CHAPTER TWELVE
"Here
we are," said Vijaya, when they had reached the
end of the short street that led downhill from the market place. He opened a wicket gate and ushered his guest
into a tiny garden, at the further end of which, on its low stilts, stood a
small thatched house.
From behind the bungalow a yellow mongrel
dog rushed out and greeted them with a frenzy of ecstatic yelps and jumps and
tail-waggings.
A moment later a large green parrot, with white cheeks and a bill of
polished jet, came swooping down from nowhere and landed with a squawk and a
noisy fluttering of wings on Vijaya's shoulder.
"Parrots for
you," said Will, "mynahs for little Mary Sarojini. You
people seem to be on remarkably good terms with the local fauna."
Vijaya
nodded. "Pala is probably the only
country in which an animal theologian would have no reason for believing in
devils. For animals everywhere else,
Satan, quite obviously, is homo sapiens."
They climbed the steps to the veranda and
walked through the open front door into the bungalow's main living-room. Seated on a low chair near the window, a
young woman in blue was nursing her baby son.
She lifted a heart-shaped face that narrowed down from a broad forehead
to a delicately pointed chin, and gave them a welcoming smile.
"I've brought Will Farnaby," said Vijaya as he
bent down to kiss her.
Shanta held out
her free hand to the stranger.
"I hope Mr Farnaby
doesn't object to nature in the raw," she said. As though to give point to her words, the
baby withdrew his mouth from her brown nipple, and belched. A white bubble of milk appeared between his
lips, swelled up, and burst. He belched
again, then resumed his sucking. "Even at eight months," she added,
"Rama's table manners are still rather
primitive."
"A fine specimen," said Will
politely. He was not much interested in
babies and had always been thankful for those repeated miscarriages which had
frustrated all Molly's hopes and longing for a child. "Who's he going to look like - you or Vijaya?"
Shanta laughed
and Vijaya joined in, enormously, an octave lower.
"He certainly won't look like Vijaya," she answered.
"Why not?"
"For the sufficient reason,"
said Vijaya, "that I'm not genetically
responsible."
"In other words, the baby isn't Vijaya's son."
Will looked from one laughing face to the
other, then shrugged his shoulders. "I give up."
"Four years ago," Shanta explained, "we produced a pair of twins who are
the living image of Vijaya. This time we thought it would be fun to have
a complete change. We decided to enrich
the family with an entirely new physique and temperament. Did you ever hear of Gobind
Singh?"
"Vijaya has
just been showing me his painting in your meditation room."
"Well, that's the man we chose for Rama's father."
"But I understood he was dead."
Shanta
nodded. "But his soul goes marching
along."
"What do you mean?"
"D.F. and
A.I."
"D.F. and
A.I?"
"Deep Freeze and
Artificial Insemination."
"Oh, I see."
"Actually," said Vijaya, "we developed the techniques of A.I. about
twenty years before you did. But of
course we couldn't do much with it until we had electric power and reliable
refrigerators. We got those in the late
twenties. Since when
we've been using A.I. in a big way."
"So you see," Shanta chimed in, "my baby might grow up to be a
painter - that is, if that kind of talent is inherited. And even if it isn't, he'll be a lot more
endomorphic and viscerotonic than his brothers or
either of his parents. Which is going to be very interesting and educative for everybody
concerned."
"Do many people go in for this kind
of thing?" Will asked.
"More and more. In fact I'd say that practically all the
couples who decide to have a third child now go in for A.I. So do quite a lot of those who mean to stop
at number two.
Take my family, for example.
There's been some diabetes among my father's people; so they thought it
best - he and my mother - to have both their children by A.I. My brother's descended from three generations
of dancers and, genetically, I'm the daughter of Dr Robert's first cousin,
Malcolm Chakravarti-MacPhail, who was the Old Raja's
private secretary."
"And the author," Vijaya added, "of the best history of Pala. Chakravarti-MacPhail was one of the ablest men of his
generation."
Will looked at Shanta,
then back again at Vijaya.
"And has the ability been inherited?"
he asked.
"So much so," Vijaya answered, "that I have the greatest difficulty
in maintaining my position of masculine superiority. Shanta has more
brains than I have; but fortunately she can't compete with my brawn."
"Brawn," Shanta
repeated sarcastically, "brawn ... I seem to remember a story about
a young lade called Delilah."
"Incidentally," Vijaya went on, "Shanta has
thirty-two half-brothers and twenty-nine half-sisters. And more than a third of them are
exceptionally bright."
"So you're improving the race."
"Very definitely. Give us another century, and our average I.Q.
will be up to a hundred and fifteen."
"Whereas ours,
at the present rate of progress, will be down to about eighty-five. Better medicine - more congenital deficiencies
preserved and passed on. It'll make
things a lot easier for future dictators."
