For the Win
Page 36
It had been mere seconds, but it was already over. Two of the boys were running away, one was sobbing through a bloody mouth, two were unconscious. Ashok looked for wounded soldiers. Three had been cut with machetes, including the two he’d seen hurt by the leader as he ran for Mala. Remembering the arterial blood, red and rich, Ashok found its owner first, lying on the ground, eyes half open, breath labored. He pushed his hands over the injury, a deep cut on the left arm that spurted with each of the hammering beats of the boy’s chest and he shouted, “A shirt, anything, a bandage,” and someone pressed a shirt into his bloody hands and he applied hard pressure, staunching the blood. “Someone call for a doctor,” he said, making eye-contact with Anam, a soldier he had hardly spoken to before. “You have a phone?” The girl was shivering slightly, but she nodded and patted a handbag at her side, absentmindedly swinging the length of iron in her hand. She dropped it. “You call the doctor, you understand?” She nodded. “What will you do?”
“Call the doctor,” she said, dreamily, but she began to dial. He turned and grabbed the hand that had passed him the shirt, and he saw that it was attached to Mala, who had stripped it off of another boy in her army. Her chest was heaving, but her gaze was calm.
“Hold here,” he ordered, without a moment’s scruple about dictating to the general. This was first aid, it was what he had been trained for by his father, long before he studied economics, and it brooked no argument. He pressed her hand against the bloody rag and stood, not hearing the crackle of his joints. He turned and found the next injured person, and the next.
And then he came to the boy, the little boy whose misshapen head had caught his attention. The boy who’d been hit high and low with two hard-flung rocks. The whole front of his jaw was crushed, a nightmare of whitish bone and tooth fragments swimming in a jelly of semi-clotted blood. When Ashok peeled back each eyelid, he saw that the left pupil was as wide as a sewer entrance, and did not contract when he moved away and let the sun shine full on it. “Concussion,” he muttered to the air, and Yasmin answered, “Is that bad?”
“His brain is bleeding,” Ashok said. “If it bleeds too much, he will die.” He said it simply, as if reading from a textbook. The boy smelled terrible, and there were sores on his arms and chest and ankles, swollen, overscratched and infected insect-bites and boils. “He has to see a doctor.” He looked back to the bleeding soldier. “Him, too.”
He found the girl who’d promised to call a doctor. “Where is the doctor?” He had no idea how much time had passed since he’d told her to call. It could have been ten minutes or two hours.
She looked confused. “The ambulance,” she began. She looked around helplessly. “It will come, they said.”
And now that he listened for it, he heard it, a distant dee-dah, dee-dah. The narrow lane that housed Mrs. Dotta’s cafe would never admit an ambulance. Without speaking, Yasmin ran for the main road, to hail it. And now that Ashok was listening, he could hear: neighbors with their heads stuck out of their windows and doorways, passing furious opinion and gupshup. They cheered on Mala’s army, rained curses down on the badmashes with their machetes, lamented Mrs. Dotta’s departure, chattered like tropical birds about how she had been forced out, weeping, and chased down the road in the dark of night.
Ashok was covered in blood. It covered his hands, his arms, his chest, his face. His lips were covered in dried blood, and there was a coppery taste in his mouth. His shirt and trousers—soaked. He straightened and looked around the crowded lane, up at the chatterers, blinking owlishly. Around him, the soldiers and the wounded.
Mala was whispering urgently in Sushant’s ear, the boy listening intently. Then he began to move among the soldiers, urging them inside. The Webblies had work to do. The police would come soon, and the people inside the building would have the moral authority to claim it was theirs. The boys with their machetes, injured or gone, would have no claim. Ashok wondered if he would be arrested, and, if he was, whether he’d be able to get out. Maybe his father could take care of it. An important man, a doctor, he could take care—
Two ambulance technicians arrived, bearing heavy bags and collapsed stretchers. They were locals, with Dharavi accents, sent from the Lokmanya Tilak hospital, a huge pile with a good reputation. Quickly, he described the injuries to the men, and they split up to look at the most serious cases, the deep arterial cut and the concussion. Ashok stayed near the small boy, feeling somehow responsible for him, more responsible than for his own teammate, watched as the technician fitted the boy with a neck-brace and then triggered the air-canister that filled it, immobilizing his head. Carefully, the technician seated a plastic ring in the donut-hole center of the brace, over the boy’s ruined jaw and nose, so that the plastic wouldn’t interfere with his breathing. He unfurled his stretcher, snapped its braces to rigidity and looked at Ashok.
