Mild
What the Body Kept
568 words · 3 min read
The mirror on the almirah door is tilted slightly forward, and in it she can see herself from the collarbone down — the sari draped the way her mother's cousin had arranged it that morning, the muslin so fine it moves when the ceiling fan turns. She had not looked at herself like this in three months. She had not had reason to. The winter afternoon light coming through the single window is flat and honest, and she stands in it the way you stand in something you cannot avoid.
The wedding house is loud even through the closed door. Shehnai from a speaker somewhere, the particular frequency of women laughing all at once, the percussion of chairs being arranged for the reception. She has perhaps forty minutes. She had told Rubina she needed to rest, and Rubina had nodded with the knowing efficiency of someone who has done this herself.
The muslin is not what she expected. She had worn saris before, but her body had been a different country then — one she had mapped thoroughly and trusted. This fabric, this thin winter-white with its woven border, rests against her abdomen in a way she cannot quite account for. The pleats lie flat over a softness that was not there before. Not unpleasant. Just — new. A coastline redrawn.
She sits on the edge of the bed. The petticoat drawstring, tied that morning at what felt like the right place, has shifted to press against the lower curve of her belly, and the pressure is specific and warm. She is aware of it the way you become aware of something only when you are finally still enough to notice. Her hands rest on her thighs, the muslin beneath them cool from the air, her own warmth already beginning to move through it.
She had not planned this. That is what she would say if there were anyone to say it to. She had only sat down.
Her right hand moves first — not toward anything, just resting differently, the heel of her palm settling into the place where her thigh meets the gathered pleats. The fabric layers there. She can feel the difference between the petticoat beneath and the sari on top, a small architecture of cloth, and beneath both of these: herself. Warmer than she expected. She had not known she was warm.
The sound that came out of her was not a sound she chose. Shorter than a breath, swallowed before it finished. She pressed her lips together after, as if to confirm it had not escaped into the room.
Her left hand had gone to the edge of the bed without her noticing, gripping the carved wood of the frame.
In the mirror: her collarbone, the rise of her chest under the pallu, her own hands — one gripping, one resting in the gathered cloth of her lap. The muslin had warmed completely now. She could not feel the fabric anymore. Only herself through it.
She held very still in the middle of that wanting.
The shehnai continued outside. The light did not change. The woman in the mirror did not look like someone she had lost. She looked like someone she had not yet found the edges of — and her right hand, still resting in the warm gathered pleats, had not moved, and she had not yet decided if it would.