Where the Sun Will Rise Tomorrow
It's 1905, and Japan’s victory over the Russians in the Russo-Japanese War has shocked the British and their imperial subjects. In India, 16-year-old Leela and her younger sister, Maya, are spurred on to wear homespun as a sign of protest to show the British that the Indians won't be oppressed for much longer, either.
But when Leela's betrothed, Nash, asks her to circulate a petition amongst her classmates to desegregate the girls' school in Chandrapur, she's wary. She needs to remind Maya that the old ways are not all bad, for soon Maya will have to join her own betrothed and his family in their quiet village. When she discovers that Maya has embarked on a forbidden romance, Leela's response shocks her family, her town, and her country firmly into the new century.
Published after winning Galaxy Galloper’s “Novella Spectacular” contest to find the best unpublished novella, Where the Sun Will Rise Tomorrow is the beautifully written story of a girl who has no plans to become anything more than what has been promised to her by history—until those promises become untenable.
My Review
I was drawn to this book because of the time period and concept of this story. In the beginning, I did like this book. Leela and Maya were good. They did bring good voices to the story. Although, I do agree with another reader that it did appear as if the girls did follow the male voices a bit more stronger than I thought they would. Don't get me wrong as the girls did make a stand. However, it is interesting to show just how much family, tradition, and society plays a part into our actions and ways of thinking.
So back to my comment earlier about in the beginning liking this book. What I meant by this is that while, I did like the story and the girls; it felt like everyone else was just white noise. I could not find that connection with them. Therefore, I struggled to connect with the story as a whole as well. Character connection is important and to a story like this I think it is very important. Sadly, this book did not do it for me.
About the author:
Rashi Rohatgi is the author of Where the Sun Will Rise Tomorrow. An Indian-American Pennsylvania native who lives in Arctic Norway, her short fiction and poetry have appeared in A-Minor Magazine, The Misty Review, Anima, Allegro Poetry, Lunar Poetry, and Boston Accent Lit. Her non-fiction and reviews have appeared in The Review Review, Wasafiri, World Literature Today, Africa in Words, The Aerogram, and The Toast. She is a graduates of Bread Loaf Sicily and associate professor of English at Nord University.
The
next day my cheeks, my eyes, and my hair are as good as they’re
going to be when Nash arrives just after breakfast. Instead of inviting us to
his family’s for lunch, he is taking Maya and me
to Gol Ghar. Everybody, from children to grandparents, loves Gol Ghar, but I
wonder if he’s chosen the grain silo so that we
will have an excuse to walk hip to hip, shoulder to shoulder up the narrow
staircase. As Maya tells him about the good luck we’ve
had with the training college’s opening, I study him.
Nash
has always been beautiful: his dark skin smooth, his broad lips projecting
softness, his lashes longer than mine with three coats of petroleum jelly.
Beautiful, and somehow therefore gentle: the Chowdhurys have always been
successful, and lucky, and generous. They have nothing to prove, and Nash, a
diamond in this fine setting, even less so. And so though he’s
always been tall, and always looked at each person as though they were the only
one left in the city, he’s always struck me as laughing,
comforting, with kindness to spare. In childhood, we hardly saw anything of
him, but once we were formally engaged, he withstood the taunts of his
classmates and often swung by with ices or samosas or the choruses of songs
from the latest films. It was easy for him to love, and as all I’d
ever dreamed of was loving someone back, he was perfect.
He’s
changed: his lanky frame has tightened, straightened, and as he listens to
Maya, I can see in the stiffness of his hands in his lap and of his toes, curled
around the edge of his sandals, that he’s
kept the tiniest portion of his attention for himself. He is still beautiful,
but also... threatening? Is that the right word for the way he makes my body,
still seated and composed, feel called to attention against any inclination of
its own? His hair is longer, I see—his barber must only have shaved him this
morning, rather than give him the accompanying trim—and this imperfection lets
me catch my breath.
The
carriage is pulling up to the Gol Ghar— our very own Round House, our silly
English silo that once held grain and now serves as a pleasure ground for those
of us too brown to make use of the club—as Nash responds to Maya’s
exclamation that she’s more than ready for us to go back to
school next week. “But surely...”
he says.
When
Nargis and Mawiyya do that to me in school—trail off in the middle of a thought
there’s
no chance I could finish on my own—it’s to mock me, but Nash doesn’t
mock. I realize that while Maya and I have had numerous conversations about my
post-marriage life and how to keep it as seamless a transition as possible,
Nash and I haven’t had any. “Why
don’t
you run slightly ahead and check on the crowd?” I ask Maya with our shared
look. We trail her, slowly, and I want to throw my arms around him again, but
instead I say, “You know I
won’t
attend the training college from August if you or your parents don’t
approve.” I start with what Maya would call a barefaced lie because I suppose
that, all said and done, it’s the truth. November, really, is
wedding season, but ours is to be held as soon as the weather settles. Some
families need time to negotiate; ours will be efficiently put together as Papa
has ceded complete control to the Chowdhurys since, as even Koyal Chachi would
agree, there’s no chance of their taste being
anything less than impeccable.
