entire frontage, up to the veranda wrapped around the base of the house. The property was thick with coconut, casuarinas, mango, and breadfruit, but they were underwater to the base of their trunks.
He could see the problem from the gate. The Colebrook estate was a basin, high at either end and dipped in the middle.
A flotilla of wood had been hastily erected to span the flood. The planks led to the side of the house, where a canopy of billowing sheets had been erected. From the gate, Eligius could see rows of chairs facing forward toward the veranda and a canopied stage.
âYour memsaâab,â Ault said, âlives on superlatives as if they were her daily bread.â
âI donât understand.â
âFlattery,â Ault said. âIt will see you through when matters grow dark, as matters are bound to do. Remember to present her with the letters. As I knew nothing of you, Iâve not told her of your ability with English or your abhorrence at what it is you will be doing. Itâs best that you find your own place.â
Eligius hesitated at the gate. âDid you know my father?â
Chandrak watched him.
âYes,â the missionary said.
âDid you bring him to these people?â
âTo the people who lived here before. Iâve known your village for many years. I help where I can. I thought he might find
something of worth here. That happens in the strangest places, Iâve come to realize. If not him, then someone else. But what of it?â
The back of Eligiusâ neck was stiff from the cold rain, but he couldnât rub it, or return Chandrakâs warning gaze, or move at all. To act was to tilt the world somehow, and then he would not be able to put it right.
âI can remember how he was before the books and laws, when he was a man like other men in my village. He was my father. And then he wasnât. The other men listened to him speak but stopped calling him to the fire. My mother hardly looked at him. Everything that mattered got lost.â
âThe boy is upset,â Chandrak said. âLet me speak to him. For his mother. It will help things.â
Ault dismissed them with a wave. Chandrak led Eligius away from the missionary. âThereâs a greater good to be served,â he told Eligius. âI will tell you what you need to know about these people, and you will listen.â
âNo, grama sevaka. I just want to go and come home with rupees.â
Chandrakâs hand tightened until a warning of pain blossomed in Eligiusâ arm. âDo you know they want to stamp England across Indiaâs brow? The households theyâre creating, like the one your father served, are English households. No matter that Ceylon lies just outside the window. In their homes, itâs the role of the dutiful wife to govern her familyâs days and nights, their meals, their sleep, their social obligations and their cleanliness, and yet not be seen to govern anything, or else their husbands look weak. Do you understand this?â
âYes,â he said grudgingly. It wasnât so different from his own home.
âYour memsaâabâs husband is infirm. She has two children, and with all this to manage and never enough to manage it with, she must maintain their position. A servant who helps his memsaâab with such things is a great blessing. You will be a servant they depend on. Tell me you will do this.â
Eligius nodded. He wanted to leave, yet something of Chandrakâs anger felt familiar, a once-inhabited room violently rearranged.
âI ask you now, be a man like your father. He served them so he would always know how it felt to bear these bastards on his back. It gave him strength to be the man he was.â
The rain left tears on Chandrakâs cheeks. âGo. Send your heart away and walk through their gate as if nothing mattered.â
He turned from Eligius and shambled into the gathering storm. The
Maria Violante
Jennifer Reynolds
Nora Flite
C. Greenwood
CB Conwy
Rett MacPherson
Philip Kerr
Zola Bird
L. J. Smith, Aubrey Clark
Dyanne Davis