Deodate

Deodate

Thursday, December 16, 2021

As long as



In this water that life comes

Sustains and grows, yet perishes

If you are dipped in,

The worst when the earth

Beneath takes you in.

Behold the river, the streams

And flows, they capture

The grandeur and tricks you in.

When the feet sense

The touch, it’s cool.

It’s cooler to sink and float.

Yet you get the chills

Once it’s up to your mouth.

Your throat's drowned,

You've voice no more.

Will that ferry fetch me?

No! I am just a picture

Of floating eyes and nose.

Here and there a fish bite,

Might have been ticklish

But not when you’re breathless.

There from a long branch

A peacock stares at me.

I would have shared the same

If only a hope had been in me.

Shall these hands raise

To invite undesirable attention?

No! Powerless, strengthless,

Here I am at this horizon,

Scared to feel my last breath.

As long as the toe stands

I shall hold on.


Thursday, November 4, 2021

A Physical Being



I exist in numbers; in years and days,
In volume and mass, in adhaar too.
Prove my presence in the things I use,
The dress I wear, the books I own
And in the one I gave birth to too.
Count my needs in the food I eat,
In the bed I sleep, in the phone I hold.
Yes, I do exist as a physical being.

I am asked the howabouts of
My child, my parents, and even relatives
But never of this poor physical being.
Devoid of dreams and desires,
Be a puppet. Who the hell
Had taught me to dream?
To educate, to work and to make
The next move, I need consent.
And that is the biggest favour on earth.
Thank you honourable beings
For signing it. Am I owned?
Shall the words hurt me?
No! I am just a physical being.

I am like a virtual assistant.
Yell at me, shout at me,
I shall be always polite.
No other emojis to wear
Except the cute smileys.
Can I be angry at them?
Can I cry out loud before them?
No! I am just a physical being.

Inside something still whispers,
"Be free, write not what is dictated,
But what you feel, there you find
Your happiness." Alas! Who knows
This physical being has gave up
On happiness and desires only peace.
Shall these words heal me?
No! I was never wounded
'Cause I am just a physical being.













Friday, September 10, 2021

A Suicide Note



Let me die
To end this uneventful life,
Not to annoy anyone anymore,
To succeed in at least this attempt,
To off the burden of this poor earth.
Let me go
Away from my dears
With a note “I loved you”.
Perhaps the lifeless corpse
Shall hear your praises and prayers
That I had longed for.
Let me cut this vein
To slowly drain this life.
I shall not if only I could hear
“I am here for you”.
No! I can’t hear that.
Let me take this pain
To end all my pains.

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Chaining Assets



Free are the birds with no boundaries.
Chained are the ones who built a nest
For they return from time to time
And that limits their radius.
Wings alone won't let you fly.

Thursday, July 15, 2021

The First and Last



I still remember that day how I felt waking up to the news of the unfortunate suicide of the renowned writer Judith Loyal. Eight months ago she had published her first and only novel “The Lilly That Blooms at Night”. The novel became a bestseller and soon her unknown uneventful life became a hectic one. But what had landed me in a perplexed state was that only a month ago I had taken an exclusive interview of her. I had never met a person with so much positive spirit. When she had published her novel, she was already forty five and the exciting factor was that she had been working on the same for the past twenty years. I wonder perhaps she had perceived the story as a part of own being. Rejections, insults, discouragement, nothing had stopped her from pursuing her dream. After a lot of writings and rewritings, at last she gave us her masterpiece work. A lady with such high spirit and optimistic thoughts could never have committed suicide.
These thoughts were not just mine. Her only family, her daughter who is now married and happily settled had soon alleged it to be a murder. She stated that she had suspected no trace of depression when they had met hours before the incident.
I had spent almost a complete day to take that interview but our magazine published only half of the content which I had already submitted after strict filtering. However I had the voice recording with me and I had an instinct that this was going to solve the mystery. But I didn’t want to give that to the Police, neither have them asked me for it. So I decided to consult a private detective.
******************************************

