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If I Tell You the Truth

Page 5

by Jasmin Kaur


  I didn’t dare to speak.

  “I know you told Chachi. She told me everything. And I hope she doesn’t say anything to your chacha.”

  My ribs pressed into my emptying lungs, my last molecule of faith in Chachi disappearing.

  “You’re nineteen now,” Mom continued. “I suppose that means you can make your own choice. But you need to understand something very clearly. Maybe it was my fault for not being clear before. After everything your father and I have done, after every opportunity we’ve afforded you—if you do this, you will have no place in our home. You won’t humiliate me with lies and call yourself my daughter.”

  I turned onto my side and waited for deep slumber to draw her to another world.

  dear mom,

  I’m writing this because I figure you all should know where I went. I don’t know how much you want to know. I don’t know how much you care. I don’t care whether you’ll ever believe me. But I’m gone with my friend and I suppose this tells you the decision that I’ve made. Do what you need to do to save face. Tell everyone I went back to Punjab. Tell them I went to a different school. Just know that everything will be a lot easier for both of us if you don’t come after me. I’m sorry that I couldn’t be the daughter you wanted me to be.

  Kiran

  this isn’t a poem.

  instead it’s an obituary

  for the girl i used to be

  the girl who belonged to

  everyone but herself

  the girl who swallowed

  her heart and bit her tongue

  the girl who would have

  never dared to run.

  the vaginal exam

  when was the last time you had a pap smear?

  the doctor asked with kind eyes

  i don’t—i don’t know what that is

  i replied, cheeks reddening

  a pap smear is an examination of your cervix

  to check for any abnormalities?

  she ended her sentence like a question

  you’re going to go . . . inside?

  i asked

  she nodded and i nodded

  but my lungs were coiled tight

  she touched me with cold metal

  between my legs

  and i pulled away

  muscles seizing, heart pounding

  she stopped

  looked up at me

  breathed long and slow

  asked

  kiran, are you okay with this?

  are you uncomfortable with

  your vagina being touched?

  are you feeling safe?

  would you like to just sit awhile

  and breathe?

  three months

  i’d been trying not to count all the missing pieces

  but i’d be lying if i said i didn’t look at my phone

  hoping for a call (just one)

  i knew this silence

  was only making my heart heavier

  so i gathered what i was grateful for

  and held them close

  joti was one

  her mom was another

  and the thought of this baby

  was all the rest

  six months

  according to a book joti found in the library

  babies begin to dream at twenty-six weeks

  and i wondered what could cross her mind

  before she had encountered this world

  i passed all my science exams

  learned way too much about chemistry

  and each cell that formed her body and mine

  but i couldn’t yet explain this cocktail

  of everything i felt:

  two teaspoons of hope

  three tablespoons of fear

  six dashes of sadness

  and a monsoon of

  alone

  whatever this was

  i hoped she was the antidote.

  nine months

  dear daughter,

  it’s strange talking to a being who you haven’t yet met.

  how odd it is to love a person you’ve only felt.

  but i’ve known you far longer than i’ve known myself

  and the thought of a lifetime with you is a journey

  i hope i’m worthy of.

  my heart already swells for all the days when you’ll soar

  and breaks for all the days when you’ll sink.

  but i will be there, my love.

  it will be my greatest honor to be there.

  ਸਹਾਰਾ / sahaara (n)

  a pillar, a refuge, a shelter, a source of support.

  when sahaara came

  when they placed her delicate, honey-warm body against me

  skin still blue and caked with blood and bits from my womb

  all the pain of the last ten or twelve or god knows how many

  hours evaporated melted into thin air

  all the heartbreak of every empty chair in this hospital room

  fluttered away like my chest was no longer a closed cage

  all the worry about tomorrow halted

  as if love was an antidote for time

  and this moment could stop the hands of a clock

  in that hospital room, on that sun-drenched day

  nothing existed in the world but this beautiful being

  crying and yawning and resting on my skin

  and nothing was as musical as her soft heartbeat

  synced to the beat of mine

  that sounded so much like the word home.

  the social worker

  something in my gut told me

  to say nothing to the social worker

  that would give away my fear

  curly red hair

  and ice-blue eyes

  that seemed to see right through me

  she asked us where the car seat was

  said sahaara couldn’t leave the hospital without it

  said i seemed quite young

  asked about resources and support

  and whether i needed any help

  and a crackling mountain of panic

  melted to water

  when joti entered the room out of breath

  with the car seat we’d forgotten in the car

  i promised that i had

  all the help i needed.

  on the perfect mom

  according to a magazine at the grocery store

  every new mom needed organic baby diapers

  needed a self-rocking swing

  needed a lactation massager

  needed a traveling high chair

  & no one seemed to know that i just wanted

  to rock her to sleep once without worrying

  that i was doing everything wrong.

  our paths diverged

  Joti reached for her fourth cup of coffee. I would’ve grabbed another if I wasn’t breastfeeding. We sat on the living room carpet in an elaborate nest of textbooks and cue cards and fluorescent highlighters and color-coded notes. Joti’s exhaustion-riddled eyes flitted across diagrams of oligomeric proteins and actin filaments and microtubules. We were supposed to be studying for the bio-chem exam, but Sahaara needed a feeding.

