“And what?”
“Are they . . . ?” Archie repeated the mime, but this time with the kind of anatomical exaggeration that leaves air-traced women unable to stand upright.
“Oh, but I have still some time to wait,” he said, smiling wistfully. “Unfortunately, the Begum family do not yet have a female child of my generation.”
“You mean your wife's not bloody born yet?”
“What of it?” asked Samad, pulling a cigarette from Archie's top pocket. He scratched a match along the side of the tank and lit it. Archie wiped the sweat off his face with a greasy hand.
“Where I come from,” said Archie, “a bloke likes to get to know a girl before he marries her.”
“Where you come from it is customary to boil vegetables until they fall apart. This does not mean,” said Samad tersely, “that it is a good idea.”
Their final evening in the village was absolutely dark, silent. The muggy air made it unpleasant to smoke, so Archie and Samad tapped their fingers on the cold stone steps of a church, for lack of other hand-employment. For a moment, in the twilight, Archie forgot the war that had actually ceased to exist anyway. A past tense, future perfect kind of night.
It was while they were still innocent of peace, during this last night of ignorance, that Samad decided to cement his friendship with Archie. Often this is done by passing on a singular piece of information: some sexual peccadillo, some emotional secret or obscure hidden passion that the reticence of new acquaintance has prevented being spoken. But for Samad, nothing was closer or meant more to him than his blood. It was natural, then, as they sat on holy ground, that he should speak of what was holy to him. And there was no stronger evocation of the blood that ran through him, and the ground which that blood had stained over the centuries, than the story of his great-grandfather. So Samad told Archie the much neglected, hundred-year-old, mildewed yarn of Mangal Pande.
“So, he was your grandfather?” said Archie, after the tale had been told, the moon had passed behind clouds, and he had been suitably impressed. “Your real, blood grandfather?”
“
Great-
grandfather.”
“Well, that
is
something. Do you know: I remember it from schoolâI
doâ
History of the Colonies, Mr. Juggs. Bald, bug-eyed, nasty old dufferâMr. Juggs, I mean, not your grandfather. Got the message through, though, even if it took a ruler to the back of your hand . . . You know, you still hear people in the regiments calling each other
Pandies,
you know, if the bloke's a bit of a rebel . . . I never thought where it came from . . . Pande was the rebel, didn't like the English, shot the first bullet of the Mutiny. I remember it now, clear as a bell. And that was your grandfather!”
“
Great-
grandfather.”
“Well, well. That's something, isn't it?” said Archie, placing his hands behind his head and lying back to look at the stars. “To have a bit of history in your blood like that. Motivates you, I'd imagine. I'm a Jones, you see. 'Slike a âSmith.' We're nobody . . . My father used to say: âWe're the chaff, boy, we're the chaff.' Not that I've ever been much bothered, mind. Proud all the same, you know. Good honest English stock. But in your family you had a hero!”
Samad puffed up with pride. “Yes, Archibald, that is
exactly
the word. Naturally, you will get these petty English academics trying to discredit him, because they cannot bear to give an Indian his due. But he was a hero and every act I have undertaken in this war has been in the shadow of his example.”
“That's true, you know,” said Archie thoughtfully. “They don't speak well about Indians back home; they certainly wouldn't like it if you said an Indian was a hero . . . everybody would look at you a bit funny.”
Suddenly Samad grabbed his hand. It was hot, almost fevered, Archie thought. He'd never had another man grab his hand; his first instinct was to move or punch him or something, but then he reconsidered because Indians were emotional, weren't they? All that spicy food and that.
“
Please.
Do me this one, great favor, Jones. If ever you hear anyone, when you are back homeâif you, if
we,
get back to our respective homesâif ever you hear anyone speak of the East,” and here his voice plummeted a register, and the tone was full and sad, “
hold your judgment.
If you are told âthey are all this' or âthey do this' or âtheir opinions are these,' withhold your judgment until all the facts are upon you. Because that land they call âIndia' goes by a thousand names and is populated by millions, and if you think you have found two men the same among that multitude, then you are mistaken. It is merely a trick of the moonlight.”
