Shiva the Cat
the reports of my death are greatly exaggerated
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2019
- Location
- over the hills and far away
"And you O my soul where you stand,
Surrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space,
Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to connect them,
Till the bridge you will need be form’d, till the ductile anchor hold,
Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul."
-Walt Whitman
Bombay, IndiaSurrounded, detached, in measureless oceans of space,
Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, seeking the spheres to connect them,
Till the bridge you will need be form’d, till the ductile anchor hold,
Till the gossamer thread you fling catch somewhere, O my soul."
-Walt Whitman
March, 193--
“Telegram for you, madam,” said the well-dressed porter as he approached the isolated table on the back veranda of the Taj Mahal Hotel.
The woman seated there alone looked away from the picturesque view of the sea beyond with an expression of mostly-contained irritation as she took the envelope, addressed to Dr. Marianne Campbell, from his white-gloved hand. Dispatching the man with a coin and a soft “Thank you” in a lilting Scottish burr, Dr. Campbell considered ignoring the communication until she'd finished her breakfast. This was the first significant amount of time she'd had to herself in weeks, ever since boarding the steamer back in New York with her colleague, the esteemed Dr. Francis Morgan, and three undergraduate students in tow.
Until last night's late arrival in Bombay, any time that hadn't been spent supervising Miss Freeman, Mr. Whateley, and Miss Morales had been spent in conference with Morgan, discussing the strategy,best practices, and most of all, the cost of the mission at hand. Miskatonic University had agreed to cover the party's travel and supply expenses for an exploratory expedition to a newly-rumored temple near Gujarat, with additional funds available for excavation if they could actually find the place and deliver solid evidence of its existence (a prospect which many in the Archaeology department held in great skepticism).
Dr. Campbell had a sneaking suspicion Morgan himself had only been sent along as a chaperone to the party, rather than out of any real academic interest. After all, the idea of a lone woman shepherding three greenhorn field scholars through the jungles of India was utterly absurd, even if she was arguably the most accomplished lady archaeologist of the modern era.
In her earliest days at Westfield College back in England, young Marianne had risen to professional acclaim by discovering the grave of a viking shieldmaiden while on summer holiday, and while working an excavation in graduate school had located the entrance to the tomb of a long-lost Egyptian high priest. Even her career at Miskatonic had been jump-started by a serendipitous stumbling upon a prehistoric burial mound during a privately-funded excavation on a friend's property. Eager to lay claim to the discovery, the university had offered Dr. Campbell a teaching position, which though un-tenured as of now, had proven quite lucrative to the Scotswoman's interests.
Still, in the five years she had taught at Miskatonic, Dr. Campbell had never managed to quite fit in among her fellow professors. Most of them, probably Morgan included, attributed her career more to luck than anything else. They did have something of a point; who could say if Marianne would be where she was now if it hadn't been for a series of fortunate discoveries? Dr. Campbell herself would be the first to admit that while she excelled in finding, cataloguing, and preserving lost artifacts and structures, she could not always put them in the appropriate historical context (“I'm a jack of all ages, but a master of none,” was one of her favorite sayings). This led to a remarkable versatility when it came to field work of course—she was as comfortable on a dig in Egypt as Ecuador as East Timor—but alas her limited classroom acumen had relegated her to introductory-level lectures and labs for students who didn't know a ewer from an urn.
But Gujarat would be a chance to change things. If she could actually find the whispered temple hidden back in the jungle-covered mountains, Morgan and the other heads of the department had agreed to let her lead whatever formal excavation took place. Ideally such a task would only take place over the summer, but Dr. Campbell suspected that if the temple was all she dreamed, she could easily drag things out over months, or even years. Much as she might have enjoyed her quaint little rented house back in Arkham, she much preferred the prospect of being up to her knees in dirt, carefully sifting out remnants of civilization from the Vedic Period or earlier.