At the thought of this cosmic joke he laughed aloud. Then, after a silence, "What about the
ethical and religious aspects of A.I?" he asked.
"In the early days," said Vijaya, "there were a good many conscientious
objectors. But now the advantages of
A.I. have been so clearly demonstrated, most married couples feel that it's
more moral to take a shot at having a child of superior quality than to run the
risk of slavishly reproducing whatever quirks and defects may happen to run in
the husband's family. Meanwhile the
theologians have got busy. A.I. has been
justified in terms of reincarnation and the theory of karma. Pious fathers now feel happy at the thought that
they're giving their wife's children a chance of creating a better destiny for
themselves and their posterity."
"A better
destiny?"
"Because they carry
the germ plasm of a better stock. And the stock is better because it's the
manifestation of a better karma. We have
a central bank of superior stocks. Superior stocks of every variety of physique and temperament. In your kind of environment, most
people's heredity never gets a fair chance.
I ours, it does. And incidentally
we have excellent genealogical and anthropometric records going back as far as
the eighteen-seventies. So you see we're
not working entirely in the dark. For
example, we know that Gobind Singh's maternal
grandmother was a gifted medium and lived to ninety-six."
"So you see," said Shanta, "we may even have a centenarian clairvoyant in
the family." The baby belched
again. She laughed. "The oracle has spoken - as usual, very
enigmatically." Turning to Vijaya, "If you want lunch to be ready on time,"
she added, "you'd better go and do something
about it. Rama's
going to keep me busy for at least another ten minutes."
Vijaya rose,
laid one hand on his wife's shoulder and with the other gently rubbed the
baby's brown back.
Shanta bent down
and passed her cheek across the top of the child's downy head. "It's Father," she whispered. "Good Father, good, good ..."
Vijaya
administered a final pat, then straightened himself
up. "You were wondering," he
said to Will, "how it is that we get on so well with the local fauna. I'll show you." He raised his hand. "Polly.
Polly." Cautiously, the big
bird stepped from his shoulder to the extended forefinger. "Polly's a good bird," he
chanted. "Polly's a very good
bird." He lowered his hand to the
point where a contact was made between the bird's body and the child's, then
moved it slowly, feathers against brown skin, back and forth, back and
forth. "Polly's a good bird,"
he repeated, "a good bird."
The parrot uttered a succession of low
chuckles, then leaned forward from its perch on Vijaya's
finger and very gently nibbled at the child's tiny ear.
"Such a good bird," Shanta whispered, taking up the refrain. "Such a good
bird."
"Dr Andrew picked up the idea,"
said Vijaya, "while he was serving as a
naturalist on the Melampus. From a tribe in northern
"Pure Pavlov."
"But Pavlov purely
for a good purpose. Pavlov for friendliness and trust and compassion. Whereas you prefer to use
Pavlov for brain washing. Pavlov for selling cigarettes and vodka and patriotism. Pavlov for the benefit of
dictators, generals, and tycoons."
Refusing any longer to be left out in the
cold, the yellow mongrel had joined the group and was impartially licking every
piece of sentient matter within reach - Shanta's arm,
Vijaya's hand, the parrot's feet, the baby's
backside. Shanta
drew the dog closer and rubbed the child against its furry flank.
"And this is a good good dog," she said.
"Dog Toby, good dog Toby."
Will laughed. "Oughtn't I to get into the act?"
"I was going to suggest it," Shanta answered, "only I was afraid you'd think it was
beneath your dignity."
"You can take my place," said Vijaya. "I must
go and see about our lunch."
Still carrying the parrot, he walked out
through the door that led into the kitchen. Will pulled up his chair, and, leaning
forward, began to stroke the child's tiny body."
"This is another man," Shanta whispered. "A good man, baby.
A good man."
"How I wish it were true!" he
said with a rueful little laugh.
"Here and now it is
true." And bending down again over
the child, "He's a good man," she repeated. "A good, good
man."
He looked at her blissfully, secretly
smiling face, he felt the smoothness and warmth of the
child's tiny body against his finger tips.
Good, good, good ... He too might have know
this goodness - but only if his life had been completely different from what in
fact, in senseless and disgusting fact, it was.
So never take yes for an answer, even when, as now, yes is self-evident. He looked again with eyes deliberately
attuned to another wavelength of value, and saw the caricature of a Memling altarpiece. "Madonna with Child, Dog, Pavlov, and Casual
Acquaintance." And suddenly
he could almost understand, from the inside, why Mr Bahu
so hated these people. Why he was so
bent - in the name, as usual and needless to say, of God - on their
destruction.
"Good," Shanta
was still murmuring to her baby, "good, good, good."
Too good - that was their
crime. It simply wasn't
permissible. And yet how precious it
was! And how passionately he wished
that he might have had a part in it!
