Part 13 (1/2)

'You sure you could handle it? But look, you see how stupid I is, still letting myself be interested in your affairs! You could handle it?'

'G.o.d will give me a little help.'

'All right, all right. Give me all this flashy talk. But don't come round begging me for anything, you hear.'

And Beharry left.

Ganesh read and thought deeply all that day and most of the night.

'I don't know why for you wasting all this time on one little black boy,' Leela said. 'Anybody would think you was a schoolchild doing homework.'

When Ganesh saw the boy next morning he felt he had never seen anyone so tormented. It was torment heightened by a deep sense of helplessness. Though the boy was thin now and his arms looked bony and brittle, it was clear that he had once been strong and healthy. His eyes were dead, lack-l.u.s.tre. In them you could see not the pa.s.sing shock of momentary fear, but fear as a permanent state, fear so strong that it had ceased to thrill.

The first thing Ganesh said to the boy was, 'Look, son, you mustn't worry. I want you to know that I can help you. You believe I can help you?'

The boy didn't move but it seemed to Ganesh that he had recoiled a little. 'How I know that you not laughing at me, just as everybody else laughing at the back of their mind?'

'You see me laughing? I believe in you, but you must believe in me too.'

The boy looked down at Ganesh's feet. 'Something tell me you is a good man and I believe in you.'

Ganesh asked the boy's mother to leave the room and when she left he asked, 'You see the cloud now?'

The boy looked Ganesh in the face for the first time. 'Yes.' The voice was part whisper, part scream. 'It here now and the hands it reaching out getting longer and longer.'

'Oh, G.o.d!' Ganesh gave a sudden shriek. 'I see it now too. Oh, G.o.d!'

'You see it? You see it?' The boy put his arms around Ganesh. 'You see how it chasing me? You see the hands it have? You hear what it saying?'

'You and me is one,' Ganesh said, still a little breathlessly, breaking into pure dialect. 'G.o.d! Hear my heart beating. Only you and me see it because you and me is one. But, listen to something I going to tell you. You fraid the cloud, but the cloud fraid me. Man, I been beating clouds like he for years and years. And so long as you with me, it not going to harm you.'

The boy's eyes filled with tears and he tightened his embrace on Ganesh. 'I know know you is a good man.' you is a good man.'

'It just can't touch you with me around. I have powers over these things, you know. Look around at all these books in this room, and look at all those writings on the wall and all the pictures and everything. These things help me get the power I have and cloud fraid these things. So don't frighten. And now tell me how it happen.'

'Tomorrow is the day.'

'What day?'

'It coming to get me tomorrow.'

'Don't talk stupidness. It coming tomorrow all right, but how it could take you away if you with me?'

'It saying so for a year.'

'What, you seeing it for a whole year?'

'And it getting bigger all the time.'

'Now, look, man. We must stop talking about it as though we fraid it. These things know when you fraid them, you know, and then they does behave like real bad Johns. How you getting on at school?'

'I stop.'

'What about your brothers and sisters?'

'I ain't have no sisters.'

'And your brothers?'

The boy broke into a loud cry. 'My brother dead. Last year. I didn't want him to dead. I never want Adolphus to dead.'

'Eh, eh, but who saying you want him to dead?'

'Everybody. But it ain't true.'

'He dead last year?'

Tomorrow go make one year exact.'

'Tell me how he dead.'

'A truck knock him down. Ram him against a wall, break him up and mash him up. But he was trying to get away even then. He try to pull hisself away and all he could do was take his foot out of the shoe, the left foot. He didn't want to dead either. And the ice only melting in the hot sun and running down on the pavement next to the blood.'

'You see this?'

'I didn't see it happen. But it was really me that shoulda go to buy the ice, not he. Ma ask me to go and buy some ice for the grapefruit juice and I ask my brother to go instead and he go and this thing happen to him. The priest and everybody else say was my fault and I have to pay for my sins.'

'What sort of d.a.m.n fool tell you that? Well, anyway, you mustn't talk about it now. Remember, you wasn't responsible. Wasn't your fault. Is clear as anything to me that you didn't want your brother to dead. As for this cloud, we go fix him tomorrow self, when he get so close to you I could reach him and settle him.'

'You know, Mr Ganesh, I think he getting fraid of you now.'

'Tomorrow we go make him run, you watch and see. You want to sleep here tonight?'

The boy smiled and looked a little perplexed.

'All right. Go home. Tomorrow we go settle this Mister Cloud. What time you say he was coming to get you?'

'I didn't tell you. Two o'clock.'

'By five past two you go be the happiest boy in the world, believe me.'

On the verandah the boy's mother and the taxi-driver sat silently, the taxi-driver on the floor with his feet on the step.

'The boy go be all right,' Ganesh said.

The taxi-driver rose, dusting the seat of his trousers, and spat into the yard, just missing the display of Ganesh's books. The boy's mother also rose and put her arm around her son's shoulders. She looked without expression at Ganesh.

After they had gone away Leela said, 'Man, I hope you could help the lady out. I feel too sorry for she. She just sit down quiet all the time, not saying anything, she face small with sadness.'

'Girl, this is the most important case anybody ever handle in the world. I know that that boy going to dead tomorrow unless I do something for him. It give you a funny feeling, you know. Is like watching a theatre show and then finding out afterwards that they was really killing people on the stage.'