“Because I want him to bring me something from Italy.”
“I don’t know about that,” Duniya wasn’t encouraging.
“That Somali Airlines stewardess what’s-her-name can take a letter to him. Let’s find out when she’s flying to Rome and we’ll give her a letter or something, a message.”
Duniya’s body stiffened at the reference to the stewardess.
“What’s wrong?” Yarey inquired.
“What would you like Uncle Abshir to bring you from Italy?” Duniya said, frowning.
“I want a Walkman.”
Duniya smiled limpidly. “Well try to get a message to him.”
“And there’s something else,” Yarey was too thrilled to be still.
Patience diminishing, Duniya asked, “Something he can carry easily through customs?”
“A filmcalled ET.”
“A film?”
“A video, then I can watch it on Bosaaso’s machine.”
“We’ll try to reach him somehow.”
“Promise?”
“And you promise not to talk about his coming to a living soul?”
Yarey nodded.
“If you don’t keep your end of the deal, I won’t keep mine,” said Duniya.
“I will,” said Yarey. “I’m grown-up now.”
Nasiiba, who had just showered, entered the room. When Yarey and her mother kept conspiratorially quiet, Nasiiba suspected they had been discussing her. Otherwise why would both avoid eye-contact with her? She looked from her young sister to her mother, from her mother to the foundling and then finally at the radio, which was jabbering on, but words failed her. And Duniya said girlishly to Yarey “Shall we go and shower together?”
“That’ll be fun, Duniya,” said Yarey.
They left the room, convincing Nasiiba that either they had been talking about her or knew something they wouldn’t share with her.
After showering, which they both enjoyed, Duniya borrowed Mataan’s room to change. In the mirror her face looked soft like the earth after spring rains: brown, whole, supple. For a while she listened to the young people’s chatter in the courtyard: Mataan, Marilyn and her friend and another whose voice she couldn’t place. Nasiiba and Yarey were feeding the baby The curtains drawn, the door bolted from inside, with enough sunlight to see herself in the looking-glass, Duniya took a studied interest in her body for the first time in many years. And what she saw depressed her.
She had neglected her own body while she took care of others’ physical needs, as a nurse, as mother of three children, and now as co-guardian of a foundling. She hadn’t realized she had grown so fat that she had a belt of it round her waist.
Somali men are said to be turned on by the mound of flesh round a woman’s navel. But what kind of women did Bosaaso like? Did he prefer them slim, young-bodied, with not an extra ounce anywhere? For a woman of her age and background, Duniya knew her body was still in good shape. Surely, she thought, it wasn’t a body to turn up one’s nose at. It had served her faithfully all these years, giving of itself all it possibly could, and it had known only two men, one of them sixty-odd years old. In the two years she had been Zubair’s wife, they could not have made love more than thrice a month. Yet she had not felt sexually dissatisfied; most traditional couples did not make love often, and no one made such a big deal about sex anyway.
Her second husband Taariq wanted it nightly Nor did the calendar of her period deter him from demanding that she oblige. However his stamina was short-lived and he came at the very point when she started to climb the ladder of her own sexual pleasure. When he was drunk, she would push him away like an infant breast-feeding playfully He would without a fuss fall asleep, snoring instantly so she would have to shake him awake in order to have a quiet night.
By leaps of logic she found herself considering the women Bosaaso had known, who might have left indelible influences on him. His mother. The Afro-American with whom he had cohabited for several years. And Yussur. Duniya made a mental note to find out as much as she could about these women, not as rivals, just as people. Would Nasiiba know anything about the Afro-American, Nasiiba who knew such things?
Getting into a dress belonging to what Duniya referred to as one of Nasiiba’s moods (Nasiiba had the expensive habit of buying clothes she never wore, dresses bought when they took her fancy and which she then forgot), she now felt let down by her own weakness. Why, she had never thought the day would come when she, Duniya, would rack her brain about male likes and dislikes or would dress to please a man! She was being silly falling in love and admitting it; stupid borrowing a dress of Nasiiba’s when the one she had worn the night before had made her feel so uncomfortable, tight at the waist, itchy and moist at the armpits.
Someone was knocking on the door. Urgently.
“Who is it?”
“Open the door, Mummy.”
“What is it?”
“Open and I’ll tell you.” Nasiiba was breathless as though all the jinns in the cosmos had formed themselves into a union to chase her to this door.
“What is it, Naasi? Tell me,” Duniya said, opening the door.
“It’s about the baby.”
For a moment Duniya couldn’t think whom she meant. “What baby?”
“The foundling.”
“What about him?”
And Duniya remembered the name of the young woman whom she had seen at the Out-patient Clinic — Number Seventeen. Fariida was the girl’s name. Sister to the Somali Airlines stewardess whom Yarey had wanted to contact so she would take a letter to Abshir. Heavens, what complications!
Duniya told her daughter to calm herself, “Whatever it is you have to say, remember the universe is two hundred million years old and won’t come to an end before you’ve spoken your piece. Now what’s bothering you?”
“Muraayo is here,” said Nasiiba, chest palpitating with anxiety.
Duniya was not moved by this news. She turned, asking Nasiiba to zip up the back of her dress. This done, Duniya walked over to the standing-mirror to take an appreciative look at herself. She was amazed she had accomplished all this without tripping or knocking things over in clumsy gestures of lost equilibrium. Then: “Now why should Muraayo’s being here frighten you so?”
“It’s about the foundling.”
Duniya calmed herself down. “What about the foundling?”
“Promise you won’t give away the foundling to Muraayo?”
Duniya decided that Yarey had been naughty and had threatened not to return to Muraayo’s household but to stay here where, because of Bosaaso and the baby a lot of late-night fun was taking place, more than at Uncle Qaasim’s. “Why shouldn’t we give the foundling to Muraayo?” she said to Nasiiba.
“He’s not meant for them,” Nasiiba said.
“I may not be the most intelligent woman in the world, but I’m not that stupid and none of what you’ve said so far makes any sense to me.” Duniya paused. “Tell me, when did you last see Fariida?”
Nasiiba acted strangely, looking about suspiciously as though Fariida were hiding in the shadows of the darkened room. Then she swallowed hard, and her eyes popped as if she had by mistake eaten her own Adam’s apple. She recovered quickly enough to say in her characteristically defiant way, “What has Fariida got to do with what we’re talking about?”
“You’re the one who found the baby,” said Duniya. “Not me.”
Duniya could sense because of Nasiiba’s stillness of breath she had hit a target. But the feeling lasted only briefly. What made her feel triumphant was that it was Nasiiba who knocked her great toe on Mataan’s doorsill, not Duniya.
“Tell Aunt Muraayo I’ll be with her in a moment,” said Duniya.
Fariida: the mother of the foundling? Who was the father then?