In an early memory, I am sitting on the floor, ringed by bell metal plates of rice and daal and faces beyond, imprisoning me. ‘Now we’ll eat you up whole,’ someone says laughing, ‘if you don’t finish what’s on your plate.’ I rushed for refuge from those communal meals to our own set of rooms upstairs. I thought our two rooms were the nicest in the house. The one with four long windows overlooking a tree-fringed road was where we did all our living. Like the windows in Charulata, ours were made for peeping through, their wooden shutters let me observe the world below unseen. Torn away from the windows for unwanted naps, I lay looking up at iron rafters cloudy with cobwebs; when I turned, ceramic electric switches formed a row of black-and-white doodle faces in one corner. It was in this room that my father’s mother, who died before I was born, before my father married, had been kept through her long mysterious illness. The picture room had a cut-out, mounted portrait of her—large, almost two feet high. It showed a seated woman, her skin the colour of tea, man-like hands folded tight. Her brown lips sagged at being imprisoned within a glass case. Perhaps her bad humour had something to do with her being an inert dinner guest at many games of House-House.