|  | SRUTHI THEKKIAM   Friday Afternoons on Bus Number 51  Alok is a salesman at Lakshmi  Silks, a sari shop located in one of the busiest shopping districts of Bangalore City. The old, stone-paved roads here  are narrow; the granite slabs underfoot are slippery—they have been worn down  by the volume of people who walk on them every day. Alok trudges from the bus  stop to the shop every morning and back from the shop to the bus stop every  night, watching his feet on the smooth stones. Most of the gray slabs look  similar, but some have patterns on them: an arc of white, a swirl of black,  white specks on a dark background like a reflection of the night sky. He has  walked this route so many times that he can recall the order of these patterned  stones. 
 All  day long, Alok unfolds saris to show them to loud, demanding women. Their  voices sound alike to him, and he thinks of them as being just one woman: the  Customer.
 
 “Show  me the red sari,” the Customer says. “No, not the blood red, the magenta one  with the brocade edge. Now show me the purple-- actually, the blue …”
 Neatly  folded saris are stacked on shelves of the rectangular shop; Alok slides them out  and unfurls them onto the white, laminated tables with practiced flicks of his  wrist so the Customer can see how lusciously the fabric and embroidery  complement each other. On most days, she is hard to please and walks out of the  shop empty-handed, but Alok is never impatient. As he refolds these six-meter  long saris, his fingers expertly follow the directives of the vertical and  horizontal creases to ensure that the fabric stays unwrinkled.
 
 Alok has been  working here since he was twelve years old, and although he is now thirty-one,  Kumar Sahib, the owner of  Lakshmi Silks, calls him “Boy,” just like he did on Alok’s first day at work. Sahib  always addresses the other salesman by his first name, often accompanied by an irritated  exclamation—“Oi Vivek!” or “Vivek, you donkey!”—but Alok has always been “Boy”  to him. Vivek ogles the women shoppers, winks and wiggles his eyebrows at them,  and sings Bollywood love songs under his breath while showing them the saris.  But Alok has remained timid and deferential. He shies away from making eye  contact with the women who come in to shop and rarely lifts his eyes from off  the saris.
 
 So when the three new  mannequins for the shop window were delivered to the store a few months ago,  Sahib asked Alok to assemble them.
 
 “You were an  obedient and polite child,” Sahib said as Alok struggled to fit the voluptuous plastic  torsos onto the shapely legs, “but I was afraid that once you got older, I’d  have the same problems with you as I’ve had with other young salesmen—the ones  whom I fired because their behavior was even worse than that fool Vivek’s.  Luckily, this didn’t happen; you are the best worker I’ve had, Boy.”
 
 Alok mumbled his  gratitude and fitted a mannequin’s arms into the sockets; her palms came  together in a namaste.
 
 “This is why I  choose you to dress the mannequins,” Sahib said. “The window display must be so  appealing that no woman who passes by the shop should be able to resist  entering.”
 
 Alok likes this  idea; he finds it challenging. He imagines that, one day, the girl from the bus  will come to that part of the city on a shopping trip, her sandals slipping a  little on the worn-out stones; and as she nears the sari shop, the mannequins Alok  has dressed will draw her inside, and there she will be, smiling at him in that  beautiful, familiar way.
 Once a week, Alok takes the three  mannequins down from the shop window and into a small room at the back of the  shop. Here, he first undresses them, and then wraps them in the new saris that  Kumar Sahib has picked out. Vivek always follows him into the tiny room so he  can laugh at him as he does this, and this routine makes Alok furiously  embarrassed. When his fingers brush against the mannequins’ breasts, and he  tucks in the saris low on their hips, his head throbs and his hands shake.  Vivek rolls with laughter as he watches him fumble nervously with the saris. 
 “This  is the closest you’ll get to a real woman,” he tells Alok, “so enjoy it, Little  Girl.”
 
 Once,  Alok had modeled a sari for an elderly lady who came into Lakshmi Silks to shop  for her daughter in England;  since then, Vivek has taken to calling him “Little Girl.” The elderly lady had  been unlike the Customer that Alok knew and was used to—her unusual  friendliness disconcerted him. She told him that her daughter was in London, getting a Ph.D. in  English Literature, and was marrying her British boyfriend the following month.
 
 “I haven’t met  him, but I’ve spoken to him on the phone,” the old lady said. “He seems like a  nice boy.”
 
