Meet Me in Mumbai Excerpt
Meet Me in Mumbai Excerpt
Meet Me in Mumbai Excerpt
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author or third-party websites or their content.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the
product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to a ctual
persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
ISBN 978-1-338-74928-1
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I stare at the stick, willing the second line not to appear. But my
powers of persuasion must have dulled b ecause it shows up,
a pretty baby pink, which is ironic considering there’s nothing
pretty about this. An avalanche of thoughts threatens to bury
me. Suresh h asn’t responded to any of my emails or messages. I
don’t even have his home number in India.
It’s starting to dawn on me that I might be alone in this.
There’s a loud knock on the bathroom door, and I almost
drop the stick. “Ayesha, are you done? You’re g oing to be late for
school.” Salma Aunty sounds anxious, which is nothing new.
The w oman could win a gold medal if there’s ever an Olympic
event on how to worry yourself into an early grave. But she’s
sweet, and I hate it when she worries about me.
“Coming, Aunty.” I quickly wrap the pregnancy test stick in
a wad of toilet paper and shove it into the pocket of my Dora the
Explorer robe, a gift from my cousin Reshma, who’s only a
couple of years older than me and headed back to college just
before I arrived in Bloomington, Illinois. Apparently, she thinks
I’m seven, not seventeen.
1
I open the door to find Salma Aunty smoothing the duvet on
my bed. Then she turns around and begins to straighten the
things on my desk. She picks up a few sketches that I’ve left on
top of my notebooks and puts them together in a neat little pile.
“You don’t have to do that, Aunty,” I say in protest, mostly
because I don’t like her touching my stuff, but partly also because
I promised my mom that I would be super polite and always
keep my room neat and tidy, so as not to bring shame upon
my f amily back in India.
Salma Aunty is my mom’s cousin. She settled h ere in
Bloomington-Normal about twenty years ago when her hus-
band got a job teaching physics at Illinois State University. She
graciously offered to let me live with them during my senior
year of high school so I could apply to college from within the
US. It’s a bit complicated because my parents moved back to
India soon after I was born here. So, I have a US passport but an
Indian accent and brown skin, which is what drew Suresh and
me together in the first place. There a ren’t a lot of brown people
in our school, and it’s nice to have someone else who misses eat-
ing pav bhaji and ragda patties at Elco Market as much as I do.
“Come down and have breakfast before it gets cold,” Salma
Aunty says. “I made Bombay toast. It’s your favorite, na?”
“Yes, thank you, Aunty,” I say, giving her arm a quick squeeze
before disappearing into the walk-in closet to get changed.
The thick slices of fried bread soaked in egg with onion, green
chilies, and cilantro are still hot and crispy as I slide into a chair
at the breakfast table. Normally I would inhale at least three
slices, but today all it does is make the bile rise up to my throat.
I’ve been feeling this way for a couple of days now, starting right
after I realized I’d missed my period. When I woke up that morn-
ing, I just knew.
2
I didn’t r eally need a test to confirm, but I bought one any-
way. And now I would kill for a cup of coffee, which I’m pretty
sure is bad in my condition. Condition. Is that what this is? I meet a
cute boy who feels like home, we hang out, talk a lot, and I end
up getting pregnant? It’s like w e’ve known each other for a long
time, but in reality, it’s only been three months. Though h ere,
far away from my parents and my little sisters, even a week feels
like an eternity.
I have no idea what I’m going to do.
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C H A P TER T WO
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