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    Rigby Taylor
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Frankie Fey - 29. Kolkata

Shiv, still in his hated sari, kept up easily despite his thin sandals. By unspoken agreement he and Frankie pretended not to be interested in each other. Only the fat Englishman puffed and grunted like a stuck pig most of the way and began to lag behind. But by the time the bags were tied firmly on the roof of the waiting Jeep, he staggered across and collapsed onto the front passenger seat. The porters were paid and disappeared. Then Michael and Lu sat on the comfortable rear seats while Frankie and Shiv perched on the hard jump seats with little leg room and nothing to hold on to as they bounced, twisted, and swayed back to Lachung, over passes, down into valleys, zigzagging across ridges then along the valley to bypass Gangtok, followed by more zigzags down hill at what seemed breakneck speed until the road became straighter and smoother and they made up time, arriving just after midnight at Bagdogra airport.

The driver, who had not spoken a word the entire trip, continued about half a kilometre past the main airport building, then unloaded the gear near a neatly painted hangar and office; the terminal of “Three Brothers Airline” according to an elaborately painted sign. He drove away and two porters loaded the luggage into a small commercial jet that would take them to Kolkata. But not for three more hours. The pilot had to wait for a parcel. One of the porters ran back to the main building, returning with tea and fried pastries filled with vegetables that they downed like starving men.

The parcel arrived; they boarded the plane and zipped into the air like a leaf in the wind. Day was breaking as they flew over Kolkata. Frankie peered out the window, astonished to see that as well as the great Hooghly River there were also vast sheets of water to the east of the enormous city. Lakes and ponds seemingly everywhere. Michael, who was looking more cheerful than earlier, explained they were sewage treatment and fish farms. The city was huge, flowing over both sides of the river, yet within it there seemed to be almost as much wild land as urban. And it was so flat.

‘Kolkata was built on what was pretty much a swamp,’ Michael explained. ‘So it’s hot and sweaty during monsoons. And when the seas rise it’ll probably go under, like half the other ports on the planet.’

An enormous white ‘V’ appeared below.

‘That's the airport. Fasten seatbelts everyone.’

They taxied past the modern structure to a slightly more elegant version of the “Three Brothers Airline” office, and while everyone else was unloading, Algy phoned for transport. The air was pleasantly warm and dry. After the freezing winds of Sankturi, Frankie felt himself relax for what seemed the first time for weeks. He was definitely not a cold climate man.

Two expensively inconspicuous cars arrived. Algy accompanied the luggage, including Frankie’s satchel, in one car, and Shiv and Frankie again had the jump seats facing their opponents, as Frankie was starting to think of them. Would he ever see his satchel again? He tried to read road names, but only managed Jessore Road that went on for several kilometres. To the west he saw the top of a bridge before a left turn into Mahatma Ghandi Road and then right again and then left and right several times through narrower streets until he had no idea which way the river was or even the direction they'd come from.

The car stopped on a pleasant road lined with shade trees, in front of a large, colonial style building of four stories with dull yellow walls, arched windows framed in white, narrow columns each side of the main door, and a fake balustrade across the front of the roofline. It looked neat, well maintained, and according to an elegantly painted panel, was the Kool Kat Klub.

‘Where are we?’ Shiv asked suspiciously as everyone got out.

‘Old Kolkata. One of our nightclubs.’ Michael pushed open the heavy wooden doors and they entered an elegant, marble-floored foyer with dark wood panelling, an ornate polished desk, a chandelier, and paintings on the walls. A handsome, greying Indian greeted his bosses with a deep bow and apparently sincere Namaste.

‘I am very pleased you have both returned safely, Mr. Michael and Mr. Lu. Allow me to be of great service.’

‘Thanks, Arnold,’ Lu said abruptly. ‘We’re glad to be back, but we haven't eaten properly for days. Give us half an hour to spruce up and then something tasty to eat.’

‘Yes sir. Certainly sir.’

‘Through here.’

Shiv and Frankie were herded through double doors into a larger vestibule with a wide curved staircase leading up into shadows. Lu opened another set of double doors for them to admire a reconstruction of a classic nightclub from American movies of the nineteen fifties. A small stage at one end for the orchestra and performers, a dance floor surrounded by tables and chairs, and a bar at the back. It was elegant, pleasant, and looked pricey. ‘This is the mixed nightclub.’

