Jolly Boy trots to the kitchen for the rest of the ingredients. He comes back with an armful of bandages still in their packaging and a fat spool of cotton wool. He drops the bandages and unrolls the cotton wool, cuts it to length for the first application. He holds Bibhuti’s elbow delicately while his mother wraps the strip around Bibhuti’s arm for padding. She dips the first bandage in the plaster solution and then winds it over the cotton-wool sleeve, her eyes darting all the while to her husband’s for guidance. With great care she repeats the process until three layers of bandages clad his arm, smoothing the plaster down with her palm between each application to achieve a clean finish. Her sobriety throughout suggests many years of painstaking ministrations like this, of swabbing blood and smoothing matted hair, of binding fractured fingers and forceful reintroductions of ball joints to their sockets.
Bibhuti stays awake to watch, biting back the pain to remonstrate quietly with her over her fussy technique. She flusters to get the job done to his satisfaction while the room hums to a narcotic rhythm of muted industry. Before my eyes he’s fixed and shielded again from my thrill-seeking bat. I’ve hit him for the last time. A pang of mourning. I’ll end my life having never killed a man. I feel the consolation of it as I feel the cooling draught of the air con on my neck. Your mercy, that’s what it is. If I feel saved from something, whether it’s hell or an inescapable deed, then someone or something must have done the saving. That’s what I’m thinking when I watch Bibhuti’s other bones being dressed and then sit alone with him listening to the rain as the plaster sets.
‘You didn’t cure me, then,’ I say. I try to make it sound breezy.
‘I am very sorry,’ Bibhuti says.
‘It’s okay. Not to worry. Thanks for trying anyway.’
‘You still have plenty of time. You must use it wisely. Maybe there is another treatment for you at home. There is always hope if you listen to what your heart is telling you.’
I tell him I have to go soon. I hear him sobbing and I look away to spare his shame. His picture on the wall is crooked. I’ll straighten it when I get up. He sits with his legs spread wide, three slabs of concrete between them. The sledgehammer poised in another man’s hands. That should have been our record, it would have been so much easier. I should have found him years ago.
36
I hug the ladder tight and turn my face from the view of the ground. Rain shingles the back of my head. Somewhere below me Ellen calls out a spooked profanity and Jolly Boy trills a stiffener to his white uncle’s nerves. I can’t move. I want to sleep here, vertical and soaked to the skin. I want to forget all the new names I’ve learned.
I feel B Pattni’s big hands on the ladder below me, anchoring it to the bed of the pick-up. The force of his grip fortifies me. That’s the plan. The neighbour’s ladder didn’t reach on its own so an appeal was made and B Pattni answered with the bright idea of standing the ladder on the back of his truck. The extra height brings the broken satellite dish within an arm’s length. A merry improvisation, in the Indian way. Safe as houses, as long as the handbrake holds.
B Pattni offered to climb the ladder for me and I had to stand my ground. It was my job. I had to suffer the spotlight glare of the crowd as I made my ascent, the neighbours come to see me make my amends and the reporters digging in for the first glimpse of Bibhuti on his feet and ever hopeful for the summoning to hear it all from the horse’s mouth, how a man among them touched the sun and came back.
They all wonder at me, how a pasty Englishman became the hand of God. I free an arm to check the screwdriver in my pocket and take another step up, barefoot for bite on the slippery metal, the paint chipping off my toenails and my strength ebbing away. I’m barely animal enough to find my grip. I have to put everything into squeezing. My slowness shames me. I shake when I lift off and scrabble for the next handhold, an unmanly spectacle for the watching cameras. I keep going because I have to. I bet myself that my last act on this continent would be something charitable. Something useful to a friend. I haul myself up as far as I can go.
At the top it’s just me and my breathing. I reach out and reel the dish in. It looks intact. Only the bracket’s broken, sheared away from the wall. I shout out my findings. B Pattni steps away from the foot of the ladder to get the replacement bracket and for a moment I’m adrift. The wait for his return is an age without the ballast that comes from other people. I keep my focus on the prayer bracelet around my wrist. Its colour has faded and it slips loosely down my arm. When I feel B Pattni’s weight engage again with the ladder I know I’ll live beyond today.
I pick my way slowly back down the rungs to meet B Pattni at the bottom. He passes me the bracket and the screws and I begin my climb again. I hope I look determined and fearless and that he’ll mention this detail when called to witness my feat to Bibhuti, who sits alone in front of a blank TV screen waiting for his connection to be restored. I lift my head to feel the rain slapping my face. It’s still warm. Up I go.
Bibhuti is pleased with me. The screen throws a bold light into the room. The picture is clear. He clicks past the cricket, prodding tetchily at the remote control buttons. He shuffles through the channels to be reunited in little bursts of recognition with each of his favourites. He doesn’t linger on the sports. The reunion is painful, a tactless reminder that the coming weeks will be spent idly and with terrible waste. To dull the torment while his bones recover he must banish all signals of the grace and power that live in the world beyond his walls.
He clucks his tongue and changes the channel. An American police procedural drama from a decade ago. His eyes glaze over and he slides back into the sofa, giving himself up to the indolence the doctor prescribed when we left the ward in a stumbling entourage.
‘You should be in bed,’ his wife chides him. ‘You will rest much better there.’
He grunts in reply and fidgets with the volume control.
The floor is sand-shifting under my feet, my legs still think they’re dangling in thin air. When I have time to reflect I’ll recall how scared I was up on the ladder, it’ll rush in like a tidal wave and sweep me away. But for now my thoughts are consumed with the logistics of going home. There are flights to book and a will to write. I have to choose which of my accumulated trinkets to bequeath and which to throw out, and that means listening again to the stories of each of them. The listening will take up most of what time remains. I’ll have to go back and put a God to every one of them before they fade away. While I was sleeping you quietly filled me. Now I’m awake and responsible. I have to go and settle things. I have to leave the place where I woke up. I have to forget my friend.
I ask him if he’s comfortable and if there’s anything else I can do for him. He waves me away, his eyes fixed on the TV screen.
Jolly Boy senses his father drifting away from him and he has an idea. Does he want to see the record, the footage is on YouTube?
The life returns to Bibhuti’s eyes and he sits up. He instructs Jolly Boy to get his laptop. Jolly Boy rushes to the bedroom, a bounce in his step, comes back with the laptop already open and whirring into start-up.
‘Come,’ Bibhuti says to me, ‘we will watch together. Jolly Boy, let Uncle sit.’ He watches with excitement as the browser opens up and the boy types a search into Google. Bibhuti Nayak baseball bat.
I look away before he hits enter.
‘It’s okay, I don’t need to see it.’