A smoky room, long dark coat, perhaps a hat, I had all the default idea of a private detective. But when I visited Mr. Lee, he was playing with his bunnies in his garden. A man in mid thirties, average height and weight, Mr. Lee looked quite ordinary. He asked if I wanted to discuss the case at the garden or in his study room. I preferred some privacy, after all this includes a public figure. His room was quite rich with books, but it was very well lit unlike my imagination. I discussed the matter with him and gave the voice recording. He said he would let me know in two weeks.
Exactly after two weeks, the Police had given their final report. “It’s undoubtedly a suicide”, they concluded. I called Mr. Lee. He said he needed one more week. Another week was over. I called him again. He repeated the same “one more week”. Now it was clear. I knew it. He might have got some evidence. It might be a murder. When I shall write this, it is going to be a break through in my journalist career.
****************************************
Today is the day. He said he would come to my home with his report. I was eagerly waiting for him. He came.
“ It’s a murder, isn’t it? “, I asked.
“No! It’s a suicide.”
Anger, sorrow and disappointment flashed inside me. “Is this for this you kept me waiting? Police have already concluded this so.”
“ But I know the reason and I wanted time to re-examine it”, he said calmly.
That was a little consoling response. “Then tell me.”
“It’s you”
“ How on earth is it me?”
“ Listen, I want you to listen to my findings patiently. This may be hard for you, but this is what I have found. In your recording. You had asked her, ‘Don’t you feel a sense of loss when you are at last done with a story that has been living with you for a greater part of your life?’. The question seemed quite silly and it didn’t make into the final draft of your published interview. However, after this question, there was a sudden change in the tone of her answers. Previously she gladly informed you that her Publisher had already offered to publish her next novel, whatever it may be. But after this, when you asked towards the end when we could read her next novel, she had said that she couldn’t answer that now. I had checked all her tweets, posts and write ups, anything I could get access to. Everything that she had written in the last two weeks conveyed her self doubt on if she had got over her novel and if she could ever write another. For example, ‘The death of a foster child holds you back from having another' this was one of her last tweets. Since she randomly wrote about different fantasies, nobody doubted anything. You had injected in her the idea that she has lost something she had been carrying for the past twenty years and replacing that with another was not easy. Human psyche is really complicated. You can be either its master or slave. Since she was living alone after her daughter had moved with her husband, she had no other things that would distract her from her depressive thoughts. Besides, the Police report was crystal clear. There was no sign of attack. She had cut her own veins. Every evidence supported this.
These are my findings. I don’t doubt it. But you have every right to disapprove this and if you do so, you need not to pay me anything.”
I paid him and he left. He was right. Human psyche is really complicated. Only I know how scattered I felt when I heard it was not a murder. I, for a moment I felt I had lost my last chance to improve my prospects. The lack of purpose in life surely leads to depression; if we think about it. Obsession surely is another reason. She had been obsessively working on the novel for many years. Before I had pointed out this, she was living in the transient excitement of her success. But some realizations make us guilty and guilt is another reason to suicide. Don’t you think I feel it now. I had caused a poor soul to end her life. Perhaps, I should do the same. Dear reader, depression is real. No one wants to die alone.

Monday, June 14, 2021

Strange Waters



Being in a foreign land is like being on a swing. You don’t know which side you belong to. Your passport must prove that you don’t belong here but where you really belong is hard to tell. This is home if you must acknowledge that home is a feeling, yet facts prove the other way. Nobody really understands this dilemma unless they go through the same waters, get hit by the same waves and survive the same storm. So your peer group in this stage of life might understand. But they are not easily available for women. As time gives us more roles and responsibilities, women have to manage more things at the same time. From “why my child didn’t poop today? “ to “ why Hillary's political career faded?”, everything bothers a woman. The key to her survival is to prioritise things and while doing so she keeps her family at the top of the list. This is why as frequently asked women didn’t top many other recognised lists though she was a permanent member in the school toppers list. So women do not often contact their peer group to discuss her trifles.

