Short Story
It was a day
like any other. It started off well enough like any other. She'd woken up at
the usual time, just around 6. Not that there was any reason to, actually - now
that they were just the two of them - she and her husband of these 49 years.
Her children had long moved out and the small flat no longer was filled with the noise of laughing, crying, playing, fighting, little children.
Her daughter,
Varsha, now lived abroad with her husband and six year old son. They Skyped -
once a week, usually on Saturday evening. She could not honestly admit to love
for her grandson, Akshay, who she had yet to meet in the flesh. After all, how
can we love a Skype image? The boy was pretty, well behaved even, but equally
aloof and formal. Perhaps next year, finally, she would get to see him when
they came over from New Jersey - though, similar promises had been made, often
enough, in the past.
Her son lived closer - in the next street, actually. Rohan was a good boy. Caring. Loving. His wife, too, was as nice a daughter-in-law as one could reasonably expect in today's world. All said and done, she was still a daughter-in-law, not a daughter. Some distance was inevitable, no?
Shaking herself
out of these useless straying thoughts she returned to her routines. Filling up
fresh drinking water in the clay pots. Watering the tulsi plant in the kitchen
window. Cutting up the vegetables to be cooked for lunch. Getting the newspaper
for her husband to read. Getting his bath water heated. A hazaar things that
seemed to be the sum of her existence.
As she went
about her day Shrikant, her husband, 76 years of age, still erect, brimming
with energy, came cheerily in from his morning walk. Filling the small flat
with his booming voice, his abundant presence, talking incessantly about this,
that and a myriad other things.
There was a
time when she loved his cheerful outlook.
Handing him a
steaming mug of tea along with his newspaper she gently said, "Go and
bathe once you've done with your chai. We have things to do this morning"
He grinned at
her, accepting the chai & paper, saying, "Oh yes, Nalini, I remember.
Your visit to the clinic. Don't worry yourself too much. Most of the test
results are normal. And that little lump? Forget it, it will be nothing!",
he laughed.
She smiled back
but wished, just for one fleeting second, "I wish he could turn down
this overbearing cheeriness just a wee bit!" Even as she thought it she
felt a twinge of guilt.
Returning to the kitchen cum puja room, she went about her chores. Breakfast now ready while, at the same time multi tasking to finish reciting her mantras, settling the monthly bill with the doodhwala, keeping the trash bucket outside... where did the morning go? The clock was showing 9:25 without her having been aware of time fleeting.
Returning to the kitchen cum puja room, she went about her chores. Breakfast now ready while, at the same time multi tasking to finish reciting her mantras, settling the monthly bill with the doodhwala, keeping the trash bucket outside... where did the morning go? The clock was showing 9:25 without her having been aware of time fleeting.
But this, too,
was a daily norm... busy busy busybusy in the little, little small things that
over decades had worn her down. The devil, she'd heard her husband say, lives
in the details. What did he know, she thought to herself. Those streaks of grey
that first appeared when she was still in her 30s; her spectacles to help her
read - she who had always had the sharpest, keenest eyesight among her friends;
that slight stoop that seemed to slowly shrink her by the time she was 50..
These daily routines had gradually eroded her without anyone ever noticing.
Today, as she stood before her dressing mirror, applying sindoor to her
forehead, she found herself thinking of her childhood. Thinking of how her
mother used to apply kajal to her eyes, braid her hair… surely, that was a
different age, that belonged to a different person. She was not that girl at
all, she who was 69 years old today. She had no right to even have those
memories, let alone indulge in nostalgia.
From the front
room Shrikant’s voice boomed genially, “Are you ready? Time to go. The
appointment is at 11 and it’s already 10:00. Bring all the papers, they’re in
that file in the cupboard!”
“I’m almost
done, just 2 minutes” she said, while locking up the cupboard from where she’d
taken her medical file. A quick peep into the kitchen, a silent hurried “Hare
Rama, Hare Rama” to her beloved god and they were off.
Her mind was
teeming with thoughts… what will the doctor have to say? What will I have to do
to adjust/change my lifestyle. Will everything be all right, as Shrikant keeps
saying? Absently she climbed into the autorickshaw, and she heard Shrikant tell
the driver, “Kandivli station, and make it quick”. She began to think of the
long wait at the clinic. There would be at least 40 – 50 patients and she hoped
she would not be the last. The stench of the hospital was something she had
never got used to. Not even after her own deliveries. Hospitals were places
that held unpleasant memories – her father’s long drawn out demise
(tuberculosis), her mother’s (she simply stopped living, slowly, dying day by
day due to sheer exhaustion), her brother (hit by a truck). There were more but
she averted her thoughts.
By now they had
reached Kandivli station. It was just past 10 and the station was, as ever,
crowded. It was teeming with what seemed like millions of people, to her
unaccustomed eyes. She was not used to crowds, not much used to travelling on
the Mumbai locals. The few times that she had been, it was always with
Shrikant. She would hold on to his hand for dear life, and cling close to him.
He would laughingly put his arm around her, protectively, sheltering her from
the raging crowds, his twinkling eyes gently making fun of her fears. She would
look into his eyes and slowly allow her tensed muscles to relax, and finally
smile back at him, chiding herself for her anxiety. How safe she always felt
with her husband. She was truly lucky, she knew, a simple village girl married
to this gentle city bred giant.
She had never
been to a town, prior to her marriage. And here, in Mumbai, at the age of 20,
wide eyed and fear filled, she had stepped into her marital home. Her
mother-in-law, a strong willed disciplinarian, her absentee father-in-law posted
on some remote border working with the army as a sergeant, Shrikant’s two rowdy
younger brothers who were ever hungry, ever playful, ever filled with bubbling
energy that even their mother could not control. All these 49 years in Mumbai
she had been out of the house barely a few times each year – not because she
wasn’t allowed to, rather she felt comfortable and safe within the walls of her
home, her safe nest.