Pure sentimentality! he said to himself; and
then aloud, "Good, good, good," he echoed ironically. "But what happens when the child grows a
little bigger and discovers that a lot of things and people are thoroughly bad,
bad, bad?"
"Friendliness evokes
friendliness," she answered.
"From the friendly
- yes. But not
from the greedy, not from the power-lovers, not from the frustrated and
embittered. For them, friendliness
is just weakness, just an invitation to exploit, to bully, to take vengeance
with impunity."
"But one has to run the risk, one has to make a beginning. And luckily no-one's immortal. The people who've been conditioned to
swindling and bullying and bitterness will all be dead in a few years. Dead, and replaced by men and women brought
up in the new way. It happened with us;
it can happen with you."
"It can happen," he
agreed. "But in the context of
H-bombs and nationalism and fifty million more people every single year, it
almost certainly won't."
"You can't tell till you try."
"And we shan't try as long as the
world is in its present state. And, of
course, it will remain in its present state until we do try. Try and, what's more, succeed at least as
well as you've succeeded. Which brings me back to my original question. What happens when good, good, good discovers
that, even in Pala, there's a lot of bad, bad,
bad? Don't the children get some pretty
unpleasant shocks?"
"We try to inoculate them against
those shocks."
"How? By making things unpleasant for them while
they're still young?"
"Not unpleasant. Let's say real. We teach them love and confidence, but we
expose them to reality, reality in all its aspects. And then give them responsibilities. They're made to understand that Pala isn't Eden or the
"What about such facts of life as
those bloodcurdling snakes I met half-way up the precipice? You can say 'good, good, good' as much as you
like; but snakes will still bite."
"You mean, they
still can bite. But will
they in fact make use of their ability?"
"Why shouldn't they?"
"Look over there," said Shanta. He turned
his head and saw that what she was pointing at was a niche in the wall behind
him. Within the niche was a stone
Buddha, about half life size, seated upon a curiously grooved cylindrical
pedestal and surmounted by a kind of lead-shaped canopy that tapered down
behind him into a broad pillar.
"It's a small replica," she went on, "of the Buddha in
the station compound - you know, the huge figure by
the lotus pool."
"Which is a magnificent piece of
sculpture," he said. "And the
smile really gives one an inkling of what the Beatific Vision must be
like. But what has it got to do with
snakes?"
"Look again."
He looked.
"I don't see anything specially
significant."
"Look harder."
The seconds passed. Then, with a shock of surprise, he noticed
something strange and even disquieting.
What he had taken for an oddly ornamented cylindrical pedestal had
suddenly revealed itself as a huge coiled snake. And that downward tapering canopy under which
the Buddha was sitting, was the expanded hood, with
the flattened head at the centre of its leading edge, of a giant cobra.
"My God!" he said. "I hadn't noticed. How unobservant can one be?"
"Is this the first time you've seen
the Buddha in this context?"
"The first time. Is there some legend?"
She nodded. "One of my favourites. You know about the Bodhi
Tree, of course?"
"Yes, I know about the Bodhi Tree."
"Well, that wasn't the only tree that
Gotama sat under at the time of his Enlightenment. After the Bodhi
Tree, he sat for seven days under a banyan, called the Tree of the
Goatherd. And after that he moved on to
the Tree of Muchalinda."
"Who was Muchalinda?"
"Muchalinda
was the King of the Snakes and, being a god, he knew what was happening. So when the Buddha sat down under his tree,
the Snake King crawled out of his hole, yards and yards of him, to pay Nature's
homage to Wisdom. Then a great storm
blew up from the West. The divine cobra
wrapped its coils round the more than divine man's body, spread its hood over
his head and, for the seven days his contemplation lasted, sheltered the Tathagata from the wind and rain. So there he sits to this day, with cobra
beneath him, cobra above him, conscious simultaneously of cobra and the Clear
Light and their ultimate identity."
"How very different," said Will,
"from our view of snakes!"
"And your view of snakes is supposed
to be God's view - remember Genesis."
"'I will put enmity between thee and
the woman,'" he quoted, '"and between her seed and thy seed.'"
"But wisdom never puts enmity
anywhere. All those senseless, pointless
cockfights between Man and Nature, between Nature and God, between the Flesh
and the Spirit! Wisdom doesn't make
those insane separations."
"Nor does
Science."
"Wisdom takes Science in its stride
and goes a stage further."
"And what about Totemism?" Will went
on. "What about the fertility
cults? They didn't make any
separations. Were they
Wisdom?"
