6. In the order in which affections were doled out in her family, Farzana believed she was stuck in second position.
“Why do you say that, Farzi?” I asked, only half-listening. I was leafing through a magazine Farzana had sneaked out of her parents’ room and was distracted by an ad featuring a naked man and woman standing against one another so that their critical parts—just their critical parts—were hidden in the curves of each other’s bodies. It was an ad for shoes. Or perfume. The product was beside the point.
“Because it’s true,” Farzana said, taking the magazine from me and fanning it before our faces. “All day, my mother says to me, ‘Farzi, do this. Farzi, do that. Farzana-khazana, my treasure, I’m teaching you housework for your own good, darling!’”
She lowered her voice to match her mother’s drawl, duplicating the woman’s mannerisms to perfection. I burst out laughing and rolled across the bed to her. She flapped the neck of her t-shirt for air and I noticed a blue undergarment enveloping the swell of her budding breasts. Instinctively, I threw a protective arm across my own torso. I hadn’t started wearing a bra yet and my body offered no suggestion that I might need one soon.
“And that donkey, Aslam,” Farzana continued. “He gets away with everything!”
It was hard to disagree with that. Farzana’s neighborhood wanderings unfailingly ended before sunset because she had to return home and help her mother with dinner. Aslam, however, came and went as he pleased. When the family bought a new car, Aslam wrestled Farzana out of the front seat while their father watched in amusement and their mother concentrated on fitting her complacent girth through the back door. When Aslam pored over some newly acquired astrological charts on the living room floor—a strange and enduring hobby he picked up God knows where—Farzana was expected to bring him snacks. And if he spilled his sticky rose sherbet on the new floor tiles, Farzana was asked to clean up. “Mere chand ke tukde—my beautiful piece of the moon,” their mother would say, breaking into a betel-stained smile and stroking Farzana’s forehead. “He’s your little brother. If you don’t indulge him, who will? Besides, if you learn to take care of Aslam, you’ll be well-prepared to take care of a husband, when it’s time.”
“It’s not going to be that way,” Farzana would hiss. “You’ll see. I’m going to find a husband who takes care of me. Someone who dotes on me.” But her mother, ambling out of the room, seldom listened.
7. The year we turned thirteen, Farzana decided she would marry a man ardent in his adoration of her. And since it would be a few years until that happened, she set about searching for someone else who could worship her in the meantime.
They weren’t the husband she had started to dream of. But until he came along, Farzana decided, the unconditional affections of Nabeela-Jameela, the never-dying cats, would do.