By the end of December 2013, I had already been two years away from India, having (temporarily) relocated to Hanoi, Vietnam in 2011. As head of the Asia-Pacific region for a French international engineering conglomerate, I had set up regional headquarters in New Delhi. However, because of an unexpected resignation of my GM in Hanoi, I had moved there to ensure a seamless transition, especially because of a number of potential deals in the offing with Korean and Japanese businesses.
Of course I had made frequent visits to India, as I did to all the other countries in the region where we had offices and GM's reporting to me. However, for reasons both official and personal, I had extended my stay in Vietnam and had placed the need to hire a GM on the back burner. In India, although I continued to maintain my residence and domestic staff, on most visits I would stay at the same hotel that also housed our regional HQ.
Normally, every December I would go home to France where I'd catch up with my parents in Paris, spend a weekend at a ski resort somewhere in Les Trois Vallees, visit members of my Board of Directors, and get back to work after the first week of January. But in 2013 I didn't do that because of a major acquisition that we were working on out of our New Delhi and Mumbai offices in India. Instead, I stayed for about ten days in India bringing the deal to a successful conclusion before the end of the year.
The decision to fly in to India, instead of to Europe, was a last minute one. And since this was likely to be an extended trip, I decided to stay at my residence instead of the hotel I usually stayed at. However, I normally let my domestic help Sunita, and my driver Bahadur, take their annual vacation in December and like every other year I had given them permission to do so now as well. But my landlady (or house agent, really) had been kind enough to arrange a temporary maid when I called to let her know that I would be coming in the week before Christmas.
I flew in to Delhi on a Friday night, the 20th of December I think it was. There was a car and driver from my office waiting at the airport. Immigration and customs clearance happened swift and efficiently, baggage collection equally smooth, and we were out of the airport in less than 40 minutes from touchdown. I had the keys to my apartment but was unclear about whether the temporary help would be available 24/7 or just on a part time basis.
As we approached home, close to the centre of New Delhi, the driver said "Sir, your driver Bahadur on leave. You want I come serve you while you stay India?" I smiled and replied appreciatively, "Thank you! Yes I will need your help. I will tell Christine at the office to organise your assignments. Thank you!" The truth was I didn't want a 'personal' driver during this stay and would be happy to let my assistant at office arrange for my transportation requirements.
I got to my apartment close to midnight, thanked the driver, told him that the office would give him instructions for the next morning, and went up to the penthouse in the elevator with my suitcase and other hand luggage. As I opened the door and stepped in, dragging the Samsonite behind me, ambient lighting suffused the living room with a welcoming golden hue. The door shut and locked silently behind me. It was a nice feeling being back 'home' and I wondered why I had avoided it for so long. But I knew. I was uncomfortable with the idea of facing my dear maid, Sunita, after the lustful last night we had spent together. And our parting, fraught with raw emotion, when I left for Vietnam two years ago.
Feeling a certain guilty pleasure now at being in my cosy abode, alone, I dragged the valise to my bedroom, took off my shoes and stripped off my clothes, throwing them into a corner behind the door. The apartment was warming up gradually as the heating system kicked in and I wound my way to the bar in the living room. I noticed that the drapes were partially drawn but the sheers were missing from the windows and the sliding glass doors that led to a lavish terrace garden. The bar was well stocked, just the way I had left it. I pulled out a bottle of Jack Daniel and poured out a measure of bourbon. Opening the freezer section of my refrigerator, I scooped out a few cubes of ice and threw them into the tumbler.
Then, naked, I walked to the music console and switched it on. Almost immediately the soft intimate strains of an Indian stringed instrument, a Santoor, filled the silence. Taking a gulp of the whiskey, I went to my favourite leather recliner and settled into it. Dinner had been served on the flight so I wasn't hungry, but I wondered what I would do in the morning since I assumed that the fridge was bereft of any consumables.
A couple of hours later, I awoke, realising that I had dropped off to sleep on the recliner. The night was silent. The glass of bourbon, now empty, was still in my hand, resting on my lap. I placed it on the side table, got up off the lounger, and stumbled to my bedroom. I hurriedly brushed my teeth and then staggered to my bed. Throwing off the cover, I slipped in under the duvet, pulling it over me. I was out in less than ten seconds.
I slept the sleep of the dead for the next six hours. Monday through Thursday had been extremely busy days, as had most of Friday, with very little sleep in between. I was in a series of meetings in Singapore, from where I had flown directly (without going back to my base in Hanoi) to New Delhi on a Singapore Airlines flight that had been uncharacteristically delayed. But when I awoke at 8:30 am on this Saturday morning, I felt fresh and alive.
I threw off the covers and walked, naked as I had slept, to the bathroom. Half an hour later, I had completed my ablutions and donned a pair of jeans and a warm flannel shirt before walking out to the kitchen. I was pleasantly surprised to see that there was enough in and out of the refrigerator to offer some fairly healthy breakfast options. I started with a steaming hot mug of coffee which I carried out to my wonderfully green terrace and soaked in some of the early morning sunshine (although it was struggling to pierce through the winter fog).
After a while I decided to get back inside because there was a bit of a chill this December morning. As I was sliding shut the glass panels, I heard the doorbell chime, but almost simultaneously heard someone keying open the door so I stood still. As it swung open, a young Indian girl stepped in, and then stopped dead in her tracks. Perhaps she wasn't expecting me to be there, but immediately and very deferentially, she folded her hands together and said "Namaste, Sahib!"
I replied and greeted her back, knowing immediately that she was the temporary maidservant that Mrs. Vimla (the house agent) had promised. I put a smile on my face as I greeted her so that she lost her nervousness and began to feel a little more at ease. "Hame nahin maloom that ki aap ghar pe honge. Sorry sir," she said softly. I smiled again and said it was ok that she wasn't aware about my having arrived.
Although my understanding of the Hindi language had improved considerably over the years that I had been stationed in India, my spoken fluency had suffered over the last couple of years while I had been in Vietnam. "Do you speak English", I asked.