  “Actin filaments are important to cells because they . . .” Joti read from a green cue card and then glanced up at me.

  “They . . . they maintain the integrity of the—ouch! Sorry. I don’t think Sahaara’s latched on properly. Shit, my nipples feel like they’re gonna fall off.” I placed a pinky between my nipple and Sahaara’s gums to break her latch. My newborn erupted in shrieks and I quickly placed her back on my breast. There was quiet once more.

  Joti placed the cue cards on the carpet. “Why don’t you take a break, Kiran? Let’s try again when she’s asleep.”

  I shook my head. “No point. She’s gonna start crying as soon as I put her down.”

  Joti’s mom was sitting on the plastic-protected sofa, sipping cha and observing our futile attempt at exam prep. “Kiran, what’s happening with
your other courses?” she asked.

  My back stiffened with worry. I’d passed my first semester with a near-perfect GPA. This semester, I was hanging on by threads. “Two of my professors are letting me finish the semester from home, by correspondence. And one said I can’t get credit for the classes I miss but I can come for the final exam. And, yeah, you already know about bio-chem. . . .” If it weren’t for Aunty Jee offering to babysit Sahaara while I took the bio-chem exam, I’d fail the course.

  “Hmm—” The landline rang and Aunty Jee leaned over to get the phone. “Kidhaan, Deepi? How was your day?” Aunty Jee stood up and gave Joti an oddly pleading look. I caught a grimace on Joti’s face before she busied herself with chemistry notes. Aunty Jee disappeared into her bedroom but her muffled voice carried through the paper-thin walls.

  “What’s going on?” I asked, confused by Joti’s sudden discomfort. “Did I miss something?”

  “Nope, nothing at all,” she said, swiftly returning to the subject of school. “Your chem class is on Monday afternoons, right?”

  “Yeah. Same time as your bio class.”

  “And if you don’t pass?”

  “Then . . . I’m officially in violation of my student visa rules. If I’m not a full-time student, I could lose the visa. I need to be in at least four classes a semester.”

  This was a brick to my chest. What would happen if I violated the visa rules? Would the university report me to immigration? Would I randomly receive a knock on the front door while I was breastfeeding Sahaara? Could they send me back to Punjab and keep Sahaara here?

  To violate the rules was to enter a black hole. I had no clue what I’d encounter.

  “I could find a babysitter.”

  “But money’s pretty low, right?”

  Another brick. “It is,” I mumbled. “Wish I could take a semester off. Just one.”

  “I know we can get through this,” Joti said, “but we’ll need to be realistic. It’s gonna be an uphill battle from here.”

  “Graveyard shifts.”

  “Huh?”

  “By the summer, maybe—hopefully—Sahaara will sleep through the night. And then I can find overnight work. And then maybe I can save up enough for another year of school?” I knew how ridiculous I sounded. International student fees were horrific, and we weren’t allowed to work more than twenty hours a week.

  “Joti.” Aunty Jee emerged from her bedroom. “Your sister wants to talk to you.”

  “Mom . . . I’m not. You already know this.”

  “Joti. Please.” She couldn’t say no to the desperate plea in her mom’s voice and got up to grab the phone.

  “Hi—yup—I’m good—yup—that’s good—okay—see ya.” She passed the phone back to Aunty Jee as quick as she’d picked it up and returned to her sea of notes. Aunty Jee shook her head and said her goodbyes to Deepi.

  “What’s going on?” I asked. “Are you and Deepi not talking?” Joti’s sister, Deepi, had visited over winter break and she’d been nothing but sweet. Even though we’d never met before, she had surprised me with a set of bibs and bottles for Sahaara. I couldn’t imagine why Joti would be upset with her.

  “It’s nothing.”

  Nervousness deepened the lines on Aunty Jee’s forehead. “Joti, this has gone on for long enough. You’re increasing my blood pressure with all this drama. We need to talk about it.” She crossed her arms, pulling her purple sweater closer to her body.

  “That’s a little dramatic, Mom,” Joti mumbled, worry betraying her soft brown eyes.

  “Kiran, Joti is upset with Deepi because—”

  “—because she was being an asshole about you staying with us.”

  The silence was awkwardly punctuated by kirtan pouring out of Aunty Jee’s radio. My throat went dry. “Oh,” I eventually mumbled.

  Aunty Jee slowly sat down on the sofa, eyes pleading and apologetic. “Deepi and I had a long talk about all this silly business. I think she understands now.”