“You know the procedure?”
Instead of answering, Ashok positioned himself at the boy’s skinny hips, putting a hand on each, ready to roll him up at the same time as the medic, keeping his whole body in line to avoid worsening any spinal injuries. The medic slid the stretcher in place, and Ashok rolled the boy back. For one brief moment, he was supporting nearly all the boy’s weight in his hands and the child seemed to weigh nothing, nothing at all, as though he was hollow. Ashok found that he was crying, silent tears that slid down his face, collecting blood, slipping into his mouth, doubly salty blood and tear mixture.
Mala silently slipped her arm in his. She was very warm in the oppressive heat of the morning. There would be a rain soon, the humidity couldn’t stay this high all day, the water would come together soon and then the blood would wash away into the rough gutters that ran the laneway’s length.
“He was a brave kid,” Mala said.
Ashok couldn’t find a reply.
“I think he thought that if he charged us with that knife, sliced one of us up, we’d be so scared we’d go away forever.”
“You really understand him, then?” Ashok saw Yasmin steal over to them, slip her fingers into Mala’s.
Mala didn’t answer.
Yasmin said, “Everyone thinks that you can win the fight by striking first.” Mala’s arm tightened on Ashok’s arm. “But sometimes you win the fight by not fighting.”
Mala said, “We should call you General Gandhiji.”
“It’d be an honor, but I couldn’t live up to Gandhi. He was a great man.”
Ashok said, “Gandhi admitted to beating his wife. He was a great man, but not a saint.” He swallowed. “No one mentions that Gandhi had all that violence inside him. I think it makes him better, because it means that his way wasn’t just some natural instinct he was born with. It was something he battled for, in his own mind, every day.” He looked down at the top of Mala’s head, startled for a moment to realize that she was shorter than him. He had a tendency to think of her as towering, larger than life.
Mala looked up at him and it seemed that her dark eyes were glowing in the hot, steamy air, staring out from under her long lashes. “Controlling yourself is overrated,” she said. “There’s plenty to be said for letting go.”
There were so many eyes on them, so many people watching from every corner of the road, and Ashok felt suddenly very self-conscious.
Inside, the cafe was hardly recognizable. It stank like the den of some sick animal that had gone to ground, and one corner had been used as a toilet. Many of the computers had been carelessly moved, disconnecting their wires, and one screen was in fragments on the floor. There were betel-spit streaks around the floor, and empty bottles of cheap, fiery booze so awful even the old drunks in the streets wouldn’t drink it.
But there was also a photo, much-creased and folded, of a worn but still pretty woman, formally posed, holding a baby and a slightly larger boy, whom Ashok remembered from the melee. The baby, he thought, must have been that younger boy, and he wondered what had become of the woman, and how she was separated from the sons she held with so much love.
And the more he wondered, the more numb and sorrowful he felt, until the sorrow welled over him in black waves, like a tide coming in, until he buckled at the knees and went down to the floor, and if any of the soldiers saw him hold himself and cry, no one said a word.
His papers were intact, mostly, in the back room where he’d worked, and the network connection was still up, and the garbage was all swept out the door and the windows were flung open and soon the sound of joyous combat and soldierly high spirits filled Mrs. Dotta’s, as it had so many days before. Ashok fell into the numbers and the sheets, seeing how he could work them with the new dates, and he was so engrossed that he didn’t even notice the sudden silence in the cafe that marked the arrival of a policeman.
