A Night at the Taj
Gary Indianaâs fictional vignettes âA Night at the Tajâ originally appeared in Aura Rosenbergâs Head Shots, a book published by Stop Over Press in 1996. It has been excerpted here to coincide with Rosenbergâs current exhibitions at Pioneer Works and Mishkin Gallery surveying over five decades of the artistâs work.
Room 23
He says he does not remember where he was between 10 pm and midnight last Thursday, that he has a gastric disorder, that there may be a computer chip lodged in his brain that produces false memories and enables him to speak French, that he does not know any Muriel, but if he does it must be a stranger who approached him at a sausage kiosk outside the main rail station in DĂŒsseldorf two weeks ago, claiming somebodyâd stolen her suitcase and for various reasons she wouldnât go into she couldnât report the theft; that woman, who gave her name as Anna, traveled with him to Cologne, where they spent one night in a two-star hotel (the sex was melancholy, perfunctory) before proceeding to Amsterdam, where she assured him that certain friends were picking her up outside the station; he then took a train to Brussels, in Brussels changed for the Paris Express, in Paris he checked into a three-star hotel in the 19th quite near a Monoprix supermarket, heâs certain he stayed there at least three days before coming here. He does not know why his name came up in connection with the murder of Anna or Muriel, which apparently happened in Rotterdam, a city heâs never been to, or how this inquiry made its lightning way to New Delhi. His passportâs been confiscated, presumably for a routine check, and now his other arrangements are stalled. He is supposed to contact an R. Kumar in a flat near Connaught Circle, sign over some bills of lading, receive a packet of securities, fly to Agra, phone someone else from a coffee shop in Agra, exchange the packet for American currency, return to Delhi, from Delhi take a plane to Tehran and another plane to Karachi, in Karachi heâs to rent a car and drive down to Peshawar, give the money to a contact there, and the rest of it he can only imagine: the cash turning into guns, the guns going over the border into Jammu, and by that time heâll be back in London, having the chip scalpel out of his wetworks or what have you.
Using a powerful technique he learned from Sherpas, heâs lowered his metabolism to a degree just shy of clinical death, the earphones feeding Mozartâs Requiem into his head, the Deutsche Grammophone Berlin Philharmonic version, Anna Tomowa-Sintow, soprano.
Room 72
âAnd why couldnât it have been Victoria Frankenstein who created the monster from spare parts and set it loose among the ignorant villagers? Countess Dracula the implacable undead sucking life from the hapless Harker? We should pussify and cuntify all this dire literature, transsexualize these historical figures, replace the totemic lingam with a hole-o-rama. We need a girl Hitler, a lady Stalin, a clitorified terror as potent as the phallus, vaginated myths with all the dark charge of cannibalism and piracy.â
âBit strong for the Womenâs League.â
âOh? Have you taken a look at their gods?â
âStop pacing, Bunny. You make me nervous when youâre pacing.â
Room 81
She kneels with knees spread wide apart at the end of the bed, bent forward on her elbows doggie fashion, breasts dangling like bloated wine skins, glory hole and Mr. Fuzzy floating in space, while he, standing across the tulip-patterned spread, pumps his modest but impressively pointed manhood for her delectation, his skinny frame and incipient potbelly a peculiar contrast to her long, freckled Rubens of a figure. Theyâre on their way to Karnataka to visit his relatives, mainly to dispel the popular family notion that heâs queer, that he lacks his older, married brotherâs testosterone, that heâs pissed away his twenties scribbling lame sestinas on cafe napkins while sponging off his mother and sister. Sheâs thrilled to parade his ethnicity among her passionless leftist chums back home, while here she does a strong impression of a zesty but basically submissive near-wife, ten years his senior and therefore sensible and security-minded. This brainy big white woman spells success like a numbered Swiss account. Now heâs between her legs with his fist grinding into her snatch, red hot prong pressed tight against her shin, lapping the sour sole of her foot. Her vagina fits him like a glove of slightly congealed gelatin. As he shoves his skinny brown penis inside he wonders if this time sheâll let him put it in her ass. He wonât feel he really owns this great white whale down to the ovaries until he sees her shit on his dick. He tells her heâs fucking her fine fine pussy, he orders her to fuck that big, hard dick all the way down to his aching balls, he whispers that his balls are bursting with so much come he could populate Nigeria: his voice is a bit too piping and priggish for this sort of steam discourse, she likes a lot of verbal but heâd like to pull out and poke it up her poop chute without a lot of chitchat. The thought makes him come before sheâs even half-lubricated, he slides out with a pop and spanks her fanny with his spurting rod, his jism slimes down her ass crack as he wipes himself on her rosebud. She crawls away from him and sprawls with her shoulders against the headboard, starts doing herself with her fingers. He tells her to wait, says he can get it hard again after a cigarette. Oh sweetie she says when did you ever.
