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If I Tell You the Truth

Page 6

by Jasmin Kaur

“Ah, yes. Right. Right. Well, come take a seat in my office. Lovely name, by the way. Kiran. Is that Indian?” He glanced back as he guided me down the musty hallway.

  “Um, Punjabi.”

  “Ah, Punjabi. Lots of Punjabi clients that I work with. You don’t sound Punjabi, though.”

  “Sorry?”

  “Your accent. I hear the Punjabi, but it comes off a little British. How’d you learn English so well?” His strange comment caught me off guard and I stifled the urge to retort with something just as rude.

  “I went to an English-language school in Chandigarh.”

  “No kidding, eh? No Indian clothes, either, I see? Not a bad thing. It’s important to look the part when you’re trying to become a Canadian, if you know what I mean.” I silently took a seat in a worn leather chair. He sat down behind the desk, clasping his hands together. “So, how can I help you?”

  Anxiety tightened around my parched throat. This was my first time talking to a stranger about my student visa. I’d been painfully apprehensive about divulging any bit of my story to a man I didn’t know, but Joti seemed so certain that he could help. I reminded myself of Sahaara’s innocent eyes, her sweet smile. I had to give this a try for her. “To make a long story short . . . I’m living in Canada on a student visa. I was going to university here, but I didn’t finish my program because I had a daughter while I was still in school. Costs kept piling up and I needed to take on more shifts at work, so I couldn’t finish school—”

  “Odd timing to have a kid, isn’t it? Middle of school and all. But go on.”

  I raised an eyebrow and continued. “No one from the university’s really followed up with me about my missed semesters and I’ve started building a life here and I’m wondering if there’s a way for me to stay—”

  “Oh, there are definitely ways. That’s the good news. The bad news is some routes may take longer than others. . . .”

  Exactly what I’d been afraid of. I held my breath, waiting for him to continue.

  “So, you got yourself in a bit of trouble. Not the end of the world. Your child—is her father a Canadian citizen?”

  “No.” The hairs on the back of my neck rose at his mention. “He’s not in the picture.”

  “Got it. Got it. And you didn’t finish school. That’s not good. Raises flags for the government. Do you still have the student visa?”

  I nodded. “Until August.”

  “You mentioned work. Do you have a work permit?”

  I hesitated before I spoke. “I did. I mean, it expired a while ago . . . it’s been two years, I think.”

  “And have you been working since?”

  “No,” I lied without missing a beat. My instincts told me that it would be unwise to admit I’d been working, even if he was here to help.

  “Uh-huh.” He leaned back in his chair, toying with a yellow stress ball and surveying me intently. His face was slightly tinged red, except for two pale circles around his eyes. He looked as though he’d vacationed somewhere tropical and never removed his sunglasses. “Your daughter was born here. That automatically makes her a Canadian citizen. It also means you have a path to citizenship. This is what I’d call ‘the long route.’ Once your daughter turns eighteen, she becomes eligible to sponsor you as a permanent resident. Of course, she’ll need the right amount of funds in her bank account to show the government she can support you and all the paperwork and so on, but I’d say it’s a fairly reliable route to take.”

  “Eighteen years old?”

  “At least eighteen. Mind you, these things always drag on longer than folks like yourself might initially anticipate.”

  “That’s . . .” A million different scenarios crossed my mind. Most of them involved something going terribly wrong between now and Sahaara’s eighteenth birthday.

  “. . . not exactly ideal, is it?” he finished my sentence.

  “I can’t leave until she’s eighteen and then come back. I—I really need to stay here with my daughter. You don’t understand. I can’t leave Canada.” My shoulders prickled with heat at the thought of returning to Chandigarh.

  He cocked his head and nodded. “How old is your daughter?”

  “Almost three.”

  “Staying here is your immediate goal, then. Not just in fifteen years when the paperwork decides to catch up. I can definitely streamline that process for you.” He eased himself up from his chair and bounced the smiling yellow stress ball between his hands as he paced the room.

  “That would be amazing,” I said, relief flooding my voice. “Things are way more complicated than I ever imagined and I want this sorted out once and for all.”

  He leaned against the front of his desk, just to the right of me. Looking directly forward from my seat, all I could see were his brown pant pockets. His belt. “I can get your paperwork going, but you should be aware that the fees are going to get pricey.”

  The flood of relief met a wall. Of course it was too good to be true. “What would I be looking at? My friend had mentioned that you have low fees. . . .”

