Asking questions, p.1

Asking Questions, page 1

 

Asking Questions
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Asking Questions


  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Introduction

  Questions

  Answer

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  ASKING QUESTIONS

  H. R. F. Keating

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  First published in Great Britain in 1996 by Macmillan.

  This eBook edition first published in 2020 by Severn House Digital,

  an imprint of Severn House Publishers Limited.

  Copyright © 1996 by H. R. F. Keating.

  Introduction copyright © 2020 by Vaseem Khan.

  The right of H. R. F. Keating to be identified as the author of this work and the right of Vaseem Khan to be identified as the author of the introduction has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988.

  British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

  ISBN-13: 978-1-4483-0404-2 (e-book)

  Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.

  This eBook produced by

  Palimpsest Book Production Limited,

  Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland

  INTRODUCTION

  Sitting on my bookshelf in my east London study is a twenty-year-old and somewhat dog-eared copy of The Perfect Murder. Some of the pages are marked by my own all but illegible scribbles, others are crinkled by a combination of damp and rainwater; not just any rain, mind you, but honest-to-goodness monsoon rain. I bought the book from a roadside seller while living in Mumbai in my twenties, the sort of grinning, roadside sprite that is as much in evidence in H.R.F. Keating’s 1960s vision of India as he was in the India I found myself in. I’d gone there in 1997 to work as a management consultant, and ended up spending ten wonderful years ‘in-country’. My parents hailed from the subcontinent but I’d grown up in Thatcher’s Britain – all I knew of India came from hazy memories handed down to me by my father (he’d been unceremoniously shunted across the newly-created border to Pakistan as a child during Partition) and bits and pieces I’d gleaned from Bollywood movies.

  The India that I discovered was a nation on the cusp of transformation, a country beginning the journey from a semi-industrialised agrarian economy – the post-colonial India that Keating introduced to us decades earlier and that had largely stagnated since – to the status, today, of superpower-in-waiting. A country of swamis and snake charmers – as it had always been – but now, increasingly, a country of call-centres and coffee shops, of shopping malls and software firms, of MTV and McDonald’s. A country that Inspector Ghote would find both recognisable and wholly beyond his imagining.

  By the time I returned to the UK, a decade later, I had already decided that I would encapsulate those incredible memories of India into a novel. The result was The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, the first in my Baby Ganesh Agency series. These crime stories, featuring a policeman forced into early retirement from the Mumbai police service and subsequently compelled to ‘adopt’ a one-year-old baby elephant, are my attempt to chronicle the tumultuous landscape of the India that I observed first-hand. Five novels and two novellas in the series later, I can admit that these tales of the subcontinent owe a debt to H.R.F. Keating’s Inspector Ghote series.

  Back when I was casting around for a suitable template upon which to base The Unexpected Inheritance of Inspector Chopra, my eye alighted on that old copy of The Perfect Murder. I had already had the idea of a policeman who inherits a baby elephant, but I was seeking inspiration that such a work – a crime novel set on the subcontinent – might find an audience. The modern publishing industry was not prone to experimentation, or so my investigations at the time informed me.

  As I reread Keating’s novel and recalled the success that his series had enjoyed, I was emboldened. Two years later I completed my manuscript and whizzed it off to a small selection of agents. The rest, as they say, is history.

  My protagonist, Inspector Ashwin Chopra, could not be more different to Inspector Ghote. Whereas Ghote is a timid, sometimes obsequious fellow, often forced to bend to the prevailing winds of authority, Chopra is a rigid, bristly-moustachioed man, unfailingly honest, and intractably unyielding. And yet in their DNA we find a common gene – an unwavering commitment to that dark flame that flickers so elusively on the subcontinent – justice. For India is a place where justice is often at the mercy of those with wealth and power. This did not sit well with Ghote, and neither does it sit well with Chopra.

  Both Keating and I set out to bring to life these two policemen and the city that they inhabit – Bombay/Mumbai – India’s city of dreams. Yet the respective roads that we travelled to do so could not have been more different. I spent ten years living and working in India; Keating only visited India for the first time a decade after The Perfect Murder was published.

  That being the case, one might rightly ask why he chose the subcontinent as his muse in the first place? The answer: he picked up an atlas, flicked through it, and randomly chanced upon a map of India. From such moments of serendipity are legends born.

