Chapter-1:
. . . Thiruvananthapuram . . .
I ate the fish, which was rich in spices and chilly. Amama knew that fish was my favourite, especially Karimeen Pollichathu, a dish made from pearl spot fish. We finished eating and washed our hands. Mum took the plates into the kitchen. Amama then asked us to help her tend to the plants in the garden.
After about an hour of helping Amama with gardening, I
went to the Thiruvananthapuram beach. Our garden looks over the beach. The
beach’s a beautiful place to watch the sunset. I spend hours there, either sitting
on the shore and watching the waves or playing in the water with the kids of
the village. The Thiruvananthapuram beach is a tourist hot spot, it can get
crowded in the peak season. I can make some extra money by guiding tourists
around Thiruvananthapuram. On my way there I see a newspaper boy screaming at
the top of his lungs to sell today’s paper, copies of which are piled on the
back seat of his bicycle. It makes me wonder what’s the date today. I check my
phone, it’s the twenty-fifth of March, another Friday, nothing special. I sit
there on the shore, watching the waves. I always love the sound they make. The
gushing of the wind and the gurgling of water. The sound of the waves crashing
against the shore is accompanied by the scent of hot sand mixed with sunscreen and maybe even coconut. I bought a bounty bar a while ago. I love the taste
of chocolate with coconut shavings. The waves always calm me down, whether it’s
before an exam or after a busy day.
I just finished schooling a month ago. I had worked
hard for my twelfth board exams. The results came in and I passed with a good
98.74%, so getting into college wouldn’t be too difficult. I was a humanities
major. I’ve found interest in literature. It’s always been my ambition to be an
author. I want to get a degree in literature to further pursue this dream. I’ve
been searching for colleges with courses in literature in Thiruvananthapuram for
the month, but I still haven’t found one that fits.
My phone suddenly rang. It’s Will. I usually call
William by the name of Will and he calls me Akshi. I pick up the call, “Akshi,
where are you?” he asks in a threatening sort of way, I smile,
especially because I know he can’t see me doing that, “Where I usually am after
sunset. You know me better than that, Will. I’m at the Thiruvananthapuram
beach.” I can hear him sigh through the phone, he sounds frustrated as he
speaks, “Come home now. Father’s calling in a family meeting.” Father
calls a family meeting when he has an announcement for the whole family.
I get up and brush off the sand from my clothes. I
walk home through the streets of Thiruvananthapuram and find ammavam on the
veranda, ammavam is what we Malayalees call our mother's brother, I ask him what the meeting was for, and he replies, “Don’t
know. Your father got an email. He read it and told us we’re having a family
meeting.” Everyone in the house finds the idea of a family meeting
strange, but no one admits it to my father. This whole conversation with
ammavam was in Malayalam. Will isn’t very fluent in Malayalam, and my father
doesn’t understand the language at all. Amama doesn’t speak anything but
Malayalam. That’s why there always has to be a translator when my father and
Amama are having a conversation. I can speak Malayalam like any other local in
Kerala.
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