On the way back, they drove past the Sule Pagoda and found the streets unusually quiet for that time of day. âI wonder why there are no rickshaws, no hawkers . . .' Dolly paused to look around. âHow odd: I can't see a single Indian on the street.'
In the distance, at a street corner there was a long line of men. As the Packard rolled past, they saw that the men were queueing to have tattoo-like designs painted on their chests. Dolly's reaction was instantaneous. She leant over to shake U Ba Kyaw's shoulder.
âDollyâwhat's the matter? What's happening?'
âWe have to turn round. We have to go backâback to the house.'
âBecause of those men? Why? Does it have something to do with those tattoos?'
âThose weren't tattoos, Uma. Those designs were for soldiers who're going to war . . .' Dolly began to drum her fist distractedly on her knees. âI think there's going to be some kind of trouble. We have to find out where the boys areâ where Rajkumar is. If we're quick maybe we'll be able to stop them leaving the house.'
Some twenty yards ahead of the Packard, a man leapt off a footpath and ran into the street. Uma and Dolly noticed him when he appeared in one corner of the Packard's wide, curved windscreen. He was an Indian, a rickshaw-puller, dressed in a tattered vest and a longyi. He was running hard and beads of sweat were flying off his arms. One of his hands was clawing the air, and the other was holding up his longyi, keeping it from getting entangled in his legs. His face was dark and his eyes very white and bulbous. Two steps carried him from the edge of their windscreen to its middle; he turned to glance over his shoulder and his eyes started in his head. Now they saw that he was being closely pursued by a man who was just two steps behind him. This man was bare-bodied and a black design was painted over his chest. He was carrying something but they couldn't see what it was, because it was hidden beneath the edge of their windscreen. Then, all
of a sudden, the pursuer swung his shoulders and drew his arms back, in the manner of a tennis player preparing to make a stroke. They saw now that the instrument in his hands was a da, a long, glinting blade with a short handle, part sword, part axe. They sat transfixed in their seats as the da scythed through the air in a circular motion. The rickshaw-puller had almost reached the far end of their windscreen when suddenly his head toppled over like a lopped-off branch, hanging down over his spine, held on by a thin flap of skin. But the body did not fall instantly to the ground: for a fraction of a second the decapitated trunk stayed upright. They saw it advance by one more step before crashing to the pavement.
Uma's first impulse was to reach for the door handle. âWhat are you doing?' Dolly screamed. âStop.'
âWe have to help, Dolly. We can't just leave him on the street . . .'
âUma, have you gone mad?' Dolly hissed. âIf you get out of the car now, you'll be killed too.' She gave Uma a push, thrusting her on to the floor of the car. âYou have to hide, Uma. We can't run the risk of your being seen.' She made Uma lie flat and then ripped the cloth covers off the Packard's back seat. âI'm going to cover you with these. Lie still and don't say a word.'
Uma put her head down on the floor-mat and closed her eyes. The rickshaw-puller's face appeared in front of her: she saw his head once again, toppling backwards. In that instant when the decapitated body had still been upright, still moving forward, she had caught a glimpse of those white eyes, hanging down over his spine: their gaze had appeared to be directed into the car, right at her. Uma felt her gorge rise and then vomit came pouring of her mouth and her nose, fouling the floor-mat.
âDolly.' Just as she was beginning to raise her head, Dolly gave her a sharp nudge. The car came to a sudden stop and she froze, with her face inches from the vomit-covered mat. Somewhere above Dolly was talking to someoneâa group of menâshe was explaining something in Burmese. The
conversation took just a minute or two, but an eternity seemed to pass before the car moved on again.
The riots lasted several days and the casualties numbered in the hundreds. The toll would have been higher still, if it had not been for the many Burmese who had rescued Indians from the mob and sheltered them in their homes. It was discovered later that the trouble had started with a clash between Indian and Burmese workers at the docks. Many Indian- and Chinese-owned businesses were attacked, among them one of Rajkumar's timberyards. Three of his workers were killed and dozens were injured.
Rajkumar was at home when the trouble broke out. Neither he nor anyone else in the family suffered any personal injury. Neel happened to be safely out of town when the riots started, and Dinu was taken home from school by his friend, Maung Thiha Saw.
Despite his losses Rajkumar was now more adamant than ever about remaining in Burma: âI've lived here all my life; everything I have is here. I'm not such a coward as to give up everything I've worked for at the first sign of trouble. And anyway, what makes you think that we'll be any more welcome in India than we are here? There are riots in India all the timeâhow do you know that the same thing wouldn't happen to us there?'
Uma saw that Dolly was near collapse and she decided to stay on in Rangoon, to help her cope. A week became a month and then another. Every time she spoke of leaving Dolly asked her to stay on a little longer: âIt's not over yetâ I can feel something in the air.'
As the weeks passed, there was a deepening of the sense of unease that had settled on the city. There were more strange events. There was talk of trouble at the Rangoon Lunatic Asylum, where several thousand homeless Indians had been accommodated after the riots. In the city gaol a mutiny erupted
among the prisoners and was suppressed at the cost of many lives. There were whispers of an even greater upheaval in the offing.
