Out of India (24 page)

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Authors: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

BOOK: Out of India
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Babaji and Margaret were having a discussion on the relative merits of the three ways toward realization. They spoke of the way of knowledge, the way of action, and that of love. Margaret maintained that it was a matter of temperament, and that while she could appreciate the beauty of the other two ways, for herself there was no path nor could there ever be but that of action. It was her nature.

“Of course it is,” Babaji said. “And God bless you for it.”

“Arthur used to tease me. He'd say, ‘Margaret was born to right all the wrongs of the world in one go.' But I can't help it. It's not in me to sit still when I see things to be done.”

“Babaji,” said Elizabeth, laughing, “once I saw her—it was during the monsoon, and the river had flooded and the people on the bank were being evacuated. But it wasn't being done quickly enough for Margaret! She waded into the water and came back with
someone's tin trunk on her head. All the people shouted, ‘Memsahib, Memsahib! What are you doing?' but she didn't take a bit of notice. She waded right back in again and came out with two rolls of bedding, one under each arm.

Elizabeth went pink with laughter, and with pleasure and pride, at recalling this incident. Margaret pretended to be angry and gave her a playful slap, but she could not help smiling, while Babaji clasped his hands in joy and opened his mouth wide in silent, ecstatic laughter.

Margaret shook her head with a last fond smile. “Yes, but I've got into the most dreadful scrapes with this nature of mine. If I'd been born with an ounce more patience, I'd have been a pleasanter person to deal with and life could have been a lot smoother all round. Don't you think so?”

She looked at Elizabeth, who said, “I love you just the way you are.”

But a moment later, Elizabeth wished she had not said this. “Yes,” Margaret took her up, “that's the trouble with you. You love everybody just the way they are.” Of course she was referring to Raju. Elizabeth twisted her hands in her lap. These hands were large and bony and usually red, although she was otherwise a pale and rather frail person.

The more anyone twisted and squirmed, the less inclined was Margaret to let them off the hook. Not because this afforded her any pleasure but because she felt that facts of character must be faced just as resolutely as any other kinds of fact. “Don't think you're doing anyone a favor,” she said, “by being so indulgent toward their faults. Quite on the contrary. And especially in marriage,” she went on unwaveringly. “It's not mutual pampering that makes a marriage but mutual trust.”

“Trust and understanding,” Babaji said.

Elizabeth knew that there was not much of these in her marriage. She wasn't even sure how much Raju earned in his job at the municipality (he was an engineer in the sanitation department), and there was one drawer in their bedroom whose contents she didn't know, for he always kept it locked and the key with him.

“Ill lend you a wonderful book,” Margaret said. “It's called
Truth in the Mind,
and it's full of the most astounding insight. It's by this marvelous man who founded an ashram in Shropshire. Shafi!” she called suddenly for the servant, but of course he couldn't hear,
because the servants' quarters were right at the back, and the old man now spent most of his time there, sitting on a bed and having his legs massaged by a granddaughter.

“I'll call him,” Elizabeth said, and got up eagerly.

She went back into the stone-cold house and out again at the other end. Here were the kitchen and the crowded servant quarters. Margaret could never bear to dismiss anyone, and even the servants who were no longer in her employ continued to enjoy her hospitality. Each servant had a great number of dependents, so this part of the house was a little colony of its own, with a throng of people outside the rows of peeling hutments, chatting or sleeping or quarreling or squatting on the ground to cook their meals and wash their children. Margaret enjoyed coming out there, mostly to advise and scold—but Elizabeth felt shy, and she kept her eyes lowered.

“Shafi,” she said, “Memsahib is calling you.”

The old man mumbled furiously. He did not like to have his rest disturbed and he did not like Elizabeth. In fact, he did not like any of the visitors. He was the oldest servant in the house—so old that he had been Arthur's bearer when Arthur was still a bachelor and serving in the districts, almost forty years ago.

Still grumbling, he followed Elizabeth back to the veranda.

“Tea, Shafi!” Margaret called out cheerfully when she saw them coming.

