‘You take your hand off the knife at your back,’ he said, ‘and I’ll take my hand off mine.’
We laughed, and shook hands.
‘Your Company is keeping us busy,’ he said, spinning the pedal of his bicycle backwards as he held the concrete and steel road divider. ‘I’ll be able to retire, if this keeps up.’
‘If your work ever brings you south of Flora Fountain, I’d appreciate a heads-up.’
‘You will have it, my brother. Goodbye!’
Pankaj wheeled his chrome bicycle back into the road. I watched him thread his way through the traffic expertly.
And before I lost sight of him, in the time it took me to lift my eyes to the sky, I was done. It was over. I was finished with the Sanjay Company, and I knew it.
I was done. I quit. I’d had enough.
Faith. Faith is in everything, in every minute of life, even in sleep. Faith in Mother, sister, brother, or friend: faith that others will stop at the red light, faith in the pilot of the plane and the engineers who signed it into the air, faith in the teachers who guard children for hours every day, faith in cops and firemen and your mechanic, and faith that love will still be waiting for you when you return home.
But faith, unlike hope, can die. And when faith dies, the two friends that always die with it are constancy and commitment.
I’d had enough. I lost the little faith I’d had in Sanjay’s leadership, and couldn’t respect myself any more for submitting to it.
Leaving wouldn’t be easy, I knew. Sanjay didn’t like loose ends. But it was done. I was done. I knew that Sanjay would be at home late. I decided to ride to his house before the night was out, and tell him that I quit.
I looked up at the banner of Leopold’s, and remembered something Karla once said, when we drank too much and talked too much, too long after the doors were closed.
I’d been staring into a splintered mirror, and it was a while since I’d faced
I was leaving behind close friends who’d faced down enemies with me: men who’d known Khaderbhai, and knew his imperfections, and loved him as I did.
It was tough. I was trying to walk away from guilt and shame, and it wasn’t easy: guilt and shame had more guns than I did.
But fear lies, hiding self-disgust in self-justification, and sometimes you don’t know how afraid you were, until you leave all your fearful friends.
I felt things that I’d justified and rationalised for too long fall like leaves, washed from my body by a waterfall. Alone is a current in truth’s river, like togetherness. Alone has its own fidelity. But when you navigate that closer view of the shore, it often seems that the faith you have in yourself is all the faith there is.
I took a deep breath, put my heart in the decision, and made a mental note to clean and load my gun.
Chapter Twenty-Five
Kavita Singh, the journalist who was earning a reputation for good writing about bad things people did, leaned back with her chair tipped against the wall. Beside her was a young woman I’d never seen before. Naveen and Divya were on Didier’s left. Vikram was with Jamal, the One Man Show, and Billy Bhasu, both from Dennis’s tomb.
The fact that Vikram was up and around again after two hours of sleep betrayed the depth of his habit. When you first start on the drug, a high can last twelve hours. When your tolerance crawls into addiction, you need to fix, or search for one, every three to four.
They were all laughing about something, when I approached the table.
‘Hey, Lin!’ Naveen called out. ‘We’re talking about our favourite crime. We all had to nominate one. What’s
‘Mutiny.’
‘An anarchist!’ Naveen laughed. ‘An argument in search of a reason!’
‘A reasoned argument,’ I countered, ‘in search of a future.’
‘Bravo!’ Didier cried, waving to the waiter for a new round of drinks.
He moved aside to let me sit. I took the seat next to him, and took the opportunity to pass him Rannveig’s Norwegian passport.
‘Vinson will collect it from you, in the next day or two,’ I said quietly.
I turned my attention to Vikram. He avoided my eyes, and played with a smudge of beer on the table in front of him. I motioned for him to lean close to me.
‘What are you doing, Vikram?’ I whispered.
‘What do you mean?’
‘You were out cold two hours ago, Vik.’
‘I woke up, man,’ he said. ‘It happens.’
‘And these guys, who buy dope, just happen to be with you?’
He drew away, leaning back in his chair, and spoke to the table.
‘You know, Lin, I think you’re mistaking me for someone who gives a shit. But I don’t. And I think I’m not alone. Didier, do you give a shit?’
‘Reluctantly,’ Didier replied. ‘And infrequently.’
‘How about you, Kavita?’ Vikram asked.