Shock gives way to tears, almost all
the time. There is no other primary reaction that a human can possibly come up
with, except perhaps getting aggressive. He darted out of his room after twenty
odd minutes and shot out of the house, locking it from outside. The smell of
cologne lingered long after he left. She should have sat motionless for an
hour. Or, was it two? She did not know how long was the stream of tears gushing
forth from her eyes.
She tried to collect herself and
began ambling across the house absent-mindedly. She tried to open the front
door, but it was locked. The house did not have a balcony, only a window in the
hall. It was on the 30th floor, so there was nothing that she could
see that was of substance. Something made her try open the door of his room. It
was locked again. What was inside that he kept so protected all the time? The
human brain is like a monkey that can jump from one tree to another with wild
swings. So was hers doing a similar job. She ate some cookies and bread that
they had bought from the supermarket the day earlier.
At around four in the evening, she
heard the door open. He came in, went to his room and closed the door behind
him. Around an hour later, she knocked. No response. She tried it a few times
and the knocks started giving way to bangs. At the tenth, the door opened and
along with it, a hand came and pushed her frail body down to the floor. Her
head banged against the wall.
“What, you
bitch?”
growled he.
Still recovering from the first
violent assault on her, she could barely mumble anything audible. Things
started fading in front of her eyes and she swooned.
When she woke up, she found a trickle
of light from the lampshade in the hall. She pulled herself up and looked
around the house. There were no sounds from his room but she could not make out
if he was in or not.
She looked at herself in the mirror.
Why me? What
did I do to suffer thus? I have not harmed a fly in my life. Did I really ask
for this? What was the need for me to get into this? What is happening to me?
Thoughts, outpourings and tears fought
with each other to come out of her head. She could feel her heart pain. When
you are in such deep psychological pain, you can feel the heart ache. Yes, it
does. The heart begs for a solution to get out of the situation. "A way out, please," it cries. You
cannot do anything but wait for something to happen, events for which you
cannot create though. Helplessness cannot get more accurately defined.
She sat in a corner. She felt
immobile. Life had suddenly changed into existence, survival. All in a matter
of days. She could not understand what were the reasons for these events and
how they could find a place in her life all of a sudden. She had an answer to
many things in life. Almost everything. Not this. Not now. A couple of hours
would have passed when she got up and made herself some hot coffee. She fell
asleep soon. A very rare case when you fall asleep after a coffee. But that was
the psychological stress in which she was in.
When she woke up, it was morning.
There was no sound from the room. A loaf of bread was lying on the table. He had
come from outside perhaps. Most probably left. She got up. After a coffee, she
moved towards his room. She banged the door. No answer. She tried the latch. To
her surprise, it was open. She went inside. The bath in his room was ajar. He
was not to be found. She started inspecting the room. Clothes, neatly arranged.
The bed was laid clean – one could not say if someone had used it recently.
Lots of books were neatly arranged on a shelf. But there were glass pieces on
the ground - of a broken bottle. There were random paintings – modern art? A
small window, but fitted with a blind. She then opened the bath. The smell of
soap, perfume and the wet floor suggested that it was used just then. So he had
just left. She noticed a wooden shelf, fully covered. She opened it. What she
noticed would leave her stunned. Full of medicine. Random strips containing
tablets, many of them with names that were tongue twisters. A couple of bottles
and syringes. She picked a couple of them, came out, sat on the bed and began
reading the contents. Vague knowledge of chemistry, a subject she hated from
the start and a gap of around six years from her Class 12 did no help in aiding
her identify anything.
Then it happened.
“What are
you doing here?”
The booming voice startled her. There he was. He was back. Ostensibly, he would
have remembered that he would have forgotten to latch his door. She sat on the
bed, still. The sunlight from the window shone upon him – close to six feet,
slightly dark and intimidating, even with those glasses on.
“Can’t you
hear, you bitch? What the hell are you doing here, I asked!” He said, advancing
towards her.
He pulled her hand and seized the
tablet strips and bottles. He flung them on the table. The right hand then went
back and was advancing towards her. It wanted to make contact with her cheek,
ear or head, violently. At that instant, up went her left hand. His right hand
hit her left wrist.
Then it came out. In torrents.
“NO!!!!” She shrieked. “Who the hell do you think you are? What are
you? Don't come near me!!”
She then pushed him away and ran.........to
the kitchen. He had never seen that behaviour from her ever and was not able to
react. Before he could collect himself and turn back, there she was – standing
near the door of the room with a large kitchen knife.
“Tell me,
now! Who are you? What do you want? Why did you marry me and spoil my life?
Come on, you bastard! Bloody software engineer! Come on, take me on, you mean
cur!”
He was too shell shocked to speak
still and she went on.