Lobby
The excessive lobby, constructed by Nehru to showcase the postcolonial miracle, acres of shiny marble that look like wet linoleum, with a raised conversation area, carpeted, full of ecru divans and plushy chairs that the honored guest sinks into and disappears altogether, crisscrossed by Japanese executives flushed from drunken exertions in a karaoke bar, a fat lady from Des Moines clutching Asia Week and the Wall Street Journal as she feeds herself sweets, a massive Sikh in an orange turban lighting a cigarette with a pounded gold lighter, and now three men in tuxedos, a sharp-faced Eurasian in his early thirties and a taller, younger Chinese man whose feral mouthâs full of crooked gold teeth, supporting between then a lanky WASP, fiftyish, whose name is certainly Dickie, followed by a Danish or Dutch girl with flowy corn-colored hair, in a magenta kurtah and baggy white slacks, theyâve just excluded from the regulation Ambassador taxi and wobbled up the steps and burst into the lobby, making it known to the doormen that Dickieâs made a little too free with a bottle of Shenleyâs, they get this octopus of sprawling flesh over to a divan and prop him in something like a sitting position, the Eurasian says:
âKirstin, see if they wonât give you Dickieâs key.â
âHe looks really awful.âÂ
âHeâll look even worse if he pukes himself right here.â
âWhat on earth did you give him?"
âChan, loosen Dickieâs tie. Dickieââ the Eurasian slaps him hard, smiling, ââyouâre home, Chan, loosen his tie a little, Dickie, listen to me, Kirstinâs getting your key, Kirsten, go get the goddamn key.âÂ
Room 60
âSister Mary Albert, this âere cross ayn nothing buâ plywood.â
âAye, begorrah, Father Albert, nay but plywood cood be scavenged oot a tha leprous jhuggi colony.â
âIdon seem proper, bu' ah suppows ill hefta do.â
âThis âereâs the âammer Father Albert.â
âEh ken see thaâ Sister Albert. Wey aright then, avert yer eyes Sister Albert.â
Father Albert slips out of cassock and stands before her all naked except for the loincloth.Â
âBegorrah Father Albert, yer the spittinâ image oâ the blessed savior.â
âThas blasphemy nearly Sister Albert, the saviorâs eyes was far more prettier than these here tired old sinninâ Scottish eyes.â
âSure the savior hed pretty eyes Father Albert.â
âEn the saviorâs beard much flowier en longer than this âere scraggly untoward bush of blighted Scottish fuzz.â
âSure the savior hed a bonnie beard Father Albert. En hereâs the nine inch nails, Father Albert.â
âWell then nail me to the blinkinâ festerinâ plywood Sister Albert, what ye be waitinâ four?â
âWill ye be wantonâ me te nail yer feet as well as yer ands Father Albert?â
âI want the sameâs was done to the savior, Sister Albert. The crown a thorns yeâll find in the brown suitcase.â
âAh doon have a Roman spear for the side Father Albert.â
âAh jes wonna be crucified Sister Albert en fer thaâ aye doon need the bleedinâ spear naw do aye. Fer the love a Mike Sister Albert mind ye hit the nails not me fingers.â
Room 57
â...certainly my last night on earth, which you could then explain as fear of deterioration, either mental or physical, or the cumulative frustration of an economic nightmare that follows precisely the same scenario time after time, though this is not a place where oneâs money worries at home figure very large in oneâs thoughts, itâs not simply easy to see that others are infinitely worse off, itâs unavoidable, there is no empty space, no existential vista likely to remind you that you are alone in the world, quite clearly you arenât but this is what being alone in the world will be for everybody in the future, a dense cluster of miseries with unbelievable variations spread like marmite over every square inch of public space, and