 Alok was nervous  and didn’t reply. He wished she would stop talking and tell him which kind of  sari she wanted.
 
 “Next month is an  auspicious month for weddings,” she continued. “My girl might be modern, but  she is traditional in the important ways.” She nodded as she said this, and he  nodded back. Finally, she said, “Show me your best saris.”
 
 Alok brought out  the most expensive saris in the shop—rich, smooth silks embroidered with gold  and silver threads and embedded with semi-precious stones. The old lady  examined them slowly and picked out a pink sari with golden paisley embroidery.
 
 “My daughter’s  complexion is very similar to yours,” she said. “Could you wrap this sari around  yourself so that I can be absolutely sure it will look good on her?”
 Alok felt muddled  and panicky, and couldn’t think of how to refuse her. He wound the sari around  his clothes, his eyes darting to Vivek who was busy with customers on the other  side of the shop; he hoped he wouldn’t look over and see him.
 
 “I’ll take it,” the  old lady said finally.
 
 But while Alok  rapidly unwrapped the sari from around himself, Vivek glanced across the room  at him and grinned.
 
 “Little Girl looks  pretty in pink,” Vivek said later when he passed him on his way out for a  cigarette break.
 
 And now when Kumar  Sahib asks, “Where’s the Boy?,”  Vivek yells out to Alok, “Little Girl! Sahib  wants you!”
 Often, Vivek shuts  the door of the small backroom when Alok is dressing the mannequins, and locks  it from the outside.
 
 “I’ll give you  some privacy while you play with your dolls, Little Girl,” he says.
 
 As Alok fiddles  with the pleats of a sari, he can hear Vivek laughing on the other side of the  door. The mannequins stare at him, smooth-faced and calm, their full, red lips  curved in coquettish smiles.
 On every weekday except Friday, Alok  has a regular routine. He catches the 7:30 bus each morning from his house to  the shop. On his way from the bus stop to Lakshmi Silks, he buys a small  garland of jasmine from the flower sellers who sit by the Ganesh temple. By 8:00,  he has unlocked the shop and opened the windows to let in the cool morning air;  he sweeps the floor and wipes the white tables clean. He lights a  sandalwood-scented incense stick and sets it before the portrait of Goddess  Lakshmi that hangs on the wall, and replaces the day-old jasmine garland on the  portrait with the fresh one he has just bought. Kumar Sahib comes in at exactly 8:30, immediately opens his ledger,  and begins balancing accounts. Vivek strolls in casually after 9:00, despite  Sahib’s regular reprimands. Alok is busy with customers all day, except for two  fifteen-minute tea breaks at 11:00 in the morning and 5:00 in the evening, and  a half-hour lunch break at 1:00. At 8:00 each night, he locks up the shop.
 He  takes the bus back home, where his mother keeps his dinner warm and sits with  him while he eats. Alok can predict what she will talk about. First, she will  ask him if he had a good day, to which he will always say that he did. Then she  will tell him about her day: She washed the clothes, her arthritis is becoming  worse, she went to the market to buy vegetables, she comforted the neighbor’s  colicky baby. Finally, she will try to talk him into getting married. On some  days, she is insidious about this:
 
 “Swarna’s niece is  so beautiful. I have a photograph of her with me, Son. See? Isn’t she lovely?  Such fair skin! She made cashew candy the other day. What a wonderful cook!”
 
 On other days,  when her arthritis is especially bad, or when another woman in the neighborhood  has asked her why Alok is still a bachelor, her impatience makes her more  direct:
 
 “Kumar Sahib pays  you well now, Son. You can afford a wife and a child—maybe even two children!  Don’t you want to make me a grandmother?”
 Alok won’t respond  to her, and she continues her harangue until she wears herself out and lies  down on her mat to sleep. After he eats, Alok goes to bed. The multicolored  spots he sees when he shuts his eyes remind him of the saris in their various  designs and brilliant hues.
 Fridays are special, and at one  o’clock on Friday afternoons, Alok has lunch at restaurant that is a ten-minute  walk away from Lakshmi Silks. The lunch special here is channa masala served with rotis, and this is what he has. Being a special day, he reasons, it merits a  special lunch. After he eats, he washes his hands over and over with the lemon-scented  soap in the restaurant restroom. When he is satisfied that they smell clean, he  uses his big checked handkerchief to wipe them dry with great  thoroughness. 
 He then walks to  the bus stop, watching his feet on the stones, and because he is eagerly  looking forward to the rest of the afternoon, he smiles at the stones he  recognizes. Bus Number 51 is usually a little late, and this makes Alok  impatient. He jumps up when he sees it approaching, and boards it quickly. The  bus is never filled up at this time and he almost always gets a window seat. He  settles down and listens to the hum of the engine, and watches the soft, white  clouds. They take on cheerful shapes: a small dog with a curly tail, a fat man  bending over, a cluster of balloons.
 
