Authors: Deborah Moggach
A peon came in with a tin tray. Mr Rahim took out a grimy note and sent him away.
âYou are liking our Pakistani tea?'
âVery much,' she lied. She inspected him over the rim of the cup. He was plump, perhaps forty years old; his hair was sleek with oil. He was perspiring â as, indeed, was she. His skin was dark, almost purple; he looked like a ripe plum in his nylon shirt.
âI heard about you through your cousin, the taxi driver.'
âHe carries my recommendation. I tell you, Mrs . . .'
âManley.'
âMrs Manley, I am coming from nothing. I can speak with frankness, I am not proud. I am self-made man. With my own energies I build my business. Now I do dealings with all the bigwig persons. You will see my cards.'
He pulled out a drawer and handed them to her. âHere is Vice-Chairman of Philips Electrical, a most pleasant gentleman from your own fair country that I myself have visited one time. Sure, I have visited London town. This man, he holds Pepsi-Cola agency, he has three fine kiddies, I have been guest in his residence. And this â he is head person of Toyota Spare Parts. I find them all beautiful bungalows with their secluded compounds.'
She looked at the cards. Deep down she felt a twitch of reassurance, that he knew such people.
âI have many letters . . .' He was opening the drawer again.
âNo, please don't bother. Actually I didn't come about a house. I have one, in K12.'
âAh, the tiptop location, most exclusive. Please, some biscuits.'
âNo thank you.'
âIt hurts me, here.' Again he put his hand to his heart. âYou are not liking my biscuits?'
She ate one. The phone rang and he spoke lown it. She seemed to have been eating biscuits all morning. But how different this room was from the other. No Queen on the wall; instead, a tinted print of Jinnah. No chintz curtains to draw against this foreign sky. Outside stood a block of flats topped with a water tank. Buzzards lazed in the air, ready to swoop and scavenge from the street. Down there, television sets were being unloaded from a camel cart and carried into a shop. Further along two men squatted, their backs to the street, and relieved themselves against the concrete wall. These Muslim men did it so discreetly in their loose pyjamas, rising to knot the cord.
âIt's nice to look at a street without them seeing me,' she said when he put down the phone. âThis is like a purdah window, up here. The only place I can sit looking out is at home, but then all I can see is the garden wall.'
âAh, in K12 the compounds are so beautiful. It is no wonder you are preferring the looking there.'
âI don't mean that.' She stopped.
âLet us talk heart to heart.' He leant forward. âThat is what I say when I am meaning speaking business. Maybe you need air-conditioner.'
âYes, your cousin said â'
âI have many threads to my bows. I have many friends, many contacts. My very dear friend, he works in the import agency. You want it, I find it. Sultan Rahim, he say. Sultan Rahim, he is never sitting still on his backside.'
âActually, I wanted a beach hut.'
âNo problem. I find you the beautiful beach hut quick as a flash.'
âYou can? I've heard it's difficult.'
âEverything is possible. You put your trust in Sultan Rahim.'
They fell silent. She looked around the room. It was bare, but for the desk and two filing cabinets. Mr Rahim was rearranging the papers on his desk.
âThere are some?' she asked.
âYes?'
âBeach huts? You have some on your files?'
âThe little home-from-home beside the ocean. It is what, in his heart, is the dream of every person. I am right?'
She nodded. Another pause.
She looked at the filing cabinets. Still he made no move. Outside the window the buzzards wheeled round and round. They never moved their wings, coasting on the heat.
She drained the syrupy tea. âDo you have any?'
âWe have the saying: All things they are arriving to he who is wishing them.' He rose. âCome. We will visit my very good friend. He too has visited your city of London.'
âSo he has one?'
âWith Sultan Rahim, there is not any questioning of have and haven't. My conveyance is waiting outside.'
She followed him down the stairs. She had lost track of time. His shiny, blue-black hair bobbed below.
âThis is very kind of you.' Her voice echoed in the stair well. She hurried down, her rubber chappals flapping.
His conveyance was a small, smart Fiat. She must stop these questions. She settled into the furry passenger-seat. A doll hung above the dashboard. It was a ballerina; it jigged as he started the engine.
