The next morning, with bell and camphor and trumpet, we planted our trophies before the temple. Five twigs of toddy trees were there, and a toddy pot. Venkamma of course said, ‘Look, look, a toddy god have they made of a moon-crowned god,’ and she spat on us and called us the toddy people. Yes, yes, sister, we are toddy people! But we don’t marry our daughters to gap-toothed sons-in-law. Nor like Bhatta do we go on Kashi pilgrimage with toddy contract money. Do we?
15
The following Tuesday was market day in Kanthapura, and we had risen early and lit the kitchen fires and had cooked the meals early and we had finished our prayers, and when the food was eaten and the vessels washed and the children sent with the cattle — for this time they wouldn’t come with us — we all gathered at the temple, and when Seenu had blown the conch and lit the camphor, we all marched towards the Kenchamma grove, and the cattle sellers stopped their cows and calves to see us, and the oil women put down their oil jugs and asked, ‘Where are you going, brothers and sisters?’ and old Nanjamma who could never hold her tongue says, ‘Why, to picket toddy shops,’ and Moorthy cries out, ‘Silence! Silence!’ and the cartmen pull aside the bulls and jump out of the carts to see the procession pass by, and when we are by the Skeffington Coffee Estate, Betel Lakshamma, who sells flowers for the Kenchamma worship, is there and she says to Moorthy, ‘And you are the soldiers of the Mahatma? And it’s you who defied the police?’ and Moorthy smiles and says, ‘Yes, Mother,’ and she says, ‘Then you’ll free us from the revenue collector?’ and Moorthy says, ‘What revenue collector?’—’Why, Raghavayya, the one who takes bribes and beats his wife and sends his servants to beat us,’—and Moorthy does not know what to answer and he says, ‘We are against all tyrants,’ and she says, ‘Why, then, come to our village, son, and free us from this childless monster,’ and Moorthy says, ‘We shall see,’ and she says, ‘We ask you to come,’ and Moorthy says, ‘I shall write to the Congress and if they say yes, I shall come,’ and then old Lakshamma, who is a very clever woman, she says, ‘Let us garland you,’ and Moorthy cries out, ‘No, no,’ but she says this and that, and garlands him and says, ‘You are my Lord, and though I saw you like a rat on your mother’s lap, I knew you’d do great deeds and bring a good name to the Himavathy.’ And when old Madanna of the banana shops sees this, he stops his bulls and tears a few bananas from the banana bunch and he offers them to Moorthy and Moorthy says, ‘May the country bless you, Madanna.’
And we march on and on, winding up the Karwar road to the Kenchamma grove, and at every step there are corn people and puffed-rice and Bengal-gram people and bangle sellers and buttermilk people and betel-leaf people, and they stop us and say, ‘Take this, take this, Mahatma’s men!’ And then suddenly a car comes hooting down the valley and they say, ‘Perhaps the Taluk magistrate?’—’Perhaps the collector sahib?’—’Perhaps the planter sahib?’—and they are so frightened that they jump over the gutters and slip behind the trees and the car rushes past us and we see a Red-man’s face and a Red-man’s beard and a Red-man’s hat, and people say, ‘Why, that’s the good Solpur Padre!’ and Ratna says, ‘No, no,’ but Moorthy cries out, ‘Silence, please,’ and we grow dumb. And the nearer we come to the fair the larger is the crowd behind us, and our hearts beat hard, and when we are by the Kenchamma grove, Moorthy says, ‘One man or woman at every arm’s length,’ and seventy-seven in all we stand by the Kenchamma grove and up the Skeffington Road, one man or woman at every arm’s length and Moorthy stood over the Monkey’s bridge, with Ratna and Rangamma beside him, and across the rivulet, on the dry meadow crouched the toddy booth, but the police were already there.
We had never stepped upon the Coffee Estate road, and each time the cart passed by the Kenchamma grove, in secret fear we would never look towards it. And we imagined the sahib standing here, standing there, by the Buxom pipal tree, by the Ramanna well, and we thought there he’s looking for a woman, he’s behind the aloes there. And the leaves would flutter and there would be a cough or sneeze, and our limbs would tremble and we would look away to the Kenchamma grove, and sometimes, when on a morning a cow or a calf strayed over the Skeffington road, we cried out, ‘Hey-Hey,’ from the main road and we waited for a Pariah to come and we sent him to drive it home. And today, as we stood on the Skeffington road, broad and bright with the margosa trees that lined it to the iron gate, where two giant banyans hovered from either side, as we looked up the hill, up the twisted road and past the trees to the porch and the stables and the bamboo nettings of the bungalow, a shiver ran down our backs, and we all wondered how Moorthy could stand so near the gate. And yet Moorthy was calm and talking away, waiting for the first coolie to come out, the first coolie who would come out with his week’s earnings at his waist, and go straight to the toddy booth; and we waited and waited. Vasudev had told us it was Pariah Siddayya who would lead them out, and we looked this side and that, and we said, ‘They’re coming! They’re coming!’ and we looked at the Estate trees, high and lean and protective, and the little coffee shrubs beneath, and there were birds in them and wind and darkness, and as the sky was growing cloud-covered, we said, ‘Now it is going to rain and the people will not come out,’ and yawning and perspiring we look away towards the market where people are hurriedly putting up their shops, the pegs are hammered in and the tents stretched out and the carts are emptied and the bulls wave their heads and flap their ears to drive away the flies, and then one by one they kneel and flop down for a comfortable munch — and donkeys bray and pigs snort and the Padre’s voice comes curling up the tamarind tree with pancake smoke from Puttamma’s frying pan, and there is music with the Padre’s voice and it is tambourine music and band music, and the cymbals beat, and people gather and the Padre sings on and on in Harikatha, while carts come round the Kenchamma hill and people come behind them, and when they see us they come near us and they talk to Moorthy, and Moorthy explains to them why we are here and they say, laughing, ‘Why, you will never stop a man drinking!’ and others say, ‘Ah, you are like that Padre there talking of drink and sin.’ Yet others say, ‘You are right, learned sir, but if you put a dog on the throne, he’ll jump down at the sight of dirt; thus we are,’ but Moorthy says, ‘No, no, you cannot straighten a dog’s tail but you can straighten a man’s heart.’