Authors: Robin Mukherjee
4
âI just love this bit,'
giggled Cindy, clapping her hands.
We had gathered in the lobby where Mrs Dong was nailing a notice over the reception desk headed, âRools!' Item One of which was, âNo Loitering', problematic, I thought, in an area designed principally for that purpose. Item Two was, âNo argue bout Rates!' Item Three was, âNo argue bout Rools', and so on. She had somehow persuaded Pol to hold it up while she hammered.
All the ladies, meanwhile, had changed. Martina was in knee-length cream shorts and a pale pink blouse. Cindy, whose fiery hair now tumbled playfully over her shoulders, wore a tight black dress that flowed in a single piece from her neck to her calves. Sharon, meanwhile, had a pair of faded jeans, long tan boots and a blue t-shirt stencilled with the words, âGo Ahead Punk, Make My Day'. Mike had remained in his crumpled suit and was looking, as ever, overheated.
Cindy peeked through the shutters. âAre the press here?' she said, excitedly. âWhat about TV? I don't know, do they have TV? Is it autographs or straight to limo? Marty?'
Hendrix had snatched the medicine a little too hastily and was now chasing its contents across the floor. I was still out of breath from my sprint, though the journey had been relatively uneventful. The dogs who chased me had thudded against the clinic door as I slammed it behind me, whining and scratching as I headed for my office.
From Dev's room, I could hear Father shouting, âResearch, I'll give you research. Sit up when I'm talking to you.' However generous the offer to assist with Dev's work, Father had evidently failed to appreciate how prolonged study causes one's head to rest on the desk.
It took me a while to find the remedy for Hendrix's fish-phobia since I'd forgotten what colour the box was. Still, I thought it would give the dogs time to get bored and go away. In the event, they had merely camped in the shade opposite, leaping up when I reappeared. But I was ready for them, scattering Imodium pellets as I ran down the road, something they always lapped up enthusiastically, though it made them quiet for a few days afterwards.
Pol was ready to help me through the window, which was just as well since one or two tradespeople had, by now, made their way to the rubble at the back. I thought the mood less festive and a little more earnest than earlier, especially when Mr Briniwal, the upholsterer, rushed towards me brandishing a mallet.
Mike was in the middle of a speech when we finally reached the lobby. âSo let us remember,' he said glancing through the shutters, âthat we are not merely Entertainers, we are Ambassadors. And as Ambassadors, we bring to this country, to this land, to the good people of⦠ah, this place, a little touch of England, though, strictly speaking, touch and you're out, sonny.' He chortled.
âCan we get on with it?' said Martina.
âJust waiting for the nod, darling,' said Mike, glancing out again.
âYou must let me know if the symptoms persist,' I said to Hendrix who was fishing behind a sofa.
âYou're the dude,' he said.
âSeriously,' said Mike, âa lot of people talk about The Brotherhood of Nationsâ¦'
âLike who?' said Sharon.
âWell, lots of people.'
âName one,' said Sharon.
âJust take it from me,' said Mike, a little sharply, âthat people do. But how is that to be achieved? Through wars, conquest and exploitation?'
âYou mean there's another way?' said Sharon playing, I suspected, the devil's advocate.
âThere is only one thing that can truly forge new bonds, new chainsâ¦'
âNow you're talking!' said Cindy.
âAnd that is art. Paintings, music, all that. Stories and legends. For instance, they've got this thing about some⦠whatever, having its head chopped off. And we⦠well, we've got two thousand years of civilisation culminating in the invention of the Calendar.'
âGregorian?' said Pol.
âPirelli,' said Mike, straightening up. âOkay ladies. We're on.'
âYippee,' said Cindy, jumping up and down.
âGot anywhere for this?' said Sharon, holding out a wrinkled piece of gum.
âFind something,' said Mike. âBrendan? You ready?'
âHuh?' said Hendrix from under a chaise longue.
âMy people,' said Cindy, waving at the window, âI love you all.'
âOkay,' said Mike gripping the door handle. âKeep it loose, nice and relaxed. Marty, that's beautiful. Shal, maybe a smile.'
âI'm pouting,' said Sharon.
âOkay, but not too much. They'll think you're gonna to throw up.'
âThey might be right,' said Sharon.
âRock and Roll,' said Mike thrusting his chin forward, wrenching the doors open and marching out with his hands above his head.