‘Very chic.’

With a terse nod Michael bundled them upstairs to a similar room. ‘This is the Male-only clubroom. In India men do not feel obliged to spend every waking minute that they're not working with their wives. Here they're entertained by more… shall we say esoteric songs, dances and… other entertainment.’

Neither young man felt the urge to comment, so they were herded up to the next floor where, instead of a theatre they were confronted by what looked like a Turkish Bathhouse, decorated in the style of an Arabian Nights fantasy with arches, domed ceiling, niches, fretwork. The dressing room was sumptuous. The washroom, steam room, large pool, massage room attractively practical. Private relaxing/massage rooms down a short corridor were comfortable and dim.

‘The Turkish Bath is very popular. The boys who offer erotic massage earn big bucks.’

‘Why are you showing us this?’

‘Just filling in time until your stuff arrives.’

This time they were almost shoved up the stairs.

‘This is the top floor where staff sleep if they're required to remain on deck for twenty-four hours.’

‘Where are the staff now? The place is empty apart from Arnold.’

‘We open from seven in the evening till three in the morning. Staff come on at five o'clock to prepare everything. Arnold guards the door and fields questions, and Ali is usually in the kitchen making food and keeping everything in order. Take a look at the rooms, then we’ll go down and eat.’

A narrow corridor that ran along the street side of the building, gave access to six rooms. At Lu’s encouragement, Shiv peered into the first room only to be shoved further in and have the door slammed and locked behind him. Frankie turned to run back, but was blocked by Michael who slammed a fist into the side of his head, stunning him, then he and Lu dragged him to the next room and tossed him inside. Frankie shouted, but heard only laughter as they walked away.

A sharp pain bored into his brain at the spot where he’d been knuckled. He tried the door. Deadlocked. He went to the windows, threw wide the drapes and stared out in dismay. Solid bars did not prevent the windows being opened, but not even a cat could get through them. Even if it did, it was a vertical drop of four storeys to a concreted parking area. He opened the only internal door. A bathroom with a small window above head height.

He stopped, took a dozen deep breaths to slow his heartbeat, then gazed slowly around, unthinking, letting his brain observe and understand. The washbasin was porcelain and securely attached to the small vanity unit. In the cupboard beneath, nothing but a large rubber suction cup. The drains must have been blocked recently. It had a short plastic handle. No use as a weapon. Pipes were all concealed. A toothbrush holder and small plastic beaker. Showerhead securely bolted. Mirror glued to the wall. And then it clicked. The bathroom probably shared the wall with Shiv’s bathroom so they could share the plumbing. He tapped on the wall. No response. He banged the handle of the suction cup on the taps and waited. Three short sharp taps replied. He repeated them, and so did Shiv. Why hadn't he learned Morse code!

A phone rang in the bedroom. He raced back. Where the fuck was it. He gazed around in panic. They mustn't come up. Ah! Beside the bed a slim handset. He pressed receive. ‘Yes?’

‘Do you want lunch?’

‘Why have you locked us up?’

‘You didn’t think you were getting a free ride out of that dump in the mountains did you?’

‘No, and I can pay for it, and for Shiv. And where’s my satchel? I need it. My family will be worried and make enquiries!’

‘If they do they’ll be told about the terrible explosion up at the monastery that killed everyone.’

‘You wouldn’t!’

‘I would.’

‘But Michael, you seem a nice bloke. Please… when I've got my credit card and passport I can pay for Shiv as well and anything else I owe you. So give me my satchel and let us out of here!’

‘Oh what a shame. You should have told me this earlier. You see I’ve made phone calls and you’ll start earning your passage tonight when a nice businessman comes looking for love from a handsome young Australian surfer. I can’t afford to let him down.’

‘I’m not a surfer.’

‘I know, but it doesn't hurt to pretend.’

‘I am not a prostitute! I am not for sale! I will strangle any man who tries to come near me!’

‘Look at the bed posts.’

Frankie did and realised they were solid iron. Attached to them on large rings that could be slid to any position, were handcuffs. Big, solid, real old-fashioned police handcuffs.

‘If we even suspect you are not going to cooperate, we will have you cuffed to the bed in whatever position your client desires. Meanwhile, if you change your mind about food, just pick up the receiver and dial one.’ Michael cut the connection.

