Authors: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
At exactly five there was a rush from out of all the office rooms. Youngish men in frequently washed white shirts and thin gaberdine trousers rushed to the bus-stops or to the close-packed cycle sheds. Some of them already wore their cycle-clips round their legs. Prem was afraid of missing Raj in this crowd of clerks who all resembled him so closely, but it was not long before he saw him, hurrying with the same frowning intensity as the others towards the bus-stop. He was not at all pleased to see Prem.
âWhy do you come here?' was his first greeting, and Prem at once felt guilty.
âThis is a Government office,' Raj said severely. âIt does not look nice for people who are not Government servants to come and pay social visits.'
âI was only waiting outside,' Prem mumbled. But he knew this was no excuse.
He walked down the road with Raj. After a while he said, âDo you think it is possible for me to get into Government service?' and he looked anxiously at Raj's stern profile.
Raj pursed his lips. âIt is not easy.'
âI know.'
âTo make an application one has to fill in a long form and then there is a competitive examination and also an interview.'
âAn examination?' Prem asked tremulously. He thought he had already passed all the examinations it was his duty in life to pass, and he did not feel like starting again.
âA competitive examination,' Raj said with some relish. âIt is very difficult.'
Prem hung his head. âI only wanted toââ'
âI know,' Raj said dryly. âThere are many people like you who only want to get into Government service.'
âNo, there is something else also,' Prem said. But he found it difficult to explain what this was. The fact that he wanted to belong somewhere; and not only that, but also his whole position as householder, as husband, which he wanted to stabilize, register as it were, make sure and accepted. He was so different from the Prem who had been a student in Ankhpur College and had lived in his father's house. He did not know how to say all this to Raj; so instead he said, âOne day please bring your family to my house, I invite you.'
âThe bus fare to your house will come very expensive for me,' Raj said.
âWhen my wife comes home. She has gone to her parents.'
Raj gently shook his head and made clicking noises with his tongue.
âWhat is the matter?'
Raj went on shaking his head: âWhy did you let her go ?'
Prem was embarrassed. He could not admit that she had gone on her own, without waiting for his consent, and indeed without even as much as leaving a note for him. But he was afraid that Raj might guess at something like that, so he said as lightly as he could, âWhy not? They are her parents.'
Raj looked shrewd: âDid you have a quarrel?'
âOf course not,' Prem said, kicking at stones on the road.
âThat is when wives usually go home to their parents. Is your mother still staying with you?'
âYes,' Prem said, kicking away.
âAh,' Raj said in a triumphant I-guessed-as-much voice.
âThey lived very well together,' Prem said unconvincingly.
Raj gave a mirthless laugh: âThere is not much you can teach me about these things. Please remember, I have been married a good deal longer than you have. Here is my bus-stop. Good-bye.'
âOne minute,' Prem said. He felt that they had just reached to the kind of conversation he had been longing to have for a long time. But Raj saw his bus coming and he broke off into a run to join the queue at the bus-stop. Prem ran with him, shouting âWhen can we meet again?' as he ran.
Raj came too late. He was pushed back by the other passengers and the bus left without him. âHow rude some people are in their behaviour,' he said indignantly.
âPerhaps we can meet again in the Regal Cinema at our usual time?'
âLike college boys you want us to meet in a cinema,' Raj said.
âI will take you to a new place which I have found where we will get very good pakoras.' Prem looked at him pleadingly.
Just then another bus came. Raj quickly elbowed his way to the door, but when he had got on, he called to Prem, âI will see you on Monday.'
But Monday seemed a long way off, and Prem felt heavy with the longing to talk about his life. And because there was no one he could talk to, he sat on the bed with his legs tucked under him and a note-pad on his lap. He wrote a letter to Indu: âIf you will come home now, I shall be glad.' He was almost tempted to write that he missed her, but he felt shy. For one thing, it was not something he felt it was proper for a husband to tell his wife; and for another, he knew all her family would read the letter and, if he wrote anything very personal like that, they would laugh or perhaps even be shocked. So he wrote, âWe are all well. It is not very hot yet here for this time of year. There is a very good crop of mangoes and they have come down to only twelve annas a seer.' He sucked his pen a little and stared at the two cupids entwined so lovingly at the head of the bed. And then he looked at the little table with the gilded lion-feet on which she had kept her hair-oil and her glass phial of scent; and he sniffed the air and smelt the carbolic soap which had replaced the smell of perspiration, vanilla essence and hair-oil.
