The Zoya Factor (42 page)

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Authors: Anuja Chauhan

BOOK: The Zoya Factor
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'Oh.'

He shook his head at me and moved onto a third machine.

'So...how long will you take to finish now?' I asked, trailing behind him again.

'Seventy-five minutes,' he said briefly. 'You could go back up to your room if you like.'

Of course I didn't want to go up to my room. I was all primed for our big reconciliation. 'It's okay,' I said, settling down on the padded sound-and-shock-absorbing floor. 'I'll wait.'

He nodded curtly and went back to his workout.

I looked around the gym curiously. It was all gleaming steel-and-matte black, just like the set we'd used for a Diet
Zing!
still shoot last year. There were some body-building magazines lying around, so I flipped through them, looking at ads for bulk-building steroids featuring booby guys in tiny chaddis with
humongous
muscles all over their bodies.
They look so gross, Nikhil looks way better than any of them
, I thought, looking at him sideways through my lashes so he wouldn't notice. He was scowling at the TV screen above him, oblivious to my gaze, so I rolled onto my stomach, cupped my chin in my hands, and ogled him shamelessly.

The cool thing about Nikhil Khoda
, I mused as I ran my eyes over his lean, toffee-coloured torso in its clinging white ganji,
is that he doesn't try.
He looked around then, so I yawned quickly, turned my back on him deliberately and pretended to read. I didn't turn around again till I heard all the stacked weights slide down to the base of the machine with a clatter, a good fifty minutes later.

He looked across the room at me and said, still sounding pretty pissed off, 'I'll shower and be with you in five minutes, okay?'

'Okay,' I said equally coolly, even though I was quaking inside.

I wandered around the gym, then sat down on a complicated-looking cycle and frowned at myself in the glass.
He must want to make up, otherwise why'd he call me here? It couldn't be anything else, could it? Could it?

I was still on the cycle when he came out, dressed in his usual grey tracks, his hair sleek and gleaming, his expression unreadable. I raised my chin and met his eyes in the mirror as he sauntered over.

'So,' I said a little too loudly, 'what did you want to talk to me about?' It came out sounding a little cockier than I'd intended but the long wait in the gym had made me jumpy.

Any hopes I'd had of a romantic reconciliation and mad passionate love-making amongst all the kinky steel machines went clean out of the window when he said, 'Have you
seen
that agarbatti script Lokey's mailed for you?'

'What?' Then realization dawned on me. 'Oh
. That.'

So that was what he wanted to talk to me about. Tauji's Sheraan-wali ad.

'Yes, that,' Nikhil said. 'Whatever happened to "Cricket is so uncool and I don't want any mileage out of it"?'

He was playing back what I'd said to him in my hotel room in Dhaka, I realized. Damn, he really did remember everything I'd ever said to him.

He sounded like he hated me. And to think I'd rushed down here, tail wagging eagerly, thinking he wanted to smell the gun smoke in my hair. I tossed my head. 'I changed my mind,' I said nonchalantly. 'Anyway, who are you to talk?
You
endorse a million brands yourself, why shouldn't I?'

'Because it's being irresponsible,' he said. 'And untrue. Because it makes my team out to be eleven extras who just got lucky.'

'Sounds like a pretty authentic portrayal to me,' I said coolly, getting off the cycle so I could make a quick exit after delivering my knockout punch, which of course was: 'Hey, bad luck about the match today, by the way.'

He grabbed my arm then. 'You watch it,' he said warningly. 'Don't push me, Zoya, you don't want me to stop being your friend.'

'Well, you definitely aren't being very friendly!' I said, fighting back tears. 'You're cold and horrid all the time and honestly, all I want to do is help. If I do have something that gives you the edge, and it seems like I do, why are you being so proud about admitting that it's helping you to win?'

'Because I want to win fair and square,' he answered without hesitation, his eyes blazing. 'Not like this. Not because of some' - he flung his arms in the air - 'Voodoo goddess.'

'Oh, tell the truth,' I said nastily. 'It's not about fair play at all, it's just that you want to take all the credit.'

'Yes,' he snapped. 'I
want
all the credit. Because it's mine. It belongs to me and to all the boys, who've been sweating it out in seedy small-town stadiums ever since they were old enough to grasp a bat or ball, ever since they were old enough to dream.'

Oh great, he was in Nike-ad mode again.
Honestly, he made it sound like all of them played for the love of India alone - not for pot-loads of money.

He was still hanging onto my arm, glaring at me, and all the disappointment of my stupid dashed hopes rushed to my head. 'So, I'm just to be a dirty little secret, then, is that it?' I flung rudely at him, thinking desperately that maybe if I were obnoxious enough this would build to that moment where, in any decent romantic movie, the guy grabs the girl with both arms and lays a strong masterful kiss upon her mouth. 'I've got to help you win and keep quiet about it?'

'No,' he said steadily. 'Ideally I would prefer it if you stopped coming to breakfast altogether. But, of course, both the team and the country will have a heart attack if you do. I'm just asking you to behave responsibly about the situation you find yourself in, that's all.'

I made a frustrated little noise in my throat at this typical Nikhil Khoda speech and wrenching my arm out of his grasp, pushed my way out through the health club door.

***

Lingnath Baba had not been bullshitting. The forces of darkness were gathering. The mandatory articles pressing for re-examining the Duckworth-Lewis system made an appearance in the papers the next morning, of course, but they were pushed into relative obscurity by lengthy articles talking about how India had lost because their Lucky Charm took a day off, and how I was proving to be vital in this World Cup. The lunatic fringe of the Australian media, meanwhile, was baying for my blood with harsh headlines: 'It's Not Cricket', 'Go Home, Zoya - Level the Playing Field', 'Mighty Indians Hide Behind Girl'.

