It turned out that Mr Raha was in the timber trade. He was planning to make a bid for a major contract and had come to ask the purohit to pray for him. Like all his kind the purohit had the intuition of a famished tiger when it came to the judging of potential prey. He did much more than offer a blessing. At the temple there were several employees of the big European banks and timber companies: the purohit made it his business to introduce Rajkumar-babu to all these men.
Over the next few days messages had flown back and forth between Spark Street and Merchant Street, between the Kalibari and the offices of the timber companies. Finally, when the directors of the Chota-Nagpur Railway Company announced their decision, it was learnt that one Mr Rajkumar Raha, a name then unknown in the world of teak, had succeeded in underbidding all the major companies.
On that contract alone Rajkumar-babu had netted a profit of eight lakh rupeesâa fortune. Out of gratitude he'd virtually rebuilt the temple, paving its floors in marble, gilding the
walls of the shrine and erecting a beautiful new dwelling for the purohit and his family. Since that time he had had several other successes and had risen to eminence within the business community. And all this at the age of thirty, before he had even had time to marry.
You will understand what I mean, Uma, when I say that our Rajkumar-babu is not the kind of person to whose society you are accustomed. You may well find him somewhat rough and even uncouth in his manner. You will no doubt be astonished to learn that although he speaks several languages fluently, including English and Burmese, he is for all practical purposes, an illiterate, barely able to sign his own name.
At home in India a man like Rajkumar-babu would stand little chance of gaining acceptance in the society of people like ourselves. But here in Burma our standards are a little more lax. Some of the richest people in the city are Indians, and most of them began with nothing more than a bundle of clothes and a tin box.
I fully understand that in India a man of Rajkumar-babu's station could scarcely hope to be entertainedâor even receivedâby a District Collector. But you must consider that he has lived in Burma so long that he is now more Burmese than Indian and may well be counted as a foreigner. I hope you will make allowance for this, recalling that I for one would certainly be very grateful for your condescension in this matter.
Also associated with maildays was a special treat: fresh ice, shipped out from Bombay on the steamer. On mailday evenings the Collector liked to sit out in the garden, on a wicker chair, with an iced drink. Uma waited until the Collector had been served his whisky before she started reading him her uncle's letter. At the end of her recital the Collector took the sheet of paper from her and read it through himself.
He handed the letter back with a gesture of regret. âIf it were within my power,' he said, âI would have liked to oblige your uncle. But unfortunately it's out of the question. The Government's instructions are quite clear. Their Highnesses are not to have visitors.'
âBut why not?' Uma cried. âYou're the Collector. You could let him come if you wanted to. No one needs to know.'
The Collector placed his glass abruptly on the small peg table that stood by his chair. âIt's impossible, Uma. I'd have to forward the request to Bombay and from there it would be sent on to the Colonial Secretary in London. It could take months.'
âJust for a visit to Outram House?'
âOur teachers,' the Collector beganâit was a running joke with him to speak of his British colleagues as
amader gurujonâ
âour teachers don't want political trouble in Burma. It's their richest province and they don't want to take any risks. The King is the one person who could bring the country together, against them. There are more than a dozen different tribes and peoples there. The monarchy is the only thing they have in common. Our teachers know this and they want to make sure that the King is forgotten. They don't wish to be cruel; they don't want any martyrs; all they want is that the King should be lost to memoryâlike an old umbrella in a dusty cupboard.'
âBut what difference could a single visitor make?'
âHe might get back and talk. Something could get into the newspapers. The Colonial Office won't even allow the King to be photographed for fear that the picture could get back to Burma. The other day I had a letter from a photographer, a Parsee woman. She's out on a picture-taking tour and wanted to stop by to take some photographs at Outram House. I forwarded her request to Bombay and heard back within the week: no pictures of the Royal Family are to be allowed. Government policy.'
âBut that's monstrous,' Uma cried.
âNot at all.' The Collector's eyes narrowed. âIt's merely judicious. Do you think Burma would be well served by political trouble? Do you think this man Raha would have been able
to get rich if Thebaw were still ruling? Why, if it were not for the British, the Burmese would probably have risen up against these Indian businessmen and driven them out like sheep.'
Uma knew she would not be able to best the Collector in an argument. She lowered her voice and placed a hand on his arm.
âYou know,' she said, âit's not for the King's sake, or even my uncle's that I'm asking you this.'
âThen why?'
Uma hesitated.
âTell me.'
âIt's because of Dolly.'
âDolly?'
âShe's lived here all her life, as a virtual prisoner, and she can't imagine anything other than the life she has. But she'll have to leave Outram House some day, and where is she to go? She's forgotten about Burma and I think she needs to talk to people who can remind her of it.'
âDolly can go back to Burma whenever she wants.'
âBut she doesn't have any family in Burma and she doesn't know anyone there. That's exactly why she needs to meet people who live there.'
The Collector fell silent and Uma sensed that he was beginning to relent. âIt's such a small thing,' she prompted. âI'm sure there's a solution.'
âAll right then,' he said at last, on a note of exasperation. âSince it means so much to you I suppose there is one thing I could do.'
âWhat?'