They arrived at the highway. To one side stood the Baluchi hills, white as bone in the heat. They turned the other way, towards the city centre. He reached forward and pushed in a cassette. Gunfire rattled. An American voice spoke, hoarsely. Galloping hooves and then music.
âWhat's that?'
âThe Clint Eastwood movie. You are liking these Wild Westerns?'
She nodded. They loved the movies here. The newspapers were full of ads â âDon't Miss It. It is a Wonderful Exciting Picture of Lust. An Unforgettable Experience for Young Hearts.'
âI suppose you import V.C.R.s?' she asked.
âI fix it. You are wishing one?'
âNo.' She looked out of the window. It was real life she wanted, not cassettes.
He was a manic driver, blowing his horn at every crossroads. It was a police siren, he explained.
âYou are liking our city?'
âOh yes.' She paused. âIt's not, perhaps, quite as old-fashioned and . . . well, picturesque as I'd imagined.'
âDue to expansion Karachi is now big business centre. Myself and my brother Muslims, we are not like our Hindus over the border, we are energetic businessmens. Karachi is once little fishing village, as Dubai once little fishing village.'
âAnd you're in the right business.' She pointed at the building sites they were passing. She thought of Duke, another self-made man, building his hotel somewhere outside Karachi. By the time it was finished, perhaps it would be engulfed by the city.
She wanted to ask Mr Rahim so many things. He might know about that hot water man. He would know why the lorries were painted like children's picture books, and why people knotted their clothes this way, or that way. They passed a vacant plot. Washing lines were strung across it; purple sheets hung from them. Hundreds more lay on the ground, drying in the sun.
She pointed. âWhat are they for?' Perhaps they were special robes for some religious festival where everyone dressed in purple. Hindu priests wore orange, or was that Buddhist? Widows, she knew, wore white.
Mr Rahim looked over his shoulder. âThose cloths? They are for the exports.'
She paused. âExports?'
âThat is big colour this fall, the violet. I know this, as my cousin has shop in your Kensington Market. All your British dolly-birds, they buys his clothes. He also is having other shops, short lease in prime location like your Piccadilly Circus, he keep them open until eleven o'clock in the night-time. After movies, night-owls come to buy his kurtas.'
âI see.' The gauze skirt of the ballerina floated up and down. âI worked in a clothes shop, actually, back in London.'
âHow I am loving your Bond Street. Mr Manley, he is in garment business?'
âNo,
I
worked there.' She stopped. Perhaps she would not tell him about the old clothes. He might not understand. He might hold her in lower esteem, and he was taking such trouble for her now. I am learning, she thought.
He drove into the centre and stopped outside Bohri Bazaar. The pavement was spread with sunglasses and bootlaces. Even in this early-afternoon heat, the place was busy. To one side of the street were alleys hung with saris and embroidered tourist clothes. On the other side stood a covered emporium full of stalls. She had been here several times. Outside sat a young, pale European in dirty Pakistani clothes. He was doing nothing; just sitting in the sun.
Unlike Kensington Market men tried to waylay her, but in friendlier fashion than Juna Bazaar. âYes madam you step this side?'
She shook her head. She was no tourist. She was a resident, on business. Sultan Rahim was already seated in a large stall full of hideous brass objects. A chair was produced for her. A young man gave her a cup of tea.
âHe's here?' she asked Sultan. âYour friend?'
âHe is returning in five minutes, his nephew say me. We will drink some tea.'
Minutes ticked by. She thumbed through her library book. Now nobody was looking she need not finish her tea. She wondered vaguely about lunch; her stomach was full of syrup. There was no worry about Mohammed because she had told him that henceforth she would get the lunch herself; she had felt so foolish sitting there with her jaws working. Sultan Rahim was telling some long story to the nephew, a pock-marked youth with a weak chin. She seemed to have been forgotten. Opposite was a booth stacked with sober suitings, greys and blues; on the floor sat an elderly tailor at his sewing machine. Further down the passage was a doorway. Beside it lay a collection of men's shoes. It was a mosque in there; she had been along this passage before. Just inside the doorway she glimpsed a row of taps for the ablutions of the faithful. She remembered something Duke had said about commerce and religion existing together here; there had been approval in his voice.
