AT
about the time when U Po
Kyin began his morning's business, 'Mr Porley' the timber merchant
and friend of Dr Veraswami, was leaving his house for the
Club.
Flory was a man of about thirty-five, of middle height, not ill
made. He had very black, stiff hair growing low on his head, and a
cropped black moustache, and his skin, naturally sallow, was
discoloured by the sun. Not having grown fat or bald he did not
look older than his age, but his face was very haggard in spite of
the sunburn, with lank cheeks and a sunken, withered look round the
eyes. He had obviously not shaved this morning. He was dressed in
the usual white shirt, khaki drill shorts and stockings, but
instead of a topi he wore a battered Terai hat, cocked over one
eye. He carried a bamboo stick with a wrist-thong, and a black
cocker spaniel named Flo was ambling after him.
All these were secondary expressions, however. The first thing
that one noticed in Flory was a hideous birthmark stretching in a
ragged crescent down his left cheek, from the eye to the corner of
the mouth. Seen from the left side his face had a battered,
woebegone look, as though the birthmark had been a bruise-for it
was a dark blue in colour. He was quite aware of its hideousness.
And at all times, when he was not alone, there was a sidelongness
about his movements, as he manoeuvred constantly to keep the
birthmark out of sight.
Flory's house was at the top of the maidan, close to the edge of
the jungle. From the gate the maidan sloped sharply down, scorched
and khaki-coloured, with half a dozen dazzling white bungalows
scattered round it. All quaked, shivered in the hot air. There was
an English cemetery within a white wall half-way down the hill, and
near by a tiny tin-roofed church. Beyond that was the European
Club, and when one looked at the Club-a dumpy one-storey wooden
building-one looked at the real centre of the town. In any town in
India the European Club is the spiritual citadel, the real seat of
the British power, the Nirvana for which native officials and
millionaires pine in vain. It was doubly so in this case, for it
was the proud boast of Kyauktada Club that, almost alone of Clubs
in Burma, it had never admitted an Oriental to membership. Beyond
the Club, the Irrawaddy flowed huge and ochreous glittering like
diamonds in the patches that caught the sun; and beyond the river
stretched great wastes of paddy fields, ending at the horizon in a
range of blackish hills.
The native town, and the courts and the jail, were over to the
right, mostly hidden in green groves of peepul trees. The spire of
the pagoda rose from the trees like a slender spear tipped with
gold. Kyauktada was a fairly typical Upper Burma town, that had not
changed greatly between the days of Marco Polo and 1910, and might
have slept in the Middle Ages for a century more if it had not
proved a convenient spot for a railway terminus. In 1910 the
Government made it the headquarters of a district and a seat of
Progress-interpretable as a block of law courts, with their army of
fat but ravenous pleaders, a hospital, a school and one of those
huge, durable jails which the English have built everywhere between
Gibraltar and Hong Kong. The population was about four thousand,
including a couple of hundred Indians, a few score Chinese and
seven Europeans. There were also two Eurasians named Mr Francis and
Mr Samuel, the sons of an American Baptist missionary and a Roman
Catholic missionary respectively. The town contained no curiosities
of any kind, except an Indian fakir who had lived for twenty years
in a tree near the bazaar, drawing his food up in a basket every
morning.
Flory yawned as he came out of the gate. He had been half drunk
the night before, and the glare made him feel liverish. 'Bloody,
bloody hole!' he thought, looking down the hill. And, no one except
the dog being near, he began to sing aloud, 'Bloody, bloody,
bloody, oh, how thou art bloody' to the tune of 'Holy, holy, holy,
oh how Thou art holy ' as he walked down the hot red road, swishing
at the dried-up grasses with his stick. It was nearly nine o'clock
and the sun was fiercer every minute. The heat throbbed down on
one's head with a steady, rhythmic thumping, like blows from an
enormous bolster. Flory stopped at the Club gate, wondering whether
to go in or to go farther down the road and see Dr Veraswami. Then
he remembered that it was 'English mail day' and the newspapers
would have arrived. He went in, past the big tennis screen, which
was overgrown by a creeper with starlike mauve flowers.