little oases belonging to the rich walled off with sentry boxes and armed guards at every entrance, itâs a plain fact that this country with âthe largest middle class in the worldâ yearns for a cleansing epidemic that would kill off three or four hundred million to clear some breathing space for the survivors. Even if you do not regard the human being as the worst disaster thrown up by evolution, itâs impossible to view the fetus worship of the various religionists as anything other than a virulent psychosis, confronted as you are, every day, with the spectacle of thousands whose lives, all hypocrisy aside, are completely worthless. I mean worthless in the sense of having no chance of development, and no value in the eyes of the society they inhabit. You quickly forget all the liberal pieties and improving schemes suggested by the sight of a single homeless beggar when you multiply the beggar by a hundred million and add the concept of bad karmaâŠ
âTo return to my own case, which in light of the above strikes me as extremely trivial, I wish my real intentions could be interpreted in the untragic way that I myself see them. Letâs say that a failure of will that I almost surely could have overcome had I been a slightly different person, plus several small but alarming changes in my physiology, have persuaded me that it is not necessary to go on. Suicide is not a repudiation of life but a refusal of specific conditions in which a particular life is lived: to substitute some set of abstract principles for the concrete facts I can lay out in front of me strikes me as an excessive evil, since this is the modus vivendi of Catholicism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and all the other fraudulent, poisonous systems of control our unfortunate species has concocted to oppress and ruin itselfâŠâ
Majestic Rooftop Gardens
âHeâs out. Whatâs that?â
âGarlic chicken. Want some?
âHe looks really bad, Alain.â
âWhatâs he got?â
âWell, thereâs a camera. Passport, I think a folder of travelerâs checks, he must have put a lot of things in the safe.â
âThatâs no problem. He got in yesterday around 3, so the night staff doesnât know what he looks like.â
âI think heâs dead, actually.â
âThat isnât likely.â
âHeâs not breathing.â
âDonât give it another thought. You and Chan go back to the Sheraton. Leave me the key, Iâll come round in a half an hour. Here, try this chicken. Itâs scrumptious.â
Room 66
âŠSuch questions were repeatedly asked to the girl who had been allegedly raped for about four months by eight persons, including five policemen, two years ago⊠Hamida (not her real name) can speak only Bengali.
âDavid, I want to go home.â
Her interpreter Roma Debadrata, reader, Modern Indian Languages, Miranda House, Delhi University, was interrupted many a time by the family members and relatives of the accused.Â
âDonât be silly, Moira. Weâve practically only just got here.â
The court proceedings were disrupted for about ten minutes when a woman charged Mrs. Debadrata of doing wrong interpretation. âYeh aurat galat bol rahi haiâ (This woman is telling lies). âHamida ne Mehtab ka naam nahi liyaâ (Hamida did not name Mehtab)...
âI canât bear it, David. The noise. The people. Theyâre speaking English but you canât understand a word they say.â
âRashid used to do galat kaam (wrong things) with me during the night in his jhuggi cluster,â she said. Asked what does she mean by âgalat kaam,â Hamid said, âizat lutnaâ (rape).
âAnd the way they look at us. Everyone staring all the time.âÂ
âŠOn 10 August, between 300 and 350 gm of weapons-grade Plutonium-239, professionally packaged, was discovered in the luggage of two Spaniards and a Colombian arriving in Munich from Moscow aboard a Lufthansa airliner.
