Early on in reading "The Import" by Jai Chakrabarti and nearly until the end, I thought I knew what kind of story I was reading. I thought it was a "banality of evil" sort of story. We have Raj, who wants to do the right thing by not taking advantage of Rupa. When he finds out that Rupa, who has come from India to be the nanny to his child for six months (paid for by Raj's mother, who apparently has some amount of wealth), has her own child back home, he knows he ought to tell his mother to send her back right away. It isn't right to care for his child by making another child lose his mother, even if the money Rupa will make as a nanny will allow her to pay for private school for her child. But Raj is ultimately kind of a pliable man who enjoys ease and comfort. "Do enough" is his mantra at work, and it seems to be the same in most things. He isn't ambitious, and he is prone to the sins of the flesh, as his occasional dalliances with Molly Choi demonstrate. He ought to send Rupa home, but her being there is so convenient. It makes his life much easier, so much more comfortable. So he falls into a "gentle forgetting" of Rupa's situation and chooses instead to enjoy the freedom her presence gives him.
Raj is contrasted with his wife, Bethany, who is highly ambitious, which is why she stayed on as the full-time earner after the birth of Raj and Bethany's child. Bethany is opposed to hiring Rupa, and one of the reasons at least seems to be that she is uncomfortable with being one of those people who hires a girl from a poor village, taking advantage of her circumstances. When Raj finds out that Rupa has a daughter, he doesn't tell Bethany, and we, the readers, sort of figure it's because she'd say Rupa can't stay once she finds out.
As the story got near the end, I was sure I knew what was coming. They'd already set up the boy loving the water and Rupa being unfamiliar with it, the lack of cell phone service. I was certain that we'd end up with a drowned child and husband/father guilty for it, not because he was greedy and rich and went taking what he wanted, but because he was essentially lazy and weak enough that he was unable to turn down what made him temporarily happy. Kind of like how we all aren't that great about living in an environmentally friendly way, even though we know it's important (something hinted at in the story by the heat wave in Iceland when Bethany goes there for work). Ultimately, although we think banal evil is less of a sin than active and ambitious evil, it still leads to tragedy.
That's the story I thought we were getting until the very end.
The twist
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I wasn't quite as surprised by the twist in "The Import" as I was by two young people dancing to a fifty-year-old song in Spider-Man III, but I was still pretty surprised. |
At the very end, Bethany and Raj come back from visiting with friends who are about to get married. When they left their child with Rupa to go spend time with their friends, their child was asleep in a cabin by a lake, but by the time Bethany and Raj return, the cabin is empty, and the couple soon goes to look for their child frantically. They eventually find Rupa with their son on a canoe on the lake, and it seems like all is well, but Bethany loses her shit, and we suddenly find out that Bethany isn't really that nice of a person. She tells Raj to retrieve the child, but as for Rupa, she says, "I don't care if you leave her there." When Rupa is explaining what happened to Raj in Bengali, which Bethany doesn't understand, Bethany shouts, "What is she saying?...What did she do to my son?" In the end, Bethany and her friends pull Rupa to shore "as if she were their prisoner," although Raj feels that "it was not like that at all" because "she (Rupa) had come of her own intent."
A crisis has brought out some bias in Bethany (and also her friends, for what it's worth) that up until that point, I had mistaken for principled concern. But Bethany didn't really care about Rupa; she cared about how it looked to have someone like Rupa working for them. Once we see this bias come to the front at the end, it's easy to look back and see how it was there all along. Bethany had called Rupa a "village girl," and Bethany was also the one who first depersonalized her by naming her "the import."
Just before the couple starts off to look for their child, Raj gets a familiar feeling in his belly, which is a sixth sense he's always had, warning him of trouble. As a reporter, he'd used it to duck out of protests just before they got really unruly. Of course, one could say this is another of Raj's faults of ordinariness. Shouldn't a dedicated reporter want to be there when the protest gets out of hand? Isn't that when the real news starts? This is another spot where I was all ready for a "banality of evil" ending, but it wasn't. Because really, it's Bethany, with her ambition, who perhaps ends up being even more evil than Raj.