In the borders beside the path swaths of English flowers-phlox
and larkspur, hollyhock and petunia-not yet slain by the sun,
rioted in vast size and richness. The petunias were huge, like
trees almost. There was no lawn, but instead a shrubbery of native
trees and bushes-gold mohur trees like vast umbrellas of blood-red
bloom, frangipanis with creamy, stalkless flowers, purple
bougainvillea, scarlet hibiscus and the pink Chinese rose,
bilious-green crotons, feathery fronds of tamarind. The clash of
colours hurt one's eyes in the glare. A nearly naked mali,
watering-can in hand, was moving in the jungle of flowers like some
large nectar-sucking bird.
On the Club steps a sandy-haired Englishman, with a prickly
moustache, pale grey eyes too far apart, and abnormally thin calves
to his legs, was standing with his hands in the pockets of his
shorts. This was Mr Westfield, the District Superintendent of
Police. With a very bored air he was rocking himself backwards and
forwards on his heels and pouting his upper lip so that his
moustache tickled his nose. He greeted Flory with a slight sideways
movement of his head. His way of speaking was clipped and
soldierly, missing out every word that well could be missed out.
Nearly everything he said was intended for a joke, but the tone of
his voice was hollow and melancholy.
'Hullo, Flory me lad. Bloody awful morning, what?'
'We must expect it at this time of year, I suppose,' Flory said.
He had turned himself a little sideways, so that his birthmarked
cheek was away from Westfield.
'Yes, dammit. Couple of months of this coming. Last year we
didn't have a spot of rain till June. Look at that bloody sky, not
a cloud in it. Like one of those damned great blue enamel
saucepans. God! What'd you give to be in Piccadilly now, eh?'
'Have the English papers come?'
'Yes. Dear old
Punch,
Pink'un and
Vie Parisienne. Makes you homesick to read 'em, what?
Let's come in and have a drink before the ice all goes. Old
Lackersteen's been fairly bathing in it. Half pickled already.'
They went in, Westfield remarking in his gloomy voice, 'Lead on,
Macduff.' Inside, the Club was a teak-walled place smelling of
earth-oil, and consisting of only four rooms, one of which
contained a forlorn 'library' of five hundred mildewed novels, and
another an old and mangy billiard-table-this, however, seldom used,
for during most of the year hordes of flying beetles came buzzing
round the lamps and littered themselves over the cloth. There were
also a card-room and a 'lounge' which looked towards the river,
over a wide veranda; but at this time of day all the verandas were
curtained with green bamboo chicks. The lounge was an unhomelike
room, with coco-nut matting on the floor, and wicker chairs and
tables which were littered with shiny illustrated papers. For
ornament there were a number of 'Bonzo' pictures, and the dusty
skulls of sambhur. A punkah, lazily flapping, shook dust into the
tepid air.
There were three men in the room. Under the punkah a florid,
fine- looking, slightly bloated man of forty was sprawling across
the table with his head in his hands, groaning in pain. This was Mr
Lackersteen, the local manager of a timber firm. He had been badly
drunk the night before, and he was suffering for it. Ellis, local
manager of yet another company, was standing before the notice-
board studying some notice with a look of bitter concentration. He
was a tiny wiry-haired fellow with a pale, sharp-featured face and
restless movements. Maxwell, the acting Divisional Forest Officer,
was lying in one of the long chairs reading the
Field, and invisible except for two large-boned legs and
thick downy forearms.
'Look at this naughty old man,' said Westfield, taking Mr
Lackersteen half affectionately by the shoulders and shaking him.
'Example to the young, what? There but for the grace of God and all
that. Gives you an idea what you'll be like at forty.'
Mr Lackersteen gave a groan which sounded like 'brandy'.
'Poor old chap,' said Westfield, 'regular martyr to booze, eh?
Look at it oozing out of his pores. Reminds me of the old colonel
who used to sleep without a mosquito net. They asked his servant
why and the servant said: "At night, master too drunk to notice
mosquitoes; in the morning, mosquitoes too drunk to notice master."
Look at him-boozed last night and then asking for more. Got a
little niece coming to stay with him, too. Due tonight, isn't she,
Lackersteen?'
'Oh, leave that drunken sot alone,' said Ellis without turning
round. He had a spiteful Cockney voice. Mr Lackersteen groaned
again, '-- the niece! Get me some brandy, for Christ's sake.'
'Good education for the niece, eh? Seeing uncle under the table
seven times a week. Hey, butler! Bringing brandy for Lackersteen
master!'