  “Sure she does,” Joti said under her breath.

  “Joti, gall sunh meri! Oh nu samaj aa gayee hun,” Aunty Jee insisted. “You two need to talk this out. You both owe each other apologies.”

  “I owe her an apology? After what she said?” Joti fumed, a cue card crumpling in her fist. “Mom, she owes Kiran an apology, if anything.”

  “What did Deepi say?” I slowly asked, terrified of the answer.

  Joti glanced from me to her mom. “She was worried about what taking you in would mean for us—”

  “Joti.” I sighed.

  “—because of your family situation and your student visa and it was fucked up for her to even—”

  “Joti . . .”

  “—say any of that because it wasn’t her call to make in the first place. It was Mom’s.”

  “Joti, I don’t—I don’t blame her,” I stammered. “She’s right. You guys shouldn’t have to deal with me. It’s not your responsibility and I don’t want to be a burden. I’ll figure out—”

  “Kiran, chup kar,” Aunty Jee said. “I want you to listen to me very clearly, puth. Tu sunhdi aa mainu?”

  “Hanji,” I whispered.

  “Yes, Deepi was nervous at the beginning. She didn’t know how your family would react. She wanted me to think about everything before I made a decision.” She sat down on the carpet with me, easing herself onto her knees despite her achy hip, resting a gentle hand on my shoulder. “Kiran, I’ve always trusted my intuition. It’s never failed me. This life has taught me that sometimes, the most beautiful humans find themselves in painful situations. That doesn’t mean they’re not worth fighting for. Do you understand?”

  I placed Sahaara down on an ivory wool blanket as an all too familiar feeling of guilt overtook me.

  A hand I knew better than most others reached toward mine. “We’ve got your back, okay?” said Joti.

  and so i stayed there

  as the years spread and stretched and flew

  unconvinced that i wasn’t a burden

  but knowing there were hours in the day

  when joti and aunty jee were at work

  and sahaara was fast asleep

  when the monsters tucked away

  at the back of my mind

  would find me, all alone

  how they wanted me

  i knew that i needed

  to lean on these two women

  born from the selfless earth of my motherland

  with hearts larger than i deserved

  so that the darkness wouldn’t

  swallow me.

  kiran

  january 2005–september 2005

  a very long day

  The years passed by both far too quickly and in slow motion. Beneath a flurry of bills and toddler tantrums and overtime shifts, single motherhood had filled me with a cloudy, seemingly perpetual fatigue.

  I wiped a fresh snowflake from a picture of me and Sahaara. She was climbing up my lap, her dimples the size of dimes, her smile the size of my heart. I’d pick her up from daycare after this meeting but every separation pinched at my chest, no matter how long or short. From her bubbling vocabulary to the way she’d remove her grandmother’s reading glasses and kiss her on the forehead, I found myself in humble awe of this small, wise-hearted being.

  I tucked the Polaroid into my wallet and searched for the sticky note Joti had scribbled on:

  #320 1649 Simon Rd. Gateway Plaza. Foster Immigration Consultancy.

  Goose bumps rose beneath my warm winter coat. Maybe one of our problems was about to be solved.

  Today, Sahaara’s babysitter had given me her final warning: if I was late with another payment, we’d have to find a new daycare. I couldn’t plead my way out of this one. All I could do was hope that Mrs. Ikuko would pay me on time. Ever since my work visa expired, she made it seem like this was too much to ask for. Without this week’s pay, I wouldn’t be able to cover rent, either. That would leave me three months behind and Aunty Jee was patient, but she was also s
truggling.

  I needed to fix my immigration papers. It was the only way I could work without fearing deadly consequences.

  I crossed a street that was more pothole than cement and Gateway Plaza loomed before me in all its beige, frost-crusted glory. From kapra stores to desi banquet halls to Punjabi sweet shops, the plaza carried me home to Chandigarh in bittersweet waves of nostalgia.

  I’d grab mithiyaee later, but right now, I was on a mission. As I made my way up to suite #320, both hope and nervousness blanketed me. If things went well today, everything would be different. Joti had found Foster Immigration online, one of the only immigration firms that offered free, extensive consultations. This meant I would finally get some proper advice about staying in Canada.

  The office door opened with a creak and I was greeted by an empty front desk. I peeked past the counter to find a long, narrow hallway. The door at the end was slightly ajar.

  A fluorescent bulb buzzed and flickered above. “Excuse me?” I called. I waited for a few minutes, unsure whether to stay or leave.

  “Hi, hello!” a sunburned, middle-aged white man finally emerged from behind the door. “So sorry to keep you waiting. Secretary went home sick today. Bit of a pain.” He reached out a clammy hand and I shook it. “And you must be . . .”

  “Kiran Kaur.” I barely smiled, adjusting the heavy tote bag on my shoulder. “My friend Joti booked an appointment to discuss my student visa?”

 

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