Can You Hear the Nightbird Call? (7 page)

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Authors: Anita Rau Badami

Tags: #Historical

BOOK: Can You Hear the Nightbird Call?
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“But then how does he know my niece’s name?” Bibi-ji asked. She turned to the boy. “You said Nimmo, didn’t you?”

“Nimmo, my little Nimmo,” repeated the boy obediently. “My sister Nimmo.”

Bibi-ji didn’t know whether the boy was talking about his own sister or her niece; Nimmo was such a common name. She looked closely at the boy, wondering if he could be Kanwar’s older son, but that child would now have been little more than seven years old, whereas this boy looked to be fifteen or sixteen.

Bibi-ji asked him a few more questions, but all he could tell her was that he had seen a girl called Nimmo in the kafeela. She imagined two long caravans of people working their way across the new border, one heading for Pakistan and the other towards India. So many millions leaving their living and their dead without farewell or proper ceremony; perhaps somewhere in their midst was Kanwar’s daughter, small, lost, terrified. If she was alive.

The clatter of shutters descending from the shop next door alerted Bibi-ji to the fact that it was five o’clock and time to close up. She folded Kanwar’s letter carefully, noting that the thin paper was beginning to tear along the folds, that Kanwar’s words were disappearing along those same lines. She pressed it to her lips, smelled the faint scent of lavender. How much she had loved that smell once, she remembered. There had been a time, when she arrived in Canada, that her life had been lined with lavender. Inside their home—underlying the strong odours of garlic and turmeric, cumin and coriander—a sensitive nose could catch the determined drift of lavender. Dried lavender lay scattered in her underwear drawers and in her shoes. She was identified not by the sound of her footsteps, but by the fragrance of lavender that preceded her arrival and remained like a memory after her departure. But after Kanwar’s disappearance, she had swept all the soaps and perfumes from her cupboards and into the garbage. She shook out the sachets that she had tucked into the folds of sheets and towels and in the drawers. But no matter what she did, the smell of the herb clung to her like guilt.

She slid the letter into its envelope and replaced it in her bag. One day she would find her sister and bring her family to safety in Vancouver. For that search, she would need money; she and Pa-ji must buy, sell and invest to become wealthy. She owed this much to her sister. With
that defiant thought, she began to count the cash. Her mind shifted to the possibilities presented by the silent street outside her window. Opportunities like pearls, she reminded herself. It was only a question of spotting them. Perhaps a restaurant. Perhaps they could buy the small house with the For Sale sign that she had passed a few days ago. Then they could rent out the apartment upstairs and have a steady stream of income … She emptied the day’s takings into a pouch, locked up and, with Lalloo following, climbed the narrow flight of steps up to the apartment.

FOUR
T
HE
D
ELHI
J
UNCTION
Vancouver
1967

N
ineteen sixty-one was a momentous year for the world: the handsome young John F. Kennedy became the first Roman Catholic president of the United States, and a few months later a Russian named Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space. It was also a banner year for Pa-ji and Bibi-ji, who finally opened their restaurant, The Delhi Junction Café—realizing yet another of Bibi-ji’s ambitions.

Now here she was, six years later on a busy Saturday afternoon at The Delhi Junction, snapping a rubber band around a box of fresh samosas.

“One dollar, please,” she said, pushing the box across the counter to the waiting customer.

Another customer took his place with a request for chholey-bhaturey, followed by a woman who placed a large order for lamb curry. There was a lull in the traffic at the counter after she left. With a sigh of relief, Bibi-ji eased herself on to the bar stool and worked her shoes off her feet, wishing she had not worn the pointed green heels today. If the steady stream of customers was any indication, it would be another busy Saturday and she would be on her feet for a while. Not that she minded. A full restaurant was a good thing—yes, a very good thing indeed. She surveyed with satisfaction the crowded tables and the waiters running in and out of the kitchen carrying loaded trays. Her eyes fell on Colonel Samuel Hunt, ex-British India army, one of the regulars and the only gora in a sea of brown-skinned desis, deliberating over the brief menu before ordering, as always, the same items—mutton curry with naan and a pint of lager to wash it all down. In the six years since the restaurant had opened, Samuel Hunt had become known for his uncomplimentary sentiments towards immigrants who did not share his racial heritage—a fact that used to aggravate Bibi-ji no end, until she came to see him as a sad old man whose eyes and ears were so sealed by his skin that he could neither witness nor understand the changing world. But whatever his feelings towards the desis who gathered at The Delhi Junction, Sam Hunt could not resist their food. After twenty-five years in India, the old man had developed a taste for curries. The taste became a craving once a week, which was when he marched over to The Delhi Junction. There was also,
perhaps, an unacknowledged need to mingle with the people who had surrounded him for a quarter of a century, to argue with them, to hear the mixture of languages, to smell familiar smells. In short, Bibi-ji realized with some amusement, Samuel Hunt, the Englishman transplanted to Canada, was doing the splits between two cultures, just like the desis were.

Now she was relieved to see that he was being served by one of her more seasoned waiters, for the old India hand was crusty and reduced the less experienced waiters to nervous wrecks with his demands.

“Hot, hotter, hottest, Colonel-ji?” the waiter asked politely, as he had been taught by Bibi-ji.

Sam Hunt considered the question for a few moments, as if it were the first time he had heard it, and said, “The hotter, I think, or perhaps … no, on second thought, the hottest.”