  The novel that Keating subsequently wrote was published in 1964 and entitled The Perfect Murder. It featured Inspector Ganesh Ghote (pronounced Goh-té) of what was then known as the Bombay crime branch, a detective of considerable resourcefulness and tenacity. Ghote is not your typical western policeman. There is little of the maverick about him, no melodrama, no bitter divorces in his past (he is dedicated to his wife Protima), no hard-charging, hard-drinking machismo. He is a minor cog within a vast engine of bureaucracy and at the same time accepts this and chafes against it. He is set above the common man – by virtue of his uniform – and yet condemned to forever belong to the lower echelons of that vast stratified populace that gives India such colour and depth. Time and again in these immensely readable novels we see Ghote at the mercy of bombastic senior officers, villainous landlords and wealthy industrialists. In the face of abuse, obstacles and evil machinations, Ghote remains undeterred, finding his way to resolution in every case through a combination of understated intellect and quiet bloody-mindedness. When asked about the genesis of his seminal character, Keating would later reply, ‘Inspector Ghote came to me in a single flash: I pictured him exactly as he was, transposed as it were by some magic arc from Bombay to London. It was a tremendous piece of luck really, because I don’t think Inspector Ghote will now ever die. At least he’ll live as long as I do.’

  Prophetic words. The Perfect Murder has met with enduring success. Upon publication it won the Crime Writers’ Association’s Gold Dagger in the UK and claimed an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Keating was on his way. And after twenty-five wonderful books and a short story collection, Inspector Ghote has joined the pantheon of great sleuths: Holmes, Poirot, Maigret. In his own way, Ghote has that shimmering of Golden Age stardust about him.

  The first Ghote arrived more than half a century ago. The world has changed since then and literary sensibilities have moved with the times. Today, controversies abound under the banner of ‘cultural appropriation’, some justified, others perhaps trumpeted beyond the merits of the case by vested interests. Seasoned literary commentators and social media trolls alike are quick to pronounce judgment on writers they feel have not earned the right to depict a particular lived experience. No doubt they would make much of the fact that H.R.F. Keating, by his own admission, knew very little about India when he began researching these novels. His portrayals of India and Indians might offend some, an example of what they might term post-colonial hubris.

  I think this is missing the point. That was a different era, with different dynamics at work. Yes, there will be some who find offence merely in the fact that a middle-aged white man who had never been to India should achieve literary acclaim for novels set in the country. Personally, I believe that writers must have the licence to write that which inspires them. Whilst diversity and cultural authenticity in publishing is something I fervently believe in – for obvious reasons – I will also stand by the right of authors to be authors, that is, to journey on those fantastical oceans of the imagination that make writing such an enjoyable endeavour. For me the key to all such quasi-moral quandaries is whether or not an author has treated his subject matter with respect and emp
athy. And in his treatment of the subcontinent and its people Keating did more than simply create a series of intriguing crime novels. He brought the India of that time – in all its grit and glory – to the attention of the wider world.

  We only have to look at how appreciative Indian readers themselves were of his portrayal.

  In a 1981 article for India Today (updated in 2014), Sunil Sethi tells the story of Keating’s third visit to Bombay. He is mildly astonished when a young woman, a fan of his books, approaches him to express her admiration. Keating, Sethi tells us, can’t quite believe the reception he received in India: ‘There you are quietly writing away at your desk, and you produce this little book. Your wife likes it, but she’s an interested party. Your agent approves, but he’s also an interested party. Then you come 5,000 miles from home, and people stop you on street-corners to tell you how much they love reading your books. Isn’t it wonderful?’

  Of course, the country has changed dramatically since then. I wonder what Keating would make of this modern India? And what would modern Indians make of him and his work? More importantly, how would Ghote fare? I have a feeling that the inspector, a beacon of decency in a sometimes indecent world, would find himself quite at home as India continues its struggle to undo millennia of entrenched social attitudes: corruption, inequality, nepotism, and the debilitating effects of the caste system.

  Ultimately, as a lifelong crime reader and now a relatively seasoned writer in the genre, I believe that there is nothing so likeable in the annals of crime fiction as an honourable detective. And in Ghote we find just such a man, a man for the times in which we live.

  Vaseem Khan

  London, 2020

  Questions

  I

  ‘Asking questions. Too many questions. Nobody asks Abdul Khan questions.’

  The tall Pathan, eyes concealed as always behind black-lensed glare glasses, held Chandra Chagoo by his neck at arm’s length against the rows of glass-fronted snake cages.

  ‘So, now you will find out answer. Answer to what happens to whoever is so stupid as to try to get evidences for the policewallas to put Abdul Khan behind the bars.’

  Chandra Chagoo made a feeble effort to kick out. The blows that hit the Pathan ganglord’s iron-hard, widespread legs might have been taps from a chicken’s beak they were so ineffectual.

  Behind, a Russell’s viper, ten feet in length, black, spot-marked, threshed to and fro, excited to fury by the repeated slamming against its cage.

  ‘Soon you will find out what happens to questions-asking. Soon-soon.’