The butler, a dark, stout Dravidian with liquid, yellow-irised
eyes like those of a dog, brought the brandy on a brass tray. Flory
and Westfield ordered gin. Mr Lackersteen swallowed a few spoonfuls
of brandy and sat back in his chair, groaning in a more resigned
way. He had a beefy, ingenuous face, with a toothbrush moustache.
He was really a very simple-minded man, with no ambitions beyond
having what he called 'a good time'. His wife governed him by the
only possible method, namely, by never letting him out of her sight
for more than an hour or two. Only once, a year after they were
married, she had left him for a fortnight, and had returned
unexpectedly a day before her time, to find Mr Lackersteen, drunk,
supported on either side by a naked Burmese girl, while a third up-
ended a whisky bottle into his mouth. Since then she had watched
him, as he used to complain, 'like a cat over a bloody mousehole'.
However, he managed to enjoy quite a number of 'good times', though
they were usually rather hurried ones.
'My Christ, what a head I've got on me this morning,' he said.
'Call that butler again, Westfield. I've got to have another brandy
before my missus gets here. She says she's going to cut my booze
down to four pegs a day when our niece gets here. God rot them
both!' he added gloomily.
'Stop playing the fool, all of you, and listen to this,' said
Ellis sourly. He had a queer wounding way of speaking, hardly ever
opening his mouth without insulting somebody. He deliberately
exaggerated his Cockney accent, because of the sardonic tone it
gave to his words. 'Have you seen this notice of old Macgregor's? A
little nosegay for everyone. Maxwell, wake up and listen!'
Maxwell lowered the
Field. He was a fresh-coloured blond youth of not more
than twenty-five or six-very young for the post he held. With his
heavy limbs and thick white eyelashes he reminded one of a
cart-horse colt. Ellis nipped the notice from the board with a
neat, spiteful little movement and began reading it aloud. It had
been posted by Mr Macgregor, who, besides being Deputy
Commissioner, was secretary of the Club.
'Just listen to this. "It has been suggested that as there are
as yet no Oriental members of this club, and as it is now usual to
admit officials of gazetted rank, whether native or European, to
membership of most European Clubs, we should consider the question
of following this practice in Kyauktada. The matter will be open
for discussion at the next general meeting. On the one hand it may
be pointed out"-oh, well, no need to wade through the rest of it.
He can't even write a notice without an attack of literary
diarrhoea. Anyway, the point's this. He's asking us to break all
our rules and take a dear little nigger-boy into this Club.
Dear Dr Veraswami, for instance. Dr Very-slimy, I call
him. That
would be a treat, wouldn't it? Little pot-bellied niggers
breathing garlic in your face over the bridge-table. Christ, to
think of it! We've got to hang together and put our foot down on
this at once. What do you say, Westfield? Flory?'
Westfield shrugged his thin shoulders philosophically. He had
sat down at the table and lighted a black, stinking Burma
cheroot.
'Got to put up with it, I suppose,' he said. 'B-s of natives are
getting into all the Clubs nowadays. Even the Pegu Club, I'm told.
Way this country's going, you know. We're about the last Club in
Burma to hold out against 'em.'
'We are; and what's more, we're damn well going to go on holding
out. I'll die in the ditch before I'll see a nigger in here.' Ellis
had produced a stump of pencil. With the curious air of spite that
some men can put into their tiniest action, he re-pinned the notice
on the board and pencilled a tiny, neat 'B.F.' against Mr
Macgregor's signature-'There, that's what I think of his idea. I'll
tell him so when he comes down. What do
you say, Flory?'
Flory had not spoken all this time. Though by nature anything
but a silent man, he seldom found much to say in Club
conversations. He had sat down at the table and was reading G.K.
Chesterton's article in the
London News, at the same time caressing Flo's head with
his left hand. Ellis, however, was one of those people who
constantly nag others to echo their own opinions. He repeated his
question, and Flory looked up, and their eyes met. The skin round
Ellis's nose suddenly turned so pale that it was almost grey. In
him it was a sign of anger. Without any prelude he burst into a
stream of abuse that would have been startling, if the others had
not been used to hearing something like it every morning.
'My God, I should have thought in a case like this, when it's a
question of keeping those black, stinking swine out of the only
place where we can enjoy ourselves, you'd have the decency to back
me up. Even if that pot-bellied greasy little sod of a nigger
doctor
is your best pal.