‘Fuck!’ Frankie whispered. He took a deep breath. This is what Shiv had endured for months. Well, he wasn’t insane; he’d never give them cause to handcuff him. But there must be something he could do. He frowned, returned to the bathroom and tapped again. Shiv’s taps echoed his. He shouted, but heard only an impossibly muffled reply, so he took the plastic beaker from the toothbrush holder, pressed it against the wall and put his ear to it. Shouted something again, then listened. Something about a window. Shiv kept saying over and over what sounded like ‘to the window’.

Finally he understood and he looked up at the tiny window. Too high to see out so he got a chair, and inspected. The window opened inwards and there were no bars! But his shoulders would never get through.

‘Frankie, Frankie.’ A whisper floated through the opening.

Frankie pulled himself higher and shoved his head through, astonished to see Shiv’s head and shoulders hanging out. The windows were barely two metres apart.

‘I’m coming to you,’ Shiv whispered, pulling his head and shoulders back in. Half a minute later Frankie watched in alarm as a pair of bare feet poked out, followed by bare legs, then a bare bum, until Shiv was draped over the windowsill held by his left arm; his right arm stretched out towards Frankie.

‘Grab my arm!’ he hissed.

Frankie tried, but it was just too far. He could get one arm and one shoulder through but that wasn’t quite enough. ‘Hang on!’ he whispered, and raced back to the bedroom, took a sheet off the bed, twisted it into a tight rope, secured one end to the shower taps then decided they weren't strong enough, and if they broke the place would be flooded and they wouldn’t have time to plan anything. So he wrapped the sheet around his chest under his armpits and put the rest and one arm and his head out the window.

Shiv had hauled his head and shoulders back into his room and was draped over the sill to rest his arms. Someone was sure to see his naked bum soon!

‘Grab the sheet with your right hand,’ Frankie instructed. ‘Then when you're sure you have a good grip, bring your left hand across and hold on to the sheet with both hands for dear life. You’ll drop and swing around a bit, but I've got it secure here and will haul you up.’

Shiv lowered himself till he was hanging by his fingers, gave a huge grin, Frankie tossed the sheet, Shiv grabbed it with his right hand, made sure he had a good hold, then let his left hand go and just managed to hang on to the sheet as he suddenly dropped and swung roughly like a human pendulum coming to rest below Frankie’s window. It took all Frankie’s strength to haul the sheet up over the concrete sill and seemed to be taking forever, but in less than a minute Shiv was squeezing through the window, blood dripping from grazes on shoulders, chest, knees and feet. He hugged Frankie, who could scarcely speak from shock. Shiv appeared unfazed.

‘How did you dare?’ Frankie asked.

Shiv shrugged. ‘I know those men. They’ve been abusing me for five months. I would never be allowed to leave. They would have made a fortune having me fucked by all the ugly bastards in Kolkata until I was a useless husk, then kill me. Four seconds falling then instant death seemed an excellent alternative. And there was always the chance of actually getting here. I reckon we can beat them, don’t you?’

‘Fuck, Shiv. You're the bravest man I've ever known. I was terrified. It was lucky you didn’t give me time to think about it or I’d never have risked it.’

Shiv gave him a pat on the shoulder. ‘Ok, Frankie, now for the hard bit, how do we get out of here?’

‘We need a weapon.’

They scoured the room. Nothing removable that could be used as a weapon. Even the phone was wireless so no cord to strangle with. The towel rail in the bathroom was plastic. The chair was plastic. While Shiv was looking under the bed Frankie flicked the curtains closed.

‘Eureka!’

‘You what?’

‘Look at this!’ Frankie was on the chair carefully twisting at the rod that he’d used to close the curtain. The ring that held it to the runners opened easily so he pulled it out of the hole and passed the rod to Shiv. ‘What do you reckon?’

‘Brilliant.’

The solid brass rod was about a metre long with a good handle at the bottom and almost pointed at the top where it had been attached to the ring and curtain runners.

The phone rang. Frankie picked it up.

‘No, I don’t want lunch!’ he snarled.

Michael ignored his outburst. ‘Your mate isn't answering his phone. Do you know anything?’

‘How the fuck can I know anything when I'm fucking locked up in this prison? Perhaps the lucky bugger’s dead!’ Frankie slammed the receiver down and raced to the bathroom to close his window. Shiv’s would be open, but there was no point in giving them the answers.