The policeman—fat, corrupt, an old Dharavi rat himself, and more a creature of the slum than the children—had already gotten an account from the neighbors, heard that the machete-wielding badmashes had been the invaders here, and he wasn’t about to get exorcised on behalf of six little nobodies like them. But when there was a death, there had to be paperwork…
“Death?” Ashok said.
“The small one. Dead by the time he reached the hospital.”
Ashok felt as though the floor was dropping away from him and the only thing that distracted him and kept him from falling with it was the gasp of dismay from Yasmin behind him, a sound that started off as an exhalation of breath but turned into a drawn out whimper. He turned and saw that she had gone so pale that she was actually green, and the doctor’s son in him noticed that her pupils had shrunk to pinpricks.
The fat policeman looked at her, and his lips twisted into a wet, sarcastic smile. “Everything all right, miss?”
“She’s fine,” Mala said, flatly. She was standing closer to the policeman than was strictly necessary, too short to stare him in the eye, but still she seemed to be looking down. Unconsciously, the policeman shifted his weight back, then took a step back, then turned.
“Good bye, then,” he said, brandishing his notebook, containing Ashok’s identity card number; all the soldiers had claimed that they were never registered for the card, which Ashok really doubted, but which the policeman didn’t question, as the air whistled out of his nostrils and he sweated in his uniform. The policeman left, and work resumed. The rains had finally come, the skies opening like floodgates, the rain falling in sheets the color of the pollution they absorbed on their fall from the heavens. The clatter on the tin walls and roof was like a firefight in some cheap game where the guns all made metallic pong and ping sounds.
Ashok watched as Yasmin drifted away into Mrs. Dotta’s little “office,” the room where she made the chai over a small gas burner; watched as Mala followed her. He tried to work on his calculations, but he couldn’t concentrate until he saw Mala emerge, face slammed shut into her General Robotwallah expression, but there were still tracks from the tears on her cheeks. She looked straight through him and started to bark orders to her soldiers, who had been setting the cafe to rights and getting all the systems running again. A moment later, they were all clicking, shouting, headsets on, shoulders tight, in another world, and the battle was joined.
Ashok found his way into Mrs. Dotta’s office, found Yasmin squatting by the wall, heels flat on the ground, hands before her. She stared silently into those hands, twining them around each other like snakes.
“Yasmin,” he whispered. “Yasmin?”
She looked at him. There were no tears in her eyes, only an expression of bottomless sorrow. “I threw the rock,” she said. “The rock that hit that little boy. I threw it. The one that hit him in the mouth. He was…” She swallowed.
“He was running at us with a machete,” Ashok said. “He would have killed us—”
She chopped her hand through the air, a gesture full of un-characteristic violence. “We put ourselves in that position, in the position where we’d have to kill him! It was Mala. Mala, she always wants to win before the battle is fought, win by annihilating the enemy. And then to talk of Gandhi?” She looked like she was going to punch something, small hands balled in fists and then, abruptly, she pitched forward and threw up, copiously, a complete ejection of the entire contents of her stomach, more vomit than Ashok had ever seen emerge from a human throat. In between convulsions, he half-led, half-carried her out of the cafe, into the all-pounding rain, and let her throw up into the laneway, which had become a rushing river, the rain overflowing the narrow ditches on either side of it. The water ran right up to the cracked slab of cement that served as Mrs. Dotta’s doorstep, and Yasmin’s hijab was instantly soaked as she leaned out to spatter the water’s turbulent surface with poories and chai and bile. Her long dress clung to her narrow back and shoulders, and it heaved with them as she labored for breath. Ashok was soaked too, the blood-taste in his mouth again as the water washed the dried blood down his face. The rain made talking impossible so he didn’t have to worry about soothing words.
At last Yasmin straightened and then sagged against him. He put his arm around her, grateful for the feeling of another human being, that contact that penetrated his numbness. Something passed between them, carried on the thudding of their hearts, transmitted by their skin, and for a moment, he felt as though here, here at last, was someone who understood everything about him and here was someone he understood. The moment ended, ebbing away, until they were standing in an embarrassed, awkward half-hug, and they wordlessly disentangled and went back in. Someone had mopped up the vomit, using the rags that the badmashes had left behind and then kicking them in a reeking ball in the corner. Yasmin sat down at a computer and logged in, listening intently to the chatter around her, catching the order of battle, while Ashok went to his computer and got ready to talk to Big Sister Nor.
