the bidding of her dad, she made some tea and started

  serving us one by one. Along with that we were offered

  some savory to munch on.

  We exchanged glances and polite smiles. She seemed just

  as comely and demure as she was in the picture I had got

  from my mom. She had nice large brown eyes and very

  light skin. When she smiled she displayed a perfect row of

  pearly white teeth. When I first saw her my pulse started

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  racing. Then there was generally an uncomfortable silence

  from both of us, as the others started interacting with each

  other.

  The whole process was most painful and embarrassing for

  me. After suffering through it for about an hour, I heaved a

  sigh of relief when my mom requested their leave. The

  bidding of good byes lasted another fifteen minutes, before

  we were finally on our way home.

  After some 5 miles of driving in silence, my mom finally

  tapped me on the shoulder and asked, “Well, what do you

  think? We don’t have all month, you know? We need to let

  them know by tomorrow”.

  Mukesh intervened like a fire fighter, saying, “They have to

  let us know first, if it is okay from their side, is it not? Why

  this hurry?” That seemed to make sense.

  Within half an hour of our returning home, there was a call

  from Rajesh Dhillon. They were happy to meet all of us and

  would consider it an honor if we would agree to this

  marriage. Mukesh answered the phone. He responded

  saying that I was away visiting the temple with my mom

  and we will let him know our reaction by the following

  morning.

  I insisted that I needed to meet Seema alone and should take

  her out by myself a few times before deciding on this issue

  of a lifetime. That idea seemed outrageous to my mom and

  Nirmala. Mukesh abstained from voting, a great diplomat

  that he was.

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  “One does not do such things in India. What kind of a girl

  will do that? Would you want to bring such a girl into our

  family? This is not your America, you know? You can take

  her out all what you want, after getting married”, they

  yelled at me.

  I was quite adamant. After plenty of wrangling and

  cajoling, Nirmala-bhabi agreed to talk to Ranjana Dhillon.

  They negotiated and came up with a game plan. Sangeetha

  and Arun were coming from Seattle, the next day. It was

  agreed that we could go out as six-some, Sangeetha, Arun

  & Seema from their side and Mukesh, Nirmala-bhabi and

  myself on ours. Oh Boy! Were they doing me a great favor

  by leaving out the parents and rest of the township.

  But they wanted to announce a formal engagement by a

  week from Wednesday. Then the wedding had to take place

  within a month. Since I was due back in Dallas 3 weeks

  thereafter, it left barely 2 weeks for honeymoon.

  I even heard them mention if honeymoon was all that

  important and necessary. After all so much work had still to

  be done, like getting the trousseau ready, sending out

  invitations and arranging a grand reception etc., etc., not to

  mention visits to the American Consulate to arrange visa

  formalities for Seema. It was planned that she follows me

  first as wife of a student. Later Sangeetha would sponsor us

  both for a Green Card in the U.S.

  Since the whole course had already been charted out

  between the two ladies, there seemed little, if at all any,

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  room for me to do anything by way of choice or deciding. I

  thought to myself, if this is what is happening to an adult

  male like me, what would be the state of Seema, the girl I

  was destined to marry?

  There were the usual debates about the merits and demerits

  of the way people get married in the West and in India.

  Arguments were flung at me that after all plenty of arranged

  marriages turn out to be just fine whereas even after dating

  and courting 4 out of 5 marriages in the U.S., end up in the

  divorce court within the first 10 years.

  “Look at our parents and us. Didn’t we do well?”

  I felt like responding ‘It is not how long but how good your

  married life is. There is more to marriage than remaining

  un-divorced.’. I was in a terrible minority to enter a fight.

  High points of the outings were a picnic to a Lake near

  Faridabad one Sunday morning and a dinner at the rooftop

  restaurant in Hotel Intercontinental. We also took in a

  musical concert at Sapru House and some movies. Seema

  and I were left alone often to interact, when the other 2

  couples purposely wandered away at some excuse.

  On my part this seemed like as good a deal as any. She was

  very good looking, no doubt. She had lived in the U.S.,

  when her dad was in Washington DC, even if she was very

  young at that time. Which means she must be familiar with

  the life in America, hopefully. With a good educational

  background, she must find plenty of opportunity to advance

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  in a career if she chose. Her very influential family

  connections could not hurt either.

