Sher Singh And The Hot-Water Bottle

Master storyteller Ruskin Bond mesmerizes readers with this tale of life in the hills during a time of alcohol and liquor prohibition

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Master storyteller Ruskin Bond mesmerizes readers with this tale of life in the hills during a time of alcohol and liquor prohibition

It’s been many years since Sher Singh, of village Solti, came to my rescue.

At the time I was living right at the top of the Landour hill, in a rented cottage that leaked badly. It was cold that winter and I was short of funds and in need of sustenance. And to make matters worse, our new Prime Minister, a strict moralist who knew what was good for everyone, had imposed prohibition on the country, and I was suffering from the non-availability of Solan No. 1 (a cheap but good whisky) and a certain XXX Rum that had been distilled at Rosa in UP since before the 1857 revolt. The distillery had changed hands more than once during the fighting, and both oppressors and oppressed had raided it until it was emptied of its energizing grog. It had recovered from those traumatic events; but now, in more peaceful times, it was to suffer again, along with those, such as this writer, who thirsted after the mellowed and matured juices of our all-purpose sugarcane.

Sher Singh was my milkman. Early every morning he trudged up the hill from his village, three miles distant, to deliver his milk to two or three homes on the hillside. On the way he watered it a little at a roadside hydrant; but it was good milk, once you had removed some of the grass that floated around in the can.

One morning, when Sher Singh found me sitting in the sun looking rather depressed, he offered condolences, well knowing the reason for my dejection.

"Not to worry, sir," he said, ‘When one door closes, another door opens. Every problem has its solution. In three days’ time I will have solved your problem.

Three dry and thirsty days passed. Sher Singh came and went. On the fourth morning he asked me for my hot-water bottle— one of those rubber bags which keep you warm for half the night, allowing you to freeze during the second half.

Anyway, I gave him my hot-water bottle. His need, I felt sure, was greater than mine.

"Do you have...

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