Being Anna (Part 8)
“What happened?” Karishma was surprised to find everyone in the kitchen looking morose. Her husband’s family was also like the one at her home. Large, joint family. Almost all the women were in the kitchen. “It’s a girl,” replied her husband’s youngest aunt.
“What… what is a girl?” she didn’t understand.
The aunt looked at the family’s long time servant – Geeta. A surly woman who only spoke to Karishma with some kindness – possibly because her kindness rubbed off her.
“Come with me, Bahu Rani,” she told Karishma and beckoned her to follow her. Karishma, though puzzled, obeyed her wordlessly.
Vikram was the eldest child of his generation. His cousin Virat, who was next to him, had also been married soon after Karishma and Vikram. His wife, Malti, was expecting. She was about twelve weeks pregnant now and they had gotten a sex-determination done. The baby was a girl and it was going to be aborted.
“What?” Karishma was horrified, “Who wants to abort the baby? How can…”
“That’s the tradition of this family.”
“Tradition?”
“How do you think you do not have any sister-in-laws?”
“It’s illegal… They can go behind bars.”
“Who will send them behind bars? You? Me?”
Karishma felt nauseated and ran toward the bathroom. Nobody came to help her. She went upstairs to her room and lied down on the bed. She was too shocked to react to the news. It was Geeta who finally came to her.
“Won’t you eat something?”
“What happened to Malti’s baby?”
Geeta stayed silent.
“Geeta Chachi… How can they…”
“They don’t do it. They send me everywhere,” Geeta replied bitterly.
“You should refuse to go.”
“What will happen if I refuse to go, child? There are enough hungry mouths on this earth. I will lose my job and somebody else will do it anyway. But come now… That’s how the world is… You will get used to it…”
“The world is not like this,” Karishma cried, “Else how do they get women to marry their sons to. If everyone started killing their daughters… Why, oh Lord, why do they need to do it? If a poor family is worried about dowry and they do it… repulsive as it is, I would understand it for a minute. But what do they lack in this house, Chachi? Why…”
She sighed. “The daughters of this family brought too much trouble, too many scandals… Because of that Vikram’s grandfather decided… And since then it has indeed been peaceful.”
“No scandals, eh?” Karishma said with disgust, “Right. Because what men do is not a scandal. When women exercise their right to choose…” She recalled her initial attempts at romancing her husband. She had reached his office unannounced one afternoon with food she had cooked herself. The woman she had found in his office, he had introduced as his secretary. Karishma knew that wasn’t the case. She had met his secretary earlier. He had eaten in silence. Karishma had planned to have lunch with him, but she didn’t eat and he didn’t invite her. At the end he had said, “What men do outside home should be none of women’s concern. That is how it is. I don’t disturb your life at home. Do not disturb me at office again.”
“Eat something, child,” Geeta’s voice brought her out of her thoughts.
“I’m fine. I can fast for that unfortunate baby for a day, if I can fast for these demons ten times every year.”
“God is keeping a tally, Bahu Rani. It will punish them one day.”
“Would you not do anything, Geeta Chachi?”
“If I could, I’d do anything. But I have a family to feed too. And I can’t lose this job.”
—
After her sojourn at his office, Vikram had duly complained to his mother. After that Karishma could not step out of home without giving full explanation of where she was going. If she was meeting any of her friends, they were supposed to pick her up. Thankfully, Mou was in the same city and everyone knew that she was her childhood friend. She called her up. “Mou. I don’t care how busy you are today, you have to pick me up and help me.”
“What happened?”
“Can’t talk on phone. When can you pick me up?”
“Right away?”
“Please do.”
Mou was working as a journalist in the city. She had, luckily, an off day and she came down immediately. Karishma briefly explained her family’s ‘tradition’ to Mou in the car.
“What the fuck… Karishma. There has to be some mistake.”
“There is none. One baby has been killed in that house this bloody morning.”
“Karishma. Are you pregnant?”
“I might be, Mou,” Karishma said and slumped back in the chair. She had missed her periods for long enough.
“And?”
“I don’t know if it’s a boy or a girl. I can’t tell my family yet. I have to find out first.”
“But what will you do if it’s a girl? They will have to be sent behind bars. I can help you with that… When they send you for testing…”
“Mou! I am right now on the path of becoming a statistics of sociology. The one that said that rich people are even more likely to practice female foeticide… I don’t care about social good right now, Mou. I first have to find out if I am pregnant and if so whether I am carrying a boy or a girl… And then I will see.”
Mou’s profession as a journalist came as a great help to Karishma. She had acquaintances in almost all professions. She took her to a gynecologist.
“You are pregnant, Karishma,” she confirmed.
“When can you determine the sex of the baby?” Mou asked.
The doctor looked uncertain. “This isn’t some kind of sting operation Mou, is it?”
“Oh, for God’s sake, Jiya. If I have to do a sting operation I will do it on her bloody family. So many people use it to kill babies. Please help us save one.”
“In another four weeks. But she should be on medicines and supplements already.”
“Write the prescription.”
—
To be continued