I mentioned some of this to Miss West.
‘People talk,’ she said, ‘but there is no evidence. Nothing that points to their involvement. Of course there were no post-mortems — the funerals were held very quickly. People got suspicious about that. I wasn’t here, you know. But we all know what happens during the summer rush at the funeral ghats. All those poor villagers dying like flies in the heat. You either bribe your way through or wait your turn behind a thousand corpses rotting away by the riverside. So they had to do it quickly. Anyway, they have been good to me. I was worrying that they might ask me to leave, or ask for some ridiculous rent after Panditji and Mrs Pandey died. But they didn’t. I only wish they hadn’t let the downstairs room to those wretched sex-maniac Israelis. Did you see them on the way up? They never leave the house; they go at it like little rabbits.’
It was the voice and manner I remembered, unambiguous, matter-of-fact, and with a sharp edge; and I had now a somewhat absurd retrospective sense of having missed them all these years.
‘Did you get the packet I sent you?’ she said, abruptly changing the subject. ‘Someone left it outside your door just after you left. I didn’t see who it was. No one saw him.’
‘Yes,’ I said, thinking of Rajesh walking up the stairs to my room. Had he met Arjun then?
‘Who was it? Who?’ Miss West was saying.
‘It was someone I knew at the university,’ I said, and then found myself adding, ‘I recently found out that he was a criminal.’
‘Was he? How interesting,’ she said. ‘But the university is full of them!’
I wished suddenly to change the subject.
I told her about the prostitutes at my hotel; I told her about my all-pink room, how the receptionist had called it the ‘honeymoon suite’.
‘I am not surprised,’ she said. She paused and suddenly shivered and wrapped her arms around her chest. ‘It’s the new mafia people talk about. They are going to transform the city. You see that happening already. Those ghastly fast-food places and beauty parlours and so-called Italian restaurants and the hotels with discotheques — the money for all this comes from the mafia.’
*
As my eyes adjusted to the dark, I saw more of her room, which looked much the same as before. An earthen pot damp with water sat beneath her bed; behind the flimsy curtain of the wardrobe lay the stacks of clothes; a row of paperbacks leaned on the window sill; the clunky music system still perched on the narrow wooden shelf nailed to the wall; her straw hat clung to the wall, hanging from an invisible nail.
The only new item appeared to be a glossy poster advertising performances of Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro at the Royal Opera House. The year on it was 1995 — which meant that she had been to England recently.
But the pictures on the wall were gone — the photographs from Miss West’s past, among others, of Christopher, the pictures that had once given me such a wounding sense of faraway unattainable worlds, that had stirred so many inadequacies and yearnings in me.
Miss West said, ‘I can’t give you tea, I’m afraid. But let’s go out. Let’s go for a boat ride. Let’s do the touristy thing. You would like that, wouldn’t you?’
‘Yes,’ I said, ‘yes.’
She snatched her straw hat from the wall; and then placed it back on the nail, which had suddenly looked exposed and vulnerable. ‘The weather looks dodgy out there, doesn’t it?’ she said, squinting into the grey day outside. ‘It might rain.’
We went out, down the stairs, through the gloomy shadowless alleys, past the little shrine to Hanuman, to the ghats. The grey placid river was pierced here and there by scimitar-like flashes of light. The birds on the ancient banyan tree chattered loudly. The sun still shone on the massive stone ramparts of Ramnagar Palace, but the city to the north cowered under an enormous pile of woolly dark clouds.
The stone steps on the ghat were slippery with wet mud. As we went down to the river Miss West once swayed a bit and seemed about to fall before recovering quickly. There were a few boatmen closer to the river, squatting on the ground in a circle, quietly smoking beedis and talking. They saw us, and one of them immediately detached himself from the group and began to walk towards where we were.
The man came closer; his hair was as white as snow above his dark-complexioned face.
‘Is that Ramchand?’ I asked, suddenly remembering the exceptionally handsome boatman who had come up to us the first time I went with Miss West on a boat ride.
‘No,’ Miss West said, her voice neutral, ‘Ramchand is back in his village; he has tuberculosis. This is his father.’
It was in the same indifferent tone — the boat freed from the bank, the ropes tossed off and the old boatman straining at the oars with small grimaces upon his bony face — that she began speaking of events and personalities from the past.
She spoke of the break-up between Mark and Debbie, who was now a graduate student at Indiana University. She also spoke of people I hadn’t known but she assumed I did. None of this was unfamiliar to me; it matched my memory of her. So much of her time in that room on the roof used to go into these extensive analyses of people she knew.
She barely noticed the city sliding past us, the ghats with their isolated groups of people and solitaries, the tattered beach umbrellas, the melancholy widows in white saris, the stray coils of smoke from funeral pyres at Harishchandra Ghat.
She spoke of a courtesan she had known for a long time.
‘In her time, when she was beautiful and attractive and all that, this woman had known practically every rich person in town. That’s what makes it so shocking and depressing. I heard this just today: she died recently in great poverty, and her neighbour had to go around to collect money to buy wood for her funeral pyre.’
A long-seeming boat appeared in the middle distance; it seemed to be approaching fast in our direction.
Miss West had appeared to stop but now she added, with a vehemence that made her voice sound cracked with emotion: ‘It’s all such a waste. Such a bloody waste.’
She was silent for a while, and in the silence I thought of the morning I had awakened to find her sitting on the roof and crying over something I couldn’t then understand. ‘Such a waste, such a bloody waste’: that’s what she had said then — the exact words — and she had bemused me by sounding so different, her tone so far from the assured intimacy and confidence that had made such an impression on me.
I used to think then that her solitude committed her to puzzling out the characters and lives of people she knew. It came to me now that her curiosity was dictated all along by her own complicated life, by the setbacks and disappointments she suffered in it.
Yellow flames flickered and glowered through the grey haze at Manikarnika Ghat. The peal of temple bells travelled in light wispy echoes across the river. The sky above was heavy and expectant with thick dark clouds.
It grieved me to look at the despair that had passed over Miss West’s face as she spoke, to have the sense, as I once had, of the density of memories, wounds, ambitions and regrets seething inside her.
And I was looking away, at the looming city, when I heard her saying, her voice abruptly bright: ‘But you would remember her, wouldn’t you?’
‘Who?’ I asked.
‘The courtesan I was talking about,’ Miss West replied. ‘The woman with the kohl-rimmed eyes. She sang that beautiful song about Krishna and Radha at that party we had when you first arrived in Benares, where Anand played the sitar and Catherine did her bit with the tanpura. You remember that, don’t you?’