Samad released Archie's hand and rummaged in his pocket, dabbing his finger into a repository of white dust he kept in there, slipping it discreetly into his mouth. He leaned against the wall and drew his fingertips along the stone. It was a tiny missionary church, converted into a hospital and then abandoned after two months when the sound of shells began to shake the windowsills. Samad and Archie had taken to sleeping there because of the thin mattresses and the large airy windows. Samad had taken an interest too (due to loneliness, he told himself; due to melancholy) in the powdered morphine to be found in stray storage cabinets throughout the building; hidden eggs on an addictive Easter trail. Whenever Archie went to piss or to try the radio once more, Samad roved up and down his little church, looting cabinet after cabinet, like a sinner moving from confessional to confessional. Then, having found his little bottle of sin, he would take the opportunity to rub a little into his gums or smoke a little in his pipe, and then lie back on the cool terra-cotta floor, looking up into the exquisite curve of the church dome. It was covered in words, this church. Words left three hundred years earlier by dissenters, unwilling to pay a burial tax during a cholera epidemic, locked in the church by a corrupt landlord and left to die in thereâbut not before they covered every wall with letters to family, poems, statements of eternal disobedience. Samad liked the story well enough when he first heard it, but it only truly struck him when the morphine hit. Then every nerve in his body would be alive, and the information, all the information contained in the universe, all the information on walls, would pop its cork and flow through him like electricity through a ground wire. Then his head would open out like a deckchair. And he would sit in it a while and watch his world go by. Tonight, after just more than enough, Samad felt particularly lucid. Like his tongue was buttered and like the world was a polished marble egg. And he felt a kinship with the dead dissenters, they were Pande's brothersâevery rebel, it seemed to Samad tonight, was his brotherâhe wished he could speak with them about the mark they made on the world. Had it been enough? When death came, was it really enough? Were they satisfied with the thousand words they left behind?
“I'll tell you something for nothing,” said Archie, following Samad's eyes and catching the church dome's reflection in them. “If I'd only had a few hours left, I wouldn't have spent it painting pictures on the ceiling.”
“Tell me,” inquired Samad, irritated to have been dragged from his pleasant contemplation, “what great challenge would you undertake in the hours before your death? Unravel Fermat's theorem, perhaps? Master Aristotelian philosophy?”
“What? Who? No . . . I'dâyou know . . . make
loveâ
to a
lady,
” said Archie, whose inexperience made him prudish. “You know . . . for the
last time.
”
Samad broke into a laugh. “For the first time, is more likely.”
“Oh, go on, I'm
serious.
”
“All right. And if there were no âladies' in the vicinity?”
“Well, you can always”âand here Archie went a pillar-box red, this being his own version of cementing a friendshipâ“slap the salami, as the GIs say!”
“Slap,”
repeated Samad contemptuously, “
the salami . . .
and that is it, is it? The last thing you would wish to do before you shuffled off this mortal coil is âslap your salami.' Achieve orgasm.”
Archie, who came from Brighton, where nobody ever,
ever
said words like
orgasm,
began to convulse with hysterical embarrassment.
“Who is funny? Something is funny?” asked Samad, lighting a fag distractedly despite the heat, his mind carried elsewhere by the morphine.
“Nobody,” began Archie haltingly, “nothing.”
“Can't you see it, Jones? Can't you see . . .” Samad lay half in, half out of the doorway, his arms stretched up to the ceiling, “. . . the
intention
? They weren't slapping their salamisâspreading the white stuffâthey were looking for something a little more
permanent.
”
“I can't see the difference, frankly,” said Archie. “When you're dead, you're dead.”
“Oh
no,
Archibald,
no,
” whispered Samad, melancholic. “You don't believe that. You must live life with the full knowledge that your actions will
remain.
We are creatures of consequence, Archibald,” he said, gesturing to the church walls. “They knew it. My great-grandfather knew it. Someday our children will know it.”
“Our children!” sniggered Archie, simply amused. The possibility of offspring seemed so distant.
“Our children will be born of our actions.
Our accidents will become their destinies.
