Authors: Robin Mukherjee
A nurse had stopped, one foot on the next step.
âI'm sorry?' I said.
âAre you alright?'
âYes, thank you,' I said. âI was just contemplating the hand that stirs all this into motion.'
âYou've had a bad one?' she said, indicating blood on the white coat that Mr Shankar had ordered me to be issued with. A nurse had helped me on with it while Mr Shankar glanced over and nodded.
âIt wasn't easy,' I shrugged.
She smiled gently and moved on.
As promised, the door to the Visitor's Room was labelled âVisitor's Room', along with âNo Spitting', âPlease Use The Toilet Facilities For Ablutionary Purposes' and âNo Begging At Any Time'.
Cindy jumped to her feet when I came in. Martina looked up warily.
âHe will live,' I said.
âOh, Robby!' said Cindy, hugging me. âThank you, thank you so much.'
I tried to speak but couldn't get the requisite air. Eventually I managed to say, âPlease, it wasn't me but the dedicated skill of a certain Mr Shankar along with his excellent team of clinical practitioners.'
âBut you got him here,' she said, renewing the clench. âAnd if you hadn't, oh, Robbie, he'd be dead.'
âWhat about the leg?' asked Martina.
âHe might limp for a while,' I said, attempting to re-inflate my lungs. âPossibly always. But it remains attached.'
âHe can limp all he likes,' laughed Cindy, âas long as we can dance together to the edge of time. Can I see him?'
âYes,' I said. âI think that will be alright. Where's Mike and the Sergeant?'
âThat's something we have to talk about,' said Martina, standing up.
Cindy glanced at Martina with a quick signal of complicity. âI'll catch you later,' she said, giving me a last little squeeze.
âYou know where he is?' I gasped.
âOf course.'
âSit down,' said Martina closing the door. âYou and I need to have a chat.'
I sat down. Martina paced the room a couple of times then took a breath. âMike's gone to the airport to sort out flights,' she said. âHe made some calls and apparently there's one tonight.'
My heart, possessed of a sudden gravity, sank to the floor, through the lino, and down to the next, tumbling onwards from room to room, slipping quietly past some grisly procedure, some weeping wife, and further still to the dingy basement with its groaning pipes, resting finally at the very centre of our spinning globe where all is iron and fire.
âIf you want you can come with us,' she said.
I looked at her.
âThere's immigration issues, obviously, so we'll have to see. I don't suppose you've got a passport?'
âPassport?'
âI'm sure we could sort something. I don't know. But I'll wait for you if you want to come. Of course we'll have to get married. They won't let you in otherwise. The Sergeant said he could find someone to do that. We've got the money. I don't think that's going to be a problem.'
âYou will marry me?'
âWhy not?' she shrugged.
âAnd this means you love me?'
âYou seemed to think so,' she said.
âThere were some indications to the contrary.'
âYou asked for that,' she chuckled. âLook, I've known a lot of men. You know what I mean. But I don't think anyone's ever known me. Or even wanted to. The whole me. They just want a bit of it. A picture. But a picture fades. And pages turn. And sooner or later you close the cover. But I've never met anyone who'd do anything for me. Who'd carry his friend for miles, and find the strength he didn't know he had to do wonderful things. Who'd find it in my eyes. Whatever's there. Something. I don't know. I'm not sure you know me at all. And I'm pretty sure I don't know you. But somehow I'm getting to know myself a little bit better. And I never thought I could do that.'
âYou are a goddess,' I said.
âDon't say that. I'll only disappoint you.'
âBut only a goddess has that power in her eyes.'
âWell,' she looked away for a moment. âNobody's ever said that and meant it the way you do.'
I stood up and walked to the window. The hand that moves all this had given me my wish.
âIt won't be easy,' she said. âAnd I don't think England's what you think it is. I mean, it's great sometimes. The Autumn. Kicking leaves. Frosty mornings. And Spring. Like you'd forgotten what green was. We could find a place. Maybe quiet, maybe not. The cities are big. Not half so busy but they're big. We could find a mountain but we don't have mountains like you do.'
