The wall-length sliding doors to Isabella Tatiana’s house were drawn wide apart.
“Mrs. Tatiana?” Meera Meera Johna whispered from the balcony. There was no answer, so she called again. “Hello, Mrs. Tatiana? Are you there?”
She could have been a lucky thief that day, if she were so inclined. On tiptoe still, she entered and followed the net around walls and down the high-pile blue-red-taupe Afghancarpeted corridors that ended at a closed door through which low calls and moans wafted. Meera Meera Johna pressed her ear to the door to be sure and heard. A groan. Not an urgent or ugly groan but still, a groan. If someone behind a closed door were making a sound like that, whether ugly or not, wouldn’t you assume they might be in need of some assistance, she asked herself?
Meera Meera Johna called again: “Hello?” The groaning persisted, the sound of pleasure, curiously, and she, if she could be heard, was ignored. She turned the door’s handle, waited, and called again. So, unnoticed, she walked right in.
Meera Meera Johna saw everything. Realizing that the two on the bed were in no hurry and were oblivious to all, and that if she were to return and in earnest concentrate on the goings-on in there, she would need a little something to eat, she left the room in search of the little something. She shut the door as she might have shut any door, caring nothing about making door-closing noises — after all, the two were oblivious to all. She located the kitchen, and the refrigerator, and found in its freezer compartment a tub of milkweed-and-chrysanthemum flavored ice cream.
That Sunday, a Sunday like no other Sunday, Meera Meera Johna returned to the neighbor’s bed on the edge of which she sat, a perfect chrysanthemum-and-leaf-of-milkweed ice-cream sundae wilting, and, still unnoticed, she studied her father, his cacao-colored skin richly, steamily aglow, and she regarded the woman beneath him, hers paler than white, whose groaning Meera Meera Johna came to understand declared, Yes, uhuh uhuh, yes, her eyes shut, torso arched, neatly pinned by her hands and feet atop a velvet coverlet the deep saffron color of pollen, her hair held tightly in John Lucknow’s fist. An interesting situation, Meera Meera Johna pondered, the way Isabella stretched and pushed her pelvis upward, mothlike, and her father like a wasp atop, his pelvis just barely flicking the moth’s.
That very night, when the Mansing family sat at the dinner table, at precisely the time Meera Meera Johna finished posing the question to her father why that afternoon when Isabella Tatiana was groaning, he continued to perch so long on top of her, Matilda Jasodhra, a pale, frail woman — as yet unwinged — who looked as if she had long been chidden by the sun, halted her gleaming brass fork in mid-flight toward her mouth and took studious note of the cube of rare agouti meat — which she herself had barbecued — skewered on its prongs. She brought her fork, agouti untouched, to rest on the brim of her fine bone china plate, an act accorded the precision and delicacy of one experiencing an awakening. She just as carefully, thoughtfully, lifted the sweating stemmed water glass, and sipped from it ice-cold water. Matilda Jasodrha Mansing, once she had set the goblet back on the table, shot up her nose and chin to the ceiling with less delicacy now, and with a flamboyant flick of her head determined that she, she had had, she had had absolutely enough. Matilda Jasodhra thawed back to life, and John was spared having to answer Meera Meera Johna’s burning question when his wife belted out, “We will have a party. A big, big party with music. Lots and lots of music. Live. Cha cha cha. Cha cha cha. I shall oversee the entire thing myself, and everybody shall come to it. Including That Tatiana Woman.” Matilda Jasodhra took it into her hands that day to grow her very own wings.
The day of the party, just outside the front entrance to the house, the yardman had been clearing away the unsavory evidence of day-to-day yard existences — brown fallen leaves, weeds, a wind-borne candy wrapper — when he came upon a corner that was infested with snakes. He was, at the moment the neighborhood children led by Meera Meera Johna appeared, ramming a broomstick straight down into a hole. He had anesthetized the snakes with chloroform, a bottle of it given to him for this very purpose by his butterfly-collecting jeweler boss, and was now shoving, shoving, shoving into the hole one of these garden snakes that had minutes before been a smooth, brilliant green thing the length of a man and a bit, sunning itself on a hibiscus shrub, but was now rumpled into numerous odd angles that oozed and squirted liquids in tones of browns and reds. The gardener was shoving the snake into the hole, killing it again, and again, just to make sure, he explained when they said to him, voices full of awe, “But the thing dead already, why you beating it so? It coulda make a good skipping rope if you hadn’t a mash it up so.” He looked up at them, his eyes — what should normally have been the whites of his eyes, red-red-red, and the pupils, black-black-black — like jumbie beads, the children whispered among themselves later. They watched him move from hole to hole until he had tucked away five garden snakes in all. In the childrens’ peripheral vision shuffled the less arresting single-file procession of fifty women marching up the street, approaching the servant’s gate at the back of the Mansing house. They were all dressed exactly alike, in white servant shirts with rounded frilly collars, and black narrow knee-length skirts, black stockings, and black closed-up shoes. Each pushed a two-tiered trolley laden with dishes on which courses of catered food were artfully splayed.
“Meera Meera Mansing, inside now. Time to dress. It’s late and getting later by the minute. Come now.” Her mother’s voice shot through the house, taut yet euphoric, from the bedroom section down to the front garden, and Meera Meera Johna responded in a flash, leaving her friends to the hands of the yardman.
Just before seven o’clock, from the front of the house an infectious Cha cha cha, Cha cha cha, Cha cha cha wafted up to the bedroom section. Meera Meera Johna lifted her skirt, tugged at the scratchy crinoline beneath, twisted it, and tugged some more. Her mother snapped at her, Stop lifting your skirt. Her scalp hurt too, her hair having been combed back velvet smooth into a ponytail. Meera Meera Johna raised her eyebrows and wiggled her ears in an attempt to weaken the grip. Her mother was leading her down to the party when they both saw the light coming from under the door of John Lucknow’s studio. Forever alert to his abundant furtivenesses — for what else could one call it? — Matilda Jasodhra yanked her daughter along and they both pressed their ears to the door. They heard nothing save for the muted vibration of Cha cha cha, Cha cha cha. Matilda Jasodhra tried the knob of the door. It was locked. She banged, and John Lucknow’s voice, it was indeed his, responded sharply, What? Matilda squealed at him to open the door. He did. That dreadful sweet scent of chloroform assaulted her and Meera Meera Johna, and she wondered, as she always did, why it hadn’t as yet done him in. He held in his hands his jeweler’s glass. Working? she wondered. Working right up to the last minute before the party? She glanced — not so discreetly, so perhaps she gazed rather than glanced — throughout the room, vision gaining the amorphous properties of air that allowed it to float and bend so that she could see around to the back of the desk and behind curtains, and seeing that he was alone, she breathed a sigh of relief. He too sighed. Then she saw a tray of butterflies on his desk. Leave those damned butterflies alone, why don’t you, Matilda Jasodhra whispered between her teeth, and come. Our guests will arrive any time now. John Lucknow sent her on down with an assurance that he would be there in seconds. Why? What for? What on earth for? How odd, she thought, but that was her husband, and on down to the front of the house she and her daughter went.