‘You’re in a difficult situation,’ Thevaram had told him the last time they had met. ‘You’re running a catering service. For this you need a licence that you haven’t got and are unlikely to get. You draw unemployment benefit, even though you earn enough, more than enough in fact. But you can’t stop taking it, because you’re worried the authorities would ask questions. So you’re forced to take the money. Might it not unburden your conscience if you at least donated that illegally earned money to a good cause? And you’d be helping your nephew into the bargain.’
After that, whenever Maravan was paid his unemployment benefit he would deposit a sealed envelope at the Batticaloa Bazaar, addressed to Th.
Andrea knew nothing of all this. And Maravan would have continued to keep it to himself if Love Food’s planning meetings had gone differently.
Yes, Andrea was now holding planning meetings. He had nothing against this; it had its advantages. It meant they did not have to discuss the calendar and bookings while preparing a dinner or in the car. But it did bother him that these meetings always took place at Andrea’s flat, and that Makeda was there more often. He thought she should keep her private life and work separate, and he also found it awkward discussing financial matters in front of outsiders.
At one such meeting in the office, which was now quite homely, Andrea revealed to him that she was planning to take a fortnight’s holiday with Makeda.
‘Who’s going to stand in for you?’
‘I thought you might ask your girlfriend.’
‘Sandana? Are you crazy?’
‘What do you mean? She’s a pretty girl and she’s no fool, either.’
‘She’s a Tamil woman. Tamil women do not work in the sex industry.’
Up till now Makeda had been silent. But now she laughed. ‘Ethiopian women don’t either.’
‘What about Tamil men?’ Andrea asked.
‘They don’t either,’ Maravan admitted.
‘So why do you do it then?’
‘Because I need the bloody money!’
Andrea got a fright; Maravan never shouted like that. ‘Why don’t we cancel all our bookings, then, and you take the time off too?’ she suggested.
‘I can’t afford to,’ Maravan muttered.
‘But we’ve been earning good money. You must have put enough away for a fortnight.’
It was in response to this that Maravan disclosed his situation.
Both women listened in silence. Eventually Andrea said, ‘That means you’re being blackmailed.’
‘Not just that. They’re helping me as well.’
‘How?’
Maravan told them about Ugalu. How he had signed up to be a Black Tiger and how the two men had stopped him from being accepted.
‘And you believe them?’ Makeda asked.
He did not reply.
‘I wouldn’t trust anyone who sends children to war.’
Maravan still said nothing.
‘Men,’ Makeda said, sticking her fingers down her throat. ‘Sorry, Maravan. Men and war and money. Makes me sick.’
Andrea took her cue. ‘And yet you spend all night with a man whose business contacts are flogging arms to the Liberation Tigers and the Sri Lankan army.’
Makeda stood up without saying a word and left the room. Andrea stayed seated defiantly.
‘Dalmann?’ Maravan asked after a while.
‘Of course.’
‘He’s involved with the Pakistani, too?’
Andrea nodded. ‘You too. You cooked for him.’
‘In St Moritz.’ It did not sound like a question. It was the confirmation of an unpleasant suspicion. ‘But I didn’t know.’
‘Now you do. And so does Makeda. So what now?’
‘I won’t cook for him any more.’
‘OK. What else?’
Makeda had come back into the room unnoticed. She was wearing her coat, scarf and gloves.
‘What about you?’ Andrea asked. ‘What are you going to do with Dalmann now?’
‘Just wait.’ She kissed Andrea on the cheek, patted Maravan’s head and left.
45
A cold and stormy night, rain mixed with snow. It was a five-minute walk to the tram stop. Maravan had put his hands deep into the pockets of his leather jacket, pulled his woolly hat down and hunched his shoulders.
So it was true. Dalmann was involved with people supplying arms to the army and the Liberation Tigers. Why would he have anything to do with them if he was not caught up in their deals? Sandana was right: the money he was sending his family may have been coming from the profits made by someone helping Maravan’s compatriots to kill each other. And the money he sent the LTTE possibly came from the LTTE, who in turn were getting it from people like Maravan.
Everything was churning around inside his head. He had reached the tram stop, but he continued walking. The idea of sitting in a tram now, as if nothing were wrong, put him into a panic.
There was nobody on the streets. Cars drove past at long intervals. The houses were dark with closed shutters and curtains. Maravan walked quickly with long, sweeping strides. Like a criminal on the run, he thought. And he felt like one, too.
It took him almost an hour to get home, soaked through and out of breath. He lit his oil burner, put on a sarong and fresh shirt, rang the temple bell and did his puja.
When he had finished he knew what he had to do. The very next day he would go to Andrea and resign. It was not enough just to refuse to work for Dalmann. There were many Dalmanns in such circles. If he wanted to be sure of not getting his hands dirty he had to end it.
He would tell Thevaram and Rathinam he needed his unemployment benefit again because he was giving up his catering service with immediate effect.
It was past one o’clock in the morning, but Maravan was too unsettled to go to bed. He turned on the computer and started accessing the websites covering the civil war.
The LTTE had declared a unilateral ceasefire. The Sri Lankan defence minister called this ‘a joke’. ‘They should give themselves up,’ he said. ‘They’re not fighting us, they’re running away from us.’
The defence ministry website had put up a ‘Final Countdown’, so you could see how many square kilometres the Liberation Tigers still had to go. And the thousands of refugees packed in tightly with them. The figure was not even thirty.
One of the pro-government websites published a photo as proof that the LTTE had reneged on their promise and were still recruiting child soldiers. Two soldiers were standing in the luxuriant green of monsoon vegetation. They wore camouflage gear, had assault rifles slung over their shoulders and stared impassively at the camera. Palms and banana plants formed a dense wall in the background. A path had been cut straight through it. Tank tracks had ploughed up the soft ground.
At the soldiers’ feet the bodies of four boys were leaning against an overturned tree trunk. Their heads were slumped on their shoulders as if they had nodded off. Their combat gear was of a slightly different pattern from that of the soldiers.
Maravan enlarged the picture. He let out a loud moan.
Ulagu was one of the four.
Maravan spent the rest of the night in front of his domestic shrine, praying, meditating and dozing. At half past four he sat at his monitor and dialled the number of the shop in Jaffna. It was eight o’clock there now, it would be open.
He kept on getting the message that all lines were busy and that he should try again later. After half an hour the shopkeeper answered.
Maravan asked him to send for his sister. The man would not agree until Maravan had promised him a 5,000-rupee tip when he next sent money. He should call back in two hours, he said.
They were two hours of torture. He kept on picturing Ulagu in his mind. As a frightened little boy who always needed a bit of time before he would trust somebody. As a serious young lad who never wanted to play or muck around, but just wanted to know everything about cooking. He had only ever seen Ulagu laughing when he had managed to do something difficult, while preparing food or cooking. Or when he tried something and it tasted just right.