‘I think we’re about to have a visitor,’ he said with a frown. ‘You didn’t answer your phone, so they’ll be coming up here to find out why, and when they see your open window with no dead body at the bottom they’ll come here. What'll we do?’

‘Kill them,’ Shiv said easily. ‘They killed all those monks and guys up at the monastery, now it’s their turn.’

‘Fair enough, but how?’

‘What's that shelf for?’ Shiv pointed to a narrow shelf that encircled the room just above door height. It looked to be no more than twenty centimetres wide.

‘Ornaments and things I guess.’

‘I’m pretty light, let’s hope it’s strong enough.’ He placed the chair behind the door hinges, pulled Frankie beside it, climbed on Frankie’s shoulders then stepped up onto the shelf, remaining flattened against the wall for several seconds before falling forward, to be caught by Frankie.

‘If you can stall whoever comes in the open doorway, I can shove this thing through their skull.’

‘If you can stay up there long enough. Hang on.’ Frankie ran to the bathroom and returned with the suction cup. After spitting on the rubber he climbed on the chair and shoved it against the smooth painted wall as high as he could. When he stepped down it remained attached.

There was no time to test it. Footsteps approached. They heard Shiv’s door being unlocked just before someone started doing the same with Frankie’s. Shiv clambered quickly up Frankie’s shoulders onto the shelf and balanced without putting much strain on the plunger handle. Frankie passed up the rod then managed to be standing in front of the doorway when it opened ready to block whoever was entering.

Lu shoved a handgun into Frankie’s face and began forcing him back into the room. ‘Where’s that f…’ was all he had time to say before Shiv dropped onto his shoulders, simultaneously ramming the pointy end of the rod through Lu’s skull. Lu dropped straight down, Shiv stepped off as if alighting from a horse, picked up the revolver, then helped pull the man behind the door seconds before Michael appeared in the doorway.

‘Where’s that scrawny black bastard!’ He shouted, lunging towards Frankie, offering a perfect target for Shiv’s bullet that made a mess of his neck but didn’t stop him from swinging round to fire wildly back at Shiv, whose second shot got him in the groin causing him to drop to the floor, writhing and moaning; not loud enough to be heard on the street, so they didn’t bother administering a coup de grace.

‘Help,’ gurgled the almost slain man.

The two young men looked at each other and shook their heads.

‘Sorry, Michael. We’re busy. But it shouldn’t take you more than half an hour to bleed to death.’

While Frankie closed and deadlocked the door, Shiv returned to his room to put on the sari and sandals.

‘Shame. I preferred you naked.’

‘Me too, but I have to hide the blood and bruises. And my three-day beard! Front door?’

‘I don’t want to hurt Arnold. Let’s hope there's a fire escape.’

They ran to the end of the corridor, opened the window and discovered a rickety iron spiral staircase that ended in the driveway.

Down at ground level they tossed away the room key and walked nonchalantly to the front corner of the building. Frankie peered through the branches of a cypress towards the front door. He pulled back.

‘There's a policeman talking to Arnold.’

‘What're they doing?’

Frankie looked again. ‘Arnold’s giving him an envelope. The cop’s walking away. Arnold’s gone back inside. The door’s closed.’

‘Just a bribe. Ok, it’s safe to go, but I’ll follow a fair way behind,’ Shiv whispered, ‘It would attract attention if a foreigner was seen walking with a scrawny, poor Indian woman. Go!’ he whispered urgently when Frankie hesitated.

The street was busy with bicycles, handcarts, pedestrians, cars… all knowing what they were doing and where they were going. Neither young man had the foggiest idea of where to go, so Frankie just sauntered along acting as he imagined a typical tourist would, pretending not to understand the children begging. After several blocks he asked a man where to find a clothing store. The man shrugged and raised his hands in apology. He spoke no English. Frankie smiled and moved on, choosing an obviously wealthier man next time.

His informant pointed and told him to go to College, then right to what sounded like Beebeeganguly, then turn left, and then the directions became complex and impossible to remember, but Frankie smiled gratefully and set off, followed at a discreet distance by a thin and tired woman, her head wrapped in a sari.

It was a long, dusty, hot and enervating trudge, during which they passed several busy markets that Shiv shook his head at. On a narrow road in what looked like a slum, stood several magnificently decaying examples of British colonial architecture. At the end of another longer road, tall modern buildings loomed. Down on the street the two young men were dodging begging women holding their dead-looking babies in supplication, other pedestrians, bikes, cars and handcarts.