Luckily I have my sister, Isabella. We fondly call her Bella. She can relate to anything I would say as she had come all the way I had trodden though she didn’t really want it. I know a part of her hated me for she had to (as she claimed) live in my shadows, yet a part of her admired me blindly. That’s okay because there is a mixture of hatred and love between every siblings. If there isn’t, you know they are lying. Had she but realised that she wasn’t living in my shadows but she is my shadow, the only person who can mirror my feelings!

Revisiting this Arabian land with family is a matter of immense pleasure. This is the land I had spent the best of my days. Returning now with the family I had built, I really miss my parents and siblings. Even before the arrival and its plans, I had insisted my husband to rent an apartment in the area we had stayed. Though you cannot undo the changes the time had brought, some things will still remain the same. Though most of the buildings around here are either new or refurbished, the one where we had lived still remained the same with its black and white gates. I wonder how our apartment would look now. This time we had rented an apartment in the next lane, to be exact, opposite to the single storied house of the “Shouting man”. I don’t know if anyone else other than I and Bella would remember the man or call him by that name. He seemed to be mentally disabled. He often shouted from his house's balcony. I never saw his face. During the day he stood along the sun's beam that his face was never lit and at night he stood there in the dark. I don't know his name, age or ethnicity, not even what he was shouting. But I still remember him. I am glad that after all these years, he still shouts at the same spot, something time didn’t touch. But now his voice cracks, and he seems to be old and weak.

My husband and children are by now fed up with my childhood tales. Of course they can’t grasp the essence of it, those waters are strange to them. I don’t know how to explain them the way this land had broadened my sense of acceptance. Growing amidst people of different race and culture had opened my eyes to see things differently. Unlike the expected social frames we have to fit in in our country, here differences are welcomed. Everyone with their own differences abide to the same law of this land. It may not be favouring many, but it never intruded in their personal lives.

This morning, I woke up hearing unfamiliar voices outside the street. I opened the window and saw many men going here and there. Usually mornings until the day gets warm are quiet and foggy at this time of the year. While proceeding with my chores, I kept an eye on the unusual happenings outside. By the time I had sent my kids to school and was ready to go to the office, I saw a funeral procession. It started from the Shouting man's house. Suddenly it struck me that I hadn't heard him shouting for two days. I knew I didn’t know him. But for some reason, tears rolled down my cheeks. Perhaps only Bella can understand.

Sunday, June 6, 2021

The Art Of Saying "No"


Our train was slowly coming to the halt. The wet platform before me brings me a thousand vivid memories. The engine, the platform and the fellows rushing in and out make a beautiful mixture of voices. When I got off the train at Wilzar, a pleasant shiver flavoured with grief and loss passed through my body. Suddenly I heard a very familiar voice,

“ Rebecca”

“Jessy?!”, I muttered with a suspicious smile.

Before I could say or ask anything further, the real Jessy Fernandez came forward, helped me with my baggage and led me out.

“ Have you made arrangements to go home or shall I take you in my car?”, I know I am answering to Jessy's queries but my mind is in fact wandering in our good old days. Jessy called the driver and we made our way to home, though it's just an abandoned house now. On the way Jessy didn't speak a word, perhaps she didn't want the driver to hear our private conversation and me overwhelmed with wonder and guilt, didn’t know where to start.

The last pleasant memory with Jessy was our journey to Thiheli. It was almost eleven years ago, when I had a camp there as a part of our Tribal Research Project.