“Why did you
marry? I ask you! What are these tablets, strips of them? Syringes? What
disease have you got? What a patient are you? Why did you not tell me this?
Does your family know about this? What else have you hidden from me? Are you
gay? Talk, you bloody bastard! Talk!!”
Now, the biggest of bullies thrive on
the fear factor they create around them – it is just that the others are afraid
of them than they being menacing themselves. When that mask is pulled,
revealing their real personality, they cannot react, mainly because they have
never been in that situation.
He tried to speak but the words were
not forthcoming. There she was, around half a feet shorter than him, standing
tall. He felt small. He flopped on to the bed. “I ...I am under treatment for....”
“Depression?” She asked. He half nodded
his head.
“It has
been.....”
“I am not
interested,”
She continued, Firm and matter-of-factly. “I
need a ticket to Madras. Now!”
“Why, you
can’t just....”
“I don’t
want any blood to be spilled,” She said. Her long hair dishevelled, knife in hand, she
looked like a warrior on a battlefield. The anger in her eyes was too strong to
miss. He surrendered, perhaps even to her surprise.
Now, there comes a moment in life
when, we are forced to do something that is so unlike what we do that explains
our personality. It is not us who does it, but something inside us that makes
us do it. It is as if an invisible force has manifested inside our body
suddenly and has taken wings. It is not you, but it is you. Abnormal? Reflex
action? Maybe.
He got up, took his laptop.
Four years later.
Melbourne. Evening.
Malini’s mother came out of the
kitchen.
Malini was reading a book. “Malini, this boy is really good. You should
atleast see him.”
“Amma, can
we speak on anything else, please?”
“Why do you
choose to be lonely? How long?”
“I am not
lonely. Loneliness is not a choice. Solitude is. I am in bliss, from solitude.”
“Don’t you
need someone in your life?”
“I need
people. I don’t want anyone. Need and want, Amma, are different. I should want
someone. And no, I don’t think I would want that want, ever!” she said, as the doorbell
rang – the next batch of students of the Tandava
school of dance in Melbourne were trickling in.
Outside, the shimmer of the fading
sun was painting the entire town in gold.
18 comments:
Happy ending....must say!!!
Indeed :)
I always enjoy reading your posts. Today's post kept me literally in a nail-biting, chair gripping situation. Keep these good articles coming.
I fully agree with Anne, article is too good, but Pradeep in todays world we see so many people with different mask, can actually makeout. we dont have to pull mask to reveal their real personality, we can easily make out from their body language.
Thanks. very encouraging!
I agree, Shraddha.
as Anne said, i was also in chair gripping situation. could feel my heart beats going up and down! what to say! keep on your good work!
Thanks, Jaishree, for the kind words
Reluctantly I started reading in the midst of the work. The moment I started reading, the suspense carried by the story pulled me into it and I couldn't resist reading it fully. Excellent Pradeep. No words to describe. Lovely... I was completely lost until I finished it. Great Work.
Thanks Padmini
Kudos for such a brilliant work Sir...!!!
Thanks. Glad you liked it:)
Fantastic work....you have nicely captured the feeling of a woman in distress... with a nice finish too....keep up the spirit...
Thank you
Most unfortunate indeed. Now I am sure her well meaning parents were happy to find such a fine catch... US educated or atleast working there ! Same caste and even the right Gotra.. a man who could provide for their daughter and make grandchildren... are these not the prime drivers behind parents motivation to push their children into a marriage. Some even shamelessly blackmail their children into marriages talking about their impending death.
Everybody dies fu@ker.. everyone. today or tomorrow we all die. But for many parents these sentimental issues are nothing but bargaining chips to force their unwilling sons and daughters into a relation of their choice. Is it for their benefit .. I doubt it .. more likely their only motivation would be to shine before their peers.. "look I found a better match for my kid that you did for yours". No one cares if their children would be truly happy.
"What will others say" may be a more primary drive than their children being happy.
I see so many young people engage in casual sex and experimentation. But what is most heartening is that after an initial splurge of sorts they tone down their indulgence and become picky. As young as 20 some of them actually discriminate well while picking a partner (be it a boyfriend/ long-term partner or Fu@k buddy). Such kids are much better off than the totally insulated kids who after a failed marriage (courtesy their own parents) totally avoid the other sex.
This is Kali Yuga... trying to peddle morality of earlier yugas will not work. instead they rebound major league.
i tend to agree. Follow the heart rather than time tested stuff, sometimes. Some kids are indeed smart.
parents do want their kids to be happy, but the parameters and factors unfortunately are theirs!
By seen the title, thought you are going to say about your journey experience and observations, like payana katturaigal by Lena Tamilvanan or Vairamuthu’s “Vadugapatti Mudhal Valga varai”, but yours taken me to the crazy world …... superb.
Thanks for the comments! Nice to note that you enjoyed it.
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