Season of the Rainbirds
Page 17
Yusuf Rao’s twelve-year-old son sat cross-legged on the floor cleaning his father’s weekday shoes. He had taken out the laces and was using the handle of a spoon to prise out rectangles of caked mud from the pattern on the sole. From the courtyard high-pitched yelps and urgent commands – sound of his brothers and sisters at play – reached the room. Yusuf Rao was at the other side of the room engaged in a conversation with Mr Kasmi. The Little Green Book was on the table by Yusuf Rao’s elbow.
Mr Kasmi said, ‘I think you should lie low for a while.’
Yusuf Rao picked up the Little Green Book; he held it in his hand for a moment before returning it to the table. ‘They won’t come for me. I think they know that I gave all that up years ago.’
‘But there’s no harm in being careful,’ Mr Kasmi said in his precise way. ‘Did you hear about Saif Aziz?’
‘Yes,’ Yusuf Rao replied. ‘I think he was very wise. I would’ve done the same if I was still active. The repression’s bound to increase.’ He broke off and, a smile on his face, asked: ‘Did Saif Aziz tell you how Mujeeb Ali’s brother, after he became a minister, tried to buy him? No? Well, he sent a brand new Volkswagen round to his house with a note saying, It’s a gift, I know it’s your favourite car. Saif Aziz sent it back saying, My favourite car is a Mercedes-Benz; a Volkswagen is what I can afford.’
Mr Kasmi smiled. ‘Did he get a Mercedes-Benz?’
Yusuf Rao made a theatrical sour face. ‘Much cheaper to shut the whole paper down.’
Yusuf Rao’s youngest daughter entered the room. She wore a bright blue frock and her long straight hair was gathered with a ribbon; the fringe was held away from the forehead with a dragonfly hair-clip. She was holding a large peepul leaf in her hand. Mr Kasmi lifed her on to his lap and began skilfully to fold the supple leaf.
‘I wonder who fired the missile?’ Mr Kasmi said.
‘The BBC said it was the hanged prime minister’s son. But according to the All India Radio it was the guerrillas from Baluchistan,’ said Yusuf Rao. And he added grimly: ‘I don’t envy whoever comes to power in the wake of this regime.’
Mr Kasmi almost interrupted him. ‘I wish we could find out who actually runs this country. The army? The politicians? The industrialists? The landowners?’ He had stopped work on the peepul leaf to say this: the little girl poked him in the ribs, prompting him to continue.
Yusuf Rao smiled and referred to the voices from the mosques. ‘Or is it God?’
The boy had wiped the mud off the shoes and was about to begin polishing them. ‘No,’ Yusuf Rao said across the room. ‘The smell gives me a headache. Take them somewhere else.’
The boy sighed with annoyance and left the room. Mr Kasmi pointed to the mud he left behind and made a comment about the weather.
When the leaf had been securely folded into a whistle, Mr Kasmi held one end of the neat package between his lips and gently breathed into it: there was free passage of air. The child was already on her feet. She muttered a word of thanks when the whistle was handed to her, and blew into it immediately. The sharp rasping noise startled the adults. Mr Kasmi looked abashed. She went out with skipping steps, her eyes glowing with delight.
Yusuf Rao’s wife brought in the coffee. Her hair was wet and hung limply on either side of her face, each strand ending in a large drop of water. She smelled of clean water. ‘You should stay for lunch, brother-ji,’ she said to Mr Kasmi. ‘But it will be late. It’s Friday so I had to have a bath.’ She handed them their cups. ‘I don’t know how you can drink this. It smells of chick-pea sauce that’s been left on the stove for too long.’
Mr Kasmi said, ‘You may be right, sister-ji. Coffee is a kind of roasted bean.’
Yusuf Rao said noisily, ‘I drink it because it reminds me of my student days.’ He winked at his wife.
‘You have no shame, Yusuf Rao,’ the woman said, smiling. And she turned to Mr Kasmi: ‘Your friend has no shame, brother-ji.’
Yusuf Rao sipped the drink. He said, ‘Your brother-ji was just telling me that they’re planning a bigger police station for this town. More men and a bigger building, perhaps a promotion for the inspector. I think that’s proof enough that something did happen on Wednesday night.’
The woman sought Mr Kasmi’s eyes. He nodded.