Standing on the
platform while Shrikant went to get the railway coupons punched, she wrapped
the pallu of her sari over her head, demurely. The simple, traditional village
girl had long vanished – replaced by a typical village grandmother, not for her
the confident stride of a city lady. She still found it strange to see girls,
women of all ages wearing trousers, those things that they called jeans, tops
and stuff. And, most shocking of all, the casual way in which people mixed
together, walking with arms around each other, smoking and all these modern
fads. She still found these things disturbing and would shake her head in
disgust, only to find Shrikant – and, later, even Rohan – laughing at her
simple villager views.
Shrikant came
striding back to her side through the crowds and she fell in step by his side,
her hand instinctively seeking his. Walking up to the platform they waited
among the crowds, as he kept on a steady stream of chatter that she silently
listened to without paying much attention. When you’ve lived together for so
long, there’s actually nothing new that needs to be said, really, no? An
occasional nod of the head, a quiet “yes” and that’s more than enough. Not that
Shrikant ever needed her to speak anything much. He was naturally talkative and
merely needed an audience for his peroration.
The train was
pulling in now and she gripped his hand even more tightly. The crowds were
milling around, jostling for space, in that animalistic manner that only a
Mumbai local crowd knows how. Even as people were pouring out of the
compartment, others were jumping up, fighting for a toe-hold. Shrikant pulled
her closer, holding her hand gripped tightly in his, and telling her, “Now,
come up, fast, climb in NOW”. She moved forward two steps and a young lad, a
college student perhaps, rushed in between, a large shoulder bag on his bag,
oblivious to her presence, oblivious to her plight, and casually, with the
confident arrogance of youth stepped onto the train as it began to move.
She felt
Shrikant’s grasp tighten, she tightened her grip back, panic stricken as she
noticed him standing inside the train, and then, inexorably, as the train
gathered speed, that connection was broken. He was looking at her, for once,
worried, alarmed to note that she had not come aboard. He was gesticulating
wildly now, eyes wide in anxiety, trying to get out of the compartment, trying
to come back to her side but the crowd pressed in with too much force. She saw
the look of despair in his eyes as he realized that he would not make it.
The last she
saw of him was his efforts to try and gesture to her to stay exactly where she
was. He was trying to say something more – perhaps, he was saying that he would
get off at the next station and make his way back – but by then he was lost to
her sight.
It had all
happened so swiftly, within a few seconds really, that she still hadn’t come to
terms with it. Standing there, on the briefly empty platform, looking dazed,
she did not know what to do. She looked around, saw an empty bench and went and
sat on it. Still in shock at her sudden abandonment, she did not even make an
effort to THINK. Clutching her file containing her medical papers, she sat
there, gazing fixedly at nothing.
How long she
sat thus, she did not know. All she knew was she that Shrikant would surely
come. He would come and rescue her, take her back into the comfort and safety
of his genial smile. She was sure, too, that he would first give vent to his
anxiety and fear by shouting at her, till he would cool down. She knew him. She
knew that behind the impending burst of volcanic fury a little child was
hiding, someone who needed to let off the steam before becoming normal again.
She smiled, inwardly, anticipating his lecture.
She glanced
around. Kandivli station was once again teeming with hordes of commuters
hurrying along, busily marching to wherever their destinies took them. She
looked at her wrist watch and found, with a start, that it had been almost 20
minutes since she was left alone. Surely, Shrikant ought to have been back by
now? Meanwhile, all around her, people kept walking purposefully, marching to
their destinies.
She stopped for
a moment, contemplating that word – Destiny. She was never one to think
“serious” stuff, before. Yet here she was, suddenly thinking of this word. It
seemed mysterious, alluring. She contemplated the word more carefully, silently
mouthing it to herself before saying it out aloud. “Kismet”, she said. “Naseeb,
taqdeer, bhaagya” Different words, all of them sounding strange, unfamiliar to
her for she had always gone passively with the flow.
She looked once
again at the purposeful hordes around her. Men, women, even the young teens
seemed to walk with long, hurried strides, going God knows where. She glanced
at her wristwatch again. 25 minutes had elapsed. She suddenly was seized of the
thought that she, too, must hurry before it was too late. She knew that time
was now running out, that this moment that was made available to her was an
opportunity. She ought to seize it.
She, who had
all her life allowed things to happen, was now in a unique position. She could
– no, she should! – seize this opportunity and make something of it. Briefly
she considered… she could take a rickshaw and go home, or go to her
daughter-in-law’s house. She could even, perhaps, go to the clinic (after all,
the file was still with her)
Or… or… the
thoughts were still unformed, inchoate. Yet she knew, she could not afford to
wait any longer. He would be here any moment and then she would no longer be
able to DO anything of her own will.
Suddenly she
came to a decision. She got up and began to walk, towards the exit gate.
Epilogue: An
hour later, Shrikant and Rohan were in the Kandivli station CCTV control room,
reviewing the footage. They saw Nalini clearly from one camera. The footage ran
for about 26 minutes. She was just sitting, quietly, on the bench for a long
time, silently as though waiting for someone. And then she got up, took a few
hesitant steps, towards the exit gate. Slowly, they could see, she stood a
little bit more erect, her shoulders seemed to square, her head lifted up with
a strange confidence that they found unfamiliar. She walked briskly up to, and
out of the camera frame.
That was then.
More than 22 days ago. The only news after that last frame was the discovery of
a plastic cover containing her medical reports. Nothing else.