âI could invite this Raha here as my personal guest. I could say he's a relative by marriage. And then, if he were to pay a visit to Outram House, it would be just a private visitâ nothing official
âI'd be so glad . . .'
The very next morning a telegram was dispatched to Uma's uncle in Rangoon, to tell him that his friend, Mr Raha, was welcome to visit Ratnagiri; he would be received as the Collector's personal guest.
twelve
W
ithin moments of the steamer's arrival, word went out along the waterfront that there was a rich prince on board, one Rajkumar, a foreigner who was very free with his money. An uproar ensued: coolies and porters laid siege to the gangplank; idlers drifted in from the shaded shoreline and gathered on the beach.
Rajkumar was still asleep in his cabin when the steamer docked. It was U Ba Kyaw who woke him. It was Rajkumar's practice to bring a number of his people with him, when he was travelling abroad. This was his way of protecting himself from the pitfalls of his new circumstances. This particular journey had induced apprehensions of a novel kind and as a result his retinue was even larger than usual. Along with a stenographer and an accountant he had also brought U Ba Kyaw, his most trusted employee.
Rajkumar sent U Ba Kyaw ahead to distract the crowd and then slipped quickly off the steamer. There were two carriages waiting at the far end of the jetty: one was from the Residency. The Collector was out of town that morning, but he had left careful instructions on how the visitor was to be received. Kanhoji was to drive him to the Dak Bungalow where he was to stay. In the evening he was to dine at the Residency.
The other carriage at the jetty was the Outram House phaeton. Along with Kanhoji, Sawant was leaning on a rail,
watching the uproar on the jetty. Both men were taken by surprise when Rajkumar was pointed out to them. Of all the party he looked the least likely to be the man whom Kanhoji had been sent to meet.
After dropping Rajkumar at the Dak Bungalow, Kanhoji headed back to the Residency to give Uma a full account of the uproar at the jetty. His report was unsparingly detailed: he told Uma about the half-chewed cheroot in Rajkumar's mouth, the dishevelled untidiness of his attire, his crumpled longyi, his greasy vest and his uncombed hair. Uma was left with a sense of lingering unease. Was it prudent to invite someone like this to dinner? What exactly did he eat?
In a striking departure from custom, the Collector had entrusted the organising of the evening's meal to Uma. Usually it was he who oversaw the Residency's entertaining. Although otherwise uninterested in domestic matters, he was very particular about his dinner parties: he liked to examine the table and the place settings personally, tweaking the flowers and pointing out the plates and glasses that needed another round of polishing. It was to him that the servants went for their instructions on what to serve and which dinner service to use.
That morning when the khansama came to enquire about the menu, Uma had been taken by surprise. Thinking quickly, she told him to serve exactly what he had served the week before, when the Director of Public Education came to dinner. She remembered shepherd's pie and fried fish and blancmange.
âI want all of that tonight,' she'd told the cook,
âekdum woh hi cheez
.' Then, on an impulse she wrote a note to the Anglo-Indian Superintendent of Police, Mr Wright, asking him to come to dinner, with his wife. She had already asked Mr Justice Naidu and Mrs Naiduâan elderly couple, unfailingly pleasant, undemanding. And of course Dolly was to come too: that had been arranged long before.
As evening approached, Uma tried to recall everything the Collector did before a dinner party. For once, she told herself, she would be a good memsahib. She went to the dining room
and fussed with the plates and forks and flowers. But when the Collector came home, she discovered that she might as well have spared herself the effort. The Collector was plainly unimpressed. After stepping into the dining room to inspect her handiwork, he emerged with an unspoken rebuke on his face.
âThe fish-knives weren't in the proper place,' he said. âAnd there was dust on the wine glasses . . .' He made her go back to rearrange everything. âI'll come back again later to check.'
Waiting for the guests to arrive, Uma sat by a window, her hands folded in her lap like a chastened schoolgirl. Perhaps it was a mistake, this dinner party, inviting Dolly to meet this stranger. Perhaps even her own presence here was a mistake. This was a thought that had never occurred to her before, but its chill shadow lengthened quickly in her mind. Was this what they called a premonition?
âMadame . . .'
It was the Naidus, grey-haired, tall, brimming with soft-voiced goodwill. âHow nice . . .' And then in came the Wrights, with Dolly following a few minutes later.
Rajkumar was the last to arrive. Rising to greet him, Uma found that her first impressions were unexpectedly favourable. Looking over her folded hands, she noted that he had gone to some trouble to dress neatly and plainly, in âEnglish' clothes: a sober black suit, a carefully knotted tie. His pumps were polished to a fine sheen and in his hands he was carrying a malacca cane with a handle of delicately carved jade. He looked much older than she'd expected: his face was weathered with hard use and his lips were heavy and richly coloured, very red against his dark skin. Along the line of his jaw there was a fold of flesh that hinted at jowls to come. He was far from good-looking, but there was something arresting about him, a massiveness of construction, allied with an unlikely mobility of expressionâas though life had been breathed into a wall of slate.
Glancing over her shoulder, Uma spotted Dolly sitting half-hidden behind the scrolled arm of a chaise-longue. She was
wearing a mauve htamein and an aingyi of white silk. A lily glowed like a light against the black sheen of her hair.