Suddenly he was writing quite differently, and instead of dawdling and hesitating over each word, his pen raced over the paper: âWhy did you go away from me? I long for you and sometimes I feel like crying with tears because you are not there. I think of you so often. The house is empty without you and my heart also is empty. In the night I lie alone in our bed. Then I want to feel you and I remember how warm you always are and so soft like silk. I want to stroke you and kiss you everywhere with my mouth and then I want to be inside you. When I think of this, I feel I shall die with longing so much for you.'
âSon!' His mother came into the room. âWhat are you doing, son?' Prem quickly covered the writing with his hand.
âYou are writing a letter? You are writing to your wife? Let me see.' She held out her hand.
âNo no,' he said. He tore off the sheet and crumpled it almost viciously and held it tight in his fist. He felt hot with shame. âI am onlyââ'
âI have cooked rice and mincemeat for you, son,' she said proudly. âCome and eat.'
âI am just coming. Please take it out for me.' When she had gone, he released the crumpled ball of paper from his fist and let it drop to the floor. He took matches and set fire to it on the stone floor; he swept up the ashes carefully in his hand and threw them out of the window. He felt terribly ashamed of himself. Hans is right, he thought; a person like me, with so many evil uncontrolled thoughts, must mortify the flesh until all shameful desire is purged away. And yet, even while he was thinking this, he longed for Indu and to do to her all the things he had written.
After the tea-party had, from his point of view, proved such a failure, he had not liked to give much thought to his obligation to ask for a rise in salary. But it still remained, he knew, an obligation. Sooner or later he would have to approach Mr. Khanna again on the subject. He was very reluctant to do so. He was put off by the thought of again going upstairs into Mr. Khanna's living-room and standing there, asking for a rise in salary, while Mr. Khanna ate his breakfast and Mrs. Khanna looked suspiciously at Prem's feet lest they dirtied her carpet. He felt it was difficult to keep up one's dignity in such a situation.
But he could send a letter. It would be so much easier to state his case in writing, pointing out how he was a family man and had to pay 45 rupees rent a month. âIf I write a letter,' he told Sohan Lal, with whom he consulted on this point, âI will be able to give my story at length and convince him it is really necessary for me to have a rise in salary.'
âYou can try if you like,' said Sohan Lal in a voice which did not commit him to any comment on the success or unsuccess of the venture.
So in the evening, when he got home, Prem tried. He sat down on the bed with a note-pad (the same on which he had begun to write his letter to Indu) and tried to formulate a petition to Mr. Khanna. Since it was a petition he started off with âIf it please you, sir'; but after that it was difficult for him to progress. There were so many points to be considered. As he put it to Sohan Lal the next day: âI will have to write in official style to make him see that my demand is just, but I also want to be personal and touching, so that his feelings will be softened.' It took several consultations more and a lot of sitting on the bed with the note-pad before he finally got his petition completed. He liked his beginning, which was straightforward and factual: âI am a lecturer in your college.' From there he went on to define the duties of a lecturer, ending up with, âAnd so, is it not right to presume that a lecturer's great responsibility to Youth and Learning entitles him to higher salary than is given to him?' After that he became official again (âI submit hereby my request for rise in salary') but followed it up with an account of his personal history. From then on he hinted rather than stated directly, âYou also must have learnt from experience, sir, that when once a man marries, soon other things follow and it is not long before he has the burden of a family to support', and ended up in a crescendo of personal appeal: âI stand before you with folded hands and trust in your goodness that you will not turn aside the appeal of one who has only recently started out in life and is in need of assistance and kind thoughts from his elders.' After reading this over several times, he added âand betters'.
