Kumar returned to April's room in a matter of minutes, having quickly thrown on a polo shirt and Dockers over his underwear. Slipping on a pair of casual shoes, he returned to find April still alone: her stepmother was still out shopping, apparently.
But it was only minutes later that the door to the room was opened with a key and a woman, burdened with boxes and bags, entered.
It was now Kumar's turn to gasp inwardly.
His first sight of Carolyn Waters was one he would remember for many years. Even though she seemed exhausted from her arduous shopping expedition, she radiated a peace and tranquility that he found immediately appealing. That wasn't to say that there wasn't a hefty dose of abstract beauty in her faceâwith its rich brunette hair, deep brown eyes, a hint of a snub nose, full lips, and a gentle curve of the jawlineâand a slender but curvy figure to match. She was just an inch or so shorter than April; and although she must have been at least five or ten years older than Kumar, she looked much younger than that.
As she noticed the strange man in her room, she almost dropped the load of packages that she was carrying, emitting a startled "Oh!"
"Let me help you with those," Kumar said gallantly as he almost plucked the packages out of Carolyn's grasp.
As she looked on in a daze, she turned her attention to her stepdaughter. "April, who is this?"
There was something in her tone of voice that was a trifle ominous for Kumar. But April took control of the situation.
"Mom!" she cried, and Kumar was inexplicably heartened to see that she seemed to regard this woman as her genuine mother. "I have to tell you what happened!"
"What happened?" Carolyn said, sounding more worried than ever.
"Well," April said in a rush, "I was going to take a dip in the pool, but I hit my head against the edge and just sank all the way to the bottom! Gosh, Mom, I think I was unconscious! Anyway, this manâhis name is Kumarâwas the only one who saw me, and he dived down and brought me up to the surface! Mom,
he saved my life!
And he can't even swim! Isn't that brave of him?"
Carolyn was taking this all in as her jaw slowly dropped. After the end of April's excited recital, it seemed she couldn't quite grasp the full extent of the incident.
As she stood stock-still, frozen in terror, April went on: "Mom, aren't you going to say anything? Kumar saved my life! I could have died!"
Those words finally seemed to spur Carolyn to action. Uttering a strangled cry, she turned abruptly to Kumar and flung her arms around him. Then she burst into tears.
"Omigod! Thank you so much! My poor baby!" she exclaimed. Kumar, stunned by Carolyn's response, returned her embrace as tentatively as he had when April had done the same thing to him hours before. To his astonishment, he felt Carolyn give him a kiss on the neck as she held him tight, pressing her breasts against his chest.
"Mom, really!" April chided as she took in the spectacle.
Carolyn suddenly seemed to become aware of the possible indelicacy of the situation. Suddenly releasing Kumar, she turned her attention to April. Taking her stepdaughter by the shoulders, she spun her around as if giving her a quick inspection.
"Are you okay, dear? Are you hurt?"
"Mom, I'm fine," April said, seeming to find her stepmother's attention unwelcome, as if it were emphasizing her status as a child. "Everything's okay. I have a little bump on my head, that's all."
Carolyn felt the need to sit down, and she plopped herself on the corner of one of the beds. Reaching behind her to the bedside table, she snatched up a Kleenex and dabbed her face.
"Oh, God, I don't know what I'd do if anything happened to you, dear," she said in an intense undertone. "You're all I have."
Kumar took in the words but couldn't understand them.
What exactly is going on here? Where is April's fatherâand, for that matter, her birth motherâin all this? What have I gotten myself into?
Once Carolyn had regained some of her composure, she formally introduced herself to Kumar. "I'm Carolyn Waters," she said, extending a hand in his direction.
Kumar felt it was rather absurd to shake hands after having been embraced so tightly by this woman, but he did his best to maintain decorum. Taking the hand, he said, "Kumar Mehrotra at your service."
"You certainly were at
my
service!" April said, with a sly look in Kumar's direction.
Kumar flushed, hoping that her stepmother didn't pick up on the
double entendre.
"Mom," April went on, "I think we should go to dinner with himâas a way of thanking him."
Carolyn still seemed a little dazed. "Well, sure, dear, of course. It's the least we could do."
"Why don't we go now? I'm starving!" April said.
"All right, dear," Carolyn said, getting up and looking around confusedly.
"Let's give her some time to get ready," Kumar said to April.
"Oh, I'm fine," Carolyn said, although that seemed far from being the case.
But after some minutes, everyone seemed ready to go. They ambled out of the room and headed for the main restaurant in the hotel. There were several smaller specialty restaurants scattered around the hotel, and of course there was a wide selection of eateries in the nearby area, but none of the three felt they had the energy to go very far afield.
As they sat down and gave their beverage orders (Kumar, for one, was in dire need of a stiff Scotch on the rocks, while Carolyn ordered white wine and April settled for a Coke), they all felt a bit awkward. The very strange circumstances that led to their acquaintanceâand, in particular, that led to Kumar and April's intense intimacy, which both desperately needed to keep secretâand the fact that they knew next to nothing about one another made conversation difficult. But Carolyn, seemingly the most tranquil of the trio, opened by asking Kumar to tell them something about himself.
He gave the basic outlines of his life story. Coming from India with his parents at the age of five, he had settled in the Midwest and had a thoroughly American childhood, full of sports and games with his little friends, good schools, and a fascination with classic rock music (he was a devotee of the Beatles and Bruce Springsteen). But, although he excelled in athletics, he was determined to make a career from his brains, not his brawn, and he got into Cornell and developed a facility with computers, technology, and related disciples. He stayed at Cornell for a master's degree but didn't bother with a Ph.D., for he was already in demand by tech companies in the area. Four years ago he made the transition to a freelance consultant.
As Kumar was telling this story, April was listening with rapt attention. She seemed to take in every word of his account as if she was dying of thirst in the desert and had come upon an unexpected oasis, rejuvenating herself with drafts of cool, clear water.
But it was Carolyn who, giving a quick glance at his left hand (and the obtrusive absence of a ring on a certain finger), said, "No wife in the picture?"
"No," Kumar said, feeling a bit warm all of a sudden.
"Pretty amazing that you've not been snatched up by some fetching lass. Surely there are plenty out there where you live?"
April was frowning furiously at her stepmother's line of questioning.
"Sure there are," Kumar said uncomfortably. "It's just . . . I guess I haven't found any who really suit me."
"Choosy, are you?" Carolyn teased.
"Mom!" April cried.
"I guess I am," Kumar said, with a covert glance at his young lover.
That was when April suddenly turned beet red.
"You're not here alone, are you?" Carolyn said.
"Well, yes, I amâbut I didn't plan it that way. A friend was supposed to come with me, but something came up and he couldn't make it."
"That's too bad."
"So . . . what about you?" Kumar asked, turning the tables. "You two must have led an interesting life."
"Not hardly!" April said, cutting off Carolyn as she was about to speak. "I've spent my whole life in Seattle. Don't get me wrongâit's a wonderful place! But I want to see more of the world."