“Not time for tea yet,” he said.

She laughed. She loved it when her servants answered her back; she felt it showed a sense of ease and equality and family irritability, which was only another side of family devotion. “What a cross old man you are,” she said. “And just look at you—how dirty.”

He looked down at himself. He was indeed very dirty. He was unshaven and unwashed, and from beneath the rusty remains of what had once been a uniform coat there peeped out a ragged assortment of gray vests and torn pullovers into which he had bundled himself for the winter.

“It's hard to believe,” Margaret said, “that this old scarecrow is a terrible, terrible snob. You know why he doesn't like you, Elizabeth? Because you're married to an Indian.”

Elizabeth smiled and blushed. She admired Margaret's forth-rightness.

“He thinks you've let down the side. He's got very firm principles. As a matter of fact, he thinks I've let down the side too. All his
life he's longed to work for a real memsahib, the sort that entertains other memsahibs to tea. Never forgave Arthur for bringing home little Margaret.”

The old man's face began working strangely. His mouth and stubbled cheeks twitched, and then sounds started coming that rose and fell—now distinct, now only a mutter and a drone—like waves of the sea. He spoke partly in English and partly in Hindi, and it was some time before it could be made out that he was telling some story of the old days—a party at the Gymkhana Club for which he had been hired as an additional waiter. The sahib who had given the party, a Major Waterford, had paid him not only his wages but also a tip of two rupees. He elaborated on this for some time, dwelling on the virtues of Major Waterford and also of Mrs. Waterford, a very fine lady who had made her servants wear white gloves when they served at table.

“Very grand,” said Margaret with an easy laugh. “You run along now and get our tea.”

“There was a little Missie sahib too. She had two ayahs, and every year they were given four saris and one shawl for the winter.”

“Tea, Shafi,” Margaret said more firmly, so that the old man, who knew every inflection in his mistress's voice, saw it was time to be off.

“Arthur and I've spoiled him outrageously,” Margaret said. “We spoiled all our servants.”

“God will reward you,” said Babaji.

“We could never think of them as servants, really. They were more our friends. I've learned such a lot from Indian servants. They're usually rogues, but underneath all that they have beautiful characters. They're very religious, and they have a lot of philosophy—you'd be surprised. We've had some fascinating conversations. You ought to keep a servant, Elizabeth—I've told you so often.” When she saw Elizabeth was about to answer something, she said, “And don't say you can't afford it. Your Raju earns enough, I'm sure, and they're very cheap.”

“We don't need one,” Elizabeth said apologetically. There were just the two of them, and they lived in two small rooms. Sometimes Raju also took it into his head that they needed a servant, and once he had even gone to the extent of hiring an undernourished little boy from the hills. On the second day, however, the boy was discovered rifling the pockets of Raju's trousers while their owner was
having his bath, so he was dismissed on the spot. To Elizabeth's relief, no attempt at replacing him was ever made.

“If you had one you could get around a bit more,” Margaret said. “Instead of always having to dance attendance on your husband's mealtimes. I suppose that's why you don't want to take those poor little children to Agra?”

“It's not that I don't want to,” Elizabeth said hopelessly.

“Quite apart from anything else, you ought to be longing to get around and see the country. What do you know, what will you ever know, if you stay in one place all the time?”

“One day you will come and visit me in Almora,” Babaji said.

“Oh Babaji, I'd love to!” Elizabeth exclaimed.

“Beautiful,” he said, spreading his hands to describe it all. “The mountains, trees, clouds . . .” Words failed him, and he could only spread his hands farther and smile into the distance, as if he saw a beautiful vision there.

Elizabeth smiled with him. She saw it too, although she had never been there: the mighty mountains, the grandeur and the peace, the abode of Shiva where he sat with the rivers flowing from his hair. She longed to go, and to so many other places she had heard and read about. But the only place away from Delhi where she had ever been was Ankhpur, to stay with Raju's family.