There remained the problem of how to present this petition to Mr. Khanna. He thought about it all evening. He saw himself knocking on Mr. Khanna's door, walking into the room with sure and certain steps, laying his letter before the Principal, joining his hands in a respectful manner, and then leaving the room as softly, courteously but confidently, as he had entered it. It seemed easy enough when he thought about it like that, but all the same he wished he did not have to do it. So much did he wish this, that he even looked in the morning's paper to see if there was no suitable job advertised for him. There was not, so he went to look in the old papers stacked on a shelf in the kitchen. And as he sat on the floor, looking through the advertisement columns of old papers, he remembered that other time when he had sat among the old papers on the kitchen floor looking for a possible job. He remembered that he had felt sad then; and he felt rather sad now. But it was different. The only thing that was the same was that there were no jobs advertised for him. He looked through column after column and wished he were an engineer or a town planner or a doctor. His mother called from inside, âSon, why are you in the kitchen?' At that moment it occurred to him why it was so different from the other time he had looked through the papers for a job. Then he had felt sad because Indu was there; now he felt sad because she was not there. He folded the papers back and called to his mother that he was coming.
He did not shrink from his decision. Next day he really walked up the stairs to Mr. Khanna's private apartment, holding the letter tightly in his hand. But his plan was upset when he saw that Mr. Khanna was not there. Only Mrs. Khanna and three other ladies. They sat in a close circle, each one stirring in a tea-cup; one lady was talking and the others leaning eagerly towards her. Their eyes were gleaming. âEvery afternoon from two to five when her husband was in office,' the lady was saying. The others swayed their heads and clicked their tongues. They did not notice Prem. âAnd the children in the house all the time,' the lady said in a shocked gloating voice. âHai-hai,' said Mrs. Khanna with another click of the tongue. The teaspoons went round in the cups in quick agitation.
Prem cleared his throat and the four heads spun round towards him. âWhat do you want?' Mrs. Khanna shouted hoarsely.
âMr. Khanna,' Prem said, holding out the letter. It shook slightly for his hand was trembling. The four ladies looked at him angrily.
âThis is what it is like in a college,' Mrs. Khanna told the others. âNot one moment's rest or peace. Every minute these people come to bother you.'
âIt is not right,' said one lady.
âThey must be told,' said another.
âWhat is the use of telling,' said Mrs. Khanna. âNow leave your letter and go!' she shouted at Prem. They drew their chairs closer together and leant towards each other. âAnd what is worse â¦' the lady began again. Prem shut the door behind him. As he walked down the stairs, he could hear a loud delighted gasp of shock emitted in chorus.
âIt was very embarrassing for me,' Prem commented when he had told Sohan Lal about this occurrence. He could still feel the ladies' angry looks on his face. âI am a lecturer of the college. I have the right to go upstairs.'
âShe doesn't like us to come up,' Sohan Lal said in a matter-of-fact way.
âWhy?' Prem insisted, ready to argue the point out. But Sohan Lal was not. He knew he could not afford to annoy the Principal's wife and that was all the argument needed for him.
âAnd who knows if she will give my letter,' Prem said in a despairing voice. The whole venture seemed to have failed. Not only had he been an object of anger and contempt to a group of ladies, but he had also delivered his petition into unsafe hands. He returned home in a highly unsatisfied state of mind.
T
HE
servant-boy stood out on the landing with a wide grin on his face: âShe is home,' he said. Prem walked past him and went straight into the bedroom. On the little table with gilded lion-feet stood a bottle of hair-oil, a comb, a little round tin of mascara and a glass phial of scent. Indu had her back to the door; she was hanging up her picture of Mother and Baby, stepping back several times to see if it was straight. Prem rubbed his hand against the side of his leg. His face was stern and strained, and he did not know what to say. Indu turned round and saw him, and she lowered her eyes and also did not know what to say. They stood like that for a while. At last Prem said, âYou have hung up your picture.' Indu nodded. âIt looks nice,' Prem said. His voice was hoarse; he was still rubbing his hand up and down against his trouser-leg.