I don't care if you choose to pal up with the scum of the
bazaar. If it pleases you to go to Veraswami's house and drink
whisky with all his nigger pals, that's your look-out. Do what you
like outside the Club. But, by God, it's a different matter when
you talk of bringing niggers in here. I suppose you'd like little
Veraswami for a Club member, eh? Chipping into our conversation and
pawing everyone with his sweaty hands and breathing his filthy
garlic breath in our faces. By god, he'd go out with my boot behind
him if ever I saw his black snout inside that door. Greasy,
pot-bellied little-!' etc.
This went on for several minutes. It was curiously impressive,
because it was so completely sincere. Ellis really did hate
Orientals-hated them with a bitter, restless loathing as of
something evil or unclean. Living and working, as the assistant of
a timber firm must, in perpetual contact with the Burmese, he had
never grown used to the sight of a black face. Any hint of friendly
feeling towards an Oriental seemed to him a horrible perversity. He
was an intelligent man and an able servant of his firm, but he was
one of those Englishmen-common, unfortunately-who should never be
allowed to set foot in the East.
Flory sat nursing Flo's head in his lap, unable to meet Ellis's
eyes. At the best of times his birthmark made it difficult for him
to look people straight in the face. And when he made ready to
speak, he could feel his voice trembling-for it had a way of
trembling when it should have been firm; his features, too,
sometimes twitched uncontrollably.
'Steady on,' he said at last, sullenly and rather feebly.
'Steady on. There's no need to get so excited.
I never suggested having any native members in here.'
'Oh, didn't you? We all know bloody well you'd like to, though.
Why else do you go to that oily little babu's house every morning,
then? Sitting down at table with him as though he was a white man,
and drinking out of glasses his filthy black lips have slobbered
over-it makes me spew to think of it.'
'Sit down, old chap, sit down,' Westfield said. 'Forget it. Have
a drink on it. Not worth while quarrelling. Too hot.'
'My God,' said Ellis a little more calmly, taking a pace or two
up and down, 'my God, I don't understand you chaps. I simply don't.
Here's that old fool Macgregor wanting to bring a nigger into this
Club for no reason whatever, and you all sit down under it without
a word. Good God, what are we supposed to be doing in this country?
If we aren't going to rule, why the devil don't we clear out? Here
we are, supposed to be governing a set of damn black swine who've
been slaves since the beginning of history, and instead of ruling
them in the only way they understand, we go and treat them as
equals. And you silly b-s take it for granted. There's Flory, makes
his best pal a black babu who calls himself a doctor because he's
done two years at an Indian so-called university. And you,
Westfield, proud as Punch of your knock-kneed, bribe-taking cowards
of policemen. And there's Maxwell, spends his time running after
Eurasian tarts. Yes, you do, Maxwell; I heard about your goings-on
in Mandalay with some smelly little bitch called Molly Pereira. I
suppose you'd have gone and married her if they hadn't transferred
you up here? You all seem to
like the dirty black brutes. Christ, I don't know what's
come over us all. I really don't.'
'Come on, have another drink,' said Westfield. 'Hey, butler!
Spot of beer before the ice goes, eh? Beer, butler!'
The butler brought some bottles of Munich beer. Ellis presently
sat down at the table with the others, and he nursed one of the
cool bottles between his small hands. His forehead was sweating. He
was sulky, but not in a rage any longer. At all times he was
spiteful and perverse, but his violent fits of rage were soon over,
and were never apologized for. Quarrels were a regular part of the
routine of Club life. Mr Lackersteen was feeling better and was
studying the illustrations in
La Vie Parisienne. It was after nine now, and the room,
scented with the acrid smoke of Westfield's cheroot, was stifling
hot. Everyone's shirt stuck to his back with the first sweat of the
day. The invisible
chokra who pulled the punkah rope outside was falling
asleep in the glare.
'Butler!' yelled Ellis, and as the butler appeared, 'go and wake
that bloody
chokra up!'
'Yes, master.'
'And butler!'
'Yes, master?'
'How much ice have we got left?'
''Bout twenty pounds, master. Will only last today, I think. I
find it very difficult to keep ice cool now.'
'Don't talk like that, damn you-"I find it very difficult!" Have
you swallowed a dictionary? "Please, master, can't keeping ice
cool"-that's how you ought to talk. We shall have to sack this
fellow if he gets to talk English too well. I can't stick servants
who talk English. D'you hear, butler?'
