
This involved considerably more than simply unsnapping a strap or untying a couple of knots. First,
Sanjay's lean visitor entered a code into the hand unit he extracted from the pocket of his ragged shorts.
An LED on the pack, which was woven of impenetrable carbon fiber composite camouflaged to look
like cheap burlap, flashed green. Entry and broadcast of a second code brought forth another green light
plus a soft click from somewhere within. Had anyone else tried to force their way into the pack without
successfully entering both codes, the amount of C-4 explosive integrated into its inner lining was sufficient
in quantity and purity to scatter the would-be intruder's body parts plus those of anyone in his immediate
vicinity over a distance more expansive than the standard cricket field. As the pack's owner unsealed the
top flap Sanjay leaned forward, the better to see what the man with the mongoose countenance had
brought for him.
There were a dozen small packets, every one as neatly wrapped and bound as a Chinese New Year
present. Each was hand-identified in English, that being as much the language of general commerce
throughout the subcontinent as it was in the rest of the wider world. One package said "Acetaminophen
syntase—Pandeswami Industries, Guwahati." The two next to the first declared their contents to be
"Multivitamin with proprietary Ayurvedic herbs and supplements." All three packages contained nothing
of the kind, unless one counted as a similarity the fact that they were packed tight with synthesized
Pharmaceuticals.
Illegal recreational pharmaceuticals.
Sanjay had always been a very fast learner. He had been the first in his village age group to master
English verbs, the first to inquire about how to use a computer keyboard, the first to try voice recognition
com-mands. Once he obtained the small business loan that had enabled him to open his little shop, it had
not taken him long to learn that even when dealing with ignorant tourists, the profit margin on T-shirts and
silver anklets and carved wooden elephants was small. Much smaller than on other things that could be
sold to travelers out of a shop such as his.
He prided himself on never selling such items to Indians. Well, not to Hindus, anyway. He was a strong
BJP man, firmly believing them to be corrupt but less corrupt than the members of the Congress and
other parties. When resigned to a life in hell always vote for the lesser devil, his father had once told him.
Though considering himself to be com-pletely unprejudiced, he was happy enough to sell drugs to
Buddhists, and Muslims, and the occasional Sikh, as well as to eager tourists.
You are throwing away your lives as well as your money, he wanted to tell them when they came
looking for his shop (he had already gained a modest reputation for availability of certain chemical
combinants). You were born with all these advantages, and you are casting them to the winds for a few
moments of false pleasure, he felt the urge to say.
But he did not. Because he had a wife, and two children, and had not the brutal ancestors of his
fresh-faced customers raped and stolen from his own progenitors whatever had taken their fancy?
Ghosh's Keepsakes was not exactly a front for a reprise of the Sepoy Rebellion, but neither did his
misgivings over what he was doing cause him to lose much sleep. Especially not when some
smart-mouthed French or Italian kid wearing fake Indian clothing and sporting long dreads ambled in off
the street, acting as if he owned the place, and flashed a wallet stuffed with more rupees than Sanjay's
long-suffering father was used to seeing in a year.
So he beamed at Bindar, who was forever looking over his shoulder as if Durga herself was on his tail
with a knife in each of her eight arms, and selected one of the packets at random. His visitor simply
nodded, knowing in advance what Sanjay intended to do with the package. Unless, of course, the
shopkeeper had taken leave of his rural but care-fully honed senses.