  More than anything else I was also very very tired of the

  wild geese I was chasing, trying to bed the girls on the

  campus, which invariably ended up leaving me most

  frustrated. I decided not to resist or fight the inevitable that

  was charging toward me inexorably.

  On her side Seema seemed to be generally a reserved and

  shy person. Besides, her mom was quite domineering and

  took all the decisions in her life. She had been quite aware

  of all the details about me even before we met. Her sister

  and brother-in-law also had filled her in. She did not have

  too much to ask me on our outings. She seemed reconciled

  to the whole idea with little opinion. I did not find that very

  complimentary. Though I did find her going into some kind

  of a reverie and drowned in thoughts, every so often. I

  assumed she was thinking of her life as a married woman in

  a foreign land.

  On my return to Dallas, I had to tell Srinivas that he needs

  to start looking for another place.

  I saw in the Student Center Notice Board that there was a

  Thai student who had finished graduation and was going

  back home. He was disposing off his belongings. He was

  asking $500 for a 15 year old Toyota Corolla in ‘running

  condition’ with some 180,000 miles on its odometer.

  I took a good look at her. She had tattered upholstery. The

  glass would roll up the window only with some extra

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  efforts, since it had always been kept down. The owner

  believed cool Texas breeze is so much healthier than air-

  conditioning. He claimed it gave him a good 25 miles to a

  gallon of gas. All it needed wa
s a new battery and a couple

  of better treaded tires in the next 4 months or so. The

  original color was probably some shade of pinkish-red.

  Now it had smudges and dirty patches all over with some

  kinks and dents, making it impossible for its color to be put

  in any one description.

  I negotiated and brought down the price by a hundred

  dollars. I had some $150 of my own savings and from

  reselling the textbooks. I borrowed the remaining ransom

  from Srinivas, promising repayment of $50 per month.

  The Thai student carefully counted the cash and put it in his

  shirt pocket. Then he shook my hands after handing me the

  keys. I sat in the driver’s seat and cranked the engine. After

  the 3rd attempt there was a big gurgling noise and the

  engine started. As I stepped on the gas, the car started

  rolling with some smoke and bursting-of-crackers noise

  coming from the rear.

  First the Thai student’s face lit up, as the car was really

  moving. Then his face became crest fallen. He slowly

  stroked the body of the car and with a sullen face told me,

  “Please take good care of her”, as if he was parting with his

  favorite aunt.

  “Don’t give it a thought. She is in good hands. Send her

  flowers for Mothers’ Day, if you wish”, I told him and

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  drove away. I needed a car quite badly. How could I

  welcome my princess without a steed?

  Within about 2 months Seema arrived. She arrived with a

  check from her dad for $50,000.00 drawn on his Swiss

  Bank account. It was in her individual name. I did find it

  somewhat hurtful that they would give a present not

  including me in it. At my suggestion, she opened an account

  with that money in her individual name at a bank near the

  campus.

  For Seema it was not an easy adjustment to her new life.

  Her previous experience of living in the U.S., was of no

  consequence whatsoever. She had been brought up in a very

  different life-style, with parents doting on her every need

  and servants taking care of all the work. Now she had to do

  everything herself, that included cooking, washing, cleaning

  the toilet bowl, laundry, and not excluding carrying grocery

  bags up 2 floors to our apartment on the campus.

  The apartment itself was very sparsely furnished on the 2nd

  floor with no elevators. She had problems with people’s

  attitudes toward her and her incapability to communicate

  properly with any one, leave alone developing meaningful

  friendship. It is one thing to know the English language, but

  quite another to be able to think on the same frequency as

  the other people you come in contact with.

  The climate was a big change. Texas has very severe

  summer and winter, unlike in India. Living cooped up in an

  apartment all the time, as your only human contact is away

  at work most of the time, can by quite daunting. Having to

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  live with a man that was a closed book, notwithstanding his

  being her husband, is very challenging in itself.

  She had absolutely no idea at all about what marriage and

  its responsibility were all about, even for Indian life-style

  and standards. She had very few skills of cooking or

  housekeeping. She had been brought up with the belief that

  once she gets married she would acquire all those skills at

  her husband’s house anyway. So why trouble her now? Let

  her have a good time while she can.

