inspired moment, fills the rest with cotton balls. He sets the egg on top. It looks like itâs floating on a cloud. He brings it to India while sheâs drinking tea in the study.
âLook,â he says, setting the box by her keyboard. Her face goes blank.
âThatâs sweet,â she says tentatively. âItâs like a little bed.â
âIt is a little bed,â Uri says. India nods.
In the bedroom, Uri sets the egg on the nightstand and waits for India to finish brushing her teeth. The eggâs face is growing on him. The more he looks at it, the more he thinks he can see something sentient. A sparkle in the dried ink. A texture to the shell similar to the fine hairs on human skin. India comes in and takes off her yoga pants and top. She stands in front of the mirror looking at her body. Sometimes she turns and asks him if he thinks sheâs beautiful. Itâs amazing that she does this; she speaks with such derision about women (like her sister) who need constant affirmation. Tonight she doesnât ask him, though she scrutinizes her profile before grabbing her nightgown from the drawer.
She looks at the egg for a minute before she turns off the light.
âIt looks like Groucho Marx,â she says.
âIt looks nothing like Groucho Marx,â Uri says. âIt doesnât have a mustache.â
âWell, it looks like a weird old man,â she says. Uri can smell her coconut face lotion and the rich unwashed oil of her hair. He thinks of Blithe. He thinks of pears.
Blithe trots down the maroon carpets of the office in a short wraparound dress. Sheâs wearing sheer stockings and the same little black heels. She disappears into the file room and Uri imagines following, pushing her face first against the wall. Sheâd gasp and reach behind her to feel him, hard through his khakis.
Instead he goes into his office and flicks on the light, takes the egg, and sets it next to his phone. Then he thinks better of it and sticks it in his drawer.
Heâs halfway back to Berkeley that evening when he realizes heâs left it there. Rather than face Indiaâs wrath (âYou left it at work? Imagine what would happen if you forgot a baby ?â), he gets off the train in Oakland and takes another train back to the city. He sits next to an elderly Chinese woman clacking her dentures sloppily. As he disembarks, she takes out the teeth and stares at them as though a stranger left them in her mouth.
The security guard buzzes him in. Itâs nearly six oâclock and all the government workers have fled. The building is strangely muted. When he presses the door code heâs met with the reassuring smell of reams of paper and printer toner. Heâs never thought of coming here to relax, but itâs nice. Orderly.
âOh,â says Blithe. âI thought youâd gone.â Heâs in his office, egg in hand. He quickly slips the egg into his trouser pocket. It bulges. He tries to dangle his hand in such a way that she wonât notice. Her hair is falling out of her clips; sheâs distracted.
âI was just stood up,â Blithe says. âItâs the second time this guyâs stood me up, and itâs my birthday.â
âOh. That sucks,â Uri says. Blithe stands there, looking miserable. âHappy birthday.â
âYeah, right.â
Uriâs heard Blithe complain about how much harder it is to make friends out west. No oneâs reliable and no one knows how to drink. He guesses itâs true. Most of his buddies are from elsewhere: New York, Louisiana. Indiaâs from Detroit. Blithe looks like sheâs going to cry. India works late on Thursday nights and then she has a meditation class until half past nine.
âI can take you for a beer,â Uri says. Blithe looks grateful.
They take the train to the Mission. Blithe knows a new tapas bar and they get a table near the window. Outside, a young woman
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