Parent Category: Ideas
Category: Fiction
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It was hot, dry and dusty when they finally arrived in Jaisalmer.  But then, how often is it not hot and dusty here? 

In the markets a wizened woman, of indeterminate age, is using a straw broom to aggressively sweep the area in front of her shop. The dust will soon be kicked-back by passers-by; or swept back by her neighbours; requiring her to sweep again, and again.  She will do the same again tomorrow; and the day after; and the day after that.

Jennifer's mind is elsewhere. She's has dreamt of visiting exotic India ever since a client at the hairdressers told her, with enthralling details, of her adventures here.

They've arrived in the dusty city late in the afternoon, by road from Jodhpur.  In spite of his preference to visit California or Las Vegas again, she's finally persuaded Bruce that he might like India. He should try something a bit more adventurous for a change.

Below the entrance to the famous Jaisalmer Fort, is a small square that marks the start of the road winding up, then turning at right-angles, through the protective elephant-proof gates.  In this little square, motorised trishaws: Tuk-tuks, jostle restlessly like milling cattle.  They are waiting for tourists, like our travellers, who may hire them tomorrow to see the town or, if they are lazy or tired, just to mount the steep hill up to the Fort. 

One or two tourists per vehicle is ideal.  But some, like those four older Australians earlier today, used just one when they returned from the cloth market, because there was only one of the little machines waiting and, anyway, it's a short trip.  But cramming four big tourists into one is not as hard as transporting the locals, who expect a little Tuk-tuk to carry six or more, a couple crammed in beside the driver and, occasionally, a goat or two.

Like much of this area of Rajasthan, the surrounding countryside is desert or semi-desert, dry grasslands interspersed with sand in great dunes.  Wild peacocks share the landscape with sheep and goats and the ever-present wandering-cows of India.  On the horizon, hundreds of wind turbines turn spasmodically, gleaning whatever energy they can from the fitful afternoon breeze.  And across this part of India the electricity grid has been turned off, so that a cacophony of small domestic generators has begun, in daily protest against the uncooperative wind. 

For Jennifer, this part of India is the most romantic. Once, Jaisalmer, with its commanding Fort, dominated the millennia old trade route, linking India to Central Asia, Egypt, Arabia, Persia, Africa and the West.  Its wealth grew from its position, as a strategic halting point for the camel caravanserai of Indian and Asian merchants, carrying:  opium; copper; silk; cotton; dates; coffee; and all manner of exotic goods, both east and west. 

But the camel trains no longer snake across these dunes. Since the Partition, of India into India and Pakistan in 1947, the relationship between the two new nations has frequently been hostile. Now divisions of armed soldiers trace these ancient camel paths and a new border severs the ancient trade route. 

Military jets from the nearby air-force base scream high above, patrolling the desert.  And the camels carry trekking tourists instead.

Bruce is an accountant. They met when he came in to the salon to check over the books. After months of dating, Jennifer quit her rental apartment and moved in with him at his place in Brisbane West. It's been over a year, so they are definitely a couple now and some of the gloss has worn off. For example, he's been like a 'wet rag', dampening her romantic fancies, all through the drive here.  At one point, after reading from his tablet, he announced that:

“This is interesting. Exploitative tourism and militarisation have replaced the ancient trade route, in the Jaisalmer economy.”

He went on to describe the weapons used by the Indian army, something about the Cold War and Russia and NATO ammunition. and even the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Jennifer shut him out, trying hard not to hear about modern conflicts and to hold on to her belief in the exotic mystery of these ancient lands.  Somehow cashed-up tourists and machine guns; rockets; and tanks; are not romantic.

 

 


Arrival

 

The hired car-and-driver is carrying them up the steep road, into the Fort. There's not a lot of space. Another car is attempting to leave. The driver asks directions to the hotel. Confusion reigns, but the travellers take this in their stride. They have been in India for a couple of weeks and have come to regard this confusion as normal. Eventually, someone is found who can identify the hotel and the bags are unloaded; and trundled down a lane to the entrance.

