Songbirds by Christy Lefteri
1
Yiannis O
NE DAY, NISHA VANISHED AND turned to gold. She turned to gold in the eyes of the creature that stood before me. She turned to gold in the morning sky and in the music of the birds. Later, in the shimmering melody of the maid from Vietnam who sang at Theo’s restaurant. Later still, in the faces and voices of all the maids that flowed along the streets like a turbulent river of anger, demanding to be seen and heard. This is where Nisha exists. But let’s go back. We need to go back.
2
Petra
T
HE DAY NISHA DISAPPEARED WE went to the mountains. The three of us put on our hiking boots and waited for the bus that goes up to Troodos, which comes just twice a day. Nisha would normally go out on her own on Sundays but this time, for the first time, she decided to come along with Aliki and me.
Oh, it was beautiful up there! The autumn mist mingled with the ferns and pines and twisted oaks. These mountains rose from the sea when the African and European tectonic plates collided. You can even see the Earth’s oceanic crust. The rock formations, with their veins and lava pillows, look like they are wearing snake skins.
I love thinking about beginnings. Like that story my aunt used to tell in the back garden: When the Creator finished his creation of the world – Petra, are you listening?! – he shook the remaining clumps of clay from his hands and they fell to the sea and formed this island.
Yes, I love thinking about beginnings. I don’t like endings, though I suppose I’m like most people in that. An ending can be staring you right in the face without your knowing it. Like the last cup of coffee you have with someone when you thought there would be many more.
Aliki played with leaves as Nisha and I sat beneath the heater at one of the small taverns on the trail we were taking, and drank coffee. I remember the conversation we had.
Nisha had been unusually quiet, stirring her coffee for some time without drinking it. ‘Madam,’ she said, suddenly, ‘I have a question to ask.’
I nodded and waited while she shifted in her seat.
‘I would like to take tonight off to—’
‘But Nisha, you had the whole day off !’
She didn’t speak again for a while. Aliki was gathering armfuls of the leaves and placing them on a bench. We both watched her.
Nisha had decided to spend her free day with us, to join Aliki and me on this trip. I shouldn’t be expected to give her more time off.
‘Nisha,’ I said, ‘you have all day off on Sunday. In the evening, you have things to do. You need to help Aliki get her bag ready for school, and then put her to bed.’
‘Madam, many of the other women have Sunday night off too.’ She said this slowly.
‘I know for a fact that other women are not allowed to go gallivanting around at night.’
She acted like she hadn’t heard this and said, ‘And I don’t think madam has plans tonight,’ giving me a sly look before returning her gaze to the coffee. ‘So maybe madam could put Aliki to bed just for tonight? I will do extra duties next Sunday to make up for it.’
I was about to ask her where she intended to go; what was so important that she was willing to disrupt our routine. Perhaps she saw the disapproving look in my eyes, but there was no time for either of us to say anything because at that moment an avalanche of leaves was released over our heads. Nisha screeched, making a pantomime of it, waving her hands in the air and chasing Aliki, who was slipping away down a path that led into the woods. I could hear them after a while in the forest, like two children, laughing and playing, while I drank my coffee.
*
By the time we got home that evening, Nisha hadn’t mentioned again taking the night off. She made dhal curry, and the house filled with the smell of onions and green chillies, cumin, turmeric, fenugreek and curry leaves. I looked over her shoulder as she sautéed the onions and combined the spices with the split red lentils, finally adding a splash of coconut milk. My mouth was watering. Nisha knew this was my favourite dish. I lit the fire in the living room. It had rained earlier that afternoon and from the living-room window I could see that Yiakoumi opposite had his canopy open, and the cobbled streets glimmered beneath the warm lights of his antique shop.
We do not have central heating, so we sat as close as we could to the flames with the bowls of dhal curry on our laps. Nisha brought me a glass of sweet zivania – the aromatic type with caramel and muscat, so warming on this chilly night – and tested Aliki on the nine times table.
‘Seven times nine?’ Nisha said.
‘Sixty-three!’
‘Good. Nine times nine?’
‘Eighty-one! And there’s no point in doing this.’
‘Why not?’
‘I know them.’
‘But you haven’t practised.’
‘I don’t need to. You just have to see the pattern. If you ask me what seven times nine is, I will know that the answer begins with a six. I know that the second number is always one lower than the previous one. So, eight times nine is seventy-two.’
‘You’re too cheeky for your own good, you know? I’m going to test you anyway.’
‘Go ahead. If it helps you.’ Aliki sighed and shrugged as if she had resigned herself to this pointless fate of learning something that she already knew. She had every bit the spunk of a nine-year-old girl.