Reddy peered over his thick glasses, palms down on
the table as if he were at a board meeting.
‘But it never did, did it?’
‘Well, no. But how was I to know that? As the evening
wore on his mood changed; so did mine. He was sinking
into gloom, muttering darkly about bondage and I was
hopeful. Only later did I recall the terror in his eyes.’
Arvind shook Mahesh’s hand heartily.
‘Great chapter Vats! So what if it’s an arranged
marriage. They work! I can tell you, a man with two years
experience!’
‘Sure they do, Arvind and we have a thirty year
testimonial to that, don’t we?’ In the dull wash of the
halogen lights, Ranjan looked jaundiced. The heavy
jowls, puffy eyelids and the bulbous nose held Mahesh
spellbound. Arvind left with a cheerful wave; none
responded. Reddy stood under the awning of a cigarette
stall, watching them. Ranjan smiled at Mahesh, his face a
death mask.
‘The fun begins now doesn’t it? See you next
weekend.’ He walked towards Lion’s Gate. Reddy scurried
after him.
‘You’re not off to your jaunts again, are you
Ranjan . . . because I am coming with you!’
Ranjan burst out laughing.
‘Reddy, my good friend,’ he clapped him on the back.
‘Mahesh has put us in good spirits hasn’t he? But, I am tired, and I need some rest. I need something else; I don’t
know what . . . perhaps a life less replete with memories
of . . .’ Ranjan gulped.
‘Such a painful thing . . . to be saddled with ancient
hatreds, futile nostalgia.’
Reddy had never heard Ranjan speak like this, he of
all people, so, so positive! Suddenly Reddy felt a shiver
even though it was hot and humid. They shuffled along
uprooted pavements, skirting mounds of garbage and shit,
over darkened rivulets of piss, in the shadowed arcades of
Edwardian stone buildings with nameplates pock-marking
dimly-lit corridors in which naked electrical wiring hung
slack along grimy walls, like blackened guts of unknown
beasts. Ranjan was panting; a thin sliver of saliva glittering
in the pale wash of the streetlights trickled down his
various chins.
‘You should be thankful . . . born a south Indian, away
from the horrors of abrupt loss. A man takes generations
to dig roots and claim the fruits. And you have done that
Reddy, even the peasant in that fucking revolution you
blabber so much about. You know why?’ He did not wait
for an answer; Reddy had none.
‘They fought for stable geography not an arbitrary
one. No tectonic shifts like the Partition, all we children
of those miserable refugees uprooted from their watan,
homelands, left with treacherous memory and all
for what? Derelict in humanity and their landscapes,
brimming with bitterness . . . what could they pass on but
hatred posing as folk tales?’ He wheezed like a leaky pipe.
‘But I fought; I found humanity in . . . Money! The
great agent of inversion! Marx was right, my friend Reddy,
but not for the reasons you think. He understood the
power of commerce. But you know what? You cannot
force your dream down people’s throats. They have to suffer despair, monumental loss . . . to start dreaming . . .
their own dream.’
Ranjan almost fell into a half-open drain; he had not
seen the black ooze so much as smelt its foul stench. He
grunted, rested a heavy paw on Reddy’s thin shoulder.
The dull blue of the solitary fluorescent bulb, dangling
precariously above the arched entrance illuminated their
faces. They were just a short distance from the brightly lit
and busy Shahid Bhagat Singh Road.
‘Partition, my friend! Division! Genocide! That is
what I am talking of, in case your fucking dimwit mind
hadn’t understood! Loss; recovery! Not revolution! Not
the airy-fairy yearning for collective orgasms by lonely
masturbators like you; as for me, it’s hatred for the haters,
understand? Self-Interest! Watch your back! No Credit
without Commission! The three weapons of democracy!’
Frightened yet unwilling to leave him, Reddy nudged
his friend along.