3. Farzana’s brother, Aslam, is missing. It’s not the first time this has happened.
4. Farzana and I grew up together in Hyderabad, right off the city’s commercial center, where, in the early nineties, a row of crumbling buildings with onion domes and marble façades were renovated into offices and restaurants. The last such edifice, doilies of rust blooming across its cladding where a water pipe had burst, was gutted and converted into a four-star hotel on the upper floors and a burger joint on the lower, its sign advertising Authentic Mutton-do-Pyaza Burgers, Better Than New York!
My mother’s outbursts were really meant for my father. His contentment in his low-ranking government job struck her as unambitious and she found his refusal to seek a transfer to another city frustrating. She spent three evenings a week tutoring high school students in Shakespeare, Marlowe, and Milton (“Don’t marry young, Bela, I wish I had taken the time to finish my Ph.D.”) and had read out the AM and PM English bulletins on public radio, a post she’d held for almost two decades. The latter was a job with few perks besides the occasional moment of prestige. Every now and then, people looked at her reverently when they learned that this middle-class woman read the English bulletin for radio. She basked in the glamor this afforded, wearing her pride as though it were the diamonds my father never bought her.
5. Farzana’s family was middle-class too, but less so than ours. Her father, a portly man whose button-down bush shirts stretched taut across his belly, was a bureaucrat at the State Secretariat. Our homes stood across the street from each other like identical twins, but the similarity diminished over the years. Her father’s burgeoning fortune revealed itself in the embellishment of spare rooms, round terraces, and columned balconies on the compact original structure, until their house looked like something out of a dark fairy tale. “It’s like a tower of matchboxes,” my mother would say, peering out of the window night after night, the lights turned off so no one could see her. “So ostentatious. It’s all bribe money, I’m sure.”