  All this was such a far cry from all those glamorous scenes

  she had seen in the Bollywood movies, with heroes and

  heroines prancing and dancing with duets on their lips in

  front of big mansions.

  At first married life seemed to move quite uneventfully for

  me. However I did find Seema not showing much by way of

  feelings or love toward me. Sex became a routine matter

  and always at my initiative after gaps of several days. It did

  not quite cross my mind that there could be any other man

  in her life and thoughts. I kind of assumed, that must be a

  typical attitude of an Indian girl.

  Sangeetha set our papers for a Green Card in motion. Then

  on, I was constantly and progressively being made aware,

  subtly and sometimes not so subtly, that I owed them my

  life, liberty and happiness, because of this.

  There would constantly be phone calls at all odd times,

  from her parents in Delhi or from her sister in Seattle. She

  was getting directions and instructions on what to do and

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  what not to do. My presence in her life started becoming a

  non-event.

  One weekend Arun and Sangeetha flew down. They shed

  tears at the abject ‘deprivation’ to which their girl was being

  subjected. The three of them went around shopping for

  everything in my house including a new car for Seema.

  There were also these catty remarks about how Arun was

  able to afford so many lavish things and if I would ever be

  able to do that. It meant little to them that I was still a

  research scholar living on my scholarship and my self-

  respect demanded that I don’t take help from anybody else.

  I tried ignoring their lack of respect bordering on a

  patronizing attitude toward me. Soon my workload started

  increasing as well. I was under a lot of pressure to finish my

  research project before funding would exhaust. Sometimes

  that meant my being at the Lab almost all night. Even on

  normal days by the time I came back home, Seema would

  have eaten and gone to bed, leaving my dinner on the table.

  I had not wanted Seema to idle away her time. So I

  persuaded her to get enrolled into MBA program at the

  Clarke School of Business at CHU itself. It was all within

  walking distance in the campus. I thought that way she will

  have some interests and diversions. That would also expose

  her to the local Americans and help her get integrated here.

  As days and months rolled by, Seema did finish and get her

  MBA degree. It was not easy for her to find a respectable

  job in spite of that. It took quite a while before a Real Estate

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  company would take her in as a trainee. That did not

  enamour her one bit.

  Her mom kept reminding us that we should be giving her a

  grandson soon. That would give her a good reason to come

  visit us in America, which was one of her life’s most prized

  ambitions. She came and lived with us for a few months

  before and after, Munni was born. They were all quite

  disappointed that it was not a boy, to inherit that big

  fortune. However, they slowly got reconciled to that fact.

  Now all the instructions and directions of how to lead our

  lives came directly and personally from Ranjana breathing

  down our necks, instead of over the phone, as was

  happen
ing so far. It almost seemed like I was orbiting on an

  entirely different planet leaving them to their own world,

  which accidentally happened to be my house.

  On Munni’s first birthday Seema’s parents sent a check for

  $ 100,000.00 in Munni’s name. We opened a joint bank

  account for the mother and daughter. My mom and Mukesh

  sent a new dress and some toys with a friend who was

  coming from there. It had become very very obvious,

  especially to Seema’s family that they could pull their

  weight on me and my life with total impunity. I had no

  counter-weight whatsoever on my side to prevent their total

  domination of my life.

  Within a year, Rajesh Dhillon retired. He and his wife

  started working on selling their house and coming over to

  the U.S. for good. Sangeetha had started working on their

  Visas. He still had some friends in the DC area. He wanted

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  to buy a house and settle down there. But was over ruled by

  Ranjana. She wanted to stay near her daughters. Since Arun

  could not be shaken from his post, they decided to make

  Seattle their family head quarters. Soon they would be

  manipulating Seema and myself to move there as well.

  After Rajesh and Ranjana settled down in Seattle, it became

  a routine affair for Seema to pack up and go over there

  every so often. Some times I would not even be aware of

  her going until after I got home to find a note stuck on the

  fridge. I was so totally engrossed in my research project that

  I had no energy or time left to chase these red herrings.

  Slowly but surely my Ph.D., doctorate arrived and I heaved

  a big sigh of relief. The topic of my dissertation happened

  to be a hot technical problem on which Texas Electronics

 
Raj Dore's Novels