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After Amisha’s death, Janna helps Deepak to choose a new wife to pick up the household duties and look after the children. Deepak’s new wife Omi is one “whose family had wealth but whose heart was cold” (365). Amisha’s memory haunts Omi, who becomes resentful toward infant Lena, believing her to be cursed for being born under the new moon.
Omi often beats Lena for the smallest mistakes. When Ravi confronts Deepak about this, Deepak reveals that Omi found Amisha and Stephen’s love letters. He knows that Lena is not his daughter. Deepak has “a reputation to maintain” (367) and threatens to place Lena in the village orphanage if Ravi ever reveals her parentage. Deepak also dismisses Ravi. Ravi suggests Deepak send Lena to Stephen, but Deepak tells him that Stephen died a few weeks after Amisha.
Ravi finds work “as a city worker who picked up the feces left by the wandering animals” (368) in the streets. He keeps regular contact with Amisha’s sons, who tell him of Lena’s mistreatment at home. Before the boys leave for college overseas, Paresh tells Ravi that Lena has received two offers of marriage: one from a young man moving to America to become a doctor, the other from a family that runs a sewing business.
Lena is in love with the young man moving to America, but Omi doesn’t want to accept that marriage, claiming the dowry is too high. Ravi visits Deepak after many years and reminds him of the promise he made to Amisha to send their daughter to America. Deepak believes Amisha’s betrayal nullifies the promise. Ravi lies and says that Amisha loved him and trusted Deepak “to do right by Lena” (371), persuading him to accept the America-bound suitor. Ravi is immensely happy to see Lena married to the man she loved and fulfill Amisha’s greatest wish.
Lena’s upbringing puts her in a secondary place in society, beneath the men that are given charge over her decisions. After a childhood full of neglect and abuse, her future and marriage are Deepak’s decision. Even her brothers cannot stand up for her as culture dictates that Deepak is the authoritarian head of the family. Lena’s life is so dictated by men that this chapter is presented from Ravi’s perspective. Rather than having Lena explain her own childhood and marriage to Jaya directly, Ravi narrates the events of Lena’s youth, emphasizing the fact that Lena has little active voice.
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