Of course, she still had to find the temple first. But Marianne had waited this long, and now that they'd finally made it to India she didn't mind waiting a few days more. Last night before sending the three students off to their own quarters, she had generously invited them to sleep in and spend the day exploring Bombay a bit for themselves, or at least enjoy the luxury of the Taj Mahal Hotel before they would be relegated to the rustic trails of the backcountry. Dr. Campbell hadn't seen any of them since her own late rising, nor had she crossed paths with Dr. Morgan, to her own relief. She thought he'd mentioned something about wiring back to Arkham last night before they'd parted company, but in truth Marianne did not care enough about Morgan's activities to inquire further. Her own agenda for the day was blissfully empty, save for a meeting with one of her father's army friends who had agreed to serve as guide for their expedition.
Or so she thought. When Marianne finally got around to reading the telegram, her usually careful poise slipped enough to allow a few hissing curses to come slithering out under her breath.
“For goodness' sake, not again,” Dr. Campbell muttered as her gloved hands tore the missive into shreds. Morgan was really going to let her have it now. The whole reason they'd come to Bombay in the first place, rather than going directly to Gujarat, was to make contact with Captain Burke, a rather scandalous old gentleman whose peccadilloes it would appear had finally caught up with him. Not only would this leave the party without a guide and guard against the dangers of the jungle, but without a translator as well. In multicultural Bombay that wasn't so terrible, but in the rural areas an interpreter was going to be absolutely crucial.
The professor passed one hand over her freckled face, trying to collect her thoughts and determine the best way out of this situation before Morgan could discover it and berate her misguided trust in the old scoundrel Burke. Looking through the wide glass doors to the lobby of the hotel, her whiskey-brown eyes noted the diverse faces of the men, women, and children inside. The Taj Mahal Hotel was not only known for its luxury, but as a gathering place of all sorts in Bombay. The rise in anti-European and anti-British sentiment over the last few years had driven many out of the cheaper establishments in the city, and even those who couldn't afford lodging at the hotel (which was happy to cater to anyone with money, regardless of race or creed) often frequented the bar and restaurant off the lobby.
And that was how Dr. Marianne Campbell ended up walking into a hotel bar at quarter to noon on a Tuesday, dressed in a neat but unremarkable gray cotton skirt that hugged her ample hips and a crisp white shirt with no more adornment than a bit of ruching near her rather prodigious bosom. The collar was buttoned modestly to the top, but the sleeves were short enough to bear most of her soon-to-be tanned arms, while her thick mass of chestnut curls was pulled away from her face in a loose chignon.
The bartender was somewhat surprised to see a woman in the establishment, though when he heard her accent the sentiment was rather diminished and he was quick to make sure he had some decent whiskey in stock. Dr. Campbell quickly dismissed the offer on the basis of the hour, and instead asked the man if he knew of anyone who might be hired as a translator and guide through the northern highlands.
Yes, the bartender said, he did know of an American who came in sometimes and might be helpful, but there was no telling when he might make his next appearance.
“Then if you don't mind, I think I would like to just wait and see,” Dr. Campbell remarked, settling in at a corner table beneath a dim red lamp, where she could keep a hopeful eye on the door and any potential saviors that might walk through it.
While sitting in a bar was hardly how she had planned to spend her first day in Bombay, at the very least she would be unlikely to run into Morgan in the smoky gloom. That would give her time to come up with a backup plan if there was no interpreter to be had. She supposed she could try wiring some bail over to Burke...
But no, Captain Burke would have to continue his sojourn in the Delhi prison, for as luck would have it not long after Dr. Campbell had taken up her post the bartender cleared his throat to gain her attention, then inclined his man towards a stranger that had just entered the room.
Rising to her full, if unremarkable height, the professor approached the man with the dignified smile of a queen and the eyes of a cornered animal deciding whether to flee or fight. But her voice was even as she inclined her head in greeting. “Excuse me sir, would you be a Mr. Marsh?" she asked with a slight roll of the Rs in his name. "If so, I wonder if I might have a word with you...”