I
Raicharan was twelve years old when
he came as a servant to his master’s house.
He belonged to the same caste as his master, and was
given his master’s little son to nurse.
As time went on the boy left Raicharan’s arms
to go to school. From school he went on to college,
and after college he entered the judicial service.
Always, until he married, Raicharan was his sole attendant.
But, when a mistress came into the
house, Raicharan found two masters instead of one.
All his former influence passed to the new mistress.
This was compensated for by a fresh arrival. Anukul
had a son born to him, and Raicharan by his unsparing
attentions soon got a complete hold over the child.
He used to toss him up in his arms, call to him in
absurd baby language, put his face close to the baby’s
and draw it away again with a grin.
Presently the child was able to crawl
and cross the doorway. When Raicharan went to
catch him, he would scream with mischievous laughter
and make for safety. Raicharan was amazed at the
profound skill and exact judgment the baby showed
when pursued. He would say to his mistress with
a look of awe and mystery: “Your son will
be a judge some day.”
New wonders came in their turn.
When the baby began to toddle, that was to Raicharan
an epoch in human history. When he called his
father Ba-ba and his mother Ma-ma and Raicharan
Chan-na, then Raicharan’s ecstasy knew
no bounds. He went out to tell the news to all
the world.
After a while Raicharan was asked
to show his ingenuity in other ways. He had,
for instance, to play the part of a horse, holding
the reins between his teeth and prancing with his
feet. He had also to wrestle with his little
charge, and if he could not, by a wrestler’s
trick, fall on his back defeated at the end, a great
outcry was certain.
About this time Anukul was transferred
to a district on the banks of the Padma. On his
way through Calcutta he bought his son a little go-cart.
He bought him also a yellow satin waistcoat, a gold-laced
cap, and some gold bracelets and anklets. Raicharan
was wont to take these out, and put them on his little
charge with ceremonial pride, whenever they went for
a walk.
Then came the rainy season, and day
after day the rain poured down in torrents. The
hungry river, like an enormous serpent, swallowed down
terraces, villages, cornfields, and covered with its
flood the tall grasses and wild casuarinas on the
sand-banks. From time to time there was a deep
thud, as the river-banks crumbled. The unceasing
roar of the rain current could be beard from far away.
Masses of foam, carried swiftly past, proved to the
eye the swiftness of the stream.
One afternoon the rain cleared.
It was cloudy, but cool and bright. Raicharan’s
little despot did not want to stay in on such a fine
afternoon. His lordship climbed into the go-cart.
Raicharan, between the shafts, dragged him slowly
along till he reached the rice-fields on the banks
of the river. There was no one in the fields,
and no boat on the stream. Across the water,
on the farther side, the clouds were rifted in the
west. The silent ceremonial of the setting sun
was revealed in all its glowing splendour. In
the midst of that stillness the child, all of a sudden,
pointed with his finger in front of him and cried:
“Chan-nal Pitty fow.”
Close by on a mud-flat stood a large
Kadamba tree in full flower. My lord, the baby,
looked at it with greedy eyes, and Raicharan knew his
meaning. Only a short time before he had made,
out of these very flower balls, a small go-cart; and
the child had been so entirely happy dragging it about
with a string, that for the whole day Raicharan was
not made to put on the reins at all. He was promoted
from a horse into a groom.
But Raicharan had no wish that evening
to go splashing knee-deep through the mud to reach
the flowers. So he quickly pointed his finger
in the opposite direction, calling out: “Oh,
look, baby, look! Look at the bird.”
And with all sorts of curious noises he pushed the
go-cart rapidly away from the tree.
But a child, destined to be a judge,
cannot be put off so easily. And besides, there
was at the time nothing to attract his eyes. And
you cannot keep up for ever the pretence of an imaginary
bird.
The little Master’s mind was
made up, and Raicharan was at his wits’ end.
“Very well, baby,” he said at last, “you
sit still in the cart, and I’ll go and get you
the pretty flower. Only mind you don’t go
near the water.”
As he said this, he made his legs
bare to the knee, and waded through the oozing mud
towards the tree.
The moment Raicharan had gone, his
little Master went off at racing speed to the forbidden
water. The baby saw the river rushing by, splashing
and gurgling as it went. It seemed as though the
disobedient wavelets themselves were running away
from some greater Raicharan with the laughter of a
thousand children. At the sight of their mischief,
the heart of the human child grew excited and restless.
He got down stealthily from the go-cart and toddled
off towards the river. On his way he picked up
a small stick, and leant over the bank of the stream
pretending to fish. The mischievous fairies of
the river with their mysterious voices seemed inviting
him into their play-house.
Raicharan had plucked a handful of
flowers from the tree, and was carrying them back
in the end of his cloth, with his face wreathed in
smiles. But when he reached the go-cart, there
was no one there. He looked on all sides and
there was no one there. He looked back at the
cart and there was no one there.