Frankie asked directions several times, each time being pointed in a different direction, until suddenly, opposite the end of a T-junction appeared a long, single storey red brick building faced with white arches and columns. Crowds were milling on the wide paved area in front, so he headed that way. “Hogg Market”, the sign above the arches announced.

Frankie waited and Shiv sidled up. They were inconspicuous in the crowd, so Shiv pulled nervously at Frankie’s sleeve and pretended to beg. Frankie nearly laughed aloud as their situation finally caught up with him. They'd just murdered two men and were on the run. Hungry, thirsty, homeless, yet Shiv still had the guts to make jokes.

‘I don’t normally give to beggars,’ Frankie growled, pulling a thin wad of notes from his secret pocket and handing them to Shiv. ‘But I'm feeling generous.’

After an exaggerated bow of servile gratitude Shiv scuttled away and Frankie sank onto an empty bench. He felt gutted. He’d be Ok, but what about Shiv? He couldn’t just leave him to fend for himself. And he didn’t want to. He liked him too much… unless that was the effect of their morning’s excitement. He gazed around at the crowds; buying, arguing, selling. He felt intensely alive, sharp, yet oddly relaxed. A cloud of diesel fumes engulfed him as an overladen bus drove into the car park. Everyone was on the lookout for something. Searching, impatient, exhausted, but not in a slough of despond. A smell between rot and sweet drifted out of a nearby food stall. Plastic bags, cartons, food wrappers, cans, rotting vegetables…rubbish everywhere; on the streets, in alleys, in gutters and on roads. Someone laughed. A young boy asked for money. It was all so unknowable that his natural dislike of crowds mutated into numbing claustrophobia, filling his head with fears that he’d never be able to escape the swarming multitudes.

He’d gained an idea of Kolkata’s size as they landed, but down here he began to realise how huge, how complex, how impossibly impersonal and divorced from everything he thought he valued was this sprawling metropolis that resembled nothing he’d ever experienced or imagined. As he watched and observed, yet another feeling stole up on him. Respect. Respect for individuals who functioned autonomously in this maelstrom; calmly attending to their needs, doing without apparent complaint whatever was necessary to keep the spark of life alive. Even the multitude of beggars. He couldn’t give to all, but… he’d have to ask Shiv how to assuage his guilt.

A slow grin spread as realisation dawned. Like everyone around him he was aggressively individual, but so what? He was a flyspeck. Nothing to anyone and they were nothing to him. Ten million individuals eking out an existence in this insane city. Jammed together. Struggling to make ends meet. Another beggar approached, but Frankie still had no coins so waved him away. And then a handsome young man dressed casually but well, looking every bit as comfortable but more contented than those around him, approached as if they knew each other. Frankie took a step back before realising it was Shiv. Along with the sari he had thrown off all vestige of female inferiority. He seemed to have grown several centimetres and could never be taken for anything other than a virile male. His back was straight, his head proud on a firm neck, his feet shod in elegant slip-on leather shoes, his face serene.

‘Shiv! You look magnificent!’

‘Thanks to you. Do you realise how much money you gave me?’

‘No, but there's more where that came from, so don’t worry.’

‘You gave me forty-thousand-rupees.’ He handed the remainder back.

‘No way! That's yours. I took a bundle of cash from Wiley’s desk before we left, and there’s more that we’ll share later. But now you're looking respectable, help me buy an unostentatious shoulder bag, trousers, shirt, jacket and shoes that'll make me look like an honest but not very wealthy local. Oh, and disposable razors and a toothbrush. Then find us somewhere to eat and talk.’

‘Yes, sahib,’ Shiv grinned with an exaggerated Namaste.

Twenty minutes later Frankie was the proud possessor of a knapsack filled with a change of clothes. He slung it over his shoulder and followed Shiv across the road, where he spoke to a middle aged man.

‘That's the first time I've heard you speak anything other than English. How come you speak Hindi if you're from Pakistan?’

‘What gave you the idea I'm Pakistani?’

‘You look a bit like a Pakistani guy in my class at university. Lean with great bones and a symmetrical face, almost too perfect. Most Indians are not so… I don’t know… their faces are not so well organised, and if they're dressed as well as you are now, they’ve run to fat, which isn't attractive.’

