About 1500 feet up in the Chota Nagpur hills, in eastern India, there lies a sprawling monument to racial fears and racial fancies, and to an idea of nationhood that shimmered temptingly in the year between the two world wars and then vanished leaving this as its only trace. It has an odd name McCluskiegunge. Several place names in India share this conjunction of West and East McLeodgunge, Frasergunge, Daltongunge, Tollygunge. Usually they are named after some British district collector or military officer who, in the days of empire, benefited his patch of Indian countryside by building a road or a canal, or by simply being perceived as a decent man deserving a memorial (the word &lsquogunge&rsquo, or &lsquoganj&rsquo in Hindi, means a storehouse or market). McCluskie, however, was not a British official nor any kind of white man doing good. He had Indian as well as Irish blood, and this remote place in the hills was built as a settlement for his kind of people. &lsquoAnglo-Indians&rsquo is the official name, though for a couple of centuries they felt the spittle of other descriptions half-breeds, half-castes, mixed-bloods, cheechees, Chutney Marys, those with a touch of the tarbrush.