 One stop before Tagore Circle, Alok  sits up straighter and pats his hair down. In the five minutes it takes to  reach Tagore Circle,  he becomes increasingly anxious. He worries that she might not be there, and  that she has decided never to come again. He looks out the window apprehensively,  searching for her among the people waiting at the bus stop. But she is always  there. She gets on the bus and her eyes dart around as she looks for him; then,  she walks right over to his seat. She sits beside him and they immediately hold  hands, secretly and tightly.
 
 Alok  doesn’t know her name, her age, or anything about her. He rode this bus for the  first time when he ran an errand for Kumar Sahib on a Friday afternoon several months  ago. The girl sat down next to him that day and took his hand in hers. She held  onto him firmly, and though he was uneasy, he was also moved and amazed that a  beautiful woman wanted to hold his hand.
 
 When  Alok returned to Lakshmi Silks later that evening, he hesitantly asked Kumar  Sahib whether he could take three-hour lunch breaks on Fridays, from one to  four.
 
 “Of course,” Kumar  Sahib said, smiling. It was the first time Alok had asked him for  anything.
 
 And every Friday  after that, Alok has made sure that he is on the same bus at the same time in  the afternoon, and the girl has always gotten on at Tagore Circle.
 She looks straight  ahead, never at him. He steals glances at her from time to time, trying to  memorize the shape of her eyes, the exact shade of her dusky skin, every angle  and curve of her face. Once, he’d looked down at their tightly-clasped hands  and noticed that she was darker than him; he knew his mother wouldn’t approve  of a dark-skinned daughter-in-law, and realizing that made him smile. The  girl’s saris are always plain but in good taste, and Alok likes to think about  which sari from Lakshmi Silks he would buy for her if he could afford to. He  also makes note of the way she wears her sari every Friday—whether she pleats  the end and pins it to her blouse modestly, or if she leaves the fabric flowing  over her arm, or if she wraps it around her back like a shawl —and when he  dresses the mannequins, he does so in an imitation of her style.
 
 On some days, the  girl’s eyes sparkle, and Alok thinks she is young, too young, maybe not even  twenty. On other days, the firm way she sets her mouth makes her look older.  Alok wonders if she is married, and whether her husband is responsible for the  unhappy way she purses her lips. At this thought, he is racked with jealousy  and outrage. He imagines her husband—a cruel and ungrateful man; Alok feels  that he could fight for her.
 
 The girl always  gets off at the Majestic Market stop; there is a flicker of a smile on her lips  as she walks down the aisle of the bus and descends the steps. Alok continues  sitting in the bus for two more stops, till Vasanth Road. He goes to the  confectioner’s there to buy a box of cashew candy for his mother. He greets the  confectioner loudly, and smiles at him brightly. He asks after his family—he  knows the confectioner has two children in middle school and a wife who gets  frequent asthma attacks. Alok discusses politics and cricket with him in a  clear, confident voice, and makes witty comments and tells jokes. He imagines  what the confectioner might be saying about him to his friends and customers:  “There is this smart young fellow who comes to my shop every Friday afternoon  to buy a box of cashew candy. What a friendly and intelligent young man!”
 
 Alok tucks the box  of sweets into the pocket of his tunic and takes the next bus back to the sari  shop.
 
 Vivek is usually  at the street corner, smoking cigarettes, waiting to tease him.
 
 “Hello, Little  Girl! How was your date with Miss India? Or is it Mister India?”
 
 Alok walks by,  head bowed; he hides his loud, confident voice, but a secret smile inside him  keeps him warm. Whenever one of the women who come into the shop to buy saris  has a slender wrist with dark, silky skin, Alok wonders if it is her. In that  deliciously slow moment, before he dares to raise his eyes up to her face and  discover that it is only a Customer, he feels the air surge into his nostrils  and hears his heartbeat in his ears, and he is happy.
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