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'I don't know,' I reply. 'I've never been to his room. But we can find out today.' So Salim walks
down to Gupta's room and I tiptoe behind him.
Gupta is sitting in his room wearing crumpled kurta pyjamas when Salim knocks on the door.
'Come . . . come, Salim,' he says in a slurred voice. He has a glassful of golden liquid in his hand.
He gulps it down and wipes his mouth. His eyes look like big buttons. I watch from the little
space between the two curtains in the doorway. He strokes Salim's face, tracing his fingers over
his bony nose and thin lips. Then abruptly he orders, 'Take off your shorts.'
Salim is confused by this request. 'Just do as I say, bastard, or I will give you a tight slap,' Gupta
snarls. Salim complies. He pushes down his shorts hesitatingly. I avert my eyes.
Gupta approaches Salim from behind, his gold chains jangling. 'Good,' he mutters. I see him
unfasten the cord of his pyjamas and lower them. I can see his hairy backside. Salim has still not
understood what is happening, but a fog is lifting from my brain. With startling clarity I suddenly
comprehend what had happened in Father John's room that night. And what had followed the
next day.
I let out a piercing scream that shatters the silence of the night like a bullet. It wakes up the boys
sleeping peacefully in the dormitories; it wakes up the cook, snoring in the kitchen; it wakes up
the warden in his bedroom; it even wakes up the stray dogs, which begin to bark madly.
Gupta doesn't know what has hit him. He hastily pulls up his pyjamas and tries to shoo Salim
away. But the cook, the warden and the guards are already on their way to Gupta's room. They
discover his dirty secret that night (though they do nothing about it). But Gupta also discovers
me lurking behind the curtains. From then on he becomes my mortal enemy. Salim is shaken, but
unhurt. He had given up his animus against Hindus a long time ago. But a fear of abuse is
embedded in him for the rest of his life.
* * *
It is a beautiful spring day. And it appears even more beautiful because we are outside the
confines of the Juvenile Home. We have all been taken on a day trip by an international NGO.
We travel by air-conditioned bus all over Delhi. We have lunch in the zoo and see the animals.
For the first time we see a hippopotamus and kangaroos and giraffes and the giant sloth. We see
pelicans and flamingos and the duck-billed platypus. Then we are taken to the Qutub Minar, the
highest tower in India. Laughing and jostling, we climb the stairs and peer out from the first-
floor balcony. The men and women on the ground seem like ants. We shout 'Hooooo' and listen
for the sound to peter out before it reaches the ground. Finally, we are taken to India Gate to see
a big carnival. We are each given ten rupees to spend on any attraction we choose. I want to ride
on the giant wheel, but Salim tugs at my sleeve and pulls me to another booth. 'Pandit
Ramashankar Shastri,' it says. 'World-famous Palmist. Only Rs.10 per reading.' An old man is
sitting inside the booth, wearing a dhoti kurta. He has a white moustache, a vermilion tilak on his
forehead, and thick lenses. A black choti juts out from the back of his head.
'I want to show my hand,' Salim says. 'It is only ten rupees.'
'Don't be foolish,' I tell him. 'These chaps are conmen. They cannot know your future. And, in
any case, there's not much in our future worth knowing.'
'I want to show my hand just the same.' Salim is adamant.
'Fine.' I give in. 'You go ahead, but I'm not spending my ten rupees on this crap.'
Salim pays the money and eagerly extends his left hand. The pandit shakes his head. 'No, not the
left hand. That is for girls. Boys have to show their right hand.'
Salim quickly extends his right palm. The palmist peers at it with a magnifying glass, and
analyses the scrabbly lines as if they were a map of buried treasure. Finally he puts down the
magnifying glass and lets out a satisfied sigh. 'You have a remarkable hand, my boy. I have
never seen a better fate line. I see a very bright future for you.'
'Really?' Salim is delighted. 'What will I become?'
Mr Shastri has obviously not thought about that. He closes his eyes for ten seconds, then opens
them. 'You have a beautiful face. You will be a very famous actor,' he declares.
'Like Armaan Ali?' squeals Salim.
'Even more famous,' says the pandit. He turns to me. 'Do you also want to show your hand? It is
only ten rupees.'
'No, thank you,' I say and begin to move away, but Salim bars my way.
'No, Mohammad, you have to show your hand. For my sake, please.'
With a resigned look, I fork out my ten rupees and extend my right hand.
The pandit scowls at me as he adjusts his thick glasses and examines my palm. He pores over it
for more than five minutes. He makes some notes, does some calculations.
'What's the matter?' Salim asks, alarmed.
The palmist frowns slightly and shakes his head. 'The line of head is strong, but the line of heart
is weak. And, most importantly, the line of life is short. The stars do not seem to be right. The
alignment of the planets is inauspicious. The Mount of Jupiter is good, but the Mount of Saturn
cancels it out. There are obstacles and pitfalls. I can do something to ease your way, but it will
cost you.'
'How much?'
'Around two hundred rupees. Why don't you ask your father? Isn't he the one who owns the big
bus?'
I laugh. 'Ha! Panditji, before spinning this yarn about my future, you should have checked out
who we really are. We are not rich kids. We are orphans from the Delhi Juvenile Home in
Turkman Gate and this bus doesn't even belong to us. Still, you conned us into parting with
twenty rupees.' I pull Salim. 'Come, let's go. We have wasted enough time here.'
As we are walking away, the palmist calls me. 'Listen! I want to give you something.' I return to
the booth. The pandit gives me an old one-rupee coin.
'What's this, Panditji?'
'It's a lucky coin. Keep it. You will need it.'
I hold it in my fist.
Salim wants an ice cream, but we have just one rupee and that won't buy us anything. We watch
the other kids enjoying their rides. I flip the coin aimlessly and it slips out of my fingers and rolls
underneath a bench. I bend down to pick it up. It has come up heads. Next to it lies a ten-rupee
note, dropped by someone. Like Magic. Salim and I buy ice creams. I slip the coin carefully into
my pocket. It is indeed my lucky charm. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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