Authors: dorin
mother had disapproved. “I’m told the climate is very heating,” Mumsie had said, wrapped
in woollies against the persistent chill of the vicarage. Mumsie had disapproved of Tusker,
too, although she had tried to disguise it, because he was a soldier serving his King. But
anything Lucy did, anyone Lucy chose, anyone who chose Lucy, had to be disapproved of
because she was only a girl and Mumsie hadn’t wanted another child after the twins, certainly
not one of the female sex which was what she’d got.
“Yes, from the beginning I had a sad life,” she repeated. “A life like a flower that has never
really bloomed, but how many do?” She stuck a stamp on the envelope and decided to walk
down to the post-box herself rather than entrust the letter to Ibrahim who would read the
name and address and gossip like mad to everyone, including Minnie.
Tusker was on the verandah at work on his notes. She had not inquired what these were.
He had been a good boy the night before, actually in bed when she got back from the
pictures, having made his own cocoa and left hers in the pot to rewarm. The level of the gin
in the new bottle suggested restraint, unless Billy-Boy had brought his own bottle with him.
She wondered whether the subject of the garden had come up. If so it had passed off
amicably enough because Tusker had been in a good mood and was in a good mood this
morning.
“I’m going to the bazaar,” she said, “to get your pills, Tusker dear. Is there anything you
want?”
“No thanks, Luce.”
“Then I’ll be off. Bloxsaw!”
The animal groaned but obediently got to its feet and padded after her. The
mali
was
tending the potted plants that flanked the gravel path.
“Good morning,
mali
,” she said on the spur of the moment. The young man rose and
touched his forehead. The dog kept its distance, sheltering behind her. She said, in her
terrible Urdu, “To you, from me, for your work, many thanks are.”
He lowered his eyes, touched his forehead again.
“Come, Bloxsaw.
Chalo
.”
Mali
, of course, was as yet too young to be a Toole, she thought. But there is a Toole in
him. (“Bloxsaw!”). The neck isn’t right, yet, but the eyes are promising. Devotion and
challenge. Muni’s eyes had been the best eyes. Newman’s and McQueen’s eyes were different
from Muni’s and from one another’s. But interesting. One needed an identikit to make the
perfect Toole.
“Bloxsaw!” She put the dog on the lead and addressed it thus: I must apologize, Mr Allnutt,
at having really to insist that we go this way when all too obviously you are determined to go
that way, but it is absolutely imperative, just as it is imperative that instead of lifting your leg
at every tree we pass, and going off at a tangent, we go as quickly and directly as we can to
Ghulab Singh’s the chemists so that I may purchase those few commodities essential to my
husband’s health, I might say survival, do I make myself plain?
“Yes, ma’am,” Bogie/Bloxsaw muttered, and pulled again on the rope (the lead) that
dragged the boat in which she sat, shaded by her parasol, through the Afro-Indian swamp.
When Lucy had gone Tusker, instead of continuing the notes he was making about the
library book (“A Short History of Pankot” by Edgar Maybrick, BA, LRAM. Privately
Printed), interpolated the following passage:
“Well, that proves it. The
mali
isn’t an hallucination, or if he is then Luce is even more
hallucinated because she just spoke to him. Not that I’ve ever really thought he was an
hallucination except for that minute or so when Billy-Boy first brought him into the
compound and I wondered whether I’d actually died weeks ago that night on the loo and
had since been having a sort of dream-time all to myself. But it’s been interesting the way
nobody has once mentioned the fellow to me. Originally I didn’t dare in case I actually was
damn’ well seeing things. I mean even Bloxsaw ignored him until that day we came back
from our walk and then he barked at him and suddenly turned tail, so I thought well dogs
are
odd, I mean they sometimes see things we don’t. And why has Billy-Boy never mentioned
him? Obviously though it’s been some kind of plot to humour me and they’re waiting for me
to show gratitude because I grumbled so much about there being no
mali
. I’ll be buggered if
I say anything first. The young fellow’s got the garden up a treat though, unless I’m
imagining that too, but I expect the Punjabi bitch will send me a bloody bill in which case
she can whistle for it because I can always say,
What
mali? (NB, though, wait and see and say
nowt.)”
He resumed his notes on the library book.
“Old Maybrick was always a bit of a fool, but a harmless one, and I must say I admire the
way he can write a 78 page monograph on the history of Pankot and refer to the Pankot
Rifles only in one paragraph. Stuck up bloody regiment it was in our day. Thought the sun
shone from its collective arse. The pinkest young subalterns on station gave themselves airs
if they were Pankot Rifles blokes. They even condescended to the Area Commander. There
was that one who ducked out of an appointment as
aide
to a general because the general was
originally only a Gunner. Bloody fool him. Died in North Africa with the first battalion
which old Layton later managed to get put into the bag to a man, or what was left of them.
As a Mahwar Regiment chap I didn’t begin to rank with them at all, of course, not that I
minded a bugger. I was never regiment-minded anyway, especially after it was made plain I’d
blotted my copybook by marrying at home without the CO’s approval. Approval! Great
Scott, I was pushing thirty.
Never forget his face when I got back from long home leave with Lucy in tow and said,
Colonel, I have the honour to present my wife, her name’s Lucy. It used to be Lucy Little
but it’s now Lucy Smalley, which seems a logical sort of progression don’t you think, sir?
(Ha).