I and Jessy were neighbours at Wilzar. Though she was younger than me for a few years, she seemed to be more matured and spontaneous. We had in fact nothing in common, yet we had a clear understanding of our differences which helped us mutually to get along. When I talked about my research project, it was she who suggested that she could accompany me and reside at her aunt's until my camp would be over and return together. It was the journey we looked forward. Then on one fine morning we packed our stuff and took the train to Thiheli. Thiheli was actually the last stop and Jessy had planned to get off at the very station before it. Midway there was a great waterfall at sight, the train usually halts there for half an hour. We had collected all the details. It doesn't matter where you are going if you are accompanied with someone with great energy and excitement. Jessy was that pure soul that could feel for every moment she lived. She can be really happy if you give her a nice compliment and she could easily cry if you just rise your voice. But she can lift you up literally and figuratively and take your breath away with her talent.

We had been planning for this for a while, had booked the tickets, arrived at the station early and occupied window seats. Jessy had another motive behind her excitement. She was all set to become a doctor, had cleared all the formalities of joining the course and it would start the next month. So it was the last journey she could endeavour before entering the hectic life of a medical student. All the way along the journey she conveyed her wish to go with me to the camp which was practically not possible. Then she would add that once she become a doctor she will have a camp at Thiheli exclusively for the tribal people.

The train wasn’t crowded that day. Many seats were vacant and others looked like regular passengers occupying their own seats. It was only two of us in our couch. While we were busy chatting our insignificant issues, we lost track of time. Our discussion was mainly on Uncle Ben whose house was luckily placed between our houses. We had nicknamed him Humpty Dumpty and had developed a sound dislike mutually. He just couldn’t stand us talking across the fences. Even if we were silently gesturing  at each other, he used to feel offended and we really hated how he explained to our parents about our “nuisance”. Amidst our heated discussions Jessy gave me a piece of cheese cake. She had only two pieces with her of moderate size. We took it mouthful so that we could finish it off faster and continue our discussion. Meanwhile a man in baggy dress appeared from nowhere and asked Jessy if she would let him have her seat. The problem was our mouths were full and we couldn’t speak a word but Jessy moved without hesitation. I particularly found that offensive. Why did he want her seat provided  there were many vacant seats in the train? That was the only thing I never like about Jessy. She could never say “no” to anyone. She could stand before a big crowd and give a spectacular speech but never a word for herself.

The man who looked like a typical vagabond was not interested in a conversation with us. He perhaps saw us as amateur travellers who didn’t even know how to eat in a moving train or guard one's own seat. However, Jessy tried initiating a conversation with him several times of all he disapproved the progress by giving single syllabic replies. For me, why would I want to talk to someone who takes strangers for granted and sweeps into their seats? The intrusion of the Vagabond ruined our fun.

Alas! I could recollect all those moments as if they had happened yesterday. As it is said “You cannot have too much of a good thing”. The man didn’t leave until we reached Thiheli. Jessy had got off at the previous station. I went to our camp hoping to have more fun way back home. But after two days I received a message from Jessy that she was leaving for home as her father was taken to the hospital seriously ill. Three days later, mom called me to inform about Mr. Fernandez's sudden demise. I wanted to be with Jessy at that time but leaving the camp would mean my hard work of a whole year be despised. How could I have done that!?

Once I reached back home I paid a visit to Jessy’s home with my mom. I actually wanted to hug her. But things were not as expected as it would have been, they were making arrangements to shift their residence to their hometown. They had come here for the sake of Mr. Fernandez's job and now they were no more. The whole neighbourhood had fit into their home which prevented me and Jessy to have a private talk. That was the last time I saw her.

I have never seen or heard about her in the last decade. I wonder how she got track of me and how she had come all planned to pick me at the station. Or was it just a coincidence? Guilt overpours in me on the thought that I haven't even made an attempt to know about her all this time. I didn't know why but perhaps I felt an unbearable change in her that made a fatal distance between us. But now she seems to be the same Jessy I had known and loved.

What she might be doing now? Must have become a successful doctor. May be she owns her own hospital. Has she made that medical camp in Thiheli? What would be her specialization? Did I see the sign on the car? Why am I struggling with these questions in my head? She is right before me. I could just ask her.

