Keep it up, Kilroy
Syed Shamsul Haq
Translated by: The Author
Published by: Mazibar Rahman Khoka
Biddya Prokash, 38/4 Bangla Bazar, Dhaka.
First Edition: February 2001
Yesterday 1946 Burdwan, India
Ominous dusk sinking down over the fields. Not a sound
to be heard. And darkness gluing to his feet, as he
walked. Yet on he went. Holding tight to Hasnu's hand.
Determined to reach home. Before night finally fell.
'Isn't there someone following us?' he asked, once more
looking back.
'Why no,' she said, 'I don't see anyone.'
True.
Again, there was no one there. Yet still he could not
dispel the feeling of being followed. As if an arm were
reaching out from the gathering darkness to grab at
them.
Suddenly he hauled Hasnu into a thicket by a bridge
'What the..' she gasped.
'Sh!' he hissed, pushing her face-down into the bushes.
Instantly the mosquitoes were at them. Stingingly. They
grit their teeth and bore it. Not making a sound.
Below water lapped at the bridge columns. Sounding like
ripples of applause in a half-empty theatre.
Then the voices came. Well, not voices really. Just
breathing. Two of them. From the far side. One sounding,
as if he were freezing. His teeth chattering. And
occasionally an eerie, whimpery laugh issuing from his
frightened throat.
What on earth were they doing?
Babar's ears pricked.
Hasnu's eyes were on him. Her face pale with fright in
the dim glow of the stars.
'Brother?'
'Sh!'
His hand clapped over her mouth. His ears pricked
towards the sounds on the far bank.
Down his spine suddenly and swiftly tiptoed an icy
wateriness, and at once gooey warmth bathed his crotch.
'Out with it, bastard!' a rattling hiss from the far
bank. 'Which are you? Hindu or Muslim?' The only reply
that whimpery laugh.
'Out with it now!' Hissing Rattle roared ominously.
'No, no!' gasped Whimpery Laugh 'Quiet!' Hissing Rattle
roared again. 'You little bastard'! 'No, Baba, no!'
Whimpery Laugh pleaded. 'Please, don't. I've a wife at
home.
Screams tore through the darkness. Quickly stifled
though. Then a grunt. Like coolies make. Putting down a
heavy sack. Then another grunt. And another.
Then total silence.
Already Babar had hauled Hasnu to her feet. And was
about to dash for it. When suddenly there was the man.
In front of him. Gore glistening on his long knife. And
an amulet glittering at his at his throat.
No time to notice more.
All he remembered was the pounding of his heart. In that
helter-skelter dash. For dear life. Across the fields.
And Hasnu's wail. Pursuing him. Piercingly:
'Bro-the-e-e-er!'
1
Babar didn't have much difficulty in finding the
bungalow.
'Why it's you!' Kazi Saheb exclaimed, finding him
standing there on the doorstep and welcoming him in.
'When did you get here? How did you come?'
'By road. I drove up from Dhaka. Mymensingh isn't all
that far, you know.' Then, thinking some explanation
called for, Babar adder, 'I had some business up this
way.'
'Oh, that can wait,' Kazi Saheb insisted. 'You must rest
a bit first. It's ages since I last saw you. We've a lot
to catch up on.'
'I've already seen to it. I was thinking of getting back
to Dhaka tonight though.'
'If I let you. Can't you go back tomorrow?'
'Tomorrow?'
'Yes. There's nothing to stop you staying the night, is
there?'
'Well, no. Not if you're sure it's all right.'
'Of course, it is. We've got a spare bed. All it needs
is making up. Would you excuse me a minute? I'll just
let them know you've come. Would you like a cigarette?
Though I don't suppose this brand is up to your mark, is
it? I could send out for others, though.'
'Goodness, no. I wouldn't hear of it.'
'You will excuse me a moment though, won't you? What can
I offer you to drink? Tea? Coffee? We have both.'
'Tea, please.'
Kazi Saheb passed into the interior of the bungalow.
Babar lolled back and stretched his legs. The driving
for hours at a stretch had made them go almost numb. The
roots of his hair were aching, too. Presumably a few
more had gone grey. He wasn't getting any younger.
Thirty-eight last March. And his hair was beginning to
fall out. Falling back from his forehead like a defeated
army. 'You be careful, sir,' Kalam, the TV makeup man
had told him only last week. 'We won't be able to hide
it much longer, you know, penciling round the roots like
this.'
The TV show had gone well though. Everyone had praised
it. He'd even got some write-ups in the press.
Had Latifa seen it? He wondered.
Goodness, how stupid of him! He'd only just noticed the
set. It was there in the cool, dark corner of the room.
Its two front legs splayed out before it. Latifa was
bound to have watched it, then.
Latifa was now standing at the door. Watching him.
Dressed in black slacks and a white chemise with a black
and green border. Her beautiful, young breasts, almost
imperceptible, rising and falling.
He gave her a silent smile.
