Excerpted from the Hardcover Edition
Excerpt from 
Lion and Panther in London
•••
The Sensation of the  Wrestling World Exclusive Engagement of India’s Catch-as-Catch-Can  Champions. Genuine Challengers of the Universe. All Corners. Any  Nationality. No One Barred.
GAMA, Champion undefeated wrestler of India, winner of over 200 legitimate matches.
IMAM, his brother, Champion of Lahore.
(These wrestlers are both British subjects.)
£5 will be presented to any competitor, no matter what nationality, whom any member of the team fails to throw in five minutes.
Gama,  the Lion of the Punjab, will attempt to throw any three men, without  restriction as to weight, in 30 minutes, any night during this  engagement, and competitors are asked to present themselves, either  publicly or through the management.
no one barred!! all champions cordially invited!! the bigger the better!!
Gama  the Great is bored. Imam translates the newspaper notice as best he can  while his brother slumps in the wingback chair. On the table between  them rests a rose marble chessboard, frozen in play. Raindrops wriggle  down the windowpane. It is a mild June in 1910 and their seventh day in  London without a single challenge.
Their tour manager, Mr.  Benjamin, lured them here from Lahore, promising furious bouts under  calcium lights, their names in every newspaper that matters. But the  very champions who used to thump their chests and flex their backs for  photos are now staying indoors, as if they have ironing to do. Not a  word from Benjamin “Doc” Roller or Strangler Lewis, not from the Swede  Jon Lemm or the whole fleet of Japanese fresh from Tokyo.
Every  year in London, a world champion is crowned anew, one white man after  the next, none of whom have wrestled a pehlwan. They know nothing of  Handsome Hasan or Kalloo or the giant Kikkar Singh, who once uprooted an  acacia tree bare-handed, just because it was blocking the view from  his window. Gama has defeated them all, and more, but how is he to be  champion of the World if this half of the world is in hiding?
Mr.  Benjamin went to great trouble to arrange the trip. He cozied up to the  Mishra family and got the Bengali millionaires to finance the cause,  printed up press releases, and rented them a small, gray-shingled house  removed from the thick of the city, with space enough out back to carry  on their training. The house is comfortable enough, if crowded with  tables, standing lamps, settees, and armchairs. When it rains, they push  the furniture to the walls and conduct their routines in the center of  the sitting room.
Other adjustments are not so easy. Gama keeps  tumbling out of bed four hours late, his mustache squashed on one side.  Imam climbs upon the toilet bowl each morning, his feet on the rim, and  engages in a bout with his bowels. Afterward, he inspects the results.  If they are coiled like a snake ready to strike, his guru used to say,  all is in good shape. There are no snakes in London.
These days,  when Mr. Benjamin stops by, he has little more to offer than an  elaborate salaam and any issues of Sporting Life and Health &  Strength in which they have been mentioned, however briefly. He is  baby-faced and bald, normally jovial, but Imam senses something remote  about him, withheld, as though the face he gives them is only one of  many. “You and your theories,” Gama says.
Left to themselves,  Gama and Imam continue to hibernate in the melancholy house. They run  three kilometers up and down the road, occasionally coughing in the fume  and grumble of a motorcar. They wrestle. They do hundreds of bethaks  and dands, lost in the calm that comes of repetition, and at the end of  the day, they rest. They bathe. They smooth their skin with dry mustard,  which conjures homeward thoughts of plains ablaze with yellow blooms.  Sometimes, reluctantly, they play another game of chess.
On the  eighth morning, Mr. Benjamin pays a visit. For the first time in their  acquaintance, he looks agitated and fidgets with his hat. His handshake  is damp. He follows the wrestlers into the sitting room, carrying with  him the stink of a recently smoked cigar.
The cook brings milky  yogurt and ghee for the wrestlers, tea for Mr. Benjamin. Gama and Imam  brought their own cook from Lahore, old Ahmed, who is deaf in one ear  but knows every nuance of the pehlwan diet. They were warned about  English food: mushy potatoes, dense pies, gloomy puddings—the sort of  fare that would render them leaden in body and mind.
When Mr.  Benjamin has run out of small talk, he empties a sober sigh into his  cup. “Right. Well, I suppose you’re wondering about the tour.”
“Yes,  quite,” Imam says, unsure of his words but too anxious to care. It  seems a bad sign when Mr. Benjamin sets his cup and saucer aside.