Once we reached home, we had a delighted homemade lunch she had arranged and an open conversation. She started by saying how she came to know about my visit. Last week, she had come here after seeing an ad on her previous home set for sale. She hoped to buy that but her husband being more practical found no gain on that move unless one chooses to live in the past which is not appreciated.  But the visit let her see the maid my mom had kept in charge of cleaning the house. Jessy took this chance and learned about my arrival and has been preparing for it since. She vividly explained how she rushed through her works, especially when there were more to do for a Senior HR Manager during the end of the month. Yes, she has become the HR Manager of the Company owned and operated by her in laws. I very much wanted to ask why she gave up her medical career and chose this profession, but it seems too late and she has been justifying her decision from the very beginning. I know she has the potential to work in any field but when your profession is not your passion, you are trapped in that life. At least that’s what I do believe. Jessy had taken her daughter to her mother’s and done with all the urgent matters that may pop up anytime this week which means the whole evening she is free to talk to me. Indeed we have many things to discuss.

Soon she received a phone call from her husband informing her that there is an urgent meeting with a client which she has to attend on his behalf. We had only just started our talk hoping to have the whole evening. Nevertheless, Jessy had to leave and unknown of her presence here I had already made plans for tomorrow. Waving good bye at her, the thought weighed heavy on my chest “ Will she ever say ‘no'?!”

 


Monday, May 17, 2021

When Sorrow Strikes



When the thorns of sorrow strike,
The eyes go blind so do all the senses
And gloom and numbness take
Over the kingdom and mark the fences.

"Let alone sorrow enter the gates",
A command so rude travels the kingdom.
As though heavy are the dates,
Time now treads lightly and numb.

"Let peace be seen from afar and across
The gates that there must await",
The poor soul pleas and makes her vows
"I shall find ways to open the gate".

All that I sense is unfair sorrow.
Before my eyes and beyond my reign,
Grief and grey all the news follow
Yet a hope arises midst the pain
For "Surely, with hardship comes ease",
Said the One who promised peace.

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Good Old Days



There was a time
When the air we breathed,
The water we drank,
The food we ate,
The smiles we saw,
Were all clean and pure
And free of cost.

Then came Money,
Befriended everyone,
Helpful for every need.
“Let’s earn more Money.”
“Everything can be bought.”
So we let our days tire
To earn more and more money.

There is a time
When the air we breathe,
The water we drink,
The food we eat,
The smiles we see,
Are all adulterated
And need to be paid.

Time has taught at last
“Not everything can be bought.”

Monday, April 26, 2021

Theft in the Neighborhood


“Ah Ronnie! Days just pass by.

Nothing serious or curious happens around.

Oh you heard it too?

Yes, there was a theft in the neighborhood.

But never mind, it’s not our home.

Some strangers entered the house by force.

'Mr. Mike was shot,

His daughter raped

And his wife injured',

They say.

But never mind, it’s not our home.

Remember Brownie? Their dog!

Luckily it was only tranquilized.

Poor lad! I have taken him home.

Isn’t it inhumane to orphan a pet?

The house and appliances are badly damaged.

It was an unfortunate incident.

But never mind, it’s not our home.

I was watching Netflix

When I heard the commotion.

For a moment I thought  

My earphones were damaged.

You see these are the new ones

You sent from London last week.

Lucky! They are fine.

We got the news from the newspaper boy.

No! I don’t know if valuables are lost.

You see, I don’t peep into others’ matters.

However their car seems missing.

But never mind, it’s not our home.

'There was a similar incident

In the house before it in the lane',

They say.

They have alarmed our mom

Hinting the next is ours.

But you don’t worry.

I don’t let any trouble seeking habits in this house.

Sarah! See who is at the door.

SARAHH!

Rr..Ron..Ronnie, I think they are home.”

Reader, never mind, it’s not our home.