Their efforts are immediately rewarded by the spectacular view. Their room is linked to a wall-top terrace and sitting areas furnished with big, brightly-coloured cushions.  Their bedroom is large and well-appointed; hung with rich draperies. And in the centre, is a large comfortable bed. Subdued lighting, a tasteful modern bathroom and subtle music add to the air of luxury.  In a recess in the room, on a low table, stands a four-foot-high bronze statue of Parvati.

 

Parvati the consort of Shiva

 

Jennifer is delighted.  This is the true romance and ancient mystery she had come to experience, only slightly contradicted by the sight of the wind-farms on the horizon.

And in the room is Parvati, the consort of Shiva, worshiped for her sensuality and primordial creative power.  Parvati, the creator of Ganesh, the elephant-headed god and most beloved of Indian deities. 

The couple shower-off the travel-grime, as one might plunge into a pool, after a day’s toil in a dusty wasteland. Preparing for a warm evening, they change into light, loose-fitting clothes. They're both revelling in this welcome luxury,

Outside, within the Fort, that evening, they wander hand-in-hand in the warm and scented air, when they come upon a temple, emanating sensual mysticism, the various faces richly decorated with voluptuous, semi-naked bodies. They find a discrete niche, embrace and kiss; and she forgives Bruce for his lack of romance earlier.

It's time to go to the luxurious restaurant for the promised 'first-class Indian dining experience'.

 

 


Australians

 

After their very pleasant dinner, they decide to go along to the hotel terrace where four other guests are already drinking and chatting under the stars. Their neighbours, in the lounge-like setting, are four friends, two older couples from Sydney. They welcome the younger couple enthusiastically, offering them a drink.

Jennifer accepts a gin and tonic and Bruce will have a scotch and water. As the night goes on the bottles empty. The young couple protest that they have nothing to share. But they are told not to worry, that spirits and mixers are cheap in India, unlike the wine.

From the comfort of their wall top eyrie, the party look out over the floodlit walls adjoining, swooped, in the brighter areas, by moth hunting black swallows; or are they bats? 

As they relax, their eyes drift across to the desert horizon and down into the town below. It's a perfect night. And almost so beautiful that Jennifer could cry.

One of the men recalls the incredible wealth of the Indian princes, who built this fort and its palace and so recently ruled these kingdoms.  The other Sydney man adds:

“It's hard to believe the wealth of the Maharaja of Jodhpur. Around 1920, he wandered into a firm of London architects, apparently on a whim, and ordered the largest private house ever built: the Umaid Bhawan Palace, about, 230 kilometres, over there," pointing east.

“Over 340 rooms and galleries were fitted out in gold; silver; precious woods; marbles; and ivory; to house both the public galleries, used by visitors and for the affairs of State, and the Maharaja’s private zenana (harem). They still have separate entrances for each. You can see the place for miles, it has a huge dome."

Jennifer asks if the present Maharaja still lives there.  The man, who is a lawyer or something, confirms that he does. 

“But the lives of the dynastic Princes fell apart in 1950, when the Dominion of India was created and the new, Russian-leaning, government turned on them. So, I suppose that they regret lending their support to Partition. They lost a lot of their hereditary wealth."  

“So now, for financial reasons, the latest Maharaja shares his house with the Taj Palace Hotel. The Maharaja's domain has been reduced to a few dozen state rooms, where he still lives. And with just one wife, because the new government also outlawed polygamy."  

"But many wealthy Indian men seem to find a way around that," comments one of the wives.

“He's in a similar position to the Maharaja of Udaipur, who also shares his home with an hotel and whose Rolls Royce fleet and collection of European sports cars is much diminished," adds the other man with a smile. “A small museum at the Taj Palace Hotel explains that Maharaja's project was a pre-Keynesian way of stimulating the local economy. He was using his local expenditure to offset the economic impact of the depression that would not occur until a decade later."

"Amazing foresight," comments Bruce, sharing the cynicism.

"This ability to see a decade into the future was no doubt due to his being able to communicate directly with the Gods," explains the man. "In the event of drought, and other natural disasters, the Maharaja is still prayed to, for mystical intercession, by the local people." 