For a moment the noise hushed to an eery silence. Somebody sniffed. A foot scraped. It seemed to me that I could hear the crowd breathing. Then a hundred voices erupted as one: âSaucepans you can see your face in!' âHand-made shoes in finest leather all styles considered!' âThe best samosas in Pushkara, don't listen to that lying bastard Bister!'
âYou have waited a thousand years!' shouted Mike, arms outstretched.
âSomebody tell him the meaning of OTT,' muttered Martina.
âRemember when he said we was the best thing to happen here since Queen Victoria put her foot on it?' said Sharon.
âLead balloon or what?' said Cindy primping her curls with brusque fingers.
âBut wait no more!' shouted Mike.
âYak's wool hats to keep your head toasty!' âThe only Aubergines in Pushkara worth stuffing!' âDon't listen to her, she gets her produce out of my rejects.' âShut up.' âNo you shut up.' âYour son isn't worthy of my daughter!' came the response.
âI bring you, direct from England,' Mike continued, sounding a bit hoarse now, âa bevy of bouncing beauties, the gorgeous, the wonderful, the aptly-named Heaven's Blessings!'
âYou know he used to call bingo?' said Sharon.
âYou're kidding,' said Cindy.
âIt's a great honour,' continued Mike lowering his voice, âto introduce the star of show, representing Legend's Lingerie, the award-winning Queen of the Screenâ¦'
âThat's how he started. Up in Scarborough,' said Martina.
âCome a long way,' said Hendrix.
âYou reckon?' scoffed Sharon.
âI mean this is a long way from Scarborough,' said Hendrix, wistfully.
Mike was glancing round, gesturing urgently with his hand. âVoted Gorgeous Girl of the year in
Gorgeous Girl
Magazine not just once, not twice but three times, the unbelievable, the stupendousâ¦'
âGo boogie,' said Cindy, giving Martina a quick kiss.
âMartina Marvellous!' shouted Mike.
Martina breathed in, lifted her head, pushed her shoulders back and stepped through the door.
The crowd surged forward. Mike jumped back. The Buddhist Cook sent Mr Bophal sideways with a clatter of enamelled coasters. Several traders attempted to retreat as others pushed their way up, but the porch was now so slippery with squashed vegetables that they all slid into each other and tumbled collectively down the steps. Tradespeople at the back, meanwhile, started flinging their goods at the door. Mike ducked as a watermelon thudded against the wall beside him. The chai seller threw tea over the people in front of him for which he received a finely made shoe in the face.
âWas that a watermelon?' said Hendrix.
âMakes a change from underpants,' said Sharon.
In all this commotion the only person, it seemed to me, who stood unruffled was Martina, her head slightly tilted, one hand resting delicately on her hip, the other caressing the nape of her neck as a number of men, tripping over the top step, prostrated themselves at her feet. As if gradually beginning to notice the mildly perplexing enigma of time and space, along with some of the people in it, she smiled down at them, a ripple of light streaming through the rich, brown tresses of her hair. The men stared upwards, like monks whose relentless austerities have finally yielded a glimpse of the divinity to which they had devoted their lives â in spite of the wives, aunties and grandmothers grabbing frantically at their feet in an effort to haul them back.
âAnd a big round of applause, ladies and gentlemen,' said Mike, keeping a wary eye out for more fruit. âGive it up now, for the slinky, sexy, stunning, delectable, delicious Cindy Swish. Let's hear it for Cin by name, Sin by nature!'
âWish me luck,' said Cindy giving Pol's hand a little squeeze before striding out, hips flicking, arms wide as if to hug the whole of Pushkara, mouthing the words âI love you' to anyone who cared to lip-read.
Scuffles were beginning to break out. Some of the young men, while fending off their wives had accidentally struck the people around them who, searching for the culprit, lashed out randomly causing yet more victims to thrash around in search of an adversary.
âAnd last but not leastâ¦' said Mike.
âSo if I'm not least,' said Sharon, âhow come I'm always last? Hey?'
But as it was unclear whom she was addressing, it was equally unclear who should reply.
âThe fabulous, fantabulous, stupendousâ¦'
âHe's used that already,' said Sharon.
âThe indescribably beautifluous Sharon Shiver!'
âOh right,' said Sharon, âthey get a shopping list, and I get, what, four measly words.'
