Maryam and mohtaram by nahid rachlin iss20

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MARYAM AND MOHTARAM A short story by Nahid Rachlin Even after a week Mohtaram could not believe that her sister, Narghes, was really with her in the living room of her house. But there she was, her polka-dot chador wrapped around her, sitting in a patch of the sun on the rug in the living room to warm her legs, although it was late May and the temperature hovered around 70. The house too had marks of Narghes’ presence – the presents she had brought, a cloth with paisley designs covered the kitchen table, a tapestry depicting a caravan hung on a wall. The smell of rose water that Narghes dabbed on her clothes permeated the air. It made Mohtaram feel more at home in her own house since her sister had come. She had not really known what she was getting herself into when she had sold everything she had in Iran, after her husband died, and came to America to live near her son, how much she would be leaving behind, so much would be out of her reach. She had not even known that her son she had come to be near would not be that accessible to her. She saw Cyrus only a few moments every day when he stopped in before he went to the university in Athens to do his teaching. When his children were younger she saw them every day but now they were at school and busy with their friends. Mildred, Cyrus’ wife, had not learned Farsi and her own English was not all that good and they could not really talk to each other. Feri, her daughter, who had come to America shortly after Cyrus did, was studying in Madison and was married to an Iranian engineer, but Mohtaram rarely saw her. She had a few Iranian friends who lived in town but they were all younger than her with different concerns. Before Narghes came, Mohtaram had spent days preparing for the visit – dusting every corner, washing the bedspreads, curtains, tablecloths, scrubbing pots and pans, buying a side of mutton from the young man who slaughtered a sheep every few weeks in the Muslim fashion and sold it to other Iranians in town. For years she had been asking Narghes to come for a visit. She wrote to her, ‘You will love Ohio. It is sparkling clean with no dust to settle on things. There are many trees and lakes and rivers ...’ Narghes had always refused, saying, ‘I have my prayer sessions starting next month,’ or ‘Bahman wants to get married and we’re looking for a proper wife for him.’ What had prompted her to come now, Narghes had told her, was a dream she had. In the dream she was searching for Mohtaram and finally found her in a wide, well-lit but empty street, scratched and bleeding. The dream had so shaken her that she decided she must see her sister immediately.

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the drouth

In a few moments Mohtaram took Narghes to the shopping centre, which was within walking distance, to buy shoes for her. She had been complaining that her feet hurt. Already, in one week, Mohtaram was falling into the old interdependency with her sister. Every day they woke at dawn, prayed, cooked and ate together, went out for walks. Narghes had put on her chador and Mohtaram a long-sleeved dress and a scarf on her head. Although Narghes complained about her feet and walked rather slowly, she gave the impression of being the stronger of the two with sturdy arms and ample breasts. Mohtaram felt thin and frail by contrast and was aware that her fairer skin had wrinkled more. It was hard to tell, she was sure, which one of them was older, even though there was a five-year difference in age between them. People occasionally turned around and looked at Narghes, her in her long black chador, and some smiled at her but just as often they acted as if they did not notice anything different.

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‘See, they leave you alone here,’ Mohtaram said. ‘No one interferes in your affairs.’ ‘But it’s so lonely, it’s like everyone has crawled into a shell,’ Narghes said. It seemed to Mohtaram that it would have been more natural to Narghes if people stared or even poked at her chador and asked her what it was.

One thing though caught Narghes’ attention which she liked, a pair of soft, flat shoes in the window of a dime store. ‘They look so comfortable. They’ll be perfect for me,’ she said. ‘I constantly change shoes and never find any that fit.’ They went in and Narghes tried on the shoes. They were imported from Japan and cost only five dollars. She bought two pairs. She wore one pair on the way back. She said they felt as comfortable as they looked. When they got back they began to prepare lunch. Today Feri and Sohrab were driving in from Madison to spend the weekend in Athens, planning to stay with Cyrus and visiting here during the day. They were all coming to the house for lunch soon. Mohtaram had also invited an Iranian couple living nearby too to come for lunch. Narghes helped her – cutting eggplants, green beans, cucumbers, soaking the rice, raisins and lentils. They used some of the spices Narghes had brought with her – turmeric, sumac, dried ground lemon, a combination of coriander, cinnamon and pepper. The air was filled with scents Mohtaram associated with home. As they prepared Narghes filled in Mohtaram with other stories, than she already had, about the relatives, the brothers, nephews,


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