'Yes, master,' said the butler, and retired.
'God! No ice till Monday,' Westfield said. 'You going back to
the jungle, Flory?'
'Yes. I ought to be there now. I only came in because of the
English mail.'
'Go on tour myself, I think. Knock up a spot of Travelling
Allowance. I can't stick my bloody office at this time of year.
Sitting there under the damned punkah, signing one chit after
another. Paper-chewing. God, how I wish the war was on again!'
'I'm going out the day after tomorrow,' Ellis said. 'Isn't that
damned padre coming to hold his service this Sunday? I'll take care
not to be in for that, anyway. Bloody knee-drill.'
'Next Sunday,' said Westfield. 'Promised to be in for it myself.
So's Macgregor. Bit hard on the poor devil of a padre, I must say.
Only gets here once in six weeks. Might as well get up a
congregation when he does come.'
'Oh, hell! I'd snivel psalms to oblige the padre, but I can't
stick the way these damned native Christians come shoving into our
church. A pack of Madrassi servants and Karen school-teachers. And
then those two yellow-bellies, Francis and Samuel-they call
themselves Christians too. Last time the padre was here they had
the nerve to come up and sit on the front pews with the white men.
Someone ought to speak to the padre about that. What bloody fools
we were ever to let those missionaries loose in this country!
Teaching bazaar sweepers they're as good as we are. "Please, sir,
me Christian same like master." Damned cheek.'
'How about that for a pair of legs?' said Mr Lackersteen,
passing
La Vie Parisienne across. 'You know French, Flory; what's
that mean underneath? Christ, it reminds me of when I was in Paris,
my first leave, before I married. Christ, I wish I was there
again!'
'Did you hear that one about "There was a young lady of
Woking"?' Maxwell said. He was rather a silent youth, but, like
other youths, he had an affection for a good smutty rhyme. He
completed the biography of the young lady of Woking, and there was
a laugh. Westfield replied with the young lady of Ealing who had a
peculiar feeling, and Flory came in with the young curate of
Horsham who always took every precaution. There was more laughter.
Even Ellis thawed and produced several rhymes; Ellis's jokes were
always genuinely witty, and yet filthy beyond measure. Everyone
cheered up and felt more friendly in spite of the heat. They had
finished the beer and were just going to call for another drink,
when shoes creaked on the steps outside. A booming voice, which
made the floorboards tingle, was saying jocosely:
'Yes, most distinctly humorous. I incorporated it in one of
those little articles of mine in
Blackwood's, you know. I remember, too, when I was
stationed at Prome, another quite-ah-diverting incident which-'
Evidently Mr Macgregor had arrived at the Club. Mr Lackersteen
exclaimed, 'Hell! My wife's there,' and pushed his empty glass as
far away from him as it would go. Mr Macgregor and Mrs Lackersteen
entered the lounge together.
Mr Macgregor was a large, heavy man, rather past forty, with a
kindly, puggy face, wearing gold-rimmed spectacles. His bulky
shoulders, and a trick he had of thrusting his head forward,
reminded one curiously of a turtle-the Burmans, in fact, nicknamed
him 'the tortoise'. He was dressed in a clean silk suit, which
already showed patches of sweat beneath the armpits. He greeted the
others with a humorous mock-salute, and then planted himself before
the notice-board, beaming, in the attitude of a schoolmaster
twiddling a cane behind his back. The good nature in his face was
quite genuine, and yet there was such a wilful geniality about him,
such a strenuous air of being off duty and forgetting his official
rank, that no one was ever quite at ease in his presence. His
conversation was evidently modelled on that of some facetious
schoolmaster or clergyman whom he had known in early life. Any long
word, any quotation, any proverbial expression figured in his mind
as a joke, and was introduced with a bumbling noise like 'er' or
'ah', to make it clear that there was a joke coming. Mrs
Lackersteen was a woman of about thirty-five, handsome in a
contourless, elongated way, like a fashion plate. She had a
sighing, discontented voice. The others had all stood up when she
entered, and Mrs Lackersteen sank exhaustedly into the best chair
under the punkah, fanning herself with a slender hand like that of
a newt.
'Oh dear, this heat, this heat! Mr Macgregor came and fetched me
in his car.
So kind of him. Tom, that wretch of a rickshaw-man is
pretending to be ill again. Really, I think you ought to give him a
good thrashing and bring him to his senses. It's too terrible to
have to walk about in this sun every day.'