Poor old Luce. She didn’t help matters when she told the Colonel’s lady that she’d been at
Pitmans and her speeds were such and such and that the solicitor’s office where she worked
was where we met. If old Luce’s dad had been a bishop it would have been okay, but he was
only a vicar, a parish priest. It didn’t matter a damn to me. If it had I wouldn’t have married
her. People used to think of me as a dull conventional sort of chap, but that was their
problem, not mine. Mind you, I never did anything to disabuse them of the idea they’d got
hold of that young Smalley was “safe”, a bit dim, but good with paper if not with people. It
suited me well enough. Always did like paper, working things out on it, arranging things with
it. The best job at battalion level was adjutant. I was acting adjutant when I went home on
long leave that time. I was supposed to be appointed when I got back, and had told Luce as
much. I never did work it out whether it was her, or the fact I’d married her without going
through that bloody silly rigmarole of having her vetted, that persuaded him I’d be better out
of the regiment altogether. Bit of both probably. He got rid of us by putting me up for a
temporary job in one of those small princely Indian states which the Political Department
was circularizing, and within the month Luce and I were off to Mudpore. I was never
regimentally employed again. Didn’t care a fig. The Mudpore thing carried extra pay so I
spun it out as long as I could. Can’t remember what I was called, something like
Administrative Adviser to the Commander of the State Forces, but I remember the job clear
enough: sorting out the balls-up the previous British attached officer had made and which
led to a stampede of the Prince’s elephants. The clot had cut down their feed because he
thought there was jiggery-pokery going on in the stables.
What a joke. What a lark. Ought to have written my memoirs. Old Luce adored Mudpore.
We had that bloody great bungalow practically in the grounds of the palace, the use of one
of the Daimlers with a liveried chauffeur, and when we first met the Maharajah he had on all
his paraphernalia and looked a regular bobby-dazzler, coat of silver thread, pearls festooned
in his turban; and Luce said, This is the
real
India, Tusker. Only she didn’t call me Tusker
because nobody did until later, when I’d got the elephants behaving properly again. Of
course the Mahwars have always been nicknamed the Tuskers because of the insignia but
I’m the only chap the nickname stuck to personally and permanently. A young punk of a
subaltern once said I must be called Tusker because it took me as long to work out a
problem as it took a pregnant cow-elephant to drop its calf, that’s to say twice as long as a
member of the human race needs. Must say I gave him full marks for that one.
He fancied Luce. You could see him working out how and when he could have it off with
her. Joke was she seemed to have no idea what was in his mind. Bit dim about things of that
sort, old Luce. This was in Ramnagar where we were after Mudpore and where she was the
only white woman for miles around. He used to come in from the
mofussil
every Friday night,
so regular that I called him Amami. He followed us to Lahore where we went next but went
off her because Lahore was crammed with what he couldn’t get his mind off. In 1935 he
blew his brains out in Quetta after being found in bed with a senior officer’s grass-widow.
He blew them out at 2 o’clock one morning. An hour later the earthquake reduced the
bungalow he blew them out in to rubble, so he could have saved himself the bother.
We were in Quetta the year after the ‘quake. Whenever we packed up to go to another
station Luce used to describe it as setting out again on our little wanderings. People called
her Little Me because she had this ridiculous habit of saying things like “There’ll just be the
four of us, including Little Me,” or, “Oh how nice, is that just for Little Me?” So there we
were, Tusker and Little Me. A boring couple, but useful. Luce never seemed to cotton on to
the fact that people found us heavy-going. Knowing shorthand she was in demand on every
woman’s committee that was going. She mistook it for popularity and was chuffed for days
if one of the senior bitches complimented her on her minutes or called her Lucy instead of
Mrs Smalley. As for me, I deliberately kept what nowadays they call a low profile. I
wanted
to
be thought dull. Dull but thoroughly reliable at the desk-work officers usually affected to
despise. I worked hard at getting a name as the man who could sort out other people’s balls-
ups. I liked moving around. My majority came through in ‘38. We could have gone home on
leave next year but put it off and then it was too late because the war started. In 1940 the
regiment asked to have me back. Not bloody likely. Knew how to short-circuit
that
sort of
thing. Moved round more than ever before, then in September 1941 we came up here to
Pankot to Area Headquarters. Took one look at it and I thought, nice scenery, good climate,
this is where I’ll dig in for the duration or know the reason why. So set about making myself
indispensable at the
daftar
, which meant making the job look more complicated that it was
even after I’d sorted out the mess the previous fellow had made and could do it standing on
my head. I was 40, still only a major. Had to wait another four years for a half-colonelcy, but
didn’t care. Accommodation was short. Luce and I were billeted at Smith’s, a sitting-room
and a bedroom, the ones Billy-Boy and that monster of a wife of his now live in. Luce always
hankered after a bungalow of our own, but Smith’s was fine by me. It helped me merge
unobtrusively with the background. My only ambition ever has been to survive as
comfortably as possible.
Old Maybrick doesn’t mention Smith’s at all. He’s got the date of the Church right but is
out by a year over the installation of the organ, according to Billy-Boy, but then Maybrick
only played the bloody thing. Maybrick was an enthusiast. Enthusiasm is the most ruinous
thing I can think of.”
Tusker’s birthday was April 10, Lucy’s September 12. They had fallen into the habit of
repaying station hospitality mainly by inviting people to what they called Birthday Buffet
suppers. Lucy’s birthday buffet was less troublesome than Tusker’s because she simply went
ahead with the arrangements, writing chits to people to whom they owed, warning Mr
Bhoolabhoy and confirming the approximate number of guests expected. The number of
guests was always approximate because sometimes people rang at the last moment to