She didn't return it.
Which was a bit disconcerting.
She just stood there, staring at him, her large eyes
fully opened.
'Go and fetch the tea things,' Kazi Saheb told her,
coming back in.
She went away.
'Well, you won't be going back today, 'Kazi Saheb told
Babar, pulling up a chair and flopping into it. 'And
it's doubtful whether we'll let you go tomorrow,
either.'
'Now that could be very awkward.'
'Oh, come. You're not tied to office hours like the rest
of us.'
'Well, no. That's true.'
'You're well away. I sometimes watch your show on TV. I
enjoy it very much. It's wonderful.'
'Thank you.,
'Do you depend entirely on TV? Or, do you have
aside-line?'
'I'm in business.'
'What kind?'
'Indenting.'
'I'm thinking of going into business myself, when I
retire. My eldest's still a lieutenant in the Army. Then
there's Latifa. And once she's married off, there's
another son to be seen to.'
'Then, your worries are virtually over. You've manages
well.'
'Not really. How many children have you got?'
Babar was surprised he didn't know he was still single.
Latifa had once come to do a College student program.
That's how they'd met. Kazi Saheb had been in Dhaka
then. Not having been transferred to Mymensingh till
later. Babar had become a frequent visitor to their home
in Dhaka. He'd even dined with them a couple of times.
No, now he came to think of it, nothing had been said of
his private life. Kazi Saheb had simply assumed he was
married, seeing he was now pushing forty.
'I've two children,' he lied.
'Yet Latifa was saying you had three.'
Naughty girl! Babar thought. See, how she's lied to him!
'She was mistaken,' he said. 'I've a boy and a boy and a
girl.'
'She's a great admirer of yours. Says they don't come
any better than Uncle Babar.'
'She exaggerates.'
'Come. People like you excite respect. I've always
taught her to give credit where it's due. She may be
only seventeen, but in brains and discernment she can
bear comparison with anyone.'
'Quite. She took her Intermediate this year, didn't
she?'
'Yes. I had thought of letting her stay on for her B.
A.'
'Have you had a change of plans?'
'We've received a proposal of marriage for her.'
'You're marrying her off!' Babar's surprise showed in
his voice.
Was that why she'd left Dhaka without letting him know?
And there he'd come all this way, just to find out why
she'd suddenly disappeared like that! And at
considerable risk, too. What if Kazi Saheb hadn't been
friendly? Or, had smelt a rat? And what if Latifa
herself had been difficult?
She now came in with the tea. And a few hot snacks.
'How are you, Uncle Babar?' she asked, her face
shimmering with loveliness.
She busied herself with the tea things. And her head
tilted to one side. The way it always did. Once she gave
her mind to something. It was a very familiar mannerism.
'Oh, I'm fine. And you?'
'Okay. How much sugar do you take?'
This little deception pleased him. She knew how much he
took.
'One spoon. Yes, that'll do.'
'And how much for you, Father?'
'You don't live here, I suppose. You, know very well, I
don't take any.'
'Oh, I forgot.'
'You know, Babar Saheb,' Kazi Saheb remarked,
contentedly sipping at his tea, 'I'm very fond of this
daughter of mine.'
'You talk as if you had another half dozen,' Latifa
teased him.
'Aren't you having any, Latifa?' Babar asked.
'No, I've just had lunch.
'At four in the afternoon!'
'It's useless talking to her,' her father sighed. 'She
doesn't take a blind bit of notice. She's just spent the
better part of the afternoon sloshing water over herself
in the bathroom.'
'Oh, come on, Father!'
'Well, didn't you?'
'Oh, you tell him, Uncle Babar. It takes time to shampoo
one's hair, now doesn't it? Father doesn't understand.'
'But you could catch cold. And that could lead to a
fever,' Babar said.
'I never have fever.'
'Oh, come on!'
'But I don't. You ask, Father.'
'Why, you had it once eating that basket of unripe
mangoes. That doesn't count, I suppose?'
'I'm not used to the heat in the wild. It gave me a
slight temperature.
Kazi Saheb exploded with laughter. 'None of us can ever
get the better of her in an argument,' he said.
'Cause I tell the plain truth. That's why.'
Babar detected a slight edge to her tone. A slight
vehemence. He wondered, why? And who it was intended
for?
His mind had drifted. The clink of tea-cups revived him.
Latifa was clearing away.
'Coming home has done you good,' he complimented her.
'You must be joking.'
'What would you know about it?' Kazi Saheb laughingly
reproved her. 'She wasn't eating properly at that
hostel, you know, Babar Saheb. Even now, it's the
devil's own job to get any meat down her.'
'You want to feed me up like an elephant.'
'That's all she says morning and night. Turning her nose
up at good food. I ask you, is she overweight?'
'Not in the least.'
'You must have glass eyes, the pair of you,' Latifa
laughed. She took the tray and left. Her bottom swung
like a soft, white animal's. Yes, coming home to
Mymensingh had done her the world of good. It had put
colour in her cheeks. And given her figure a new
lithesomeness.
