After a narcoleptic weekend and a tough Monday churning earnings at work, it’s 1 a.m. and I’m gagging for a cold beer. I get home, garage the motorbike and, for the first time in my nearly 9 months here in Bangalore, there’s a power outage. Now, in the daytime, these are frequent, but brief– though I have had the odd one or two depriving me of electricity for a couple of hours. I’ve learnt to boil water on the stove for coffee rather than wait for the kettle to kick in.
But this middle-of-the-night blackout seems different. I assume it may be short, so I grab my small solar-powered torch – surely the best few bucks ever invested in IKEA, and I didn’t even have to build it – march to the kitchen and grab a beer from the unilluminated fridge. Hmm, not exactly ice-cold, but, hey. Stand outside – where, annoyingly but usefully, the street lights are in full glow. Take a cigarette and down my beer, but still no tell-tale thwump to signal a return of power. Grab a second beer and head back outside, becoming mildly irritated. My daily routine of catching up with the real (non U.S. secondary corporate earnings) news and maybe going online to check out Facebook, possibly Skype the college girls back in the UK, etc, are disrupted. Idle and bored, I steal into the neighbour’s tiny strip of lawn behind their house. It’s OK, they moved out over the weekend. Fearing snakes and other creepy-crawlies, I tread carefully, and almost stumble on a mini-mountain of used condom wrappers. Must be a good two dozen lying piled up beneath an open upstairs window. Respect, dude. A hidden insight into the cliché-d quiet Indian IT guy and his wife, who I think have sold up and gone out to the U.S.
After half an hour, and still without power, I head to bed, brush my teeth and get under the thin cotton sheet, sweating in the sultry, sticky heat and willing sleep to take me away. Within seconds, I hear the angry whine of a mosquito attack. I’m up, and grab a pair of sports shorts for swatting. I prance around the room, naked and bathed in sweat trying to locate my attacker by dim torchlight. That’s not gonna happen. For some reason, I try the bedroom light … and it works. Hallelujah. I switch on the large ceiling fan, which seems to be turning faster than usual, and plug in my Blackberry charger, but this just triggers a fierce fizzing sound and I see small, grey whisps of smoke from the socket. I switch it off, gingerly unplug and swear aloud. The room smells of cordite, the fan is going hell for leather above me. I continue with the mosquito check – the room is painted white and is pretty minimalist when it comes to furniture ... so there are few hiding places. Unsuccessful, I get back into bed. I can’t now plug in one of those useless All Out citronella-scented, double-power Mosquito Destroyer things because the plug’s fucked. But at least it’s cooler now. But the fan is going so fast, and I’m lying unprotected on my back directly beneath it and in my mind’s eye I see it spinning out of control, shifting loose from its hinges and hurling itself south to inflict some serious mechano/genital mutilation. Light off … and the fricking mosquito is back, droning, whining in its menacing way. That, and my feeble fan worries, get me out of bed again, heading downstairs and thinking I might give the guest room a go. No one’s ever slept there. I won’t even bother to put sheets on, just shift the pile of ironing and hop under the cover. The fan here works, too. That’s odd because all the other power downstairs is still off. Hah, there are sheets already on, though they’re prickly, almost Hessian-like. Don’t give a shit. Fan on, quick mozzie check. Now for some sleep. Within nano seconds of the light going off, I hear the familiar buzz of a mosquito attack. Un-bloody-believable, it’s like I’m in some bad B-movie. Jump out of bed, grab my swatting shorts and go on the prowl, checking out the most obvious hiding places -- around the bed, curtains, on picture frames – I set my head by the wall to look along the vast white surfaces. Nada. The room’s unfamiliar and I know I’ll not sleep here.
Resigned to returning to my room upstairs, I pop into the loo. BANG!! The bulb explodes; major fuse fuck-up. Check, and reset the fuse box, smoke another cigarette and confirm that nothing is working power-wise downstairs. Back in my room, the lights and fan are still on. Weird. I head back down and empty a few last drops from a bottle of Jim Beam. Miraculously, there are still a few small, withered ice cubes in the freezer that haven’t yet thawed out completely.
I’m now thinking that maybe BESCOM, the local power supplier, is being very clever and has shut down downstairs power, but kept it going upstairs. This would figure, at 2.30 a.m. for most people, right? (especially, it seems, for my ex-neighbours). But I can’t convince even myself this would be a thought-out company policy. I’ve now Blackberried a whinge-post on Facebook and colleagues are inviting me back to work or to their homes with promises of power and cold beer. It’s tempting, but I really, really need to sleep. Now. I head back upstairs, knowing that I face the mad fan and the madder mosquito.
Shit, there it is, the pompous, preening bastard. In full view. On the wardrobe mirror. I take careful aim and lash out maniacally with my swatting shorts. To hell with modesty: I have a pretty good track record in mozzie murder. But this time, somehow, this one’s wise to my violent attack and dodges the sweatpant bullet. But I’m on its track, watching it carefully as it dances its crazy dance around the room, alighting for a second, then flying off again. I know patience pays here. I keep it under surveillance, occasionally losing it, then getting a sighting. Above us, above this ungainly, wobbly, unsightly combat, the fan is spinning furiously. I check the setting. It’s on ‘1’, the slowest. I figure maybe ‘1’ may, bizarrely, be the fastest, so I turn it to ‘2’, then ‘3’ … and it goes mental. I’m sure now it’s going to take flight. There’s enough updraught to get a helicopter airborne. It’s like being on a set from Black Hawk Down. I turn it back to ‘1’ and ponder whether the speed dial has been vapourised by the burnt-out charger socket next to it.
I spy the mosquito again, mid-air, and swipe. A full-on hit, but it’s flown away. How can it do that? A tiny, featherlight insect evading a rushing gale of flannelette short. Bloody hell. I’m exhausted. I give up. Naked, heaving, panting, sweating, confused and more than a little irritated, I clamber back under the sheet, under the swirling dervish fan, knowing that somewhere … there’s an angry, vengeful mosquito, potentially wounded …
It is 6:58, and I’ve had a fitful four hours sleep, but I can’t feel any mosquito bites. The fan has woken me up with its relentless pounding and vicious swishing. I go downstairs to see if anything’s working. No. Daylight is beginning to spread across Bangalore. The rooks have settled into their harsh, tuneless dawn chorus and the bastard squirrely/chipmunky things are at it, with their high-pitched, grating, piercing, shrill, early morning chatter. I have hours to kill before work. I settle down on the couch, listen for mozzies, and manage to doze off. Around 8, I’m awake again and go back to bed. Still nothing works and I’m resigned to calling in the electrician later. I start to fret for a slab of bacon in the fridge and other foodstuffs that need to chill. I sleep under the mad fan until just after 10, come downstairs … and everything is as normal. The TV works, the lights all work, the kettle works, I’m writing this on a computer that works – did I bad-dream all this? Then, after around 25 minutes, thwump. Everything is down again … and that was more than two hours ago. So, it’ll be a cold shower and off to work.
WTF … maybe I do deserve that small hardship premium I get paid.
Postscript: There was actually a fundamental wiring issue here that meant incoming power surges made lights too bright and fans too fast. After 3 days of zero power (!!), I finally had it restored. The bacon’s a gonner, as are pretty much the rest of the fridge/freezer foodstuffs. But tonight, the beer will be cold.