  “Well, for a case like this, you could be getting into the thousands. But you seem like a lovely girl. Really lovely. So, I’m going to try to lower all those overhead fees for you. I’ll do my best.” He paused. “But since I’m doing you a favor, I’m going to, you know, need a favor in return.”

  “I’m—I’m sorry?” I stammered, my pulse suddenly and strangely picking up.

  He placed a hand on my knee, winter-cold even through my jeans. He slowly slid it up my leg. “It would be absolutely terrible if, perhaps, someone reported your legal status. I can make all that worry go away, beautiful.”

  For a moment, my body was frozen in place.

  “What do you say, Miss Kaur?” He slid his hand farther up my leg, grazing my inner thigh. A shot of adrenaline punched me hard in the chest. The rage and fear kicked in simultaneously. Something between a scream and a cry escaped my mouth and I stood, the heavy leather chair falling to the floor behind me.

  “Hey, easy—easy, sweetheart—”

  “You—you fucking—” I breathed, backing away and reaching behind me for the door handle. As soon as I found it, I bolted from the office, down the hallway, past the front counter, heart thumping and body moving with all the speed my trembling legs would allow.

  I tore open the plaza doors with a force that could’ve cracked the glass. I ran across the parking lot, across the street, along the sidewalk. I kept running until I reached the bus stop. My heart rattled against my bones and something rose up in my throat. Without thinking, I vomited onto the snow, the ice splattered in my fear. A woman standing at the bus stop pulled her daughter closer and pretended not to see me.

  Why did I go there? Why did I sit there for so long? Why didn’t I run when he got so close? Why can’t I breathe?!

  My breath became shallow, air filling and half emptying my lungs in quick increments. The world around me twisted, trembled. I couldn’t feel my body. The only thing loud and clear was the ringing in my ears.

  Sit down, I told myself. I fumbled with my cell phone and tried to dial Joti’s number. My fingertips would’ve been numb even without the snarling wind. After a few rings, the call went to voice mail. I tried again and again to reach the only person who could help me.

  “Hello? Kiran?”

  I couldn’t get any words past my shallow breathing.

  “Kiran, are you there? Is everything okay?”

  “Hey,” I managed.

  “What’s going on?”

  “Um—” I begged my breath to steady. I needed to tell her what had happened.

  “Hello? Is everything okay?”

  “Joti, I—I went to the immigration consultation.”

  “How’d it go? What’d he say?”

  “He, um, he . . .” Standing there in the frost, I could feel the truth transfiguring on my tongue, writhing away from my will to speak it aloud. It became a volatile creature stretching duct tape over my lips. “He said . . . after S
ahaara turns eighteen, she can sponsor me to live in Canada.”

  “Shit. Shit! That’s gonna take a while but it’s better than nothing. Let’s get him to start the paperwork. . . .” The rest of her words were lost beneath the ringing in my ears. Why couldn’t I tell her? Why was it so much harder to speak the truth than to bury it away?

  how i survived

  i sealed up the nightmares

  barred my mind from my tongue

  slid away from the truth

  grew fangs across my skin

  shielded myself with fear

  trusted no one but myself

  held the world at arm’s length

  vowed to protect my daughter

  by any means necessary.

  august 4, 2005

  i crossed an invisible line in that moment

  when the clock struck midnight

  and it became august fourth

  and my visa expired.

  everything that happened now

  would be on the other side of safety.

  the tragedy of september

  ikuko’s grocery was closing for good

  and i cleared out the last aisle

  gutting my heart with each

  sealed cardboard box

  when day turned to dusk

  mrs. ikuko handed me my final wad of cash

  and said nothing but good luck.

  that night, the woman who had become my mother

  looked me in the eye and said two words

  that had always sounded like a threat:

  trust me.

  aunty jee said she knew someone

  who would hire me at her restaurant

  without worrying about my papers

  who would turn the question mark

  under my chest into a period.

  who would bring a definitive end

  to one of our worries.

  we’ll have to tell gurinder the truth

  about your immigration status

  she’s annoying

  a bit of a know-it-all, really

  but she can be trusted with this

  aunty jee said

  aunty jee promised

  with no other options

  i gave in

  the unpaid bills weighed heavier

  than my caution.

  sahaara

  august 2012–june 2019

  being a kid sucked.

  the grown-ups always thought

  i was too little to notice

  when they weren’t

  being honest.