Mrs Lackersteen, unequal to the quarter-mile walk between her
house and the Club, had imported a rickshaw from Rangoon. Except
for bullock-carts and Mr Macgregor's car it was the only wheeled
vehicle in Kyauktada, for the whole district did not possess ten
miles of road. In the jungle, rather than leave her husband alone,
Mrs Lackersteen endured all the horrors of dripping tents,
mosquitoes and tinned food; but she made up for it by complaining
over trifles while in headquarters.
'Really I think the laziness of these servants is getting too
shocking,' she sighed. 'Don't you agree, Mr Macgregor? We seem to
have no
authority over the natives nowadays, with all these
dreadful Reforms, and the insolence they learn from the newspapers.
In some ways they are getting almost as bad as the lower classes at
home.'
'Oh, hardly as bad as that, I trust. Still, I am afraid there is
no doubt that the democratic spirit is creeping in, even here.'
'And such a short time ago, even just before the war, they were
so
nice and respectful! The way they salaamed when you passed
them on the road-it was really quite charming. I remember when we
paid our butler only twelve rupees a month, and really that man
loved us like a dog. And now they are demanding forty and fifty
rupees, and I find that the only way I can even
keep a servant is to pay their wages several months in
arrears.'
'The old type of servant is disappearing,' agreed Mr Macgregor.
'In my young days, when one's butler was disrespectful, one sent
him along to the jail with a chit saying "Please give the bearer
fifteen lashes". Ah well,
eheu fugaces! Those days are gone for ever, I am afraid.'
'Ah, you're about right there,' said Westfield in his gloomy
way. 'This country'll never be fit to live in again. British Raj is
finished if you ask me. Lost Dominion and all that. Time we cleared
out of it.'
Whereat there was a murmur of agreement from everyone in the
room, even from Flory, notoriously a Bolshie in his opinions, even
from young Maxwell, who had been barely three years in the country.
No Anglo-Indian will ever deny that India is going to the dogs, or
ever has denied it-for India, like
Punch, never was what it was.
Ellis had meanwhile unpinned the offending notice from behind Mr
Macgregor's back, and he now held it out to him, saying in his sour
way:
'Here, Macgregor, we've read this notice, and we all think this
idea of electing a native to the Club is absolute-' Ellis was going
to have said 'absolute balls', but he remembered Mrs Lackersteen's
presence and checked himself-'is absolutely uncalled for. After
all, this Club is a place where we come to enjoy ourselves, and we
don't want natives poking about in here. We like to think there's
still one place where we're free of them. The others all agree with
me absolutely.'
He looked round at the others. 'Hear, hear!' said Mr Lackersteen
gruffly. He knew that his wife would guess that he had been
drinking, and he felt that a display of sound sentiment would
excuse him.
Mr Macgregor took the notice with a smile. He saw the 'B.F.'
pencilled against his name, and privately he thought Ellis's manner
very disrespectful, but he turned the matter off with a joke. He
took as great pains to be a good fellow at the Club as he did to
keep up his dignity during office hours. 'I gather,' he said, 'that
our friend Ellis does not welcome the society of-ah-his Aryan
brother?'
'No, I do not,' said Ellis tartly. 'Nor my Mongolian brother. I
don't like niggers, to put it in one word.'
Mr Macgregor stiffened at the word 'nigger', which is
discountenanced in India. He had no prejudice against Orientals;
indeed, he was deeply fond of them. Provided they were given no
freedom he thought them the most charming people alive. It always
pained him to see them wantonly insulted.
'Is it quite playing the game,' he said stiffly, 'to call these
people niggers-a term they very naturally resent-when they are
obviously nothing of the kind? The Burmese are Mongolians, the
Indians are Aryans or Dravidians, and all of them are quite
distinct-'
'Oh, rot that!' said Ellis, who was not at all awed by Mr
Macgregor's official status. 'Call them niggers or Aryans or what
you like. What I'm saying is that we don't want to see any black
hides in this Club. If you put it to the vote you'll find we're
against it to a man-unless Flory wants his
dear pal Veraswami,' he added.
'Hear, hear!' repeated Mr Lackersteen. 'Count on me to blackball
the lot of 'em.'