Wrestling  in England, Mr. Benjamin explains, has become something of a business.  Wrestlers are paid to take a fall once in a while, to pounce and pound  and growl on cue, unbeknownst to the audience, which nevertheless seems  to enjoy the drama. After the match, the wrestlers and their managers  split the money. Occasionally these hoaxes are discovered, to great  public outcry, the most recent being the face-off between Yousuf the  Terrible Turk and Stanislaus Zbyszko. After Zbyszko’s calculated win,  it was revealed that Yousuf the Terrible was actually a Bulgarian named  Ivan with debts to pay off.
“And you know of this now only?” Imam asks.
“No—well,  not entirely.” Mr. Benjamin pulls on a finger, absently cracks his  knuckle. “I thought I could bring you fellows and turn things around.  Show everyone what the sport bloody well should be.”
Imam glances at Gama, who is leaning forward, gazing at Mr. Benjamin’s miserable face with empathy.
“There would be challengers”—Mr. Benjamin shrugs—“if only you would agree to take a fall here and there.”
After receiving these words from Imam, Gama pulls back, as if bitten. “Fall how?” Gama says.
“On purpose,” Imam explains quietly.
Gama’s mouth becomes small and solemn. Imam tells Mr. Benjamin that they will have to decline the offer.
“But you came all this way.” Mr. Benjamin gives a flaccid laugh. “Why go back with empty pockets?”
For  emphasis, Mr. Benjamin pulls his own lint-ridden pockets inside out  and nods at Gama with the sort of encouragement one might show a  thick-headed child.
Gama asks Imam why Mr. Benjamin is exposing the lining of his pants.
“The  langot we wear, it does not have pockets,” Imam tells Mr. Benjamin,  hoping the man might appreciate the poetry of his refusal. Mr. Benjamin  blinks at him and explains, in even slower English, what he means by  “empty pockets.”
So this is London, Imam thinks, nodding at Mr. Benjamin. A city where athletes are actors, where the ring is a stage.
In  a final effort, Mr. Benjamin takes their story to the British press.  Health & Strength publishes a piece entitled “Gama’s Hopeless Quest  for an Opponent,” while Sporting Life runs his full-length photograph  alongside large-lettered text: “GAMA, the great Indian Catch-Can  Wrestler, whose Challenges to Meet all the Champions have been  Unanswered.” The photographer encouraged Gama to strike a menacing pose,  but in the photo, Gama appears flat-footed and blank, his fists feebly  raised. “At least you look taller,” Imam says.
Finally, for an  undisclosed sum, Doc Roller takes up Gama’s challenge. Mr. Benjamin says  that Doc is a fully trained doctor and the busiest wrestler in England,  a fortunate combination for him because he complains of cracked ribs  after every defeat.
They meet at the Alhambra, a sprawling  pavilion of arches and domes, its name studded in bulbs that blaze halos  through the fog. Inside, golden foliage and gilded trees climb the  walls. Men sit shoulder to shoulder around the roped-off ring, and  behind them, more men in straw boaters and caps, standing on bleachers,  making their assessments of Gama the Great, the dusky bulk of his chest,  the sculpted sandstone of each thigh. Imam sits ringside next to Mr.  Benjamin, in a marigold robe and turban. He is a vivid blotch in a sea  of grumpy grays and browns. He feels slightly overdressed.
Gama  warms his muscles by doing bethaks. He glances up but keeps squatting  when Roller swings his long legs over the ropes, dauntingly tall, and  whips off his white satin robe to reveal wrestling pants, his abdominal  muscles like bricks stacked above the waistband.
They take turns  on the scale. Doc is a full head taller and exceeds Gama by thirty-four  pounds. Following the announcement of their weights, the emcee bellows,  “No money in the world would ever buy the Great Gama for a fixed  match!” To this, a joyful whooping from the audience.
Imam  absently pinches the silk of his brother’s robe, which is draped across  his lap. Every time he watches his brother in a match, a familiar  disquiet spreads through his stomach, much like the first time he  witnessed Gama in competition.
Imam was eight, Gama twelve, when  their uncle brought them to Jodhpur for the national strong-man  competition. Raja Jaswant Singh had gathered hundreds of men from all  across India to see who could last the longest drilling bethaks. The  competitors took their places on the square field of earth within the  palace courtyard, and twelve turbaned royal guards stood sentinel around  the grounds, their tall gold spears glinting in the sun. Spectators  formed a border some meters away from the field, and when little Gama  emerged from their ranks and joined the strong men, laughter trailed  behind him. Gama was short for his age but hale and sturdy even then.								
									 Copyright © 2013 by Tania James. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.