The Horatio Stubbs Trilogy (38 page)

BOOK: The Horatio Stubbs Trilogy
11.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Pornography of the foulest and most laughable kind was on sale everywhere in India. The Indians themselves seemed hardly to distinguish between sex and venereal disease; their bookshops had counters full of books on both subjects, as if they could not tell the difference between erotic and anti-erotic. Whenever I hear that the East is less muddled on the subject of sex than the West, I remember all those filthy books on VD.

But
Micheal Meatyard
, with its liberating quota of misprints and schoolboy's howler English, was more enjoyable, and had provoked the flow of laughter as well as semen in our barrack-block.

Micheal's twin eyes bruned like carbunkles as he bent down naked in his shower to pear through the partition that formed a dirision from his cousin Vera's anotomical details. How monstrous the total curvaceousness of her ample breasts and her belly swelling down to that divine gully of her nether lips. It was all plainly revealed to Micheal's scorching gazement, the huge organ of his manhood began slowly to rear towards its full length, when he felt at his rear a brutal thrust of the penetration behind. Turning, it was none other than his fate to view there Vera's father, his eveil uncle Herbert. In a depraved state clad only in a towel, his unwanted digit thrust mercilessly at him.

‘If you want to lie with Vera,' he hissed, ‘You must also lie with me.'

Michael agrees to the deal, for by this point in his young life he has become accustomed to many outrageous couplings.

Who wrote the immortal
Micheal Meatyard
? Where was it written? Meatyard's antics must have delighted thousands of British troops. There was no clue to the author's nationality. The setting of the book was Venice, which may have meant only that the writer had read his Casanova. No use
was made of the Venetian setting, unless one counts the early scene in the book where Micheal attends a masked ball. There he dances with a buxom matron, masked as he is; they become excited by each other and go to a nearby bedroom. Only when the lady opens her legs does Micheal recognize – his mother!

This is the first of a long series of incestuous encounters which become, step by step, more complicated and more unlikely. The climax of the story is a grand scene involving Micheal and thirteen of his relations, including Uncle Herbert and Cousin Vera, in which Grandma proves to be more insatiable than any of them except Micheal.

What has happened to that masterpiece of nonsense? Is it lost to the world? The chances seem good that at least one copy was brought back to the UK before the British finally quit India. I lost our platoon copy in some forgotten rifle-pit in Assam.

No bands were playing. The 1st Battalion of the Mendips climbed up into the fleet of lorries which was transporting it to the railway station at Indore. I stood in my denims watching them drive through the main gate, with Aylmer beside me.

‘It's a brave sight,' he said. ‘Now we're leaving this dump, it seems no time since we arrived.'

Soon the place was empty. We went and loaded equipment in the midst of an unexpected solitude. Rear detail would follow main party in four days, under Gor-Blimey. The cadre was still about, but they had a habit of fading away to their
charpoys
when there was work to be done, just as Norm faded into the obscurity of his stores. At night there was guard duty, and the nights were wider and wilder than they ever were in England. There was plenty of time to wonder what exactly was happening, and to come to no conclusion.

It was best to stop feeling, as far as that was possible. Army training was something of a help towards this end. The working-class credo seemed also to be aimed in the same direction; my mates generally gave an appearance of cheer. What I regarded as a middle-class sinking feeling was my monopoly – or was that a personal trait rather than a class property? The real hope for the time ahead seemed to be to
become as rough and tough as possible and to live for the moment. That was it – never think one day ahead, forget consequences, travel blind, ignore VD warnings, be shit-or-bust! Choose sex rather than love, if offered either – sex was momentary; love endured, if only for a little time.

Christ, if only I could work out such distinctions in practice! A knocking-shop is no place in which to grow up … so what would a battlefield be like?

Indore railway junction again, spread flat under the rolling mills of mid-day heat, rails and engines and engine-sheds all made of incandescent dust, painted over with black lead. We climbed out of the lorries and the sight was familiar to us. Here we had climbed into lorries weeks before, fresh from Bombay and the boat, to head for the terrors of unknown Kanchapur. Then, in our solar
topees
, we had been no more than pink jelly in the hands of predatory porters; now, in our bush hats, we could repel the most persistent beggar with a stream of oaths and mangled Urdu.