In the same sarcastic vein, one of the wives remarks: “Obviously his god-like wisdom led him to the view that building an enormous personal palace was a far better work creation project than say: clean water and sewerage; the provision of public housing; or building schools and hospitals."

“I suppose,” says the other woman, “that given his upbringing, that persuaded him that he was a demi-god, just like the European Royal Families and their divine-right to rule, he had no qualms or sense that he was doing anything untoward.”

“Compared to things his ancestors did - and the wealth that they took for themselves - and the way they treated their people - he was acting as a modest and enlightened ruler, like Prince Albert and Queen Victoria - embracing the latest science and technology,” agreed the first.

They all agreed that the Princes of Rajasthan were once far more ostentatious. These virtual warlords had travelled from one fortified, gold encrusted, palace to another with retinues numbering in the hundreds, their numerous wives and other women carried in palanquins, some of which are still proudly on display.  

Someone claimed that their two main concerns had been to fight amongst themselves for wealth; and, collectively as Hindu Princes, to keep the Muslim Mughal Empire, then based at Agra, at bay.  

They fell back into silence, each to their own thoughts. More drinks were poured.

In comparison to these past riches, Jennifer realised, the travellers’ present enjoyment of the small luxury, of a drink in pleasant circumstances, was infinitely less outrageous by comparison.

Yet, why did their present wellbeing and their general worldly advantages like: their freedom to come here; and go back to another world, make her feel guilty?

Was it the people she had seen sleeping in the street, even on the garbage-strewn median strips in the centre of divided roads?  Or was it the urine and the neutralising lime that skirted almost every public wall?  Was it the faces that suddenly appeared - shrunken hands tapping on the window - when the car stopped in traffic?  Was it the not-yet-crawling baby that she had seen, naked and apparently abandoned, in the dirt; or the little girl begging with her child, who pulled aside its swaddling to reveal dreadful burns that had been made down it’s arm, to make her case more pathetic; or the deliberately, and uniformly-maimed, beggars?  Or perhaps it was the vast areas of primitive housing accessible only on foot, with no services that they had seen from the plane? Or was it the people bathing in puddles, in the street after rain?

“The wealth of the rich is amazing," she blurts out. "But the poor are so poor, I can't help feeling guilty."

One of the older women agreed wholeheartedly and recalled her initial impulse to help in some personal way, by buying milk for a baby, only to discover that this was a scam, run by the men who ‘ran’ the beggars. 

“And then we were followed and harassed by girls with babies for the rest of the day," the other woman went on:  "The girls even waited across a road, when we had lunch and then attacked us again. They were like seagulls after you feed them once," the other woman confirmed.

“Another day we went to a museum and there was a girl outside attempting to sell trinkets. I looked at her stuff but didn't want anything she had.  Then we saw her called over to a car where she was yelled at and slapped by a man for not selling me anything, It's a tough place if you're born poor."

By accident of birth, some Indians have become abject, abused beggars and some princes, beyond all reasonable wealth, she realises. 

The Australians' lives have not been those of princes and princesses. But they feel no jealousy, or longing, to have led the life of an Indian prince or one of his wives. They have been even more fortunate. They have had good educations; and first world awareness; and the freedom to travel; and sufficient wealth to be themselves. 

In Mumbai, the Sydneysiders had dined one night in an up-market restaurant frequented by middle class Indians. They said it featured dishes similar to any restaurant in the World. There was no curry in a hurry. It served haute cuisine dishes that included beef. 

“Restaurants like this are thriving because, as well as a few people who are still obscenely wealthy, India has a growing well-off middle-class that outnumbers Australia’s," explains the lawyer fellow. “And it's we visitors who feel guilty," he adds. "Maybe the middle-class should take a little more responsibility for the half billion or more desperately poor: unskilled and illiterate. Those people who are so superstitious that they will murder each other for a deviation in caste; or minor religious infringement.”

"Yet many of the younger ones we've seen in the better restaurants, and in up-market shopping centres, seem happy to eat a beef; and for couples to hold hands; or even kiss in public," comments one of the wives, "while in much of more traditional India, only the men can hold hands or embrace each other, because heterosexual affection, in public, is frowned upon as lewd."