'You should make a scrapbook, Zoya,' said Rinku Chachi as she sifted through the papers complacently and sipped her coffee. 'So many pictures of you. And you are looking so pretty too!'

I looked up at her dementedly, my hair in my eyes. I'd woken up with a throbbing headache, thanks to Nikhil Khoda, and now I was faced with this. 'Chachi, don't you get it? It's bad press! They hate me, okay?'

She shrugged, 'Sticks and stones, Zoya beta,' she said soothingly. 'If the dogs are barking let them bark, what goes of yours if they get a sore throat?'

I shook my head in exasperation. She just didn't get it, did she?

'Besides,' she continued calmly, smoothing my hair back from my forehead, 'in India you are a heroine. Why don't you see what some Indian papers are saying about you,
hain
?'

Now
that
wasn't a bad idea! I skipped over to Mon's room and logged onto crickindiya.com on her laptop. A big fat picture of me smiled back at me from the home page. Pleasantly surprised, I clicked on an icon that said 'Zoya Solanki - Karishma or Coincidence?' and found thirty pages of comments!

***

'Of course Zoya Devi is a karishma and should be recognized as such. She has turned the fortunes of the country around. People who do not believe are fools, who would not believe in Bhagwan Krishna himself if he appeared, with a sudharshan chakra on his finger and the three worlds inside his mouth.'

'Ganesha statues don't really drink the milk, Mahim water is not really sweet, and Zoya Solanki is not a karishma but a coincidence. Instead of worshipping Zoya, we should be thanking Nikhil Khoda who's got the useless Indian team to finally perform.'

'Jogpal Lohia has prepared an army of eunuchs. A hijron ki baraat. They are all useless without this girl. They should all put on bangles and sit at home, rolling chapatis.'

'The blood of Robin Rawal, best batsman in India is on this so-called Zoyadevi's hands. Ban her.'

'There is no such thing as a coincidence. Zoyamata ki jai.'

'It was a black day for Indian cricket when Hharviinder Singh discovered Zoya's so-called luckiness. Our new team, never very strong to begin with, has now been weakened at its very core.'

'Aarti of Zoya Devi performed daily every morning and evening. For Zoyadevi amulet, saamagri and autographed photograph visit my website at www.Zoyadevikachamatkaariballa.com. All are welcome.'

'Zoya is nothing but the latest in a long line of Rajasthani girls who have been exploited by the male-oriented society since time immemorial. Her life is doomed to end in tragedy.'

'Jogpal Lohia is a cunning fox. He is preparing to make this poor girl a scapegoat if we lose the World Cup.'

'These things happen. My mother has a large mole on her right cheek. Whenever she massages it gently, India hits a boundary. It is the nazarbattoo, the black mark that repels the evil eye for all of India. My friend has a lucky pajama. Whenever he makes his drawstring loose, India loses a wicket. He sits tight and does not go to bathroom for whole day and then India wins the match. Jogpal Lohia should invite my friend and my mother to the World Cup,'

'What a joke. Atal Bihari Vajpayee was born on the twenty-fifth of December. Does that make him Jesus Christ?'

'Lakhs of rupees of taxpayers' money is being spent on entertaining this girl and all her family in Australia. That money could have been better spent on opening cricket academies for promising youngsters in Indian hinterland.'

'This whole thing is a match-fixing scam. The bookies are hyping up the Zoya Factor so that people will bet on India, then they will give our team money to lose and make a fortune.'

'Very soon Nikhil Khoda will be sacked and this girl - who cannot tell batsman from Batman - will become captain. Wah wah, mera bhaarat mahaan. It happens only in India!'

'Nothing can be done for this country.'

***

It was like dipping your glass into a matka for a drink of cold water and pulling it out full of a million squirming snakelings instead. And these were just the first few pages. The ranting and raving and haranguing went on page after page after page. I kept scanning through them, looking for even
one
positive reasonable comment but I couldn't find any. It's not just Nikhil Khoda, I thought dementedly. Everybody hates me. Correction. Everybody hates me except the lunatics who
worship
me.

Lucky on the field. Unlucky off the field. Lingnath Baba was right. Balance is what kept the cosmos in motion, after all.

***

The boys gave me a rousing reception when I made an appearance at breakfast the next day. Zahid leapt up, pulled out a chair for me and dropped down on the one next to it, smilingly. 'It's too good to see you, Zoyaji,' he said sincerely. Everybody else chorused the same general emotion. Observing all of them carefully as I ate some fruit, I decided they really meant it. They didn't look like they hated me because I was responsible for them being called 'hijras' and 'credulous morons' on the World Wide Web. Obviously, they were smart enough to avoid the comments pages on websites like crickindiya.com.

My heart rose to my mouth as Nikhil Khoda sauntered in and took his usual place at the top of the table. I took a deep steadying breath, held on hard to the edge of the table and risked a casual glance Khoda-ways. He was shovelling chunks of pineapple onto his plate as usual. He didn't look like he had read any of those vicious comments. Or, maybe, he just didn't give a damn about stuff like that. Nor did he look like the encounter in the gym was giving him sleepless nights.

Not me. I, of course, was feeling like something out of a Jogpal Lohia ballad.
I am a timid tremulous deer
, I thought dementedly,
wandering hither and thither, oh slay me with your lotus-eyes, my navy-blue hunter!

I think he sensed I was looking at him, because he looked up just then and met my eyes quizzically. I flushed and got back to the slimy papaya slice on my plate.

'What's up, Zoya?' Hairy asked. 'Not feeling fully strong yet?'

'No, I'm fine...' I said. Then I asked, 'Hair...uh Harry, tell me, d'you read the newspapers nowadays?'

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