AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Byline: Shashi Tharoor
The doorman regarded us with undisguised skepticism. It was 3:30 a.m.--not the usual hour for visitors to drop by, even in Manhattan. "They're expecting us," I told him firmly. "Buzz upstairs and see."
He did, and they were. But the grizzled guardian at the gates couldn't suppress a shake of his head as he directed my friend Nikhil and me to the elevators. Our hostess, Neera, greeted us at her door and led us down a darkened hallway past a bedroom where one of their sons slept under a blanket. "He has an exam in the morning," she whispered. In the master bedroom a television flickered. Our host, Sanjay, resplendent in white cotton pajamas and sitting propped up in bed, waved us to a sofa. "They won the toss," he announced in tones of doom. "We're getting clobbered."
Nikhil and I sat down heavily, after only three hours' sleep. "Maybe we shouldn't have got up for this," I said as raucous shouts arose from the TV. "Are you kidding?" Nikhil replied. "Would you have missed this for anything?"
I had to admit I wouldn't. After years of being denied the most sublime pleasure known to Subcontinental man--watching an international cricket match--this was heaven. For fans like me, New York has long been a citadel of barbarism, where the world's greatest sport is neither played nor reported in the papers. For decades we had to get our news of important matches via shortwave radio. The Internet for the first time brought live scores on demand--manna from on high. But to actually see a match? So what if it was taking place nearly a dozen time zones away? Nothing could beat having a friend in Manhattan with a satellite dish who was (a) a cricket fan and (b) willing to let you into his home in the middle of the night to watch the Indian team in action.
...Source: HighBeam Research, Dawn's Early Light.