‘The sooner we get rid of this evil general, the better,’ she said. She turned to Yusuf Rao and said: ‘When the government changes I’m going to make a list of all the things you once did for the opposition and I’m going to get you a ministership.’
‘I’ve given up all that.’
There was bitter resentment in the woman’s voice. ‘They accused our party of electoral fraud. But in this town it was Mujeeb Ali who rigged the ballots.’
‘Nation-wide it was us,’ Yusuf Rao said. ‘And that’s what counts. Everyone cheats, so the one who cheats the most is the cheater. But why dig it all up again? As I said, I gave up on all that years ago. I don’t want to be a minister, bibi. The boys will be grown up in a few years. They’ll start earning.’
‘They’ll disappoint me yet.’ The woman went to the door. ‘Fridays drive me insane. Children are home, husband is home and, on top of that, there’s this noise from the mosques.’
‘What did the poor husband do?’ Yusuf Rao shouted after her.
By three o’clock, when they sat down to eat, the prayers had been said at both mosques. Maulana Dawood had finished his sermon; Maulana Hafeez was just beginning his.
There was bésan stew with dumplings, tur salad – almost out of season now – and iced lemon water. Dessert would be pistachio halva which everyone knew smelled better than it tasted. Yusuf Rao’s wife and eldest daughter – the pair had said their prayers – laid the table. One of the boys was attempting from memory Charlie Chaplin’s bread-roll dance with two spoons; the children had seen the film from which the sequence came on the television the night before. The eldest girl began to make chappatis. Her mother served the food.
Maulana Hafeez’s voice carried through the streets. And what if the entire world has wandered down the wrong path? We must still fight to keep ourselves pure. Remember that the darkness which has the ability to overpower a mountain is beaten by the tiniest of flames.
They ate in silence. The peepul-leaf whistle, clogged now with saliva, was next to the little girl’s plate. Yusuf Rao’s wife took away the stew dish and returned with it filled to the brim leaving a trail of steam behind her. She was listening to Maulana Hafeez without blinking.
The cleric was easing into his sermon. We have forgotten what lies in store for sinners. Aflame that is a thousand times more poisonous than any fire of this earth.
The twelve-year-old spent his time at the table pulling down his sleeve to cover a shoe-polish stain on his wrist. The little girl knocked over a glass of water.
Maulana Hafeez spoke for another ten minutes, his voice rising as, for the first time, he openly condemned the deputy commissioner and his mistress. Ties of family, friendship and faith keep us united against the attentions of Shaitan.
One by one the children left the table; no one managed to finish dessert. Mr Kasmi pressed his handkerchief to his lips. Yusuf Rao belched. The girl shouted from the kitchen to know how many chappatis were left. She slid the baking-iron under the shelf. Mother and daughter cleared the table, wiped down the surface and sat down to eat. Beads of sweat glistened on the girl’s brow.
It was many minutes before anyone spoke.
‘It seems that Maulana Hafeez is turning into a Maulana Dawood,’ Yusuf Rao said.
‘Maulana-ji is right,’ his wife said. ‘Somebody had to speak out. Those two are behaving like pigs. Now they’ll have to take notice and do the decent thing.’ Her breathing was laboured but her tone was measured, careful not to embarrass the girl in front of her father or make the father uncomfortable by being open with him in front of the daughter; and, of course, there was Mr Kasmi.
The heavy meal and the heat were combining to induce a stupor. Yusuf Rao fingered
the collar of his shirt, and said, ‘He didn’t have to mention them by name though.’
Mr Kasmi took a breath. ‘What difference does that make? Everyone would have known who was being referred to anyway.’
Gul-kalam’s family had gone back to their village in the mountains. Their house – the lubinium just coming into leaf – stood locked. They had taken the morning bus out of town. The compact little group had been ignored by everyone who passed by the bus station. Kalsum and Suraya watched them through the window as they came down the back lane and turned the corner – the women with jewels in the ridge between their nostrils, the half-asleep children and the wide-awake babies, the crippled brother, the goats, the heavy trunks and bundles. Suraya had said, closing the window, ‘There was no need for them to leave.’
Now Kalsum and Suraya sat on the veranda. There was no wind, hardly a breeze. Leaves whispered on the arbour.
‘What did Yusuf Rao say when you went to see him yesterday?’ Kalsum asked.
