n’t speak.”
Chacko smiled halfheartedly. “You say my workers are coming to you with com-
plaints…” “Oh yescorrect” Comrade Pillai said. “Anything specific?” “Nothing
specifically as such” Comrade K. N. M. Pillai said. “But seecomradeany benefits
that you give himnaturally others are resenting it. They see it as a partiality. After all
whatever job he doescarpenter or electrician or whateveritisfor them he is just a
Paravan. It is a conditioning they have from birth. This I myself have told them is
wrong. But frankly speakingcomradeChange is one thing. Acceptance is another.
You should be cautious. Better for him you send him off.” “My dear fellow” Chacko
said“that’s impossible. He’s invaluable. He practically runs the factory–and we can’t
solve the problem by sending all the Paravans away. Surely we have to learn to deal
with this nonsense.” Comrade Pillai disliked being addressed as My Dear Fellow. It
sounded to him like an insult couched in good Englishwhichof coursemade it a
double-insult–the insult itselfand the fact that Chacko thought he wouldn’t under-
stand it. It spoiled his mood completely. “That may be” he said caustically. “But
Rome was not built in a day. Keep it in mindcomradethat thisyilai:
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