So as all travellers must, they each put personal guilt aside; and fall back to just enjoying being here. The exotic difference and atmosphere; the new things learnt each day; the satisfaction of surmounting unusual challenges; and at this moment, their mutual company.

Soon it was time for bed.

 

 


Parvati

 

Returning to their luxurious room, Jennifer and Bruce undress, and naked, slip into the silken robes provided by the hotel. They turn down the lights and lie side-by-side, exhausted and slightly tipsy, on the bed.

Bruce has begun the lovemaking in his usual, annoyingly desultory way. It's been an amazing day though. As Jennifer lay there exhausted, with her eyes closed, she could feel his tentative-hand, moving across her tummy, under her robe, testing, seeking her acquiescence or a rejection.

And then a most unusual thing happens: Parvati has come to life.

Jennifer has become aware of another body on the bed. Parvati is exploring her labia. Parvati's fingers are lightly caressing her breasts in a new, erotic, way. 

She can smell her musky scent. She knows it's Parvati. She's no longer the cold bronze, that had stood across the room, but a warm and scented, voluptuous goddess. She has metamorphosed into a real woman. Now she's enveloping them both in her aroma - her sensual being has become flesh and blood.

Jennifer is instantly aroused as never before. Soon darting fingers, wet tongues and hard nipples are touched and brushed. Arms and legs entwine. Fingers probe. Mouths engage. Yonis alternatively rub and merge; feverishly accepting and consuming Bruce's engorged 'lingam'. 

Their bodies are re-enacting the scenes depicted in the Kama-sutra, that they had seen, illustrated in tiles, in that zenana. Passions peak, lull and rise again. When will it stop?  When will they finally be sated?

After a lifetime, and one last urgency, they fall back separately, completely bathed in perspiration. 

As she recovers, Jennifer opens her eyes.  What is Parvati doing?  She's wiping down her body, now wet with sweat and their secretions. The volume she has gathered is amazing. It seems to be growing.  It's dividing and multiplying.  She's growing a baby in her hands, just as she had done to make Ganesh, fifteen hundred years ago. 

All this time Parvati has not said a word but has sung in that weird Indian way, as she did during the lovemaking.  But now in a beautiful Indian accent she's begun to sing for a noble soul, mahatma, to come into her creation and give it life.  A soul that had passed from one life to another, advancing through the great wheel, the Mandala, until it had reached this state of bliss. This soul is now ready to enter the body of the new being, that they had helped make, in the hands of the wife of Shiva. 

'Shiva!  Oh!' Jennifer suddenly remembers him. 

Last time Parvati made a child without telling him, Shiva became infuriated and chopped off its head - before relenting and replacing it with the first animal head he found - that happened to be an elephant.  With which of his three visages might he look upon this latest creation?  Will he accept this new child benignly; as a benefactor or; as the destroyer?

With a blinding flash Shiva’s light fills the room.  Jennifer sits up with a jolt.

“Jesus that was good!” says Bruce, standing by the switch. “Which one of these is the bloody bathroom light? 

“What got into you?  You were like an animal. I didn’t know you liked some of that stuff! You must really get off on that sandalwood perfume you bought!” 

Jennifer is still in shock and says nothing. He plays with the panel.

“Can you still hear that bloody singing?  I turned the music down earlier but how do you suppose we turn it right off?”

“You just woke me up”, says Jennifer peevishly. “I was just dreaming that Parvati had come to life and was reaching for a soul for a new baby she was making”.

“Well, that was a bit bloody weird!” says Bruce, who has no soul of his own.  

He goes into the bathroom and makes his usual revolting noises, before coming back to bed and falling sound asleep.

Jennifer is now angrily awake, looking at the great lump.  Then furious, she yells at his inert body:

“You have no soul!”  

After that she turns her back to him, and with her finger tips she tries to recover the shattered dream.  “But he was damn good, for a change” she admits, as she does her best to recreate her earlier exhilaration.  And then, with a little cry, all is forgiven; and she falls into a deep satisfied sleep.

 

 


A New Day

 

The following morning at breakfast, one of the Sydney men asks them how they slept and they reply:

“Very well!” in unison. 