She smoothed her t-shirt, pressed her gum under the rim of Mrs Dong's Rools, licked her lips and glided forward, nudging Martina aside as she swept her hands across the crowd in holy benediction, pinching the Buddhist Cook on his bottom, turning elegantly on her toes and strolling back to Martina, smiling.
âYou ever pull that againâ¦' snarled Martina.
âMaybe we should go back inside,' said Mike picking tomato pips from his lapel and flinching as a sandalwood biro bounced off his shoulder.
âNo, hang on,' said Sharon pointing at the far edge of the crowd. âWhat's that?'
As in a miracle, or by some tidal phenomenon, the villagers were parting slowly down the middle as a long bamboo cane twirled in the air above them. After a moment I could make out the brightly-feathered parade hat of Sergeant Shrinivasan as he strode purposefully forward, thwacking at anyone who didn't move quickly enough and sometimes at those who did. At last the Sergeant, medals glistening, presented himself at the top of the stairs.
âThe Pushkara Police Force at your service,' he said with a bow.
âAlright,' said Mike. âLet's go. Where's Brendan?'
âWho?' said Hendrix.
âJesus Christ,' said Mike. âHow much have you taken? Okay, everyone, stay close.'
Cindy looked round. âWhere's Pol?' she said. âI'm not going anywhere without my little spice boy.'
Pol grabbed my hand and dragged me, protesting, through the door. The Sergeant was beating his way back through the villagers, Mike close behind him, stepping gingerly over lost shoes and broken merchandise. Cindy squealed when she saw Pol, seizing his free hand and skipping daintily down the steps. I followed on, keeping my face down though I could hear the mutterings around me. Martina was smiling beneficently at the people while Sharon, it seemed to me, scowled, though she might have been pouting. Hendrix kept stopping to ask various villagers if there was any chance of âscoring a little something around here' before Sharon pushed him brusquely on.
Malek was standing next to his car beckoning vigorously for the Sergeant to hurry up. But the Sergeant knew how to march and was taking his time, red feathers swaying to the rhythm of his gait. Next to Malek's car was a rusty blue jeep which, along with its original inscription of âPushkara Police Force' bore various slogans of the Sergeant's own invention such as, âThe Law is the Law and Don't you Forget it, Mister' and âThere is No Escape from my Very Long Arm'.
âWhat's he doing here?' said Malek, pointing at me.
âTour Medic,' said Hendrix.
âWell, you'd better make sure your low-born shadow doesn't accidentally fall across his high-born bloody foot.'
âWhere's the limos?' asked Sharon, looking around.
âStuck in traffic,' said Mike glancing at his shoes. âGuess we'll have to use these.'
Behind us, the villagers were regrouping. âPlease take your seats,' said Sergeant Shrinivasan, poking viciously at Mrs Geegli who had stepped forward with some hand-pressed funeral briquettes.
âI'm not getting in that thing,' said Sharon.
âSuit yourself,' said Mike sliding hastily into Malek's car and rolling up the window as Mrs Mahmoud hurried towards us with a trolley of coconuts.
Sergeant Shrinivasan opened the door for Martina, saluting as she climbed in. Cindy blew a last kiss to the crowds and jumped in with Mike and Pol. I found myself sitting next to Martina as the Sergeant switched on his blue lights and tooted the horn. Hendrix clambered into the front, wiped his forehead and said, âHit it, Sarge!' in the tone of one who has always wanted to. The jeep jolted forwards with a squeal of tyres and cloud of smog, pressing us back into our seats.
âI must apologise for these ruffians,' said the Sergeant, swerving with a slight thud into Mrs Mahmoud. âWhat a carry on! And have you ever heard such nonsense? The best saris in Pushkara! In fact, they are very poor quality. Mr Bister, on the other hand, has good saris but somewhat expensive. I can get you the same quality for half the price. Perhaps after you have seen the hall we can visit the police station to try some on.'
âI'm okay for the moment,' said Martina.
âWhen have you seen what you are missing, then you will not think that you are “okay”,' chuckled the Sergeant.
âNo offence, mate,' said Hendrix, âbut put a sock in it?'
The Sergeant chuckled again. âYou bargain well, my friend. I can indeed put a sock in it. And not just one sock but two, thus providing a complete pair.'