  grade five

  august was ending and i was so very sad

  grade five was coming and i hoped it wouldn’t be bad

  the summer was filled with swimming pool waves

  rihanna and bieber were my musical faves

  a new kid moved in right behind our house

  the only thing that rhymed with house was mouse

  his name was jeevan randhawa and he was okay

  he had a lotta comic books but i had to say

  i missed my friend manisha

  why’d she have to move away?

  this diary was for me, myself, and i

  maasi could look, but no one else had better try.

  grade six

  i was woven by mom

  who quietly said i love you

  by asking if i’d eaten

  my heart was dyed by joti maasi

  who loved with pride and without a care

  the only adult who knew all my secrets

  i was decorated in grandma’s stories

  and every poem she had memorized

  from bulleh shah to kartar singh sarabha

  all passed down from revolutionary ancestors

  but there were also tears in my cloth

  gaping and frayed and worn

  i’d never seen a picture

  of the people who birthed my mother

  even though she sometimes said i had

  this woman’s eyes and that man’s puffy nose

  my father was an empty space

  a man named prabh

  whose last name i didn’t know

  a man who doesn’t matter

  mom said

  because family are the ones

  who are there when you need them

  grade seven

  you and maasi usually went quiet

  when i stepped into the room

  but this time you asked me to sit down and listen

  undocumented.

  that’s why you

  carried sadness on your shoulders like a cinder block

  couldn’t find a job where you wouldn’t be treated like trash

  saved every penny you earned for our future

  never went to the doctor, even when you ached and shivered

  always said you were too busy to get your driver’s license

  worried so much about me switching schools

  couldn’t cross the border with maasi

  lived in canada without your blood relatives

  i’m sorry. you were too young. i didn’t want you to worry.

  that’s what you said

  when i asked why you never told me

  i didn’t know what to say

  i didn’t know how to help

  i didn’t know what to feel

  but butterflies fluttered in my stomach for days

  and i just wanted them to escape.

  then came my anger

  i told myself that a good daughter

  wouldn’t blame her mother

  for a situation as overwhelming as this

  but instead, frustration lapped and lashed

  at everything i wanted to know

  about why she was undocumented

  the questions were red around the edges

  before i could cool down:

  why did you have to overstay your visa?

  why didn’t you just go back to punjab

  and live away from your family?

  why’d you have to make things

  harder for yourself?

  mom answered none of them

  and barely grimaced

  before she turned away

  as if she couldn’t face me

  i didn’t ask the last ones

  because i knew they were more

  heartbreak and hurt

  than sincere curiosity

  why drag me into this mess?

  why even have me?

  my heart crashed into the rocks

  every time i asked her a question

  that she didn’t want to answer.

  what did my dad do?

  what was he like?

  why didn’t he want me?

  why didn’t he want us?

  mom said

  he was a bad person

  and it doesn’t matter

  and aren’t i enough?

  i nodded and said nothing else

  because she was sad and silent.

  but the questions were eating away at me

  she yelled at me

  for not finishing my homework

  and i just wanted to know

  if he would have held me, instead.

  google search

  sobbing in my room after our fight

  mom walked in and sat on the edge of my bed

  quiet the way she usually was when distant

  prabh ahluwalia

  she said

  that’s his name

  just like she did when she was angry

  or wistful or simply lost in her head

  she refused to look at my face

  before she left the room

  and i wasn’t sure whether

  to smile or well up in tears

  as i bolted to a laptop too slow and old

  to understand the urgency in my fingertips

  i googled his name

  and combed through hundreds of facebook profiles

  until sleep tugged at my eyelids and i gave up:

&nb
sp; all those search results

  and none looked like me.

  a confession

  sometimes

  i stared into the mirror

  after everyone went to bed

  studying my features

  as if they were pieces

  of a jigsaw puzzle

  that had to be solved

  with only half the box

  my eyes belonged to mom.

  and maybe her mom as well.

  and, apparently, my nose

  belonged to a man

  that mom called her father.

  but the golden-brown earth of my skin

  and my stiletto-edge jaw

  looked so very distant from

  the woman who birthed me

  in the stillest hours of the night

  i found myself trembling

  reaching for my chin

  outlining it with my fingers

  tracing my skin with both hands

  searching for all the missing

  parts of my story.

  another confession

  sometimes

  i felt guilty for thinking

  i needed more than her.

  jeevan

  he and i sighed at the exact same time

  heavy hearts worry in our chests

  lives that felt like a freakin’ mess

  despite all the holes

  in both of our bodies

  we were two pieces of different puzzles

  that happened to fit together perfectly

 

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