‘He says if Burkat wants me to divorce him then I should keep the house,’ Suraya said.
‘And put him out?’
‘Yes.’
Kalsum lifted an eyebrow. ‘Where would he go?’
‘What do I care!’
‘For shame!’ Kalsum touched her earlobes. ‘Such talk from a Muslim. He’s your husband … And what about the boy?’
Suraya’s eyes softened. ‘He says I have a right to him as well.’ Her face had lit up at the mention of her son. ‘He’s tall, apa. Two hands taller than his father. Only fourteen years old.’ Good food and a healthy environment had unlocked the information in the boy’s genes; information that had been dormant in his father and uncles.
‘So,’ Kalsum said, ‘you’ve decided to go back.’
Suraya did not reply. Instead, she said: ‘You’d be alone here if I go, apa. Once again.’
Kalsum folded her arms. ‘Don’t worry about me. I’m happy where my men have left me.’
The sunlight yellowed, turned amber and then faded.
The barber locked the door to his shop and jumped down from the platform. He and Zafri walked together towards their homes. They lived in the same lane by the western river. They kept silent as they passed Judge Anwar’s house. A cat jumped down from a tree and crossed their path.
Inside Judge Anwar’s house the youngest girl took the chewed toffee out of her mouth to see what colour it had become. One of her sisters – her eyes swollen from ten days of tears – rebuked her. The child scuttled out of the room, blowing bubbles with the warm saliva thick with caramel. The widow listened to a noise for some minutes before realising that it was the sound of her own breathing. There was a flash of lightning. The widow smiled acquiescently at the child who had just come into the room and said: ‘God’s taking a picture.’
Most of the town was dipped in darkness. Wavering spheres of street light, speckled with drizzle, floated above the streets. Tereza Massih crossed herself and closed the window. She lighted a fumigation coil. Benjamin Massih murmured something in his sleep which she strained to catch. She picked up the plate containing the crusty edges of a chappati and went out.
Two blocks away Dr Sharif twisted the dial of the radio. The needle sliced across a station where a melancholy song was being played. The physician returned to the song and remained immersed in its lulling sentiment long after it had faded.
Mr Kasmi got ready to walk the four blocks to Mujeeb Ali’s house. He collected his umbrella and turned off the bedroom light. As he descended the stairs his shadow trailed behind him like an emperor’s robe. Downstairs Alice felt the day’s washing: it was still damp and would have to be left out on the veranda overnight. Mr Kasmi arrived at the bottom of the staircase and called, ‘Ready?’ He was to walk Alice home before going to Mujeeb Ali’s house to give his daughters their private lesson.
‘Where’s Arshad?’ said Nabila Ali, pushing aside the embroidered mosquito-netting and addressing the cook who had come to the bedroom door to take her leave. She was taking home the day’s left-over food. She shrugged but answered all the same, ‘He’s gone to have his bandages changed.’ Nabila Ali nodded: ‘Has Kasmi-sahib’s tea been sent in?’ The cook nodded and left.
By nine o’clock the drizzle was coalescing into heavy rain. Elizabeth was on her way to the bedroom when she heard the knock. ‘Who is it?’ she said and went towards the door. She was answered by another knock much louder than the first. Elizabeth stopped in the centre of the courtyard and raised a hand to her chest. She was without her veil. She had heard Maulana Hafeez’s sermon today and had decided that from now on she would always cover her head before answering the door. As she turned, the knock came again, but so sharply that a little scream escaped her lips. ‘He’s not in,’ she shouted. Then she took several paces away from the door, which was being pushed from the street, violently. She could make out shouts above the sound of the raindrops. ‘He’s not here,’ she said, or thought, as the door swung through a complete half-circle and hit the wall.
Thunder rolled across the sky. Maulana Hafeez read the appropriate verse. He switched off the mosque lights one by one, fastened the street door and went into the house. He coughed as he crossed the veranda and had to stand still for a moment to get his breath back. ‘I didn’t see the newspaper today,’ he said as he entered the kitchen. His wife removed the milk from the fire but it continued to boil, absorbing heat from the sides of the pan. She blew into the froth. ‘They say the streets of all the big cities are crawling with army vehicles. The newspaper photographer phoned his office today, that’s how everyone knows.’ Maulana Hafeez shook his head. ‘God is merciful.’ The woman had got up and was standing at the window to the street. ‘Something’s happening outside, Maulana-ji,’ she said; her small, frail body was alert. Maulana Hafeez stood up. ‘Listen, Maulana-ji. I can hear shouting.’