âI miss them already,' I said.
âYou'll miss a lot of things,' she said, softly. âMost people I know just want to get away from where they are. But you can only ever be where you are. So you spend your whole life dreaming of somewhere that isn't anywhere, and I guess, if you're not careful, you can end up nowhere.'
âI felt this today when I saw no mountains.'
She smiled a little.
âAnd so many strangers,' I said.
âThe world's full of them,' she said. âEverywhere you look. People who don't see you. People who don't care.'
âI don't think they care for me in Pushkara.'
âThey do. They just don't know it. Perhaps they do now. You saw them crying when you left. And didn't one of them jump on the bonnet?'
âI think he was trying to sell us a wooden snake.'
âWho's going to sort out their aches and pains and give them little pills to keep them quiet? Who's your father going to shout at?'
âI think deep down he is only shouting at himself,' I said.
âHe's got some issues, that's for sure. You should talk to him.'
âHow can one talk to him?'
âThen shout at him,' she said. âI think you need to shout. At him. At anything. Shout at me.'
âI could never do that.'
âThen it won't be much of a marriage.'
But I could see that she was teasing me now.
âRabindra,' she said. âWhen you came into the room just now there was something in your eyes I hadn't seen before.'
âI was pleased about Pol.'
âIt wasn't just that. Think about it.'
I thought about it.
âI met someone,' I said. âOn the stairs. A nurse.'
Martina smiled.
âAnd for some reason I cannot get her out of my head.' I walked over to the window. The world seemed so very large, suddenly, with so many rooms and corners and corridors and stairs that you could turn up or down, or not, or stop, or not, or never take, or take looking down or up, and so many people among whom was the one whose eyes now haunted me.
âAnd what matters,' said Martina, âeven more than seeing her again is that she's there. Somewhere. You know that. And you didn't have to burn butter or whatever it is you did for me. She came because she did. And you don't need her for anything. She's what she is and who she is and that's enough. And it doesn't matter where you are or where you live, you'll always have that.'
âBut it also hurts,' I said. âIn a slightly wonderful way.'
âOf course. Because, in another way, the only thing you can ever do now is find her again.'
âThis is not contradictory?'
âDid I say I was an expert?'
The airport was even more bewildering than the city, with its glittering lights, jostling trolleys, and aeroplanes screaming overhead. I hadn't realised how big those frail beads, trailing feathers across the pale skies, were as they stood on the ground, panting with impatience, waiting to fly. The terminal, teeming with families, businessmen, and suitcases, echoed with the cacophony of a thousand voices. And, as I quickly discovered, you couldn't stand still without somebody elbowing you aside and cursing as they hurried off.
Mike was looking more comfortable than I'd ever seen him as he walked through a door marked âDepartures'. He glanced round to smile but was interrupted by an official telling him to put his cigarette out. Martina turned from the man who studied her passport, more closely than I thought necessary, to give me a sad, sweet smile that I wear in my heart to this day. I noticed that even the Sergeant had red eyes, though his chest stood out, its glistening medals gilding him with stoic dignity. The last I saw of Martina was the hem of her skirt as it swung round the corner, and the briefest flash of tanned ankle, perfect in form and movement, before she was gone.
The drive back was conducted without the siren though Sergeant Shrinivasan had argued its need for several miles. I was surprised to prevail in my views and wondered at the new deference he was showing towards me. Perhaps it had something to do with the badge presented to me by Mr Shankar before we left.
âYou did a splendid job,' he had said. âQuite superb. I wish my students could stitch like that, never mind plaster so beautifully. But you kept him alive, that's the thing. In spite of the odds. Frankly, I'd say it was little short of miraculous.'
âOnly miraculous,' I'd said, âin that I could recall a few rudimentary procedures from the medical dictionary.'
