She begrudged Tara and her baby girl the sweet simplicity of Parvati's love for them. Parvati's sister-love had not been dipped in bile. Parvati hadn't killed her father nor predeceased him. Bitterness soured into dread. The brief, impossible friendship she had forged with Rabi in Gauripur was at stake. Monet, moray, light and angle. Restore mountain, please. But there were only a half-dozen pull-down props, and the Banerjis' living room was not among them. She would have to move on, again.
PARVATI SETTLED INTO a deck chair under a jasmine-covered pergola and waved to Anjali to join her. 'Come, sit by me,' she insisted when Anjali hesitated. 'I need a break from this stuff.' She pointed to the screen of her laptop. 'Not quite Napa, but Doddaballapur will get there. Farmland to vineyard, thanks to Bish, who loves wine and wine lovers like his wife and sister-in-law.' She put her glass of chardonnay on a stack of real estate brochures by her feet.
Anjali squatted on the grass, envying Parvati, envying most of all her trust in strangers. Even when a well- meaning stranger could open the gates to monsters. Money made for that kind of self-confidence. Money was the safety net of women like Parvati and Rabi's mother. Money made possible ayurvedic spa-pampered skin and radiant hair. They had never been homeless, never starved, they'd never stolen, never had to seduce a potential benefactor.
She had left Gauripur believing in the world of Peter Champion. Poverty was virtuous. Knowledge was protection enough. Love, at long last, would come her way. Nothing would change, year after year, except the names of students. And look at what Bangalore had done to her in just a few months. She had dared to reach above her station, she'd reached for happiness, and all she'd done was bring a shelf of bricks down on her head.
'It's selfish of me, but I'm glad Tara will be settling here. She's been through too much. Not like you, of course, but traumatizing nonetheless. Has Rabi told you about their house fire three years ago? A firebombing, not careless cooking. We still don't know why. The police think international gangs, because Bish is so important. He was badly burned; his feet sort of melted away. He used to have a wicked serve in his Saint Xavier's days in Kolkata; now he walks supported by canes. Tara's afraid of coming back, but I keep telling her that living in Palm Meadows is more or less the same as living in Atherton before she divorced Bish. Oh, you didn't know? She's the only one of us three sisters who did what Daddy wanted, which meant she married the boy Daddy selected, and Bish didn't come from big money, but Daddy said he saw a spark of genius in him-that was Daddy's exact phrase-and she arrived in Palo Alto twenty years old, already the bride of a computer science graduate student and pregnant with Rabi. She divorced him ten years later and lived on her own with Rabi. Well, not exactly on her own, as she'll be the first to admit. She wrote her books. Bish and she got together again and remarried just before Kallie was born. But she's had her years as a single mother and even as a scarlet woman. You know the phrase? Red herrings, scarlet women-they're lost phrases now. She thinks she's lost touch with India in the twenty-plus years she's lived in California. Of course, she visited twice a year while Mummy and Daddy were alive. She reads and clips and Googles all she can, but she says that makes her feel even more an outsider. She says she's tired of our generation of aging Kolkata beauties, and I've told her they bore me too, but your generation of women, Anjali, they're unknowable to me even though I teach them. I sometimes feel that I'm shouting at them across a huge canyon, but they can't hear me, or they're not listening. I can't begin to enter your lives. But I'm curious, not frightened like her.'
'What do you find so mysterious about me?' Anjali blurted out.
Startled, Parvati rubbed a fingertip up and down the cool stem of her wineglass. Condensation left a stain on the glossy brochure. She blotted it with a monogrammed cloth cocktail napkin. 'You know what you can get in Palm Meadows that we couldn't get when we bought in Dollar Colony? Vaastu compliance. Forget feng shui. Hot new builders have created a buzz for ancient Hindu rules and orders. Vaastu compliance for spiritual equilibrium and a temperature-controlled wine cellar for gustatory gratification. I know I'm babbling.' She picked up her glass and pushed the brochure away. 'The short answer is, I don't know, Anjali, I really don't. The best I can come up with is