The day the strike started, Wei-Dong was in the midst of his second special assignment—the first one had been to bring over the box of prepaid cards, which had been handed off into the Webbly network to be scratched off and then keyed in and sent to Big Sister Nor so she could portion them out to the fighters.
The second assignment was harder in some ways: he was charged with finding other Mechanical Turks who might be sympathetic to the strikers’ cause and recruit them. Wei-Dong had never thought of himself as much of a leader—he’d always been a loner in school—but Big Sister Nor had talked to him at length about all the ways in which he might convince his fellow Turks to consider joining this strange enterprise.
Technically, it was simple enough to accomplish. As a Turk, he had access to the leaderboards of Turk activity, which Coca-Cola Online made a big deal out of, updating them every ten minutes. The leaderboards listed each Turk by name and showed which parts of the game he or she hung out in, how many queries he or she handled per hour, how highly the Turk’s rulings and role-play were rated by the players who were randomly surveyed by a satisfaction-bot that gave out rare badges to any player who would fill in an in-game questionnaire. The idea was to inspire the Turks by showing them how much better their peers were doing. It worked, too—Wei-Dong had spent many a night trying to pump his stats so that he could get ahead of the other Turks, scaling to the highest heights before being knocked down by someone else’s all-night run. And, of course, when you pulled ahead of another Turk, you got to leave a public “message of encouragement” for them, no more than 140 characters so that it could be tweeted and texted straight to them, and these messages had pushed the boundaries of extremely terse profanity and boasting.
Wei-Dong had a new use for the boards: he was using them to figure out which players were likely to switch sides. The gamerunners had created a facility for bulk-downloading historical data from them, and Turks were encouraged to make crazy mash-ups and visualizations showing whose play was the best. Wei-Dong had a different idea.
For weeks now, he’d been downloading gigantic amounts of data from the boards, piping it all into a database that Matthew had helped him build and now he could run some very specialized queries on it, queries like, “Show me Turks who us
ed to lead the pack but have fallen off, despite long hours of work.” Or “Show me Turks who use a lot of profanity when they’re filling in the dialog for non–player characters.” And especially, “Show me Turks who have a below-average level of ratting out gold farmers to the bosses.” This last one was a major enterprise among Turks, who got a big bonus every time they busted a farmer. Most of the Turks went “de-lousing” pretty often, looking to rack up the extra cash. But a significant minority never, ever hunted the farmers, and these were Wei-Dong’s natural starting point.
He had a long list of leads, and for each one, he had a timetable of the Turk’s habitual login hours and the parts of the world that the Turk worked most often. Then it was only a matter of logging in using one of the Webblies’ many, many toons, heading to that part of the world, and invoking the Turk and hoping the right person showed up. It would be easier to just use the Turk message boards, but if he did, he’d be busted and fired in seconds. This way was less efficient but it was a lot safer.
Now he was in the Goombas’ Star-Fields, a cloudscape in Mushroom Kingdom where the power-up stars were cultivated in endless rows. Players could quest here, taking jobs with comical farmers who’d put them to work weeding the star patches and pulling up the ripe ones. It was good for training up your abilities; a highly ranked Star Farmer could get more power-up out of his stars.
And here was the farmer, chewing a blade of grass and puttering around his barn, which was also made from clouds. He offered Wei-Dong a quest—low-level, just pulling up weeds from some of the easier-to-reach clouds, the ones that weren’t patrolled by hostile Lakitus. Wei-Dong accepted the quest, and then opened a chat with the farmer: “How long have you owned this farm?”
“Oh, youngster, I’ve been working this farm since I was but a boy—and my pappy worked it before me and his pappy before him. Yep, I guess you could say that we’re a farming gamily, hee hee!”