Long Sleeves
At a Glance
Section titled āAt a Glanceā| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2024-03-01 |
| Journal | ĀThe ĀSewanee review |
| Authors | Kanak Kapur |
Abstract
Section titled āAbstractāLong Sleeves Kanak Kapur (bio) On New Yearās Eve, we left Saiās house wearing jeans and something with long sleeves. Inside the cab, we took off our shirts and wrapped them around our waists. Underneath we had on our party clothes: skintight tops shoplifted the weekend prior from an overflowing sale bin. It was Saiās job to confirm the nightās address with our driver. She placed her elbow on the center console and leaned toward the man before speaking to him. I was shy, unwelcoming to strangers, but she was boastful, a wild dancer, nuclear and winged. In loose, rapid Urdu, she asked: āBrother, you know where to go or no?ā The sleeves were Saiās idea. She thought them up the year before, when we got in trouble with her mother the last time we dressed like this. We had returned home too late from another party, where weād been drenched in the rain. Afraid of the consequences, we stood on the porch, damp locks of hair pasted to our foreheads. From the window, weād seen Saiās mother in the living room with a stack of household bills, a highlighter in hand. Shamefaced, we entered and made our false apologies. I kept my arms folded high [End Page 201] across my chest, covering the white blouse Iād worn specifically for what it made of my boobs, which had recently and miraculously plumped to significance. Sai had on one of those bandage dresses that used to be popular, which, in her motherās words, put her every organ on display. Sita Aunty was always afraid of men, and though we didnāt know it yet, sheād passed the fear down to us, where it would remain, distantly flickering and translucent, until every so often, in what would become our separate lives, weād hear a story or encounter a man who matched the severity of these phantoms we knew Sita Aunty was afraid of. āWhat have I taught you?ā she asked us that night, her voice slipping from its composure. āDo you want to get raped?ā She threw the highlighter across the living room, the cap clattering away from the pen. In the taxi, I saw that Saiās top showed off her new belly- button ring, a gift sheād given herself for her sixteenth birthday. Alone, sheād traveled to the one underground tattoo shop in the city. I was shocked when she told me. For years Iād remember how she called me to an empty corner of the hallway between classes, how she lifted the lip of her shirt, revealing a warm, reddened puncture of skin. The charm on the ring was a tiny, diamond-studded letter. J, for Jiya, my name. The piercing made her look older than she was. In the shadowy backseat, I watched her, wondering if she would kiss me that night. Kissing Sai was a thing of luck. It didnāt always happen in public unless people asked to see, unless there was a crowd of boyish voices to cheer. I was still trying to understand the shape our bodies made when we swung an arm over the other in bed, or when her eyes lingered on the bottom half of my face when we talked. It didnāt always produce the same swell of pelvic rush as with boys, but there was something else ashimmer within me, and happy-making. The first time still rang in my memory, sharp as a desert shell. We were in her bedroom, Sita Aunty clattering pots downstairs. A [End Page 202] patch of Saiās sticky lip gloss burned my chin. I didnāt rub it off for fear that I would never feel it again. Outside, it was strangely humid for December, which was accompanied by the faint smell of wood dust, and then we heard itāa saw running somewhere, a few streets over, or in an old memory. We passed a construction zone where men in yellow hats waited for a night bus, their white shirts stained with the dayās dirt. On nearby streets were circles of identical houses builtā¦