Saturday
At last, Maulana Hafeez rose. He yawned indulgently like a child, his jaw askew, read the appropriate verse, and cupped his profile in the soft palms of his hands – a solemn gesture of gratitude towards the Creator for granting him one more day. He had awakened not long after falling asleep and had spent a restless few hours lying on his back, listening to the rain.
He took down the hurricane lamp hanging from the doorframe and carried it to the other end of the room. There he raised the glass globe by pressing the lever and lighted the wick. Then Maulana Hafeez took out the clothes hanging in the wardrobe and began to dress.
Running his tongue over his gums he collected the stale saliva, thick with the vapours from his stomach, and went to the window. He opened the casements and spat the putrid matter out into the darkness. Despite the eaves above the window a violent rush of wind drenched his face with rain. The town resounded beneath the downpour. From a tree in a distant courtyard a papiha’s reedy cry reached the bedroom. Monsoon, Maulana Hafeez thought, and closed the window.
Without noticing the hour he wound the clock with its rusty moth-like key. The alarm went off in his hands. It was five minutes to four o’clock. Maulana Hafeez remembered that on the night of Judge Anwar’s murder, he had got up to say the pre-dawn prayers twenty-five minutes earlier. Winter was drawing close. For a brief moment he thought he heard Gul-kalam blow his whistle, as he had done on many other nights over the years.
Guided by the light of the lamp – the electricity had failed around midnight – the cleric crossed the veranda to the toilet. Ten minutes later he emerged exhausted, and glanced at his wife’s bedroom. The door was open.
In the kitchen the fire had settled into languid flames with blunt tips. Maulana Hafeez’s wife poured him a cup of tea. ‘What is going to happen when Azhar comes back?’ she asked quietly.
Maulana Hafeez was precise. ‘The girl will have to change her religion and they’ll get married. I’ll make them see sense.’ He meant to say more but, seized by a coughing attack, could not continue. He had a chill on his chest and his legs and back were stiff from lying motionless like a c
orpse for so many hours.
The woman set her hand on his wrist and felt for fever. ‘Don’t go to the mosque this morning, Maulana-ji,’ she said. ‘Rafiq Asan can lead the prayers today. You need to rest.’
Maulana Hafeez shook his head. ‘I have to go. Especially today.’
He finished his tea in silence. Swallowing the last sweet gulp, he leaned towards the fire to look for the chip of cinnamon at the bottom of the cup. The release of the oily resin in his mouth comforted him.
In the bathroom, after he had performed his ablutions and was about to unbolt the door, Maulana Hafeez began to weep. Blind with tears he leaned against the door and remained there for many minutes. Then, even though tears did not annul an ablution, he performed the consoling ritual once more.
The woman heard him gargle as she looked for his white cap. Last night she had stretched the wet cap over the base of an upturned bowl. She carried the bowl surmounted by the cap to the kitchen door.
She murmured something but Maulana Hafeez raised a hand. He took the dry cap and arranged it on his head. He felt in his pocket for the keys to the mosque.
Mr Kasmi pushed the tip of the scissors into the cocoon and cut around the silky sphere. The hollow case, acting as sounding-board, amplified the noise of the blades. Mr Kasmi pulled the two halves apart – the brittle curved body of the silkworm dropped on to the table. He ran a forefinger inside each half of the cocoon, blew, and placed them in the pan with the other ingredients. Next, he picked up a large dried berry and examined the skin for holes ants might have made to lay their eggs in. He peeled the berry and threw both the skin and the stone into the pan. He completed the recipe of the infusion by adding a few dried petals of the kuchnar blossom. The original pink had deepened to lilac. Each spring Alice would look greedily at the tree laden with buds. ‘We should pluck them all and cook them before they become flowers; they’re really delicious,’ she never tired of saying. Zébun would retort: ‘I had the tree planted for its flowers; we can get the buds for cooking from the vegetable man.’ And the servant girl, pulling a face in deep irritation: ‘It seems such a waste; and it isn’t too high for me to climb either; Kasmi-sahib could hold the ladder steady.’