Bibi-ji smiled and looked away. Sometimes it was hard to believe that things had turned out exactly the way she had planned. It had started in 1958, when they purchased a small house on 56th Avenue. She and Pa-ji had rented out the apartment above the grocery store and then, in 1961, had leased out the store as well and bought this property on the corner of Main Street and 49th Avenue. It had once been a shop that sold sewing machines and had large display windows on three sides. On the left was a gas station, to the right was Mrs. Wu’s vegetable store, and across the road was a row of small shops selling, among other things, fabrics, groceries and baked goods. Not much, she had said to Pa-ji at the time.

“But don’t worry,” Lalloo had advised in his Punjabi-accented English. “Locationn. Locationn. Locationn. I am telling you, Bibi-ji,” he added, as if he, not she, had discovered the place, “you wait and see, in a few more years this area will be booming.” Lalloo had evolved from an awkward turbaned youth to a man about town. He had set himself up as an immigration consultant and marriage broker, and dabbled in real estate in addition to carrying on other businesses that bordered on the illegal. Despite Pa-ji’s objections, he had cut his long hair and traded his turban for a hat, his pyjamas for a suit and his worn sneakers for a pair of well-shined boots. He was in with the Italians, the Chinese, the Japanese and more than one politician. He knew people in construction and renovation, and within a few months he had these friends turn a bare space into this restaurant.

That was six years ago. Now look at it, never a quiet moment. The Delhi Junction had become a ritual, a necessity, a habit for many of the city’s growing population of desis who stopped by for a quick meal or afternoon tea.

Pa-ji had wanted to call the place Apna, a Punjabi word meaning Ours. However, Bibi-ji felt that they needed to have a broader appeal, so they settled on The Delhi Junction Café, hoping the little restaurant would live up to its name and one day host, if not exactly the multitude, then at least a semblance of the crowds that streamed through New Delhi’s railway station daily.

Bibi-ji had the walls painted her favourite shade of strawberry pink and asked two of the men who had then been house guests to make wooden tables for the café. An
assortment of chairs was acquired from second-hand shops and cheap furniture stores. Another long-term visitor was set to work making table cloths from a roll of blue and pink fabric that Bibi-ji had bought cheap at the fabric store across the road. Over the fabric she put sheets of plastic to minimize laundry costs. A single brass vase bearing a plastic rose adorned each table. Every morning when Bibi-ji came into the restaurant, the first thing she did was sprinkle water on the plastic roses. On one wall she hung lithographic prints of the ten Sikh gurus, a highly coloured painting of the Golden Temple with a garland of flashing bulbs around it, maps of India and Canada, pictures of Nehru, Gandhi, Bhagat Singh, Marilyn Monroe, Meena Kumari, Clark Gable and Dev Anand. On another wall were clocks displaying the time in India, Pakistan (East and West), Vancouver, England, New York, Melbourne and Singapore. The clocks were Pa-ji’s favourite items of decoration—at any given moment, he could see the time in the many countries that carried the offspring of Punjab in their bosoms. It pleased him to be reminded that Sikhs were scattered all over the world, like seeds that had exploded from a seed pod.

The clocks were also appreciated by the customers, who imagined a grandmother bending over her work in her yard in Patiala, a mother performing her evening prayers in Lahore or a brother heading for school in Chittagong. It gave them the illusion that they could reach out and touch their distant loved ones.

Bibi-ji had chosen the menu items carefully, making sure that neither beef nor pork were included so as not to offend
any religious group. She hired a cook and paid him an excellent salary, aware that the restaurant’s success depended on him. She saved on the wages of the waiters by taking advantage of the ready-made, unpaid and therefore floating staff drawn from the people who continued to move through her new home—in even larger numbers now that the Canadian government had opened its doors to immigrants from India. On weekdays, while Pa-ji manned the cash register, Bibi-ji helped with the service. She had a good memory and remembered the names of her customers, their villages, their wives, children, mothers, sisters and brothers. She remembered who liked fresh chillies served on the side with the chholey, and she knew whether they preferred the roti with ghee or well roasted on the fire. Sometimes, to please a regular, she would offer to make puris instead of rotis for a change. To the new arrivals in Canada she handed out advice on visas and immigration procedures, work permits and rents, the best places to buy vegetables and groceries, as well as a free bowl of sugary kheer if this was their first time at The Junction, as the regulars now called it.

Both she and Pa-ji were glad to see the new immigrants. They felt a deep affection for these people, even when they were not from Punjab. Fuelled by frequent infusions of tea, they liked to
discuss
things. They were old hands at gup-shup and welcomed Pa-ji’s loud interventions from his station at the cash register.

As for the children—the boys with their little topknots if they were Sikh, and the girls with their swinging braids and ponytails—they were allowed to eat for free. It was not good for business, Bibi-ji knew, but she counted on
The One Up There to witness her act of kindness and grant her a dupattaful of blessings. At one time she had hoped that these blessings would take the form of children of her own.

Then on Saturday last week, she had turned forty-five and finally relinquished hope of ever becoming a mother. She had gone to The Delhi Junction feeling depressed until Pa-ji, on a rare day off, surprised her by showing up in the middle of the morning with Lalloo in tow.

“Come, I have to show you something,” he had said mysteriously, his eyes gleaming with excitement.

“What? Now?” Bibi-ji asked, her bad mood compounded by the fact that he was dragging her off somewhere in the middle of a busy working day. “And the restaurant? Who …”

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