So we meet again – Cairo and I – sooner than I thought we would. I had left in August, promising to come back in December, and somewhere after a month into life as a Dilli ki Billi, I realized I had not been making enough, and that coming back would inevitably mean an attack of nostalgia and longing that would be difficult to resist.
And sure enough, already on day one, before I even stepped on to Egyptian soil, I found myself wondering if it would not be good to come back. Any thoughts of the nature were immediately changed after Mom’s reaction. She didn’t know I was headed home for the winter holiday season when she opened the door with: “Tu? Kyoon? Too kaise aa gayee?” (“You? Why? What made you come back?”). And immediately she asked if this meant I had left India. I said no it was a surprise. “Good, then you can stay now. We can go back together, in September.”
And all the while she
claimed not to be (happily) surprised, she was dialing up my Dad.
-
“I can’t reach Chitra. I don’t know where she’s been.” (yes, we Kalyani siblings get it from our
parents.)
-
“I just spoke to her this morning.”
-
“Yes, but I tried again, and I cannot reach her. I don’t know where she
could be.”
At this point I took
the phone from Mom.
-
“Yes, this girl roams out too late at night. That’s just how she is….”
And Dad starts
laughing, “Very good. Hahaha. Very good.”
And after a very
short-lived sense of satisfaction at my arrival, they both launch into complaints about how they could
have asked me to bring stuff from India. Here, may it be noted, I had told my
Mom that “a friend” (for I am on good terms with myself) would be visiting in
case she would like anything.
Mom’s told a few
people since.
The taste of home.
Before I came to Cairo, I had made a mental list of three things I’d ask Mom to cook for me. In the span of a day she’s already made me those three dishes. The first was tomato curry, I’d written it down somewhere in Delhi, and when I arrived, without me asking, the first thing Mom puts into the cooker are tomatoes to boil for a curry. She seems to always instinctively know. And Mom always shows her love through food. If you don’t get asked to eat when you are at my place, it’s usually not a good sign. So after all her shock and surprise, her first question was, “Do you want to eat?” I took some tea first, and then for dinner we ate curry. Nothing tastes better than home food.
I also had another
dinner planned. I had to see Corinna before she left for Germany, and so we
decided to meet with MattMatt for some Sudanese food in Dokki. Peanut sauce
with eggplant, bread and Lentil Fattah, and some beef curry that I insisted on smelling
since I wouldn’t eat it. MattMatt tolerated all this. We mostly talked about
Corinna’s cat Fayrouz. All through my walk from Zamalek to Dokki with Matt, I
regaled him with repeated expressions of “I’m so happy.”
I am so happy. I don’t
know why it’s such a big deal. I guess because it feels like stolen happiness,
like this all could easily not have been. And I’ve been stealing it since my
last night.
For a small reason,
the last night in India was a bit of a disappointment. Thanks to Stephanie, an
old friend from grad school, I have a small jade stone with “Courage” engraved
on it. I had carried it in my pocket, and it had carried me through the day. I
felt in my pocket for the stone when my heart felt like it was about to sink.
And it was where the phone was when Neeraj called back and said I should come
over to his birthday party after all. When my plans for the evening did not pan
out, I took up the offer and arrived at his doorstep with my bags. I spent the
night dancing with and getting to know what I'd now happily consider some very good friends: Revati, Judith, Melodika. The
plan was to leave from Neeraj's place to the airport at 4 am. At 2 the party started
to wind down, and by three-ish I got into Melodika’s car, and she offered to drop
me at the airport. It all worked out!
MattMatt had given me the
book “The Buddha in Daily Life” when I was going to India. I read it on my way
back to Cairo. Like the stone, it is one more thing holding me together.
On Amman to Cairo,
there was a man sat next to me whose bag-tag said “El Warsha Theatre.” I asked
him if he was indeed from the theatre, and mentioned I’d worked with D-CAF that
had worked with their company. He turned out to be the founder of El Warsha. We
had a long discussion which he punctuated with many quotes, anecdotes about
people I knew, people we knew… I had actually forgotten all my Cairo money in
India, and had planned to take a taxi home and pay by borrowing money from the
kiosque downstairs, as I had done on so many occasions before. I didn’t have
to. My flight companion offered to drop me home as his driver was coming to pick him
up, and we were both happy to extend our conversation in which we discovered common friends
and books and authors we loved.
I looked around Cairo –
the sun beat warm upon as when we were outside the airport, a welcome reprieve
from Delhi’s sunless winters, and as I arrived home there was a beautiful yellow
sun setting over Zamalek. We drove down into Agouza, and I was happy happy
happy.
I haven’t stopped
saying it since. I am happy.
“You? Why? What made
you come back?” she asks.