âThere's plenty of Doctors who can do that,' he had replied. âToo many if you ask me. If it's not in the book, they haven't a clue. But there's a few, just a few, mind, who've got that extra something. People feel better when they should be getting worse. People live when they might have died. Wounds heal when the book says they shouldn't. It's not what you know, it's what you are. And I think that's you. And that's worth incalculably more than all the clinical drones who've read every book backwards.'
âPerhaps they should try reading forwards,' I suggested.
He smiled. âLook, I know what it's like in these places, these hillstations or what have you. Precious few medics, if any. And you can't send people away to study. So the right man steps up. Which is how it used to be. Never mind these gadgets and gizmos. Medicine men. That's how it started. With just the few. The few that have it. In recognition of which, if you would allow us, there's something we'd like to give you.'
He nodded to a little group of Doctors and nurses who shuffled aside to reveal the nurse I'd met on the stairs.
âNurse Devi?' said Mr Shankar. âIf you would.'
âDevi?' I said. âA goddess?'
âShe is indeed,' said Mr Shankar.
Nurse Devi held out a small plastic badge with a safety pin through the back.
âThis is for you,' she said. âPlease. Take it.'
As I did so, my fingers brushed hers. She blushed.
âYou should wear this when you're working,' said Mr Shankar. âWell, if you like. It's up to you. It's just a bit of protocol, I suppose, but there's a place for that in this peculiar profession of ours. And, of course, should any future business bring you here.'
He patted me on the shoulder, smiled and walked off followed by Doctor Gupta and the nurses.
The badge read, âRabindranath Sharma, Associate Physician, University Hospital'.
âNurse?' said Mr Shankar, stopping at the door. Nurse Devi had remained by the trolley.
âJust a moment?' she said.
âOf course.'
She looked at me. âWhere did you say you were from?' she said, blushing again.
âPushkara,' I said.
âWhere's that?'
âIn the mountains.'
âI love the mountains.'
âYou know them?'
âNo. But if I did I'm sure I'd love them.'
âYou should visit us,' I said.
She smiled suddenly. âI just might.' Then she turned, following Mr Shankar into the busy corridor, and was lost from sight.
I'm not sure that the mountains welcomed me back. As I've said, I'm not sure they do anything. But they were beautiful and magnificent and I was glad to see them again.
Pol and Cindy came up to say goodbye a few months later. The new Memorial Hall wasn't completed, in fact it hadn't even been started, so we held part of their wedding in the Nirvana Hotel and the rest of it under the Rock. Although some priests officiated according to procedure, the final blessing was delivered by Sharon with all the powers that, so far as we were concerned, she now embodied.
I managed to spend a little time with Pol, though we couldn't skip up to the caves for obvious reasons. We sat under the bodhi tree instead, watching the world go by, or at least the little bit of it we had always known.
âI'm glad you weren't a fiend,' he said.
âPerhaps I was, in some ways,' I replied.
âYou know,' he said thoughtfully, âthe Turtle's just what we think about ourselves.'
Which I pondered for a long time, concluding eventually that you don't have to fall off a rock to become wise but it helps. I also managed to put a question to Cindy which had bothered me for some time. Was Martina serious about marrying me or had she only said that to make me think? Cindy fingered the curls around her ear for a moment. âWith Marty,' she said at last, âyou never know.'
The farewell had everyone in tears. Malek and Mrs Bister were speechless for once, smiling with pride at their handsome son and his beautiful bride. That he was to live in England was a piquant joy, for they were happy in his dream come true, but sad not to be more of a part of it. Children scattered flowers behind the bus as Pol and Cindy leaned out of the window waving.
When the Memorial Hall was finished, finally, there was much debate over what to call it. Malek no longer insisted that it bear his name, though he commissioned a bust of himself for the lobby. In the end I suggested we call it âThe Pushkara Official Leisure Centre' or âThe P.O.L. Centre' for short. This was both satisfactory to the Bisters, who delighted in the memory of their son, and acceptable to the elders who didn't register its significance for years.