‘I think that was a compliment, but I'm too hungry to care if it isn't. Come on, that fellow said the restaurant over there’s pretty good.’

After a salad, lentils and vegetables, followed by fish with rice, they were feeling comfortably replete but still found room for delicious white sweet balls with nuts and candied fruit. Finally, after rinsing their palates, and in Frankie’s case quenching the fires of spicy food he wasn’t used to, with bottled water, they talked.

‘First up, what do I do about people begging?’

‘Give them food or clothing, not money, at least never more than twenty or fifty rupees. Many of them are pawns of syndicates who take all the money their team of beggars gather, leaving them only a pittance. Some people say begging is an industry and they just don’t want to work, but I don’t believe it. Who would want to sit all day in the dust outside a railway station if they could do anything else? It’s the result of capitalism, corrupt police and no social welfare. But I can’t do anything about it, and neither can you.’

‘Who are you, Shiv? You speak English so well, you are fit and strong, brave and resourceful… where do you come from? How did you get into this situation?’

‘I was born in Amritsar, fifty kilometres from Lahore, so you were almost right. A typical lower class family with too many kids. My grandfather had an important job in a hotel and spoke excellent English, so to force me to learn it he never spoke anything but English to me until he died. I went to a local school and learned to read and write. When I was nine the transport company my father worked for went bankrupt and he lost his job, so I went to work for a carpet maker. But sitting in a dim room for twelve hours a day tying knots wasn’t any fun, so I took off and lived on my wits; message boy, temple cleaner, washing cars, selling rubbish… then I was a kitchen helper in a cheap restaurant. The boss had half a dozen similar eating-houses in the State, and when I was sixteen he sent me to one in Chandigarh, where I made myself useful and became chief cook. I worked long hours and saved a fair bit… had a heap of five-hundred-rupee notes. But then they were withdrawn from circulation. We had a month to change them, but the queues were kilometres long and the banks helped their customers first. I had to keep on working and suddenly it was too late, so I lost my nest egg. Worse, our business was cash only, but no one had cash any more so we had to close. I saw the advertisement for the job with those three guys, applied and here I am. Poorer and wiser. What about you?’

‘Middle class family, plenty of money, good schools, mother and step father died in car crash when I was fifteen, went to live with my father, then university where I learned nothing practical except to understand the machinations of world finances. And that's it. No trauma, no difficulties, no shortage of money. I feel ashamed when I think of how I've just accepted my luck as if it was my right. I came here to see if I was able to live on my wits without the emotional support of family. Instead, I’ve been saved by you and that makes me feel even more useless than when I left. I can’t help wondering if your life has made you a much more resourceful and better person than me.’

‘It’s funny how other people’s lives sound so interesting, yet to them it has been mostly boring. You're not useless; you also saved my life. What are you going to do now?’

‘I want to leave this city. Mostly because I'm sick with worry that somehow someone will work out who did what and come looking for us. Also because I've realised I’m not interested in old British Empire buildings or looking at other people and their way of life as if they're exhibits in a fun fair. I've read a fair bit, Indian authors too, and what seems clear is that all humans are the same, basically, despite slight physical differences. It’s only the circumstances in which they find themselves that make us think they’re different. All groups have wise men and women who are respected but completely ignored, because for humans enough is never enough.’

‘You’re young to be so cynical.’

‘Perhaps because I've read too much about the history of British colonialism. When I see an old colonial building I picture the wars of invasion and acquisition, the slavery, the cruelty, the millions of deaths and misery of the colonial period.’

‘But whether you see them or not, doesn’t change the past. You can have no effect.’

‘I know, but having read about things like cutting off the hands of thousands of Indian cotton weavers so they couldn’t compete with English cotton mills, or the ten million Indians who were starved to death when Churchill took all their food to build up food stockpiles in England in case they needed it during their second war on Germany, I just can’t stop feeling sick. Especially as the food wasn’t needed so the Indians died for nothing. I know life was not so hot before the British, but that’s no excuse. Perhaps the worst effect of colonialism is that when the invaders finally went, they left behind the worst aspects of their own culture, having destroyed the integrity of the conquered people. Indian lives are now poisoned by puritanical and repressive laws and attitudes that have since been rejected by the British who imposed them.’

‘You're referring to the decriminalisation of homosexuality?’