I like this story because it sort of differentiates between banal evil--which, let's face it, is pretty much all of us--and active evil. Active evil is the domain of society's Type A's. A lazy evil person will never take over a continent or commit genocide. Only someone with big goals and a lot of gumption will do that. It doesn't excuse banal evil, but it does show it as of a different kind and degree than active evil. It's like the old Catholic difference between venial and mortal sins. Raj is a venial sinner; Bethany might be a mortal one.
Backing this up is the conversation Bethany had with her friends Helen and Rob just before the final scene. They are talking about Rupa, and although each of them says only a few words, they all reveal a lot about their attitude towards her. Rob calls her "the refugee," although she isn't one.. Helen rebukes Rob for calling her this, and then she mouths some words about how even if she is a refugee, we "shouldn't close our doors to everyone." Raj points out that she is in the country on a work visa, but then Bethany says something interesting. She says that Rupa is here to take care of their child, Shay, but then she adds that, "Plus, she's being paid for by Raj's mother, so cheers to that."
This sort of sounds like Bethany is herself a banally evil venial sinner, just like her husband. She had objected many times to the whole arrangement of Rupa coming, but what had convinced her, ultimately, was that Raj's mother was paying for it. I imagine here someone who refuses to get a chemical treatment for their lawn because it's bad for the water supply, but then suddenly, they move somewhere where lawn treatments are free, and they say, "Well, if it's free, I won't say no."
Is Bethany an actively evil person, or just a more ambitious level of banal evil than Raj? Rupa seems to have picked up on something when she tells Raj he ought to be more worried about "a woman who doesn't love you," and suddenly, the reader thinks of her many business trips and whether she has her own Molly Choi somewhere.
In the end, the reader is left with several questions. Who was worse to Rupa, Bethany or Raj? Who is a worse person? And is Bethany's hard-working exterior hiding her venial sins or her mortal ones?
The last line of the story is remarkable in its ability to maintain all the ambiguity without dispelling any of it. We have six characters in the final scene--Bethany, Raj, Shay, Rupa, and their friends Rob and Helen--all together. Rob and Helen are hauling Rupa back to shore in their boat, and Raj, Bethany, and Shay are all in the boat with them. Only Rupa is alone in the canoe, being treated like a prisoner, like the worst thoughts Bethany had about what she was doing with her son were all true. The last three sentences, from the third-person narrator, are these: "It was that you could know a person only so well. Then their own ideas would muddy the water. Then you'd have to return them to where they belonged."
I don't always like ambiguous endings, but this one is really impressive in just how many ambiguities hang in the last few sentences, even at a linguistic level. Who is the "they" in "their own thoughts"? Is it the people in the boat? The people in the boat other than Raj, who doesn't think Rupa is the monster she's been made out to be? Or is it people in general, following the people-in-general meaning of the "you" in "you could only know a person so well"? The narrator has often followed Raj's consciousness with statements like these, giving us Raj's interior monologue without labeling it as such. But this might be a few lines in which the narrator is separating their voice from Raj's.
Then in the last sentence, who is the "they/them" in "you'd have to return them to where they belonged"? Is it Rupa? Reading through the whole ending, there are a number of ways to interpret the whole thing:
- "You can only know a person so well," was what Bethany, Rob, and Helen were apparently thinking of Rupa. Rupa's own weird, village ideas have muddied the water, literally, as we are out here on the lake because of the mess she made. We'll have to send her back where she belongs.
- "You can only know a person so well," Raj thought, thinking of the cultural differences between Bethany, Rob, and Helen on the one hand and Rupa on the other. But Helen, Rob, and Bethany will all add their own ideas to read into whatever they don't understand about Rupa, and then they'll send her back to India.
- "You can only know a person so well," quoth the narrator, now fully separating from Raj, and thinking of all the people now in the scene. And all those people in the scene will use their own, imperfect understanding to fill in what they don't know, making mistakes as they try. I guess now I will have to put all these people and their flawed understanding back where they belong by ending the story.
If we read it according to this last sense, then the story becomes less about the banality of evil and more about misunderstandings that are based on how we all have secrets and ulterior motives. Whichever way you read it, there is more to the truth of the story than any of the characters realize.