In that first terrible moment his
blood froze within him. Before his eyes the whole
universe swam round like a dark mist. From the
depth of his broken heart he gave one piercing cry;
“Master, Master, little Master.”
But no voice answered “Chan-na.”
No child laughed mischievously back; no scream of
baby delight welcomed his return. Only the river
ran on, with its splashing, gurgling noise as before, as
though it knew nothing at all, and had no time to
attend to such a tiny human event as the death of
a child.
As the evening passed by Raicharan’s
mistress became very anxious. She sent men out
on all sides to search. They went with lanterns
in their hands, and reached at last the banks of the
Padma. There they found Raicharan rushing up
and down the fields, like a stormy wind, shouting
the cry of despair: “Master, Master, little
Master!”
When they got Raicharan home at last,
he fell prostrate at his mistress’s feet.
They shook him, and questioned him, and asked him
repeatedly where he had left the child; but all he
could say was, that he knew nothing.
Though every one held the opinion
that the Padma had swallowed the child, there was
a lurking doubt left in the mind. For a band of
gipsies had been noticed outside the village that
afternoon, and some suspicion rested on them.
The mother went so far in her wild grief as to think
it possible that Raicharan himself had stolen the child.
She called him aside with piteous entreaty and said:
“Raicharan, give me back my baby. Oh! give
me back my child. Take from me any money you ask,
but give me back my child!”
Raicharan only beat his forehead in
reply. His mistress ordered him out of the house.
Artukul tried to reason his wife out
of this wholly unjust suspicion: “Why on
earth,” he said, “should he commit such
a crime as that?”
The mother only replied: “The
baby had gold ornaments on his body. Who knows?”
It was impossible to reason with her after that.
II
Raicharan went back to his own village.
Up to this time he had had no son, and there was no
hope that any child would now be born to him.
But it came about before the end of a year that his
wife gave birth to a son and died.
All overwhelming resentment at first
grew up in Raicharan’s heart at the sight of
this new baby. At the back of his mind was resentful
suspicion that it had come as a usurper in place of
the little Master. He also thought it would be
a grave offence to be happy with a son of his own
after what had happened to his master’s little
child. Indeed, if it had not been for a widowed
sister, who mothered the new baby, it would not have
lived long.
But a change gradually came over Raicharan’s
mind. A wonderful thing happened. This new
baby in turn began to crawl about, and cross the doorway
with mischief in its face. It also showed an amusing
cleverness in making its escape to safety. Its
voice, its sounds of laughter and tears, its gestures,
were those of the little Master. On some days,
when Raicharan listened to its crying, his heart suddenly
began thumping wildly against his ribs, and it seemed
to him that his former little Master was crying somewhere
in the unknown land of death because he had lost his
Chan-na.
Phailna (for that was the name Raicharan’s
sister gave to the new baby) soon began to talk.
It learnt to say Ba-ba and Ma-ma with a baby
accent. When Raicharan heard those familiar sounds
the mystery suddenly became clear. The little
Master could not cast off the spell of his Chan-na,
and therefore he had been reborn in his own house.
The arguments in favour of this were,
to Raicharan, altogether beyond dispute:
(i.) The new baby was born soon after
his little master’s death.
(ii.) His wife could never have accumulated
such merit as to give birth to a son in middle age.
(iii.) The new baby walked with a
toddle and called out Ba-ba and Ma-ma.
There was no sign lacking which marked out the future
judge.
Then suddenly Raicharan remembered
that terrible accusation of the mother. “Ah,”
he said to himself with amazement, “the mother’s
heart was right. She knew I had stolen her child.”
When once he had come to this conclusion, he was filled
with remorse for his past neglect. He now gave
himself over, body and soul, to the new baby, and became
its devoted attendant. He began to bring it up,
as if it were the son of a rich man. He bought
a go-cart, a yellow satin waistcoat, and a gold-embroidered
cap. He melted down the ornaments of his dead
wife, and made gold bangles and anklets. He refused
to let the little child play with any one of the neighbourhood,
and became himself its sole companion day and night.
As the baby grew up to boyhood, he was so petted and
spoilt and clad in such finery that the village children
would call him “Your Lordship,” and jeer
at him; and older people regarded Raicharan as unaccountably
crazy about the child.
At last the time came for the boy
to go to school. Raicharan sold his small piece
of land, and went to Calcutta. There he got employment
with great difficulty as a servant, and sent Phailna
to school. He spared no pains to give him the
best education, the best clothes, the best food.
Meanwhile he lived himself on a mere handful of rice,
and would say in secret: “Ah! my little
Master, my dear little Master, you loved me so much
that you came back to my house. You shall never
suffer from any neglect of mine.”
Twelve years passed away in this manner.