Margaret began to tell about all the places she had been to. She and Arthur had been posted from district to district, in many different parts of the country, but even that hadn't been enough for her. She had to see everything. She had no fears about traveling on her own, and had spent weeks tramping around in the mountains, with a shawl thrown over her shoulders and a stick held firmly in her hand. She had traveled many miles by any mode of transport available—train, bus, cycle, rickshaw, or even bullock cart—in order to see some little-known and almost inaccessible temple or cave or tomb. Once she had sprained her ankle and lain all alone for a week in a derelict rest house, deserted except for one decrepit old watchman, who had shared his meals with her.

“That's the way to get to know the country,” she declared. Her cheeks were flushed with the pleasure of remembering everything she had done.

Elizabeth agreed with her. Yet although she herself had done none of these things, she did not feel that she was on that account cut off from all knowledge. There was much to be learned from living
with Raju's family in Ankhpur, much to be learned from Raju himself. Yes, he was her India! She felt like laughing when this thought came to her. But it was true.

“Your trouble is,” Margaret suddenly said, “you let Raju bully you. He's got something of that in his character—don't contradict. I've studied him. If you were to stand up to him more firmly, you'd both be happier.”

Again Elizabeth wanted to laugh. She thought of the nice times she and Raju often had together. He had invented a game of cricket that they could play in their bedroom between the steel almirah and the opposite wall. They played it with a rubber ball and a hairbrush, and three steps made a run. Raju's favorite trick was to hit the ball under the bed, and while she lay flat on the floor groping for it he made run after run, exhorting her with mocking cries of “Hurry up! Where is it? Can't you find it?” His eyes glittered with the pleasure of winning; his shirt was off”, and drops of perspiration trickled down his smooth, dark chest.

“You should want to do something for those poor children!” Margaret shouted.

“I do want to. You know I do.”

“I don't know anything of the sort. All I see is you leading an utterly useless, selfish life. I'm disappointed in you, Elizabeth. When I first met you, I had such high hopes of you. I thought, Ah, here at last is a serious person. But you're not serious at all. You're as frivolous as any of those girls that come here and spend their days playing mah-jongg.”

Elizabeth was ashamed. The worst of it was she really had once been a serious person. She had been a schoolteacher in England, and devoted to her work and her children, on whom she had spent far more time and care than was necessary in the line of duty. And, over and above that, she had put in several evenings a week visiting old people who had no one to look after them. But all that had come to an end once she met Raju.

“It's criminal to be in India and not be committed,” Margaret went on. “There isn't much any single person can do, of course, but to do nothing at all—no, I wouldn't be able to sleep at nights.”

And Elizabeth slept not only well but happily, blissfully! Sometimes she turned on the light just for the pleasure of looking at Raju lying beside her. He slept like a child, with the pillow bundled under his cheek and his mouth slightly open, as if he were smiling.

“But what are you laughing at!” Margaret shouted.

“I'm not, Margaret.” She hastily composed her face. She hadn't been aware of it, but probably she had been smiling at the image of Raju asleep.

Margaret abruptly pushed back her chair. Her face was red and her hair disheveled, as if she had been in a fight. Elizabeth half rose in her chair, aghast at whatever it was she had done and eager to undo it.

“Don't follow me,” Margaret said. “If you do, I know I'm going to behave badly and I'll feel terrible afterward. You can stay here or you can go home, but
don't follow me.”

She went inside the house, and the screen door banged after her. Elizabeth sank down into her chair and looked helplessly at Babaji.

He had remained as serene as ever. Gently he rocked himself in his chair. The winter afternoon was drawing to its close, and the sun, caught between two trees, was beginning to contract into one concentrated area of gold. Though the light was failing, the garden remained bright and gay with all its marigolds, its phlox, its pansies, and its sweet peas. Babaji enjoyed it all. He sat wrapped in his woolen shawl, with his feet warm in thick knitted socks and sandals.

“She is a hot-tempered lady,” he said, smiling and forgiving. “But good, good.”

“Oh, I know,” Elizabeth said. “She's an angel. I feel so bad that I should have upset her. Do you think I ought to go after her?”

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