Oh, the actions will remain. It is a simple matter of what you will do when the chips are down, my friend. When the fat lady is singing. When the walls are falling in, and the sky is dark, and the ground is rumbling. In that moment our actions will define us. And it makes no difference whether you are being watched by Allah, Jesus, Buddah, or whether you are not. On cold days a man can see his breath, on a hot day he can't. On both occasions, the man
breathes.
”
“Do you know,” said Archie, after a pause, “just before I left from Felixstowe I saw this new drill they have now which breaks in two and you can put different things on the endâspanner, hammer, even a bottle-opener. Very useful in a tight spot, I'd imagine. I tell you, I'd bloody love one of those.”
Samad looked at Archie for a moment and then shook his head. “Come on, let's get inside. This Bulgarian food. Turns my stomach over. I need a bit of sleep.”
“You look pale,” said Archie, helping him up.
“It's for my sins, Jones, for my sins and yet I am more sinned against than sinning.” Samad giggled to himself.
“You what?”
Archie bore the weight of Samad on one side as they walked inside.
“I have eaten something,” said Samad, putting on a cut-glass English accent, “that is about to disagree with me.”
Archie knew very well that Samad sneaked morphine from the cabinets, but he could see Samad wanted him not to know, so “Let's get you into bed” was all he said, bringing Samad over to a mattress.
“When this is over, we will meet again in England, OK?” said Samad, lunging toward his mattress.
“Yes,” said Archie, trying to imagine walking along Brighton pier with Samad.
“Because you are a rare Englishman, Sapper Jones. I consider you my friend.”
Archie was not sure what he considered Samad, but he smiled gently in recognition of the sentiment.
“You will have dinner with my wife and I in the year 1975. When we are big-bellied men sitting on our money-mountains. Somehow we will meet.”
Archie, dubious of foreign food, smiled weakly.
“We will know each other throughout our lives!”
Archie laid Samad down, got himself a mattress, and maneuvered himself into a position for sleep.
“Good night, friend,” said Samad, pure contentment in his voice.
In the morning, the circus came to town. Woken by shouts and whooping laughter, Samad struggled into uniform and wrapped one hand around his gun. He stepped into the sun-drenched courtyard to find Russian soldiers in their dun-colored uniforms leapfrogging over each other, shooting tin cans off one another's heads, and throwing knives at potatoes stuck on sticks, each potato sporting a short black twig mustache. With all the exhaustion of revelation, Samad collapsed onto the front steps, sighed, and sat with his hands on his knees, his face turned up toward the heat. A moment later Archie tripped out, trousers half-mast, waving his gun, looking for the enemy, and shot a frightened bullet in the air. The circus continued, without noticing. Samad pulled Archie wearily by the trouser leg and gestured for him to sit down.
“What's going on?” demanded Archie, watery-eyed.
“Nothing. Nothing absolutely is going on. In fact, it's gone off.”
“But these might be the men whoâ”
“Look at the potatoes, Jones.”
Archie gazed wildly about him. “What have potatoes got to do with it?”
“They're Hitler potatoes, my friend. They are vegetable dictators. Ex-dictators.” He pulled one off its stick. “See the little mustaches? It's over, Jones. Someone has finished it for us.”
Archie took the potato in his hand.
“Like a bus, Jones. We have missed the bloody war.”
Archie shouted over to a lanky Russian in mid-spear of a Hitler potato. “Speak English? How long has it been over?”
“The fighting?” He laughed incredulously. “Two weeks, comrade! You will have to go to Japan if you want any more!”
“Like a bus,” repeated Samad, shaking his head. A great fury was rising in him, bile blocking his throat. This war was to have been his opportunity. He was expected to come home covered in glory, and then to return to Delhi triumphant. When would he ever have another chance? There were going to be no more wars like this one, everybody knew that. The soldier who had spoken to Archie wandered over. He was dressed in the summer uniform of the Russians: the thin material, high-necked collar, and oversized floppy cap; he wore a belt around a substantial waist, the buckle of which caught the sun and shot a beam into Archie's eye. When the glare passed, Archie focused on a big, open face, a squint in the left eye, and a head of sandy hair that struck off in several directions. He was altogether a rather jolly apparition on a bright morning, and when he spoke it was in a fluent, American-accented English that lapped at your ears like surf.