Gold Diggers Sanjena Sathian (best selling autobiographies TXT) đ
- Author: Sanjena Sathian
Book online «Gold Diggers Sanjena Sathian (best selling autobiographies TXT) đ». Author Sanjena Sathian
It was to Chidiâs great credit as a friend and a general believer in the improbable that as I talked on for nearly another hour, describing the Lemonade Period, he asked only a few clarifying questions. I explained things like the properties of the gold, and the matter of Shruti.
âI feel like I . . . did it,â I admitted. It was the first time I had ever said it this way, with the neatness Iâd begrudged Anita. I waited to see how it felt on my tongue. The short sentence, with no ambiguity, no spirit to it. âI did it.â
âYou probably did.â He had switched from crunches to push-ups on the hardwood while I talked, but he halted when it became clear the story was darkening. He now lay on his belly. âMaybe it was like a firing squad, though, man. A bunch of peopleâs guns pointed at her. Yours, too. You all pulled triggers. But you canât be certain which bullet was responsible.â
And then, unbidden, came a memory. A field trip in middle school. We were on a school bus going somewhereâup into the North Georgia mountains. It might have been to Helen or Dahlonega, one of those boomtowns shaped by the twenty-ninersâ rush, the one that followed the Carolinasâ and preceded Californiaâs. What I remembered was Shruti sitting alone at the far front of the bus. And I remembered Manu, my seatmate, looking at her the way he often did, with fellow-outsider sympathy, and saying, Iâm going over there. I remembered shaking my head vigorously and saying, She likes to sit alone. But Manu stood and made his way up to her, and because we were jerking up a hill full of switchbacks, it meant the whole bus saw him wobbling to reach Shruti Patel. That was a naked risk, seeking her so publicly. The teacher didnât even yell at him to sit down when she saw that he was coming to Shruti. I remember them sharing silence as we wound higher. She likes to sit alone, I kept thinking, even as I bristled at Manu for having left me all by myself.
To: Shruti Patel, 2004. (I could write, in Wangâs fashion.) When, exactly, was the beginning of your end? Is suicide a complex concatenation of chemistry, culture, and cruelty? Or was yours never suicide, only a theft and murder? When someone says you took your own life, should I be stopping them to shout, no, I did? I study causality, Shruti. I try to understand how economies grow and collapse, and how one zeitgeist blows into another. When Iâm doing my job well, I can see truths that politicians and financiers of their days missed. But I have never come close to grasping0 such patterns on the level of the personal.
âNo, no, no.â And then I was saying it over and overâI did itâalmost becoming addicted to the sound of the sentence, but then I stopped, lest it become itself a kind of absolution, like the rhythm of a bodily penance. âI did it, and I just live with that. Always.â
Chidi bowed his head. He waited for me to catch my breath.
âIf you insist on carrying that around,â he said, âfind a way to make it make you better.â
We talked still later into the night, and eventually reached the matter of the bridal jewelry and Anitaâs mother, the suspected affair, and Lakshmi Joshiâs inkling that wedding gold could contain the particular energy Anjali Auntie needed to get back on her feet.
âIt sounds risky,â he said. He was rubbing his palms together with glee. Chidi considered himself antiestablishment. He was all free information this and end copyrights that; during his youth heâd even once tried to release monkeys from a Berkeley primate lab. He was better suited for outlaw life than I. âIs it all planned out?â
âActually, I could use your help. Could you still print good imitation gold?â
âOhhh. To replace the shit? Iâd need photographs.â
âAnita could do that . . . take pictures of a few vendorsâ stock for, say, an ad brochure.â
He nodded. âI could manage. Nothing fantastic, but convincing at a glance.â
âFuck,â I said. âI mean. Thatâd be amazingâI couldâwould you want some? Lemonade, I mean? In exchange?â
He shook his head. âIâve been meaning to tell you. Judith and I are moving in together.â
I stared around our apartment, thinking how it would never be able to contain three bodies comfortablyâand then I realized.
âYou want to leave.â I managed not to say the full sentence: you want to leave me.
âYeah,â he said. âSo I donât really want the knockoff version of this happy-home-happy-life-happy-wife shit. But youâre not seriously going to start all that all over again, are you?â He glanced around the room awkwardly. âI wasnât expecting to come back from summer to find so much of my coke gone. Were you partying that much?â
âIâll pay you back. And Iâve switched back to Adderall,â I said. âBetter for endurance.â
âI just . . . I get your thing with substances a little better now.â
âYou love drugs, Chidi.â
âI do them no more than once a week, as a strict rule.â
âDo you have it on your calendar or something?â
âMy point is, Neil, that youâve got this relationship now. Something that means something. I mean, do you see it with her?â
âIt being . . .â
âYou know what I mean. I saw it with Judith, really fast.â
âYou wouldnât want security? To have something to fall back on if it didnât work out?â
âWhat does âwork outâ mean? Living together for a hundred years? At least we could say weâd been something to each other for a while. Maybe Anita doesnât have to be, like, the start of your nuclear family. I mean, why do you devote your life to these institutions we invented for different timesâuniversities, marriage?â He was back to the push-ups now, which made everything he said come out in a rapid, sweaty pant. âThe fun of California, I mean, the whole point of
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