Arctic Summer

Arctic Summer Read Free Page A

Book: Arctic Summer Read Free
Author: Damon Galgut
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Goldie had received a travelling fellowship and had decided to use it to visit India and China. He came in a spirit of social enquiry, wishing to catalogue jails and temples and hospitals, and thereby to understand moral progress in foreign places. Bob Trevelyan (known to most as Bob Trevy) had resolved at the same time that this might be a good moment to visit the East, without the hindrance of wife and children. Gordon Luce, a more distant acquaintance from King’s, was passing through Bombay en route to a posting in Burma. And Morgan—well, Morgan was travelling in order to see his Indian friend again.
    In the eyes of the other passengers, they were a peculiar lot. Certainly they were aware of their eccentricity and had not shrunk from it. At mealtimes they took pleasure in discussing important classical questions in loud voices, such as the relative merits of Tolstoy versus Dostoevsky, or whether Nero had shown any theatrical talent in the staging of his circuses. To the officers and civil servants and non-official Europeans who made up the bulk of the passengers, the antics of these giggling intellectuals were cause for suspicion. Once, when all four of them were lined up, drinking tea, a soldier sitting opposite them had collapsed in laughter. They appeared to belong, but did not, quite. They had no wives with them, and they did not participate in deck games or fancy dress balls. Their irony was construed as a lack of seriousness. So they had become known as the Professors, and sometimes as the Salon, in tones that mixed familiarity with malice.
    Over the days that followed, Searight became an honorary member of the Salon, sitting with them at mealtimes and strolling with them on the deck. After an initial wariness, all of them decided that they liked him. Under the bluff military exterior, a poetic and romantic soul began to show itself. He was knowledgeable and charming and witty, easy to be near. His manner was generous, and he had led a highly interesting life, which he conveyed in a succession of amusing anecdotes, often told at his own expense, in a rich baritone voice that was somehow public and confiding at the same time. Soon he was insisting that they come up to visit him at the Frontier, and they were agreeing that it was an excellent idea. He would take them on a picnic to the Khyber Pass, he said; he would show them the edge of the Empire.
    But for the moment there was still the remainder of the journey on the ship, the sea wide and bright around them. By now there was a general air of excitement and anticipation, which kept many of the passengers at the rail, glaring ahead at the horizon in the hope that it would yield up something solid. The first visitation came in the form of a pair of yellow butterflies, flittering around the deck. Morgan was thrilled, but the butterflies disappeared, and no land took their place.
    The next morning Bob Trevy woke him with the news that India was visible. All four of them assembled in time to watch the dark line ahead of them break up into what it actually was: a bank of moody clouds in the distance. But later in the morning the horizon did thicken incontrovertibly into a graph of curious red hills, apparently devoid of life. For some reason, Morgan thought of Italy. He had already, at an earlier time, noticed an analogy between the shapes of southern Europe and Asia—three peninsulas, with a major range of mountains at the head of the middle one, and Sicily standing in for Ceylon—but this was an Italy he didn’t quite recognise, as though it were a place seen in a dream, hinting at menace.
    Then there was the arrival, with its predictable flurry and tedium, the last unpleasant meal among the same unpleasant people, before they were finally rowed ashore. As they toiled towards land, Morgan, who was sitting with Goldie at the rear of the little boat, saw Searight at the front, next to the Indian passenger, and suddenly an unsettling memory came back

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