More minutes passed. The brass coffee sets reminded her of Brinton. Donald's grandparents' bungalow had been full of the things. Then, too, she had felt obliged to sip sweet tea and eat too many biscuits. Their lounge had been suffocatingly hot. But outside the window, a glimpse of sea.
Who owned this beach hut â Sultan's friend, or a friend of his friend? Networks of men speaking heart to heart, business to business, holding hands as they did here and bending side by side in the little mosque, placed adjacent to the cash desk.
Two women passed, their faces veiled; they wore black sateen raincoats. No doubt Sultan Rahim had a wife tucked away somewhere. Perhaps she, too, was obliged to dress in black when she went out of the house. He was a different class from the Pakistanis she usually met.
She scratched her leg. She felt sticky in her jeans. What did Sultan's very good friend think of Kensington Market, with its bold girls meeting his stare? Did he eye their skimpy clothes with only a professional interest? She looked at Sultan, slapping his thigh at something the nephew said. By now she felt quite bound with him, she seemed to have been in his company for hours. She thought of him as Sultan now. But she felt fidgety too.
âWhen did you say he was coming back?'
Sultan spread his hands. âFive minutes, ten minutes, one hour.'
âBut you said five minutes before.'
âWho is knowing?'
She must relax and slip into the tempo of this place. That was what the hippie did outside, sitting on the pavement and experiencing.
She wriggled her toes. She thought of the biro'd list at the B.W.A., times fixed, promises kept.
Time Is Golden, Do Not Fritter Away.
She felt a rare pang for Donald, who did things when he said he would. To the dot.
Here the brass shone timelessly; the tailor stitched. But back at Sultan's office the phone must be ringing for nobody. Didn't he have anything else to do? Was it such an honour, having an English girl as companion, that he was sacrificing his business hours? Perhaps he was just being kind. He drove with such frenzy, then he just sat here, swopping desultory jokes. She looked at her watch.
He said: âYou have other place to go?'
âActually, not really. I suppose I could spend all day sitting here, come to think of it.' She paused. âIt's odd, not having a job.' All she had planned to do was to go home and read her
Tips for the Tropics.
Even then she couldn't do any gardening because she still had a mali. âI wish I had a job, but my husband says foreign wives can't work. It's against government policy or something. They can only do voluntary things.'
âYou want job? Leave it to me.'
âCan you really help? It's only supposed to be something a Pakistani girl couldn't do.'
He smiled, pointing to his head. âHere, there is idea. Yes.' He paused, still smiling. âMrs Manley, I have many surprises up my sleeves.'
They recognized him
at the Sind Club now. When he approached the bar, Iman (yes, he had learnt his name) â Iman would pour out a small Scotch without Donald saying a word. When his chit arrived and he signed it, the bearer said, âThank you, Mr Manley.' In the Reading Room the chap there nodded too, with muted but unmistakable acknowledgment, and sat down again.
It was the fairest building in Karachi, built by the British of yellow stone with arched verandas along its length. More graceful than Cameron Chambers, it was made for the pleasure that follows business. The lawns were watered daily. Mature palm trees stood guard around its walls. During this hot season the flowerbeds were bare. In winter however, according to that Rosemary woman, they would be fragrant with English flowers. At closer glance the building was perhaps shabbier than in the old prints but at a distance it looked exactly the same. Indeed, it was joked at the bar that the servants seemed as if they had been there since the place was built.
Outside, too, the sounds had hardly changed. Beyond the walls came the noise of traffic and horses, and the shrill blasts of the policeman's whistle. But through the palms could be glimpsed the scaffolding of the Holiday Inn, an ugly skeleton, due for completion next year. And transistor radios could be heard from the little park next door, where office clerks sat at lunchtime.
And inside, the Club had been partly modernized. Thank goodness they had left intact the Reading Room, and the Billiards Room with its cracked leather sofas and
Wait For The Stroke
above the door. (They had removed, apparently, the sign halfway along the veranda saying
No Women and Dogs Beyond This Point;
he had told this to Christine and watched the reaction.) The Billiards Room remained, with its dusty ceiling fans, shrouded tables and wooden plaques commemorating past champions, long since in their graves. He had searched down the list of golden boys but amongst the Cottons and Sotherby-Smiths he had found no Manley. But he had at least found his grandfather in the ledger.