âWeâre white, Moira, to them we look like gods. Dreadful but there it is. At least they donât want to kill us the way they would in some Muslim country. Youâve been under so much stress darling. If we go back now weâll have to deal with reporters and lawsuits and everything that was driving us both mad.â
It takes, of course, much more to build a bomb: 22 pounds of highly enriched Plutonium-239 or 26 pounds of highly enriched Uranium-235. But the point about the smuggling is that it enables an illegal bomb-assembler like Pakistan to receive small amounts over time.
âŠAmong the cuts suggested by the CBFC is the famous nude scene, in which Phoolan Devi is stripped naked and dragged across the village square and a reduction in the duration of two of the many rape scenes in the film.
âBut this awful religion of theirs. Leaving the dead out for vultures.â
âThat isnât Hinduism, Moira, itâs the Zoroastrians, and theyâre dying out. Hardly any left.â
âEven so. Those vicious monkeys we saw this afternoon. Hateful, evil things. Itâs things likeâŠthat man today. Crawling through traffic on all fours. I canât bear it, I really canât. Donât look at me like that.â
The CBFC also said that the claim at the beginning of the movie that it was a âreal storyâ of Phoolan Deviâs life should be replaced with âbased on research.âÂ
âŠThe nine LTTE men who vanished had been arrested under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA). Six of them were part of the crew of the LTTE vessel Tongnova, which was intercepted by Navy and Coast Guard vessels of the Karaikal coast in Tamil Nadu on November 8th, 1991.Â
âBut darling the chap had a broken spine, what did you expect him to do?â
The vessel was ferrying ingredients for making explosives, wireless transmitter sets, empty jerry cans, and so onâŠthe âQâ branch of the Tamil Nadu policeâŠis âconvincedâ that they scaled the 24-foot (7.2-metre) wall, using bed-sheets as ropes.
âBut those stumps, David, the man had leprosy as well.â
The nine had walked out around 10:30 pm out of two adjoining cells, whose locks were missing, revealing the complicity of the jail officials.Â
âYou canât catch leprosy from looking at someone, whatever put that idea in your head?
Corridor
Something is not right. He fears the telling, overlooked detail, closing the door with the Do Not Disturb face outward, down in the elevator to reception, waving the key, he says heâs Richard Johnson from Detroit, America, the desk clerk eyes him with a wary look and asks for his passport, fortunately heâs used his little kit to lift out Dickieâs photograph and glue in his own. The metal box is a disappointment, one Rolex watch and about eight hundred in U.S., an air ticket he probably canât peddle and certainly canât use, then back to the ninth floor, in the room he regrets that heâs only filled a small shampoo bottle with gasoline, he starts gathering flammables into a rough mound extending from the balcony to the door, at least this will create a wall of fire, the trick is getting it to spread to the other rooms, causing as much confusion as possible. The towels can act as a fuse, giving him time to slip out of the hotel before all hell breaks loose. Another thought occurs to him. He could, perhaps, pitch Dickieâs body over the balcony after setting the drapes going, and simply climb over the ledge to the balcony next door, and then it would look as if Dickie jumped in panic. He changes his mind again. The other way theyâll suppose he fell asleep with a lighted cigarette. Maybe not. What to do? He lies down beside the corpse on the bed, pondering the best technique. He finds the inert lump of Dickie irritating, he wants to shake him and say, Youâre no help, are you. Gone to your great reward after fifty years of meaninglessness. Dickie doesnât have to think about burning down the hotel or anything else. Alain always ends by envying people heâs done away with, for exactly this reason, that they no longer have to think of anything, having passed over to a state of perfected indifference, whereas heâand now pours himself a glass of water from the pitcher and swallows a few of his yellow energizersâcan never stop calculating, never come to rest, and itâs usually now, after tabulating his resentments and adding up the take, that the bad feelings come, and the urge to fuck death in the ass overwhelms him. As he tugs Dickieâs belt loose and yanks Dickieâs trousers down he hates this big dead Yank and the cosmic secret thatâs crawled up and disappeared inside him, and hates himself for what heâs about to do. âŠ
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