A House for Mr. Biswas - V.S. Naipaul [162]
Aware of his unimpressive physique, Mr Biswas began to clown; and, as he did more and more now, he tried to extend his clowning to Anand.
‘Duck, boy!’ he called. ‘Duck and let us see how long you can stay under water.’
‘No!’ Anand shouted back.
This abrupt denial of his father’s authority had become part of the clowning.
‘You hear the boy?’ Mr Biswas said to Owad and Shekhar. He spoke an obscene Hindi epigram which had always amused them and which they now associated with him.
‘You know what I feel like doing?’ he said a little later. ‘See that rowingboat there, by the wall? Let us untie it. By tomorrow morning it will be in Venezuela.’
‘And let us throw you in it,’ Shekhar said.
They chased Mr Biswas, caught him, held him above the water while he laughed and squirmed, his calves swinging like hammocks.
‘One,’ they counted, swinging him. ‘Two –’
Suddenly he became affronted and angry.
‘Three!’
The smooth water slapped his belly and chest and forehead like something hard and hot. Surfacing, his back to them, he took some time to rearrange his hair, in reality wiping away the tears that had come to his eyes. The pause was long enough to tell Owad and Shekhar that he was angry. They were embarrassed; and he was recognizing the unreasonableness of his anger when Shekhar said, ‘Where is Anand?’
Mr Biswas didn’t turn. ‘The boy is all right. Ducking. His grandfather was a champion diver.’
Owad laughed.
‘Ducking, hell!’ Shekhar said, and began swimming towards the wall.
There was no sign of Anand. In the shadow of the wall the rowingboat barely rocked above its reflection.
Silently Mr Biswas and Owad watched Shekhar. He dived. Mr Biswas scooped up a handful of water and let it fall on his head. Some of it ran down his face; some of it sprinkled the sea.
Shekhar reappeared near the sea-wall, shook the water from his head and dived again.
Mr Biswas began to wade towards the wall. Owad began to swim. Mr Biswas began to swim.
Shekhar surfaced again, near the rowingboat. There was alarm on his face. He was holding Anand under his left arm and was pulling strongly with his right.
Owad and Mr Biswas moved towards him. He shouted to them to keep away. All at once he stopped pulling with his right hand, stood up, and was only waist-high in water. Behind him, in shadow, the rowingboat barely moved.
They carried Anand to the top of the wall and rolled him. Then Shekhar did some kneading exercises on his thin back. Mr Biswas stood by, noticing only the large safetypin – one of Shama’s, doubtless – on Anand’s blue striped shirt, which lay in the small heap of his clothes.
Anand spluttered. His expression was one of anger. He said, ‘I was walking to the boat.’
‘I told you to stay where you were,’ Mr Biswas said, angry too.
‘And the bottom of the sea drop away.’
‘The dredging,’ Shekhar said. He had not lost his look of alarm.
‘The sea just drop away,’ Anand cried, lying on his back, covering his face with a crooked arm. He spoke as one insulted.
Owad said, ‘Anyway, you’ve got the record for ducking, Shompo.’
‘Shut up!’ Anand screamed. He began to cry, rubbing his legs on the hard, cracked ground, then turning over on his belly.
Mr Biswas took up the shirt with the safetypin and handed it to Anand.
Anand snatched the shirt and said, ‘Leave me.’
‘We shoulda leave you,’ Mr Biswas said, ‘when you was there, ducking.’ As soon as he spoke the last word he regretted it.
‘Yes!’ Anand screamed. ‘You shoulda leave me.’ He got up and, going to his heap of clothes, began to dress furiously, forcing his clothes over his wet and gritty skin. ‘I am never going to come out with any of you again.’ His eyes were small and red, the lids swollen.
He walked away from them, quickly, his small body silhouetted against the sun, across the weed-ridden mud flat. Unused, his towel