"Of course they were - primitive
Wisdom, Wisdom on the neolithic level. But after a time people begin to get
self-conscious and the old Dark Gods come to seem disreputable. So the scene changes. Enter the Gods of Light, enter the Prophets,
enter Pythagoras and Zoroaster, enter the Jains and the early Buddhists. Between them they usher in the Age of the
Cosmic Cockfight - Ormuzd verses Ahriman, Jehovah verses
Satan and the Baalim, Nirvana as opposed to Samsara, appearance over against Plato's Ideal
Reality. And except in the minds of a
few Tantrics and Mahayanists and Taoists and
heretical Christians, the cockfight went on for the best part of two thousand
years."
"After which?" he questioned.
"After which you get the beginnings
of modern biology."
Will laughed. "'God said, Let Darwin be', and there
was Nietzsche, Imperialism and Adolf Hitler."
"All that," she agreed. "But also the
possibility of a new kind of Wisdom for everybody.
"Even though the
snake might kill him?"
"Even though it
might kill him."
"And even though it's the oldest and
most universal of phallic symbols?"
Shanta
laughed. "'Meditate under the tree
of Muchalinda' - that's the advice we give to every
pair of lovers. And in the intervals
between those loving meditations remember what you were taught as children;
snakes are your brothers; snakes have a right to your compassion and your
respect; snakes, in a word, are good, good, good."
"Snakes are also poisonous,
poisonous, poisonous."
"But if you remember that they're
just as good as they're poisonous, and act accordingly, they won't use their
poison."
"Who says so?"
"It's an observable fact. People who aren't frightened of snakes,
people who don't approach them with the fixed belief that the only good snake
is a dead snake, hardly ever get bitten.
Next week I'm borrowing our neighbour's pet python. For a few days I'll be giving Rama his lunch and dinner in the coils of the Old
Serpent."
From outside the house came the sound of
high-pitched laughter, then a confusion of children's voices interrupting one
another in English and Palanese. A moment later, looking very tall and maternal
by comparison with her charges, Mary Sarojini walked
into the room flanked by a pair of identical four-year-olds and followed by the
sturdy cherub who had been with her when Will first opened his eyes on Pala.
"We picked up Tara and Arjuna in the kindergarten," Mary Sarojini
explained as the twins hurled themselves upon their mother.
With the baby in one arm and the other
around the two little boys, Shanta smiled her
thanks. "That was very kind of
you."
It was Tom Krishna who said "You're
welcome." He stepped forward and,
after a moment of hesitation, "I was wondering
..." he began, then broke off and looked appealingly at his sister. Mary Sarojini shook
her head.
"What were you wondering?" Shanta inquired.
"Well, as a matter of fact, we were both
wondering ... I mean, could we come and have dinner with you?"
"Oh I see." Shanta looked from
Tom Krishna's face to Mary Sarojini's and back
again. "Well, you'd better go and
ask Vijaya if there's enough to eat. He's doing the cooking today."
"Okay," said Tom Krishna without
enthusiasm. With slow reluctant steps he
crossed the room and went out through the door into the kitchen. Shanta turned to
Mary Sarojini.
"What happened?"
"Well, Mother's told him at least
fifty times that she doesn't like his bringing lizards into the house. But this morning he did it again. So she got very cross with him."
"And you decided you'd better come
and have dinner here."
"If it isn't convenient, Shanta, we could try the Raos or
the Rajajinnadasas,"
"I'm quite sure it will be
convenient," Shanta assured her. "I only thought it would be good for Tom
Krishna to have a little talk with Vijaya."
"You're perfectly right," said
Mary Sarojini gravely. Then, very business-like, Tara, Arjuna," she called.
"Come with me to the bathroom and we'll get washed up. They're pretty grubby," she said to Shanta as she led them away.
Will waited until they were out of
earshot, then turned to Shanta. "I take it that I've just been seeing a
Mutual Adoption Club in action."
"Fortunately," said Shanta, "in a very mild action. Tom Krishna and Mary Sarojini
get on remarkably well with their mother.
There's no personal problem there - only the problem of destiny, the
enormous and terrible problem of Dugald's being
dead."
"Will Susila
marry again?" he asked.
"I hope so. For everybody's sake. Meanwhile, it's good for the children to
spend a certain amount of time with one or other of their deputy fathers. Specially good for
Tom Krishna. Tom Krishna's just reaching
the age when little boys discover their maleness. He still cries like a baby; but the next
moment he's bragging and showing off and bringing lizards into the house - just
to prove he's two hundred per cent a he-man.
That's why I sent him to Vijaya. Vijaya's everything
Tom Krishna likes to imagine he is.
Three yards high, two yards wide, terrifically strong, immensely competent.
When he tells Tom Krishna how he ought to behave, Tom Krishna listens -
listens as he would never listen to me or his mother saying the same
things. And Vijaya
does say the same things as we would say. Because, on top of being
two hundred per cent male, he's almost fifty per cent sensitive-feminine. So, you see, Tom Krishna is really getting
the works. And now," she concluded,
looking down at the sleeping child in her arms, "I must put this young man
to bed and get ready for lunch."