Mr Macgregor pursed his lips whimsically. He was in an awkward
position, for the idea of electing a native member was not his own,
but had been passed on to him by the Commissioner. However, he
disliked making excuses, so he said in a more conciliatory
tone:
'Shall we postpone discussing it till the next general meeting?
In the meantime we can give it our mature consideration. And now,'
he added, moving towards the table, 'who will join me in a
little-ah- liquid refreshment?'
The butler was called and the 'liquid refreshment' ordered. It
was hotter than ever now, and everyone was thirsty. Mr Lackersteen
was on the point of ordering a drink when he caught his wife's eye,
shrank up and said sulkily 'No.' He sat with his hands on his
knees, with a rather pathetic expression, watching Mrs Lackersteen
swallow a glass of lemonade with gin in it. Mr Macgregor, though he
signed the chit for drinks, drank plain lemonade. Alone of the
Europeans in Kyauktada, he kept the rule of not drinking before
sunset.
'It's all very well,' grumbled Ellis, with his forearms on the
table, fidgeting with his glass. The dispute with Mr Macgregor had
made him restless again. 'It's all very well, but I stick to what I
said. No natives in this Club! It's by constantly giving way over
small things like that that we've ruined the Empire. The country's
only rotten with sedition because we've been too soft with them.
The only possible policy is to treat 'em like the dirt they are.
This is a critical moment, and we want every bit of prestige we can
get. We've got to hang together and say, "
We are the masters, and you beggars-"' Ellis pressed his
small thumb down as though flattening a grub-'"you beggars keep
your place!"'
'Hopeless, old chap,' said Westfield. 'Quite hopeless. What can
you do with all this red tape tying your hands? Beggars of natives
know the law better than we do. Insult you to your face and then
run you in the moment you hit 'em. Can't do anything unless you put
your foot down firmly. And how can you, if they haven't the guts to
show fight?'
'Our burra sahib at Mandalay always said,' put in Mrs
Lackersteen, 'that in the end we shall simply
leave India. Young men will not come out here any longer
to work all their lives for insults and ingratitude. We shall just
go. When the natives come to us begging us to stay, we
shall say, "No, you have had your chance, you wouldn't take it.
Very well, we shall leave you to govern yourselves." And then, what
a lesson that will teach them!'
'It's all this law and order that's done for us,' said Westfield
gloomily. The ruin of the Indian Empire through too much legality
was a recurrent theme with Westfield. According to him, nothing
save a full-sized rebellion, and the consequent reign of martial
law, could save the Empire from decay. 'All this paper-chewing and
chit-passing. Office babus are the real rulers of this country now.
Our number's up. Best thing we can do is to shut up shop and let
'em stew in their own juice.'
'I don't agree, I simply don't agree,' Ellis said. 'We could put
things right in a month if we chose. It only needs a pennyworth of
pluck. Look at Amritsar. Look how they caved in after that. Dyer
knew the stuff to give them. Poor old Dyer! That was a dirty job.
Those cowards in England have got something to answer for.'
There was a kind of sigh from the others, the same sigh that a
gathering of Roman Catholics will give at the mention of Bloody
Mary. Even Mr Macgregor, who detested bloodshed and martial law,
shook his head at the name of Dyer.
'Ah, poor man! Sacrificed to the Paget M.P.s. Well, perhaps they
will discover their mistake when it is too late.'
'My old governor used to tell a story about that,' said
Westfield. 'There was an old havildar in a native regiment-someone
asked him what'd happen if the British left India. The old chap
said-'
Flory pushed back his chair and stood up. It must not, it could
not-no, it simply should not go on any longer! He must get out of
this room quickly, before something happened inside his head and he
began to smash the furniture and throw bottles at the pictures.
Dull boozing witless porkers! Was it possible that they could go on
week after week, year after year, repeating word for word the same
evil-minded drivel, like a parody of a fifth-rate story in
Blackwood's? Would none of them
ever think of anything new to say? Oh, what a place, what
people! What a civilization is this of ours-this godless
civilization founded on whisky,
Blackwood's and the 'Bonzo' pictures! God have mercy on
us, for all of us are part of it.
Flory did not say any of this, and he was at some pains not to
show it in his face. He was standing by his chair, a little
sidelong to the others, with the half-smile of a man who is never
sure of his popularity.
'I'm afraid I shall have to be off,' he said. 'I've got some
things to see to before breakfast, unfortunately.'
'Stay and have another spot, old man,' said Westfield.
