A COMMON ENEMY
PROLOGUE
THE FIRE-SAFETY inspector jabbed his finger in the direction of the aromatic joss stick smoking in its stand.
'And what's that?'
'Opium,' the young woman replied dreamily.
There was a sudden silence in the accounts office. The inspector's face broke out in red blotches.
'I'm not joking. What is it?'
'A joss stick, it's Indian. It's called opium.' The young woman looked round at her colleagues and added self-consciously, 'But that's only a name, you mustn't think... There isn't really any opium in it!'
"At home you can smoke opium or cannabis, or anything else you like,' said the inspector, ostentatiously nipping his fingers together and extinguishing the small smouldering stick. 'But here... you're surrounded on all sides by nothing but paper.'
'I keep an eye on it,' the young woman objected resentfully. 'And it's in a special stand, see? The ash falls on the ceramic base. It's a nice smell, everyone likes it... '
She spoke in a gentle, reassuring voice, in the same tone as adults use when they're talking to a little child. The inspector was about to say something else, but just then the middle-aged woman who was sitting facing all the other bookkeepers intervened.
'Vera, I'm sorry, but the inspector is quite right. It's a very sickly smell. By the time evening comes it gives you a headache.'
'In India the windows are probably always kept wide open,' a third woman put in. 'And they burn their fragrances all the time. It's terribly dirty there, there are always cesspits some where close by, and everything rots very quickly because of the climate. They have to smother the stench somehow. But what do we need it for?'
A fourth girl, the same age as Vera, giggled and pressed her face towards the screen of her computer.
'Well, you should have said!' Vera exclaimed. Her voice sounded tearful. 'Why didn't you tell me?'
'We didn't want to offend you,' the older woman replied.
Vera jumped to her feet, covered her face with her hands and ran out into the corridor. Her heels clattered on the parquet flooring, and the door of the restroom slammed in the distance.
'We had to tell her sooner or later,' the middle-aged woman said with a sigh. 'I'm really sick of smelling those sticks of hers. It's always opium, or jasmine, or cinnamon...'
'Do you remember the chillies and cardamom?' the young girl exclaimed. 'That was really horrible!'
'Don't make fun of your friend. You'd better go and bring Vera back, she's much too upset.'
The young girl willingly got to her feet and left the room.
The inspector gazed round at the women with a wild expres sion. Then he glanced at the man beside him - a plump young, individual wearing a T-shirt and jeans. Beside the inspector in his respectable uniform, he looked very untidy.
'This is a madhouse,' the inspector declared. 'Nothing but breaches of the fire-safety code everywhere I look. Why haven't you been closed down yet?'
'I'm surprised at that myself,' the other man agreed. 'Sometimes when I'm walking to work, I wonder: What if it's all over now? What if they've put an end to the whole mess, and from now on we're going to work according to the fire-safety regulations, without breaking a single rule
'Show me the fire-safety board on the second floor,' the inspector interrupted, looking at his plan of the building.
'Gladly,' said the man, opening the door for the inspector and winking at the women they were leaving behind in the office.
The inspector's indignation was lessened a bit by the sight of the board. It was brand new and very neat and tidy, painted red. Next to it were two fire extinguishers, a bucket of sand, an empty conical-shaped bucket, a spade, a gaff and a crowbar.
'Well, well. Well, well, well,' the inspector murmured as he glanced at the buckets and checked the date when the extinguishers were last refilled. 'The good old-fashioned kind. I didn't really expect that.'
'We make an effort,' said his guide. 'When I was still in school, we had one just like that on the wall.'