We had been acclimatized. We had India in the bloodstream, with all its havoc and noise and age and decrepitude and beauty and decay – so thoroughly into the bloodstream, that in my case it lodged there like gravel in the kidney, playing me up from time to time.

We spent two days at the junction, supervising the loading of stores into the military bogies of our train, shouting at the welter of porters – all fingers, bare feet and flashing teeth – who jostled for the honour of bearing our burdens. The train stood in a desolate siding, a hundred yards or more from the lane where the vehicles parked. We picked our way back and forth across the tracks, tracks that led to incredible places with bizarre names. What could life be like in Quetta, Amritsa, Kuttack, Seringapatam, Chittagong, Vizagapatnam and Barrackpore? The latter at least might soon become more than a name, because to Barrackpore the main party was going before the final move into action. Barrackpore was hundreds of miles away, beyond Calcutta. It looked as if Ali's information was correct.

Little tank-engines moved slowly back and forth in the sidings, careful to avoid our line of porters. The drivers waved cheerfully to us. They could not actually love us, could they?

Evening. The sun went down behind a convenient engine shed. The great sleazy town stirred, lights came on, young fellows came out clutching newly washed dhotis to their crutches and spat
betel
-juice into the dust. The brothels would be opening – or did they ever close? Life and lights and terrible things began to feed on the night. We did spells of guard with fixed bayonets by the siding; when we were off guard, we kipped on one of the station platforms outside the RTO office, under our mozzy-nets.

To sleep on a railway platform. If my poor dear parents could have seen me, with the
char
-wallahs and the three-legged pye-dogs prowling by! I took the ten-till-midnight and the four-till-six shifts on guard, so securing the privilege, during my second watch, of seeing the sky lighten with dawn, heavy birds begin to fly, and the armed ranks of railway lines glitter towards me like naked bayonets.

Among the dozen or so of us on rear detail were Corporal Ernie Dutt, Jock McGuffie, Carter the Farter, Feather, Harding, Gillespie, and young Jackie Tertis. The station canteen opened at eight in the morning, and we all filed in for a breakfast of eggs-and-chips, bread and jam, cakes and tea.

‘If yon's breakfast, roll on fucking dinner,' Jock said, swigging down the last of his tea. ‘I see they've started us on half-rations already.'

‘Shit in it, Jock, you're always bloody grumbling,' Dutt said. ‘Let's start as we mean to go on.'

Jock put on his aggrieved-but-reasonable air. ‘Somebody's got to complain round here, Ernie. May I remind you that they'll twist us for the last fucking brass farthing if you let them get away with it.' He began one of his stories of victimization in Glasgow from which, I knew, he would emerge victorious in the end.

Lighting a fag, I strolled out on to the platform. Tertis followed me.

‘I'll be glad to get into action, Stubby, won't you? Better than hanging about. I'm not scared of a few Japs. Perhaps with a bit of action my cock'll go down. It drives me bloody mad, it does – I'm just wanking myself silly. I've only got to move and I get a touch of the duke. It's this bloody fucking heat, it's bad for you!'

‘The Japs probably get the same trouble. When you get to Burma, you'll find the jungle's knee-deep in yellow semen.'

‘So you slip up in it, like, you mean?' He burst into laughter. ‘Pity any Burmese girl goes in there – she'd be up the spout in no time!' After a minute, he said, ‘Old Jock McGuffie reckons he's not going to Burma, reckons he's got some personal feud against Gor-Blimey, and says he's got some tricks up his sleeve. What does he mean by that, do you think?'

‘You never know what old Jock's up to.' A
chicko
came and begged for
baksheesh.
I waved him on. ‘Jock's pretty deep.'

‘So are you, Stubby, aren't you? I mean, you're pretty deep, aren't you? I reckon you know a thing or two – I've always said so!'

‘Get your knees brown, young Tertis!'

‘Here, Stubby, you said you'd take me to a brothel one day, remember? Do you remember what you said that other night? You know I'm dying for a bloody bit. You never took me, did you?'

‘What about that girl of yours at home?'

‘Oh, don't take the piss! When we get to Calcutta … Hey, the blokes say Calcutta's got more whore-houses than it has shitters. How about it, Stubby, just you and me – I don't want your mate Jock coming along, 'cos he'd just laugh at me, wu'n't he, I mean, like?'