‘Yeah. I know it’s stupid to worry and care about injustice, but I can’t help it.’

‘Even though it’s making you seem a bit crazy?’

Frankie laughed. ‘Ah thanks for that, Shiv. I do go on don’t I?’

‘Yes. So stop thinking and now you're here, enjoy it.’

‘I can’t. It’s too crowded. I love open spaces; places where there are no people and I'm unlikely to meet anyone. Where I can be myself without worrying I'm offending someone’s sensibilities. So, as the rest of India will be as crowded, noisy, messy and upsetting as Kolkata, I’ll go and visit a friend from high school who lives in Hyderabad, then head off home. What about you? Would you like to go to Australia?’

‘I like crowded, noisy, busy, crazy cities and the anonymity they provide, as long as I have no family keeping track of me. Some of our restaurant patrons had family who moved to Australia to escape the restrictions of family. They said if you work hard you can earn a lot of money. They start family restaurants and shops and tend to stick together, form Indian societies, keep the festivals and customs, watch each other, gossip and create a carbon copy of the interfering, hierarchical family structures they thought they were escaping.’

‘Which begs the question, if families are so interfering, restrictive and demanding of conformity, why do they persist? Why don’t the kids just get up and leave?’

‘Because in a land of dog eat dog with no social contract, no safety net for those who don’t make it financially, the family is the sole buttress against adversity. It’s fear, plain and simple fear of falling by the wayside and rotting along with the millions of grindingly poor people that is the glue that binds families. As for going to Australia, every Indian knows it’s a racist country, so as I wouldn’t feel comfortable with non Indians, and I don’t want to live like the expatriate Indians, I’ll stay in this benighted land where I know how to be myself and still feel comfortable. Perhaps start a restaurant, or a catering company, or a house-cleaning business, or… It depends on if I can find a backer.

‘How much do you think you'd need?’

Shiv shrugged. ‘About a million rupees.’

‘Have you a bank account?’

‘No. And those three bastards took my identity papers.’

‘Can you get new ones?’

‘If I go back to Amritsar.’

‘If you get a bank account, I will back you.’

Shiv’s face split in a grin of disbelief. ‘Frankie, Frankie, Frankie, you are such an innocent. You don’t know me. You are in lust with my handsome face and imagine I am as handsome inside my head. But I'm not. I'm a just an ordinary poor Indian who doesn't expect to ever have more than enough to eat and a place to sleep. If it’s the roadside, that's Ok. If you put a million rupees in my account, I’d probably just blow it all on whores.’

Frankie shrugged. ‘Once I give something to someone, it’s theirs to do with as they like. If spending it all on pleasure is what you want, then fine.’

‘But you'd never get your money back, let alone make a profit.’

‘Yeah… well… I am not interested in profit. When I said I’d back you, I meant I want to give you enough to get back on your feet, a bit of money for you to do what you like with, because I like you and think you’re worth helping. I know I haven't known you for long, but I believe in first impressions.’ Frankie looked hard at Shiv as if calculating his worth. ‘If you don’t want me to feel good, then refuse my offer, but know that I will be miserable for the rest of my life.’

Shiv laughed silently. ‘Frankie, I love you! But perhaps I don’t want to have money. Perhaps it’ll be more fun to remain fancy free and not get tied down in the business of making money. From what I've seen, money and responsibility are addictive and the addicts become slaves of their desire for just a bit more. It doesn't make them happy.’

‘No, but the security it brings can free wise people from the shackles of fear, and allow them to be moderately contented. You won’t always be young, strong, handsome and sexy.’

‘Are you wise?’

‘I’m working on it. What about you? Do you want a lover? Wife? Family?’

‘If I was sexually attracted to men, I would want to live with you forever, anywhere, as long as you were there. But as I'm not, we both know that could never work. If we lived here you'd have no other friends to spend time with when I was out with my woman. And if we were in Australia I’d hate it if you spent time with other boyfriends and I’d have no friends to keep me company. We’d last six months and then it’d be over; and instead of loving you like a brother I’d start inventing reasons to hate you. I’m not upset about the last few weeks in the mountains, but it’s taught me that I don’t want a sexual relationship with a man.’

‘I understand that. So, where to from here? A wife or a prostitute?’

