Before his life changed, Nakam had half-believed in karma. Or half-hoped in it. No more. His brother the cop reminded him a person born into wealth was as undeserving as a lottery winner. Nakam agreed while feeling he must be the exception. Why him? He hadn't even bought the ticket.
The day the fortune landed in the bank, a platoon of smart people started to move it into a complexity of trust funds, investments, bonds, funds, shelters, and who knows what else. Nakam's experts let him keep seven figures as what they called liquidity. He settled his debts, gave to charity, wheedled old friends into accepting awkward amounts of money, bought a house, dodged con artists and donation-hungry mega-churches, and tipped amounts that baristas and valets talked about years later.
He also started believing in karma again. "I deserved those years of kicks in the balls," Nakam told his brother. "Then a dragon's hoard lands on me for absolutely no reason. Who's to say the dragon won't take it back?"
"Better hurry and throw a few million more my way," Khol replied.
Eventually, Nakam had been rich long enough to fear being anything else. The idea he might lose his money became an obsession. He locked onto a single word: unless. Karma might make his wealth vanish unless he used part of it to compensate certain people for causing them pain.
"It'll dress me in karmic armor," he explained.
His wiser friends pointed out that the people in question never wanted to be around Nakam again, except to stab him in both eyes.
None of Nakam's searches led to violence, but he heard two angry rants and a pitch to invest in a pyramid scheme. In most cases, however, the person declined to reply. It was no different with Sheni.
The woman had loved him and treated him with total generosity. She considered Nakam all she wanted. But an immaturity that had gone on for far too long cost him children, an extended family, calm, adulthood, level-headedness, a mate with a practical mind and passion for sex. And he had thrown it away. Nakam never asked, "What 'd I do to deserve this terrible thing that happened to me?" because for years "Sheni" had been the automatic answer.
His single page letter to her explained he had no interest in forgiveness or understanding or amends. He wanted to obey the laws dating to ancient times, laws that compelled him to compensate people he had wounded. A ten-minute sit-down to work out an amount and, snap, he'd disappear forever.
Weeks passed. Nakam filed Sheni as the last of the non-responses until a greeting card arrived. The sender had written a word in red: ACCEPTED. Underneath, Nakam read a time-date-place in the still-familiar handwriting and followed an arrow to REPLY YES OR NO over an email address.
The tall college student waiting at the restaurant could only be Sheni's daughter. "Mom isn't interested in seeing you," she said. "She asked if you're trying to ease your conscience or if you're dying."
"Neither one. It's not even meant as a gesture. Money can't make up for the pain I caused. But if paying reparations can make life slightly easier for your mother, I want to do what I can."
"You're saying that, if I name a price of a million dollars, you'll hand me a check?"
"Not exactly," Nakam said. "But is there a mortgage? Back taxes? A bill for putting you through college? I'm ready to help. Just show me the documents."
"That's it?" the woman said.
"That's it."
They agreed to discuss a number the next day. Nakam took a hotel room across the street. He spent a long walk wondering about his motives. Did he really want forgiveness? Was he hoping to feel like a great guy? Would writing the check placate karma?
In the end Nakam dismissed ulterior motives because he knew whatever took place wouldn't improve his opinion of himself.
The next day the restaurant host told Nakam his companion was already present. The sight of the graying six-footer in the booth made him want to run away.
Sheni spoke with exaggerated outrage, "It's not fair you stayed thin."
"Genes," Nakam replied.
"Plus, you didn't give birth twice." She looked him over. "My daughter told me you had something to say."
Nakam did and he said it. Though terrified of her response, he fought down an urge to ramble.
"You're the one person I've ever hated," Sheni said with emotion.
"I'm glad there's been only one."
"I don't need money from you."
"Christ, I know that."
"I don't understand why you're doing it."
Nakam had no answer beyond the explanation he'd already given her daughter. The server approached, sensed the charge in the air, and retreated.
"I should kill you," Sheni said.
"Definitely."
"It took years to put the pain behind me. The idea I wasted that time and effort and love--I couldn't get past it." She shook her head. "You're not worth a long explanation."
Nakam emphatically agreed. But Sheni gave him one anyway--the years alone post-breakup--her parents' anger at the betrayal--her stupidity at ignoring the red flags--people never changed--his inadequacies as a human being, an adult, a boyfriend, a man--his massive, toxic immaturity--bad people never got what they deserved. Nakam took the medicine, not only in the form of her words, but by letting what she said resonate inside him.
"Did you love me at all?" she said.
"Yes, I loved you."
"But not enough."
"You have to be grown up for enough," he said.
"I found a better person."
"It'd be hard not to."
Sheni had held onto her hard-headed way of saying her piece, listening to the response, and moving on. Psychology had always bored her. Worst, it frustrated her, because it never offered clear answers. For his part, Nakam avoided excuses and descriptions of his own feelings.
"If you hadn't received this windfall," Sheni asked, "would you be here?"
"With nothing to offer?"
"I hope you're more mature."
"Opinions differ," he said.
Sheni fished in her purse. "Before my dad died, he ran up a ton of medical debt and now the bill collectors are after Mom. The documentation's like The Iliad."