Three
chickos
stood nearby, watching us. One sidled forward and said to us in a bashful voice, ‘You like gobble, Johnny? Nice sweet mouth opens only five rupee …'

He stood looking up at us. We stood looking down at him. Cheeky little bugger, half-grinning, a likely-looking lad. He could do it without having to stoop.

‘Jackie,' I said, ‘Now's your chance! Let this
chicko
have a suck of it!'

He was dithering and unhappy. Shall I? Shan't I? I'd be too ashamed! It was such a disgusting thing to do, he had to do something, he could not afford five chips …

‘Four rupee, Johnny – both two men, seven rupee only, you pay me first, I no go away till job done proper, you like very much!' The
chicko
waggled his fingers to illustrate his maths.

‘The lad's keen, Jackie – have a bash, it's your birthday!'

‘Christ, I couldn't … Look, you come too, have one with me. I'll stand you a gobble.'

‘Fuck off! I'd choke him! Knock him down to three rupees and it's a bargain.'

‘Look, boy, you filthy little bastard, I'll give you two-and-a-half rupees, no more.
Malum?
Two rupee eight anna,
thik-hai?
Oh God, I never ought to do it! If my old man could see me! Where do we go, anyway? Suppose the Redcaps pick us up? What if someone caught us doing it?'

‘Tell them you were having a pee and the
chicko
ran up and bit your knob in a fit of anti-British feeling!'

The
chicko
knew a push-over when he saw one; by now, he probably owns the biggest brothel east of Bombay. He grabbed Tertis's hand and started to pull him towards the back of the station, uttering words of reassurance and encouragement as they went. His pals acted as chorus in the background. Tertis looked despairingly at me.

‘At least come and keep guard, Stubbs, you rotten fucker!'

I laughed and tapped my rifle. ‘Shall I put one up the spout?'

But it was impossible not to feel sorry for him. He was so vulnerable. What the hell would he be like in action? Sheer Jap-fodder! At least he might as well enjoy a good gobble before getting killed.

The
chicko
took him to a corner in an angle between sheds and undid his flies without a moment's hesitation, darting his hand inside.

Tertis moaned. ‘Don't look!' he said, his face forlorn and formless as it turned towards me. I had swung away instinctively. I kept watch while the
chicko
worked away and the
chicko'
s two friends stood and watched me, whispering and tittering to each other. No other figures were visible, except at a distance, ambling over waste ground. A screen of corrugated iron hid us from most of the junction.

The noises Tertis made provided a running commentary on the state of affairs, from his initial inability to get a hard-on to when he came his load – followed by immediate demands for cash and buckshees from the
chicko.
I got what Tertis called a touch of the duke myself, just listening. This was cured by frightful throat-clearings and spittings by the
chicko
, as he cleared out his mouth on the ashy dust, harsh sounds full of hatred.

‘You're lucky he didn't munch the end off,' I said, as Tertis rejoined me, pale and sweating. He did not answer.

‘Thik-hai?'

‘You won't tell any fucker, will you? Not Jock nor nobody?'

We went back to the others in silence.

Throughout that day, the lorries came and went, and we supervised the loading of their contents into our train, gathering furnace-heat in its siding.

The last thing to be loaded was a sackful of rations, our food for the journey – cans of bully beef, jam, marmalade, American oleomargarine, fruit and condensed milk, as well as tea, sugar and bread. We left a guard on the train and the rest of us plunged into town for a quick look round and a drink. By six, we were back at the train, cheerful and relaxed, entirely independent of anything that might happen next.

Nothing happened for a long while. We talked about football matches. Harding played a mouth organ. We recovered from the amazement of finding that Captain Gore-Blakeley, installed in the next carriage, had a compartment all to himself, whereas there were twelve in our compartment. As Dutt sensibly pointed out, ‘We wouldn't want him in here with us.'

Other books

Wasteland Blues by Scott Christian Carr, Andrew Conry-Murray
The Wicked by Stacey Kennedy
Slow Moon Rising by Eva Marie Everson
Lori Connelly by The Outlaw of Cedar Ridge
Circle of Stones by Catherine Fisher
Circle of Stones by Suzanne Alyssa Andrew
The Windfall by Ellie Danes, Lily Knight
Portrait of a Girl by Binkert, Dörthe