The boy was able to read and write well. He was
bright and healthy and good-looking. He paid a
great deal of attention to his personal appearance,
and was specially careful in parting his hair.
He was inclined to extravagance and finery, and spent
money freely. He could never quite look on Raicharan
as a father, because, though fatherly in affection,
he had the manner of a servant. A further fault
was this, that Raicharan kept secret from every one
that himself was the father of the child.
The students of the hostel, where
Phailna was a boarder, were greatly amused by Raicharan’s
country manners, and I have to confess that behind
his father’s back Phailna joined in their fun.
But, in the bottom of their hearts, all the students
loved the innocent and tender-hearted old man, and
Phailna was very fond of him also. But, as I have
said before, he loved him with a kind of condescension.
Raicharan grew older and older, and
his employer was continually finding fault with him
for his incompetent work. He had been starving
himself for the boy’s sake. So he had grown
physically weak, and no longer up to his work.
He would forget things, and his mind became dull and
stupid. But his employer expected a full servant’s
work out of him, and would not brook excuses.
The money that Raicharan had brought with him from
the sale of his land was exhausted. The boy was
continually grumbling about his clothes, and asking
for more money.
Raicharan made up his mind. He
gave up the situation where he was working as a servant,
and left some money with Phailna and said: “I
have some business to do at home in my village, and
shall be back soon.”
He went off at once to Baraset where
Anukul was magistrate. Anukul’s wife was
still broken down with grief. She had had no other
child.
One day Anukul was resting after a
long and weary day in court. His wife was buying,
at an exorbitant price, a herb from a mendicant quack,
which was said to ensure the birth of a child.
A voice of greeting was heard in the courtyard.
Anukul went out to see who was there. It was
Raicharan. Anukul’s heart was softened when
he saw his old servant. He asked him many questions,
and offered to take him back into service.
Raicharan smiled faintly, and said
in reply; “I want to make obeisance to my mistress.”
Anukul went with Raicharan into the
house, where the mistress did not receive him as warmly
as his old master. Raicharan took no notice of
this, but folded his hands, and said: “It
was not the Padma that stole your baby. It was
I.”
Anukul exclaimed: “Great
God! Eh! What! Where is he?” Raicharan
replied: “He is with me, I will bring him
the day after to-morrow.”
It was Sunday. There was no magistrate’s
court sitting. Both husband and wife were looking
expectantly along the road, waiting from early morning
for Raicharan’s appearance. At ten o’clock
he came, leading Phailna by the hand.
Anukul’s wife, without a question,
took the boy into her lap, and was wild with excitement,
sometimes laughing, sometimes weeping, touching him,
kissing his hair and his forehead, and gazing into
his face with hungry, eager eyes. The boy was
very good-looking and dressed like a gentleman’s
son. The heart of Anukul brimmed over with a sudden
rush of affection.
Nevertheless the magistrate in him
asked: “Have you any proofs?” Raicharan
said: “How could there be any proof of such
a deed? God alone knows that I stole your boy,
and no one else in the world.”
When Anukul saw how eagerly his wife
was clinging to the boy, he realised the futility
of asking for proofs. It would be wiser to believe.
And then where could an old man like Raicharan
get such a boy from? And why should his faithful
servant deceive him for nothing?
“But,” he added severely,
“Raicharan, you must not stay here.”
“Where shall I go, Master?”
said Raicharan, in a choking voice, folding his hands;
“I am old. Who will take in an old man as
a servant?”
The mistress said: “Let
him stay. My child will be pleased. I forgive
him.”
But Anukul’s magisterial conscience
would not allow him. “No,” he said,
“he cannot be forgiven for what he has done.”
Raicharan bowed to the ground, and
clasped Anukul’s feet. “Master,”
he cried, “let me stay. It was not I who
did it. It was God.”
Anukul’s conscience was worse
stricken than ever, when Raicharan tried to put the
blame on God’s shoulders.
“No,” he said, “I
could not allow it. I cannot trust you any more.
You have done an act of treachery.”
Raicharan rose to his feet and said:
“It was not I who did it.”
“Who was it then?” asked Anukul.
Raicharan replied: “It was my fate.”
But no educated man could take this
for an excuse. Anukul remained obdurate.
When Phailna saw that he was the wealthy
magistrate’s son, and not Raicharan’s,
he was angry at first, thinking that he had been cheated
all this time of his birthright. But seeing Raicharan
in distress, he generously said to his father:
“Father, forgive him. Even if you don’t
let him live with us, let him have a small monthly
pension.”
After hearing this, Raicharan did
not utter another word. He looked for the last
time on the face of his son; he made obeisance to his
old master and mistress. Then he went out, and
was mingled with the numberless people of the world.
At the end of the month Anukul sent
him some money to his village. But the money
came back. There was no one there of the name
of Raicharan.