"Like a baby," Bruce adds, obviously itching to tell more.

Then the man's wife comes in, sits down and asks exactly the same thing.  Is that a sly smile and twinkling eye she detects as they repeat the performance?

Now they politely listen to the man, as he holds forth about the butter and milk, and how the Indians hold cows to be sacred but somehow, this doesn’t apply to buffalo. 

Bruce interrupts him by saying, rather naughtily, that Jennifer had an interesting dream last night.  Jennifer has to immediately cut him short, forestalling any in-depth revelations, by explaining that she had dreamt that the statue of Parvati, in their room, had come to life and was singing for a soul, for a new baby she was making.

“Ha!” the Sydney man exclaims.  “It’s amazing how almost all religions insist on a life force that's separate to the body.” 

“Well,” says Bruce, “without it we couldn’t have everlasting life. Or gods who breathe life into inanimate objects.   Maybe it’s a hangover from a primitive belief in the unattached souls of ancestors looking for a body to inhabit.  I suppose it goes along with a belief in reincarnation.”

At that point the other Sydney couple appears. 

“Talking about religion again?” the wife says.

They explained the conversation.  To which her husband responds:

“It’s easy to see how the ancients thought that the spark of life was contained in a man’s seed and went into a fertile woman to produce a child.  It was just like a seed going into fertile soil to produce a plant. Apart from being 'fertile' or 'barren' she had no other part in it. It was his child - to do with as he liked.”  

He pauses to take a bowl; half fill it with breakfast muesli and top it with milk - buffalo or cow it's hard to tell - before continuing:

“Yet the myth of a separate life force, a spirit breathed in, granted or inherited at each conception, goes on - particularly here in India." 

“Because it allows the possibility that we can go on, to inhabit another body, in different circumstances,” his friend contributes.  And then as a throwaway, as he points at his empty cup to the waiter:  “After all, it's written in ancient texts, so it must be true.”

Having finished their omelettes, the wives have been at the fruit table, chatting about gifts they intend to buy in the markets, for children, relatives and friends.  And which of the stalls, that line the road up to the Fort, they might look at first. 

“So, if it comforts those, who like to think that their soul might have been born into different circumstances - or might still be - why shouldn’t they believe it?” asks the taller one, returning with her fruit plate.  

“Yes, why shouldn't they dream of being reborn as a prince or princess?" demands her friend, close behind.

“That’s all very well.  They can believe what they like,” her husband responds. “But ignorance and untruths lead people to make bad, often harmful, life decisions.”

A second round of coffee has been distributed by the waiter and Jennifer sits silently, listening and thinking, as she often does in the salon at home, when she's drying someone's hair or waiting as they tan.  Of course, everyone knows that babies started as an already living egg, that was fertilised by an already living sperm. If either the ova or spermatozoa was dead, no baby would result.

But people so often talk about a new life, giving the impression that life is somehow freshly created each time. But it's already-living cells, that combine and multiply to become a baby. She hadn't realised, until she listened to these people talk, and thought about it herself just now, that a baby's life is not 'new' but: 'separate'. As the men had agreed, creating life anew, at conception, is just an ancient myth, that goes back to when people were more ignorant. 

So, her vision of Parvati was just a dream, brought on by all the erotic images and aromas and sounds in this romantic and exotic place.  But it was a wonderful dream, because through it, she and Bruce have discovered a new exciting side to each other, that she can hardly wait to explore again. And just perhaps, a couple of new, separate, beings, are now on the cards?

Jennifer's very stimulating remembrances and hopes for the future are interrupted, when the shorter wife renews the wives' attack on their husbands' lack of belief in anything mystical:  

“Although you two may think it's ‘ridiculous’ in the ‘light of modern science’, people want to believe their myths.  Including, that there but for circumstance, 'they' would have been born later or conceived somewhere else. Even by someone else. They don’t want to hear that they would not exist at all... You two have no souls.” 

“That’s funny”, says Bruce, impishly: “That was the last thing Jennifer said to me last night. But she got over it.”

 

First published: October 2013

 

 

 

 

 

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