“Oh,
no, of course I wouldn’t dream of stopping you!” he says. He
actually stops, and turns to me, and reaches for my hands before he realizes,
and stops himself. “Leela, I
didn’t
realize you wanted to become a teacher, but I should have guessed. You’ve
read all of the great histories of Chandrapur, and your Sanskrit is far better
than mine. I’ve no right or desire to stop you
making the most of yourself.” “Well, that’s
good, then,” I say. “Though if I’m
being honest, I mostly just want to attend the school to make sure I’m
able to see Maya every day. I’m not used to a joint household and I’m
not sure I’ll be able to play a dutiful
daughter-in-law without her as a sounding board.” I pause, but Nash smiles, and
laughs. “And after
suffering through a mixed education, I think it will be nice to have the chance
to teach in the Hindu school whenever it opens.”
We
have only taken a few steps, but already Nash stops, causing the mother and
daughter behind us to bump into our calves and mumble apologies. “Leela,”
he murmurs, so softly I have to lean in to hear, and the proximity is causing
my heart to do a furious dance. But then he keeps walking.
“Leela,” he
says again after a few steps. “When I was
in Japan, at first it was terribly lonely. We tried to integrate, but without
eating fish, we Hindu students found ourselves isolated in the canteen; without
much money, additionally, I found myself unwilling to hole up and play cards
with boys from Lucknow or Kanpur. I know you didn’t
have it easy at Bankipore, either, with your father in trade.”
I nod.
“But
after the triumph against the West, it was as though divisions had melted away.
Even when we were sent home, I knew I was coming back to something important,
and the sight of you in that swadeshi sari running towards me solidified every
commitment I’d hardly understood, before Tokyo,
that I’d had. I’ve
dreamt about you in red for years,” he says, and though I want to faint I press
my hands to the wall and keep myself barely upright, “but
for the past year, I’ve dreamt about you in white. I’m
so lucky that my life partner shares my dreams, not only for us, but for the
country.” Nash sees me faltering, and risks censure from the auntie behind us
by steadying me, a hand to the small of my back. I am dizzy for so many
reasons.
“I
just cannot understand why there is no hesitation towards a communal training
college that will only lead towards a communalization of the school system
itself, when we’re fighting, desperately, against
communalism!”
We
have almost climbed to the top; I see Maya awaiting us, and when she catches my
eye, she winks, but I can’t reciprocate. “It wasn’t
a British initiative,” I tell him. “The Director
of Schools wanted to keep us girls together, in fact, and then both the Nawab
and the Maharani joined together to oppose him. There are surely more than
twelve Hindu girls in Chandrapur who may have wanted to get educated alongside
us, and soon there will be places, and teachers for them. Education can only
help us.”
I
am out of breath, but we’ve climbed Gol Ghar, and the view is
rewarding enough to let me tear my eyes away from Nash for a minute. And thank
heavens, because looking at this new Nash while he is deliberating is... no,
not threatening. Unsettling, I decide on. I wink at Maya, and we play our usual
game of identifying all of the best places: the fields, in the distance, past
the river, where on the way to Gaya we always stop, much too soon, for the best
roasted corn; the Rama temple with the most rambunctious monkeys; the Sikh
gurudwara that is unquestionably our most beautiful building; the Khudabaksh
library where the real scholars spend their days with microscopes, studying the
beautifully illuminated manuscripts; the market, where one day soon we must go
and see what Indian-made lingerie I will wear to start my married life.
Nash
speaks up again, finally. “I’ve
missed this place so much.”
There
are the beginnings of tears at the corners of his eyes, and I don’t
know what to say.
Maya
never has this problem. “And didn’t
you miss us, then? I didn’t get even one letter from you,
Mister.”
She
has cracked the gloomy spell, and Nash rifles through his bag until he hits
upon a small wrapped package. “I thought
you’d
prefer the paper,” he says, handing it to her.
“You
didn’t
have to get her a gift,” I say, knowing what it has cost his family to send him
away, and all for a trip with no degree certificate.
“But
he did,” Maya says, as though he’d take it back, ripping it open
willy-nilly instead of properly, neatly. I lean over to get a better look, and
am glad I did: he’s brought her stationary more
beautiful than I have ever seen. The British have their formal, heavy paper to
announce their galas, and I’ve coveted that often enough, but this
is its opposite: thin, almost translucent, and sparkling, oyster pink with
sea-green filigree adorning its edges. Maya is staring at it, and I squeeze her
shoulders. “Oh, yes,” she
says. “Thank you.”
She
walks ahead of us on the way down, staring at it; it is a good thing, after
all, that we’ve been here countless times before.
Nash and I pretend to watch her, to stop her from falling off the edge, but
really we are stealing glances at one another. “Thank
you,” I tell him, and just for a moment, before our feet reach the solid
ground, he takes my hand.
Reprinted from Where the Sun Will Rise Tomorrow with the permission of Galaxy Galloper Press. Copyright © 2020 by Rashi Rohatgi.
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