Chapter 12: Change Is Bad
It took us several weeks to put the plan together. There were calls to make, flights to book, and certain other arrangements to make. I would have loved to involve Lucy in it all, but she'd made it very clear that that would be a bad idea, so I settled for smiling enigmatically during our lunches and telling her "you don't want to know". Meanwhile, until we were ready to act, Anjali carried the bugged phone around with her and acted as if nothing was wrong.
Then, early in October, she let her parents know that she'd be coming up to Sydney for Diwali, and could they please meet her at the airport on Saturday morning?
They drove up and waited in the pickup zone at the agreed time, but Anjali didn't show. They called her phone—it rang, but didn't answer—and texted. Ten minutes later, they received a reply:
Come meet me inside the airport.
There was no more information, no further reply to their messages. By that point, I expect Mr. Kapadia would have checked the tracker and confirmed that the phone was inside the airport. After parking the car they would have made their way into the Virgin terminal, following the tracker through the building until they reached the back corner of an airport cafe where a woman sat alone at a table.
That was when I looked up from Anjali's phone, smiled my very best smile at them, and said "Good morning. Anjali can't be here, but she asked me to tell you a few things. Please do sit down."
I had the advantage of surprise, and I did what I could with it. I explained that Anjali had taken her phone in for service, and that the technician had detected some unauthorised apps on it. (This was all true, though somewhat misleading; we'd seen no point in letting them know just how much we knew.) When Mr. Kapadia tried to bluster, I pointed out that he'd known just where to find me.
I told them that she was deeply hurt by this betrayal, and I waxed rhapsodic about her qualities as a friend: her kindness, her generosity, her trustworthiness. I reminded them that she was a grown adult, very nearly a doctor, and quite a sensible one who could perhaps be trusted to talk to boys now and then (another little piece of misdirection) without getting into trouble.
I told them that Anjali had asked me to convey her request that they not make any further attempts to contact her or surveil her, and that she would be in contact if and when she felt ready, and I suggested that if and when she did an apology on their part might be in order.
I did my best. I'd taken some days scripting what I had to say, and learning my script so I could move through it as fluently as if all this talk came naturally to me. I used everything I'd learned about them from our years of acquaintance; I leant on all the goodwill I'd ever earned with them.
When I was younger I used to believe that a good enough argument could win anybody over, if only I could find the right words. Nowadays I'm far less optimistic; life is not a video game and sometimes there isn't a winning strategy.
So it was, for all my best efforts. They heard me out, mostly because I didn't leave them room to get a word in. But when at last I stopped, the two of them replied, cold and angry. It was none of my business, and Anjali was their daughter, and she didn't know what was good for her, and I ought to know far better than to presume upon them like this. They said far more than that, moderated only by their desire to avoid a public spectacle in front of airport security, and I expect it would have hurt my feelings if I'd thought about their words closely.
Instead, I just marked time. I watched their mouths move, and I nodded or shook my head as the occasion required it, and now and then I seized on one of their remarks and argued it for a while without any real expectation of changing their minds.
Eventually, I held up my hand and told them, "I've said what I came here to say. It's up to you what you choose to do with that information. I'm afraid I can't stay and talk, because my flight is boarding soon. I wish you the very best, but now I have to leave."
Then I walked back through security screening, switched off the tracker phone, and flew back to Melbourne from the same gate I'd arrived at just a few hours earlier. I hadn't even left the airport.
At the other end of my flight I walked across to the Qantas terminal and settled myself down with a good book. I had just finished it when the screens announced the arrival of another Sydney-to-Melbourne flight, and I was standing at the gate to meet Anjali as she walked off with a spring in her step that I hadn't seen in some time.
"How'd it go?"
"As planned." She hugged me and we walked out towards the taxi stand. "And you?"
"I said my piece. Don't think they bought it though. Sorry, I tried."
"Not your fault. It's a pity, but I am not responsible for their choices, and neither are you." She sighed. "I shall keep on telling myself that until I start believing it. The important thing is that you took plenty of time saying it to them."
She had flown up the night before and stayed in a hotel. In the morning she'd caught an Uber and waited down the road from her parents' house until she saw them both leave, then let herself in; in response to an entirely hypothetical question, Salwa had confirmed that it's not housebreaking if they've given you a key. Her father's password was still "tendulkar34357" and once logged on, she had no difficulty in finding the archive.
The next part was my idea. Anjali's thought had been simply to delete the archive, but we'd both recognised that that might do more harm than good. It would be a very obvious sign of tampering, and if Mr. Kapadia kept backups—which both Anjali and Mahesh had advised him to do, after the virus incident—we couldn't guarantee finding them. Far better to
sabotage
it.
We'd made a copy of the archive from Anjali's account, and then gone through it editing the incriminating parts. ("Like the school library," Anjali had said. "We had editions of Catullus and James Joyce with all the naughty bits bowdlerised.") Her "checklist, as discussed" was now a list of things to think about when planning a PhD thesis. We'd left the conversations about "Lily" mostly unedited, but changed the dates so that they no longer matched Anjali's visits to my place, and in some cases coincided with times when Anjali had an alibi.
Anjali had copied the doctored archive over the original, changed the "last modified" date to cover her traces, and run a script to check for any other copies on her father's computer. Satisfied that there were none, she'd cleaned up after herself and let herself out, texting me to let her know she was done. Even if there were still backups of the original version, her parents would have no reason to go look for them, and eventually they'd be overwritten with our edited version.
"How are you feeling?" I asked her.
"Sad. Relieved. I don't know. I've blocked their numbers and I've let Mahesh know the situation." I saw her shoulders slump. "I really was looking forward to his wedding. I don't suppose I'm going now."
"I'm sorry." I'd never been to a Hindu wedding, but Anjali had attended many during our acquaintance, and through her I'd picked up an idea of their significance. I also knew she'd been taking a keen interest in Mahesh's arrangements.
"Can't be helped." I felt her fingers slide into the crook of my elbow. "Is it okay if I stay over at yours for the weekend?" She didn't need to tell me why.
"Sure. Though, will you be right for clothes?" She'd packed light for Sydney, just an overnight bag with one change.
"I will be if I don't wear any." She laughed at my startled expression. "I'm full of nerves and I very much need a distraction. If you don't mind?"
"Not in the slightest."
* * * * *
"So, what did you have in mind?" I asked her, some hours later. I was on my sofa; she'd just returned from a post-travel shower, having thrown her clothes in the wash and now wearing nothing but a towel, and the red scarf woven into her hair.
"I don't know. It's so loud in my head. Half of me wants some serious pain so I can switch off, and the other half really wants comfort. I can't decide if I want you to spank me or cuddle me. And I'm sore."
"Hmm." I scratched my head. "You know, I might have an idea, but I'll need to call in some help."
"What
do
you have in mind?"
"Do you trust me?"
"Always."
"Wait and see." I looked through a directory, made a decision, picked up the phone. "Hello there? Yes, I was looking to make a booking for this evening. You do outcalls, right? Yes, I'd like to book the two-hour deluxe package, if it's not too late...it's not? Great." I gave the lady my card details and directions to my apartment. "See you soon!"
Anjali looked at me dubiously. "Did you just dial a dominatrix?"
"Wait and see," I told her.
"Ought I to dress for the occasion?"