One day a stranger stopped Dolly on the street: âIs it true that you worked in the Mandalay palace, in the time of King Thebaw?' When Dolly answered in the affirmative the stranger gave her a smile. âPrepare yourself: there is soon to be another coronation. A prince has been found who will liberate Burma . . .'
A few days later they learnt that there had indeed been a coronation of sorts, not far from Rangoon: a healer by the name of Saya San had had himself crowned King of Burma, with all the traditional observances. He'd gathered together a motley band of soldiers and told them to avenge the capture of King Thebaw.
These rumours reminded Uma of the events that preceded the outbreak of the Indian uprising of 1857. Then too, well before the firing of the first shot, signs of trouble had appeared on the north Indian plains. Chapatisâthose most unremarkable of everyday foodsâhad begun to circulate from village to village, as though in warning. No one knew where they came from or who had put them in motionâbut somehow people had known that a great convulsion was on its way.
Uma's premonition was proved right. The uprising started in the interior of Tharawaddy district, where a forest official and two village headmen were killed; the next day rebels stormed a railway station. A company of Indian troops was sent to hunt down the insurgents. But suddenly the rebels were everywhere: in Insein, Yamthin and Pyapon. They appeared like shadows from the forest, with magical designs painted on their bodies. They fought like men possessed, running bare-chested into gunfire, attacking aeroplanes with catapults and spears. Thousands of rural folk declared their allegiance to the King-in-waiting. The colonial authorities fought back by sending more Indian reinforcements to root out the rebellion. Villages were occupied, hundreds of Burmese were killed and thousands wounded.
For Uma, the uprising and the means of its suppression were the culmination of a month-long nightmare: it was as though she were witnessing the realisation of her worst fears; once again. Indian soldiers were being used to fortify the Empire. Nobody in India seemed to know of these events; no one seemed to care. It seemed imperative that someone should take on the task of letting the people of her country know.
It so happened that KLM, the Dutch airline, had recently started a plane service linking a chain of cities between Batavia and Amsterdam. There were now regular flights between Rangoon's new airstrip at Mingaladon and Calcutta's Dum Dum. The journey from Rangoon to Calcutta took some six hoursâa fraction of the sailing time. Uma was by now too distraught to undertake the four-day steamship voyage: Rajkumar bought her a ticket on KLM.
In the Packard, on the way out to the airstrip at Mingaladon, Uma became tearful. âI can't believe what I've seen hereâthe same old story, Indians being made to kill for the Empire, fighting people who should be their friends . . .'
She was interrupted by Rajkumar: âUma, you're talking nonsense.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âUma, have you for one moment stopped to ask yourself what would happen if these soldiers weren't used? You were here during the riots: you saw what happened. What do you think these rebels would do to usâto me, to Dolly, to the boys? Don't you see that it's not just the Empire those soldiers are protecting, it's also Dolly and me?'
The anger that Uma had held contained since Morningside came welling up. âRajkumar, you're in no position to offer opinions. It's people like you who're responsible for this tragedy. Did you ever think of the consequences when you were transporting people here? What you and your kind have done is far worse than the worst deeds of the Europeans.'
As a rule Rajkumar never challenged Uma on political matters. But he was on edge too now, and something snapped. âYou have so many opinions, Umaâabout things of which
you know nothing. For weeks now I've heard you criticising everything you see: the state of Burma, the treatment of women, the condition of India, the atrocities of the Empire. But what have you yourself ever done that qualifies you to hold these opinions? Have you ever built anything? Given a single person a job? Improved anyone's life in any way? No. All you ever do is stand back, as though you were above all of us, and you criticise and criticise. Your husband was as fine a man as any I've ever met, and you hounded him to his death with your self-righteousness.'
âHow dare you?' Uma cried. âHow dare you speak to me like that? Youâan animal, with your greed, your determination to take whatever you canâat whatever cost. Do you think nobody knows about the things you've done to people in your powerâto women and children who couldn't defend themselves? You're no better than a slaver and a rapist, Rajkumar. You may think that you will never have to answer for the things you've done, but you're wrong.'
Without a further word to Uma, Rajkumar leant over to U Ba Kyaw and told him to stop the car. Then he stepped out on the road and said to Dolly: âI'll find my own way back to the city. You see her off. I don't want anything to do with her.'
At Mingaladon, Uma and Dolly found the plane waiting on the airstrip. It was a trimotor Fokker F-VIII, with a silver fuselage and wings that were held up by struts. Once they were out of the car, Dolly said in hushed voice: âUma, you're very angry with Rajkumar and I suspect I know why. But you should not judge him too harshly, you know; you must remember that I too bear some of the guilt . . .'
They were at the gates; Uma held Dolly fast.
âDolly, will this change everythingâfor us, you and me?'
âNo. Of course not. I'll come to see you in Calcutta, whenever I can. It'll be all rightâyou'll see?'
part four
The Wedding
Â
twenty