It was a gloomy, driz­zly morn­ing. We woke up tired, our col­lec­tive efforts at putting out the rem­nants of last years hor­rid hur­ri­cane sea­son from our back­yard hav­ing been only half suc­cess­ful. We started early, and by about 1, we were: Done. Grumpy and Hun­gry. The bulk pickup truck arrived, and the dri­ver brushed away my offer to help, looked at me piti­fully and non­cha­lantly loaded every­thing up by him­self. Increase in level of guilt — why did I get dad to help?

We drove to India South, stuck behind the old cou­ple in a white pickup truck, their grand­son sand­wiched between them, sip­ping coke — crew cut head vis­i­ble through the back door of their cab. The old man talk­ing on his cell­phone, grandma’s feet up on the dash­board, truck crawl­ing on a one lane road. Not a speck of dust on the truck, some ply­wood on the truck bed. Did he load it up himself?

The four of us get seated on a table prob­a­bly designed for two, the four large par­ti­tioned stain­less steel plates cov­er­ing up the entire table, water cups bal­anced pre­car­i­ously at the edges. We eat, Lavanya elbow­ing me, me elbow­ing the faux wood fin­ish on the walls.

As we eat, we also lis­ten. Four engi­neers, talk­ing loudly enough for the entire restau­rant to hear. One of them invit­ing the other three to his house,

“Come over man, we can do something.”

“Really? Like what?”

“Maybe we can play poker. I have poker chips at home.”

“I have chips too. Potato chips.”

Then the killer. The other three actu­ally laugh.

At which point, Lavanya turns to me and says, “I’m glad I mar­ried you.” And we both drank a lot of water to that thought.

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