'Morning's young. Have a gin. Give you an appetite.'
'No, thanks, I must be going. Come on, Flo. Good-bye, Mrs
Lackersteen. Good-bye, everybody.'
'Exit Booker Washington, the niggers' pal,' said Ellis as Flory
disappeared. Ellis could always be counted on to say something
disagreeable about anyone who had just left the room. 'Gone to see
Very-slimy, I suppose. Or else sloped off to avoid paying a round
of drinks.'
'Oh, he's not a bad chap,' Westfield said. 'Says some Bolshie
things sometimes. Don't suppose he means half of them.'
'Oh, a very good fellow, of course,' said Mr Macgregor. Every
European in India is ex-officio, or rather ex-colore, a good
fellow, until he has done something quite outrageous. It is an
honorary rank.
'He's a bit
too Bolshie for my taste. I can't bear a fellow who pals
up with the natives. I shouldn't wonder if he's got a lick of the
tar-brush himself. It might explain that black mark on his face.
Piebald. And he looks like a yellow-belly, with that black hair,
and skin the colour of a lemon.'
There was some desultory scandal about Flory, but not much,
because Mr Macgregor did not like scandal. The Europeans stayed in
the Club long enough for one more round of drinks. Mr Macgregor
told his anecdote about Prome, which could be produced in almost
any context. And then the conversation veered back to the old,
never- palling subject-the insolence of the natives, the supineness
of the Government, the dear dead days when the British Raj
was the British Raj and please give the bearer fifteen
lashes. This topic was never let alone for long, partly because of
Ellis's obsession. Besides, you could forgive the Europeans a great
deal of their bitterness. Living and working among Orientals would
try the temper of a saint. And all of them, the officials
particularly, knew what it was to be baited and insulted. Almost
every day, when Westfield or Mr Macgregor or even Maxwell went down
the street, the High School boys, with their young, yellow
faces-faces smooth as gold coins, full of that maddening contempt
that sits so naturally on the Mongolian face-sneered at them as
they went past, sometimes hooted after them with hyena-like
laughter. The life of the Anglo- Indian officials is not all jam.
In comfortless camps, in sweltering offices, in gloomy dakbungalows
smelling of dust and earth-oil, they earn, perhaps, the right to be
a little disagreeable.
It was getting on for ten now, and hot beyond bearing. Flat,
clear drops of sweat gathered on everyone's face, and on the men's
bare forearms. A damp patch was growing larger and larger in the
back of Mr Macgregor's silk coat. The glare outside seemed to soak
somehow through the green-chicked windows, making one's eyes ache
and filling one's head with stuffiness. Everyone thought with
malaise of his stodgy breakfast, and of the long, deadly hours that
were coming. Mr Macgregor stood up with a sigh and adjusted his
spectacles, which had slipped down his sweating nose.
'Alas that such a festive gathering should end,' he said. 'I
must get home to breakfast. The cares of Empire. Is anybody coming
my way? My man is waiting with the car.'
'Oh, thank you,' said Mrs Lackersteen; 'if you'd take Tom and
me. What a relief not to have to walk in this heat!'
The others stood up. Westfield stretched his arms and yawned
through his nose. 'Better get a move on, I suppose. Go to sleep if
I sit here any longer. Think of stewing in that office all day!
Baskets of papers. Oh Lord!'
'Don't forget tennis this evening, everyone,' said Ellis.
'Maxwell, you lazy devil, don't you skulk out of it again. Down
here with your racquet at four-thirty sharp.'
'
Apr?s vous, madame,' said Mr Macgregor gallantly, at the
door.
'Lead on, Macduff,' said Westfield.
They went out into the glaring white sunlight. The heat rolled
from the earth like the breath of an oven. The flowers, oppressive
to the eyes, blazed with not a petal stirring, in a debauch of sun.
The glare sent a weariness through one's bones. There was something
horrible in it-horrible to think of that blue, blinding sky,
stretching on and on over Burma and India, over Siam, Cambodia,
China, cloudless and interminable. The plates of Mr Macgregor's
waiting car were too hot to touch. The evil time of day was
beginning, the time, as the Burmese say, 'when feet are silent'.
Hardly a living creature stirred, except men, and the black columns
of ants, stimulated by the heat, which marched ribbon-like across
the path, and the tail-less vultures which soared on the currents
of the air.