‘In India nice girls don’t fuck before marriage, which is why at eighteen I'm still a virgin. My parents argued viciously. My grandmother made everyone’s life a total misery – she was the only happy person in our house. I don’t want children, there are too many already, so I can’t have a wife because she will demand children and hate me, and the entire extended family will be on my back constantly if I don’t give her one. So I don’t want a wife. I’ll hire prostitutes when I get enough money and use my hand until then.’ His grin was enchanting.

‘Make sure you always practice safe sex; disease is rampant.’

‘Yes. Perhaps a rubber doll would be better, at least she wouldn’t argue with me.’ Shiv laughed again. ‘So… what now for you?’

‘I need to see if I still have some money in my account. Wiley had my Debit Card so it’s possible he discovered how to use it. Let’s settle the bill and ask the owner where to find an Internet Café.’

Copyright © 2018 Rigby Taylor; All Rights Reserved.
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Chapter Comments

Your "bad" characters do find previously unexplored depths of depravity. I am rather glad karma caught up with them. The gaul gall of Michael to ask them to help him as he lay bleeding...

 

Shivs transformation is dramatic. From what I can tell 1 million rupees is about CAD20k. Not a huge investment. Really goes to show that a lot of poverty alieviation is not about trillion dollar investments, its about micro investments in people.

 

Hope Frankies money is still intact, he may be resourceful and courageous, but a little cash helps!

Edited by Canuk
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6 hours ago, Canuk said:

Your "bad" characters do find previously unexplored depths of depravity. I am rather glad karma caught up with them. The gaul of Michael to ask them to help him as he lay bleeding...

 

Shivs transformation is dramatic. From what I can tell 1 million rupees is about CAD20k. Not a huge investment. Really goes to show that a lot of poverty alieviation is not about trillion dollar investments, its about micro investments in people.

 

Hope Frankies money is still intact, he may be resourceful and courageous, but a little cash helps!

Yes indeed. Corporations and 'Big" business are the death of human ingenuity, happiness and pleasure in life. Karma indeed. [Btw Michael isn't Gallic] :rolleyes:

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5 hours ago, Wesley8890 said:

Holy hell man do you know the meaning of the word happy?

I assure you, Wesley, Frankie is deliriously happy to have escaped a life of sexual slavery - and so is Shiv. Adventure is fun for young people. Sitting safely at home when you're fit and healthy is a recipe for depression. "Excitement, Adventure, Romance" - That's what it's all about for the young. Security and safety is for the middl aged. :)

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4 hours ago, sef said:

Amazing escape by the resourceful Frankie and his brave and capable friend. At least this time, they don’t have to drag bodies into the cave. Hopefully, Shiv will go on to a happy and fulfilling life. (As much as is allowed in a Rigby novel, I’m beginning to think 🤔😅😉.)

Ha ha - Everyone gets what they deserve - so of course Shiv will live happily ever after. But what about Frankie?

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1 hour ago, sef said:

I have faith you’ll provide a suitable life-mate for Frankie. Maybe chapter 39 or 40...

Golly - faith... mmmm... that's something you have when you don't know - but hope... makes me feel godlike. But I guess all writers are when they 'create' characters. Sef, I am so touched by your faith I will move heaven and earth in an attempt to satisfy your noble hopes. But no guarantees! Like god, I work in mysterious ways my wonders to perform.

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14 hours ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Golly - faith... mmmm... that's something you have when you don't know - but hope... makes me feel godlike. But I guess all writers are when they 'create' characters. Sef, I am so touched by your faith I will move heaven and earth in an attempt to satisfy your noble hopes. But no guarantees! Like god, I work in mysterious ways my wonders to perform.

Haha, 😆 I believe you have more vested interest in Frankie’s happiness than I do. A benevolent writer god who loves his creation to well to make him suffer in vain. So I will stick with my faith, in its cocksure certainty, despite insubstantial evidence. Bear with me, I know belief and faith are not part of the Rigby doctrine.😂 

Edited by sef
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6 hours ago, sef said:

Haha, 😆 I believe you have more vested interest in Frankie’s happiness than I do. A benevolent writer god who loves his creation to well to make him suffer in vain. So I will stick with my faith, in its cocksure certainty, despite insubstantial evidence. Bear with me, I know belief and faith are not part of the Rigby doctrine.😂 

What a thoroughly delightful comment - you have restored my faith in humanity - well... some humans. :rofl:

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