  II

  Chandra Chagoo, Dr Gauri Subbiah thought, tugging out of her mouth the end of her long thick plait of hair she had, in her absorption, allowed herself to suck at like a schoolgirl.

  Those seemingly idle questions the sly devil had asked. How much did they show he knew?

  Or was it that he had merely guessed? Nothing in what he had asked, apparently so innocently, which could be replied to with an outright denial. And certainly nothing to make it possible to get him necked out. As he ought to be. However good his handling of the snakes.

  She wanted to go down that instant to the Reptile Room, to stand in front of the fellow and ask and ask him what he had meant. To treat those half-hints of his as if they were a problem in research. To ask about them every question needed until the truth had been cut clean away from whatever obscurities surrounded it. Until she knew. One way or the other.

  But what if those questions brought to light the whole truth about what she had done? What if she would have to face the fact that she was truly in the power of that devil?

  III

  Ram Mahipal faced the upward-rising benches filled with the smooth, unmarked faces of first-year students.

  ‘Asking questions,’ he pronounced. ‘Let me say, at this the very start of your careers in medicine, that here is the one and only key to your futures. You must ask and ask. Whether you are going in for research or whether you are hoping to practise general medicine, you must ask questions always. Ask until you have found out what is the truth. Ask in the months and years, just now before you, what are the truths already discovered about the human body and its workings. Ask, when at last you will be able to put before your name the word Doctor, what is the truth about whatever illness is affecting the patient you are examining. That is what you must do. Ask questions. Ask questions.’

  And is it, he thought, what most of you will do? No, you will want now simply to fill your notebooks with enough facts to jump or scramble you over the hurdles of the exams that face you. And then, when you are Dr Mehta or Dr Miss Mehta or Dr Mrs Mehta, you will be content to give the wretched patient seeking your help whatever is recommended in some textbook or even some pharmaceutical advertisement and hold out your hand for the fee.

  He compressed his lips in a line of bitterness.

  Already, he saw, some of the students had actually brought out pencils and ballpoints, wanting nothing more than to be crammed with information like so many baskets in the vegetable market. Resenting every word I am saying as idle talk of questions-pestions.

  Or am I being too cynical? No, I have the right to be cynical. If anyone has. The man who lost all he most cherished by asking the wrong question. Or the right question at the wrong time. Forced to come down to this. A life of dull grindingness. And even that in jeopardy. If anyone, even some badmash like that fellow Chandra Chagoo, asks a certain question about myself …

  But what I have done, I have done.

  ‘No,’ he snapped out, almost shouted to the sweep of greedy faces in front of him – But were there some who would take heed? Was there just one? – ‘Kindly pay attention. This is the one and only time you will hear this said. So take it to your hearts. Questions. Questions. That is what you must ask and ask. That is the path to take, whatsoever thorns lie upon it.’

  IV

  Professor Phaterpaker, Director, Mira Behn Institute for Medical Research, sat in his office glaring, unseeingly, at the cover of the file in front of him.

  R. K. Mahipal MB, Ph.D.

  Damn the fellow. Why had he, too, asked questions? Is it not enough I have had to deal with that wretched snake-handler? Why did this fellow have to have ideas about me also? And why, if he had more questions to ask, did he not ask? Why suddenly fall silent? And why, after that, resign? Give up his research and go off and lecture first-year medical students only? Giving no good reasons. Causing others to begin asking questions they would not at all have thought of before. Why didn’t he ask and ask himself, go on asking?

  Even if in the end he was getting to the truth.

  And perhaps that would have been best. For the truth to come out at last. No more parrying and parrying the questions then. No more finding answers that satisfied to some extent. And then having to wait for the next question. To wonder and wonder when some nasty busybody would hit on the one that could not be answered. Except by the truth.

  But to have the burden lifted. All the heaped lies and half-truths and inventions and evasions of the years suddenly cascading down into ruin like some termite tower in the desert with a charge of gunpowder put under it. All the ant work of years crumbling to nothing in an instant.

  And it would need only one question. If it was the right one. And then it all, everything that over my lifetime I have built up and built up, would come crashing down.

  It would have needed only one more question from Mahipal. Only one more perhaps.

  And he had not asked it.

  It had been plain from the look on the man’s face that he had glimpsed the truth there in front of him. He had gone grey. Grey as ashes. But he had not dared to face the outcome. He had drawn back from that last question.

  So it will have to go on. For all the years to come. Till my body has been consumed by the fires of the burning ghats. Or, more likely, by the controlled heat of the Electric Crematorium.

  Then the world can know. And it will not hurt me.

  As, now, it would hurt. Would have hurt as much as if I was under torture itself. To have all revealed.

 

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