“I am, I am!” It happens sometimes, just filled full of excitement and yap and don’t know what, some big thing is going to happen. Well, the Khaufpur Gazette is in no way interested in my interview so I head for the tele-wallahs and’ve jugged around making faces at them, Eyes, I wish you could see…I am pulling those faces now, tongue out eyes glaring, cheeks bulging eyes fully crossed…a hefty kick lands on my arse, it’s Farouq, “Little bastard, you could have killed me.”
“You have to die one day,” I yell. “Why not today?”
The court is fully crowded, hardly space to stand. I’ve tried to climb on the bench backs, this time all kinds of dirty looks I’ve got, but Nisha’s with me, she’s found me room.
At last the judge enters, he’s wearing a black robe over his suit. The local lawyers are right up at the front, Zafar too is there. Milord sits, shuffles some papers on his desk, a court-wallah announces that this is criminal case number RT 8460/96.
“Look who’s here,” says Nisha in my ear. I’ve followed her eyes, there at the back of the court is a foreign woman wearing a head scarf and dark glasses.
“Why has she come?” Nisha demands, but how should I know. I’m still in that mad grinning mood, I give Elli a wave, she sees and waves back.
Now the judge is talking, “With regard to the petition laid before the court by Mr. Zafar, the aforesaid petition is hereby…” here, just to be a cunt, he pauses and looks at all of us over the tops of his glasses…
“…granted. The necessary summons plus letter rogatory…”
But the rest of what he is saying is lost in cheers.
“We’ve won! We’ve won!” shrieks Nisha, she’s jumped and run to Zafar, who has a huge grin on his face. Even Somraj, for the second time in a few days is smiling. People are stamping their feet.
Calls a familiar voice from the back of the court, “Sir, a great decision!”
“And who might you be?” asks the judge.
“Sir, I am Doctor Elli Barber, I have opened a free clinic here in Khaufpur for the victims of this heartless Kampani.”
“Good work, Doctor Barber, very good work. We wish you every success.” I’m thinking that Elli will now start complaining to the judge about Pandit Somraj, thank god she keeps her mouth shut.
“Now things are different,” Zafar tells the Khaufpur Gazette. “The Kampani bosses must come. If they don’t, the Kampani’s Indian assets may be attached.”
The big hearing, when the bosses must show up, is set for some months ahead, it will fall around the middle of June, just before the rains come to Khaufpur, the hottest time of year.
Bhoora sings all the way back, it’s another chicken day.
On my way to Nisha’s next morning, I meet Farouq on his bicycle’s flapping from side to side like a dog’s ear, laughing so much he’s.
“Animal,” he says, “Animal, you crazy fuck, lord of dogshit, pawnbroker to flies, you will love this. Do you know what your Elli doctress is doing?”
“So? Say.”
“She’s only staging a demo outside Somraj’s house,” says he, hardly can he squeeze out the words for mirth. “Not just a demo, but a picket, everything. Says it is a gherao. It is just hysterical.”
“What is Somraj doing?”
“When we told him, he just stood calmly, then he says, I see, and turns to Shastri, this morning we’ll practise the alaap of Yavanapuri. I think the poor fellow is in shock. Who’s ever seen anything like this woman?”
“And Zafar? Nisha?”
“Well, what do you expect? Zafar is worrying about what is the right response, Nisha is just getting upset.”
“She’s been upset a lot since Elli showed up.”
“Ha ha, yes,” says he, giving me a wink. “Dirty little shit, you notice such things.” He’s wobbled away, still chortling, then turned and yelled over his shoulder, “Muharram is nearly here!”
When I get near Somraj’s place, I begin to hear hooting and cheers. There’s a sizeable crowd of ne’er-do-wells and time-pass tapori types hanging around, shouting encouragement to her who’s provided them with this free spectacle.
Elli blue legs is walking up and down outside Somraj’s, carrying a sign mounted on a stick. SOMRAJ IS UNFAIR, it says. Following behind her are Dayanand, Suresh and Miriam Joseph. The two guys look like they wish they could be anywhere else in this world, only Miriam Joseph is smiling. All three carry placards, on which are written, SOMRAJ LET THE SICK BE HELPED, STOP THE BOYCOTT and SOMRAJ HAVE A HEART.
Much wondering there’s at this unusual sight, doubly unusual because although many foreigners come to march in our demos, none has ever started their own. Not in their maddest dreams can Zafar and Co. suppose they’d get such a taste of their own medicine.
I stop to admire these four circling outside Somraj’s house, they’re vowed to do this every day until he lifts the boycott.
There’s a stir in the crowd. The door is opening. Out steps Pandit-ji, stony faced as ever, immaculate in his white kurta pyjama.
People start jabbering, now we’ll see some real drama, fireworks there are bound to be. “Somraj is an important guy,” says someone behind me. “He will know what to say to this arrogant foreigneress.”
Somraj is holding a cup of tea, balanced on a saucer.
“See how cool he is,” says the same voice. “He has come outside to drink his tea, to show us people that he is no way bothered by this nonsense.”
“Now he’ll give the doctress what for,” opines another.
Somraj goes up to Elli, who stops marching. Instead of giving her what for, he holds out the cup of tea. “It is a hot day,” says he in that beautiful voice of his, every word carries clear across the street. “You must be thirsty. Please, take this. More is coming for your companions.”
I’m getting Elli’s thoughts, they are rushing round like a flock of chickens scattered by a dog. Then she pulls herself together.
“Thank you,” she says. “But as you see, I am busy.” She shrugs to show that her hands are full carrying the placard.
“So please,” says Somraj. “Allow me.” With one hand he removes the placard from the astonished doctress, with the other gives her the tea.
“So clever,” says the idiot behind. “See, he has the sign, how he’s looking at it. Now he will smash it down on the ground, it will fly to bits.”
Elli standing there, takes a sip of her tea, fixes hostile eyes on Somraj and says, “Well, what are you waiting for? You signed the petition against yourself, will you now join our demo against you?”
For one moment Somraj stands there expressionless. Then he’s turned to Dayanand and the others, who have come to a nervous halt and are looking on. “So then,” he says, “while Doctor Barber drinks her tea, I must take her place.”
Thus is the crowd treated to the amazing sight of Somraj picketing his own house, calling upon himself to stop being unfair.
Eyes, Khaufpuris aren’t the brightest lot, I guess it takes a minute for the message to sink in, then in the crowd someone cheers. A few more join in, but most people are puzzled. Is Pandit Somraj making a mockery of the doctress, or has he turned against his own? By the time tea arrives for the others, the watching crowd has dissolved into knots of people. Some are drifting away, others are clustered around Dayanand and Suresh and Miriam Joseph, slapping them on the back, saying that it takes those who have courage to speak. Elli and Somraj are stood together. I, who have the ability to read thoughts, watch their lips and I swear that Elli doctress says to him, “I do believe you really are against this boycott.” To which he replies, “You may draw your own conclusion.”
A while later I’ve passed Ram Nekchalan’s shop. “Kyoñ, Animal?” he says to me. “What’s Zafar doing about this? People are saying that the foreign doctress has put Pandit Somraj under a spell.”