'She's a delightful girl,' Babar commented, when she'd
gone. 'Unusually intelligent. And extremely
level-headed. She should have read science. She'd have
made a good doctor.'
'Her maths let her down badly though.'
'Really?'
'She only got forty in her school final. Besides, you
know, I saw early on she'd never make much of her
studies.'
'No,' Kazi Saheb continued, 'I'm just giving her enough
education to make her a good housewife. Able to cope in
any situation.'
'That's point of view, of course. But I don't subscribe
to it.'
Kazi Saheb had been doing a lot of laughing. His
laughter now grew more pronounced. Babar sensed he
wanted to tell him something. He gazed at him
expectantly.
'Why, you're not smoking!' Kazi Saheb proffered his own
brand. 'I sent out for yours.'
'You shouldn't have troubled.'
'But it's a pleasure. I'm so delighted you've come. I'd
been thinking of you lately. Your visit couldn't have
been more timely.'
Babar was just about to learn why, when Kazi Saheb's
wife came in. 'Good afternoon', Babar greeted her,
rising respectfully. 'How are you?'
'Very well, thanks. Do sit down. Are your children
alright?'
'As well as ever.'
Babar was a bit uneasy about his lie. But there was no
longer any way of telling them he was unmarried.
'I sometimes watch you on T. V.,' she said, smiling.
'That's one of the blessings of science. One somehow
manages to put in an appearance, even when unable to
visit in person.'
They both thoroughly enjoyed his little jest.
'You are going to stay, aren't you?'
'I've already told Kazi Bahi so.'
Kazi Saheb was pleased and honoured at being referred to
as Babar's 'bother.'
'I'd be truly delighted if you stayed a few days,' he
said.
'Then, I might next time.'
'The house'll be empty then.' Kazi Saheb sounded quite
sad.
Babar didn't follow.
'How d'you mean?' he asked.
'We're marrying Latifa off, you see.'
Babar couldn't believe his ears. 'When's it to be?' He
asked, woodenly.
'The date isn't fixed. But very soon. She's betrothed.'
'What does her fiancé do?'
'He's leaving for England this year to study chartered
accountancy. He's taking Latifa with him.'
Then her long-cherished dream of going to England would
come true, Babar thought. But he made no comment.
'Her fiance's a nephew of mine,' Mrs Kazi added. 'He was
very taken with Latifa. I wanted her to go on studying.
He said, getting married wouldn't sand in her way.
There'd be even better facilities in England for it.'
'Quite.'
Part of his mind had become quite depressed. Yet why?
Wasn't she ever to marry? The time he'd teased her about
it. About how he'd visit her, afterwards. What would she
give him to eat? Would she insist on his staying with
them? What would she introduce him to her husband as?
And so forth. And now here she was betrothed. And he'd
not been told. Was that why she'd left Dhaka without a
word? She'd not even breathed a word about it at their
last date in Dhaka. And there she'd always said, she
never kept secrets from him.
'It's getting dark,' Mrs Kazi said. 'I'd better see to
supper.' 'Mind, you make something special, darling.'
'I don't need reminding, dear. I realize how lucky we
are in having him visit us.'
'Oh, come now!' Babar made a show of modesty.
'Good gracious me! You're such a celebrated T. V.
personality. Your Puzzlers' Corner is so enjoyable!
People just don't believe it when we say you're a friend
of ours.'
'They think we're having them on,' Kazi Saheb added.
'By the way,' Mrs Kazi said, turning to her husband.
'He's an artist. Why don't you show him the designs for
Latifa's jewellery?' She turned to Babar. 'You wouldn't
mind picking out a few for us, would you? I'll send you
the catalogue.'
Babar didn't write poetry, or prose. He didn't paint, or
sing. He just presented Puzzlers' Corner on T. V. Yet
they called him an artist. He smiled to himself. He'd
never had any unreasonably high opinion of himself. Yet
somehow he did feel pleased at being called an artist.
'Yes. You send it No. On second thoughts. I'll come and
fetch it myself.'
Kazi Saheb accompanied his wife into the interior of the
bungalow.
Babar frowned. What was Latifa up to, alone in there?
Why didn't she come to him? Was she avoiding him? Had
his coming annoyed her? Could that explain the vehemence
in her tone? She had certainly been irritated with her
father for being so friendly with him. He wished he
could have seen her alone. He could have asked her, what
had made her suddenly high-tail it out of Dhaka like
that? And why she'd broken that last date? He'd sat
waiting for her all day. With the curtains drawn. And
the tape recorder playing.
Wating for her like this was intolerable. Where'd she
got to, after just popping in here for a short while
like that? Somehow he hadn't been able to ask Kazi Saheb,
or to get him to send for her. He felt guilty enough, as
it was. Fearing one of them might realize he'd come to
Mymensingh only to inquire about Latifa....