Sunday, March 28, 2021

A Fair Chance



Living a small life isn’t about the financial shortage but it is rather an account of uneventful days. My life in Mirzapur has been nothing but a number of such “normal” days. Being a doctor at Dr. Rawuthor’s Hospital and residing in the Doctors’ Quarters, everything around just surrounds it. If anything happens out of it in a normal day of mine is the narrative of my little girl’s eventful day at school. Kids have this extraordinary talent to make any time special. They do not have an “okay” day in their lives. They have good days, bad days, sad days, happy days and tough days. But for us adults, most of the days are either normal or just okay. 

“Dr. Lyla…You can have all that you get”, Dr. Rawuthor told me when I joined the clinic. Well it’s in fact a clinic with minimal facilities but considered as a hospital since you can’t find another medical aid within five kilometers of radius. Being an ophthalmologist, all that I can have is from those who come for the purpose of taking or renewing their driving license and a few routine check ups of those like Uncle Gregory who seem to spend some time reading a little. Thus, the thought of a fixed salary was a distant one as the clinic was more like a charity hospital. The patients were mostly the natives of Mirzapur who were struggling to meet their ends. We didn’t have expensive facilities either that attracted or demanded money. 

When I came here with Rustham after our marriage, Mirzapur seemed very interesting to me as a girl born and brought up in the heart of the city. Rustham though a doctor by profession had chosen to become a writer which was more apt for his rebellious nature. He was the third of six sons. He had an emotionally tough childhood. His parents got separated and went away in search of their own good fortune leaving the boys with their grandparents. When I first met Rustham his grandparents had already passed away and the brothers were all busy building their own careers. As of me, I was the only child to my rich parents. They both died in an accident when I was just ten. I grew up with a distant uncle and aunt of mine who took great care of me till all the fortune my parents had left drained. I later moved to an orphanage that aided my studies. So practically we were both orphans. At the time of our marriage Rustham told me, “I know you want the comfort and care of a family but I have neither of them to offer you… let’s build one”. But my fate was devoid of those things. Rustham breathed his last two years ago. It was also an accident. Many had the opinion that it must be a murder considering Rustham’s character. He earned more enemies than friends. But I do not have such suspicions. Rustham spent five days in the hospital after the accident. He spoke to me about the incident and how a young man came to his rescue. But unfortunately on the fifth day, he had a cardiac arrest. Death was never a stranger in my life. It was the cruelest villain that left me alone with my daughter. But at least I have her. If not for her, for whom shall I live!


It’s still hard for a single mother even if she is working to be on her own. Everyone seems to be very much interested in reminding her how incomplete she is. Dr. Rawuthor however never treated me any different after Rustham’s death. He had always been Rustham’s friend. He is a man of insight; well respected by people of all walks of society. If anything did harm to his image or the clinic was the unfortunate death of Chandrashekhar, a wealthy businessman of Mirzapur. It happened some twelve years ago, to be exact, a year after I joined. He was brought to the clinic as he suffered from a minor heart attack. The condition wasn’t that bad but still after providing primary medical aid Dr. Rawuthor had suggested to take him to the facilitated hospitals in the city which he himself refused. He was under observation for two days and at the eve of the second day he died. It was most probably a murder and I had myself witnessed the chaiwala boy running out of Chandrashekhar’s room with a syringe in his hand. Shanthi who was an elder nurse in the clinic was also with me. Shanthi had been suffering from epilepsy. Though her condition was under control on medication, the incident and the commotion worsened her state and she too breathed her last within two days. The disappearance of the chaiwala boy without a trace and lack of proper evidences made it unclear if it was a murder. However, it was an unforgettable incident in the clinic’s history. Dr. Rawuthor had been blamed since then by those who sought an opportunity to ignite a communal riot. But the fact is that Dr. Rawuthor never really had a religion. He was that man with leftist ideology and openly criticizing all those religious people regardless of their religion. Chandrashekhar on the other hand was not a very good man either. His morality had been questioned many times, especially his treatment of women. Nevertheless, those who seek a problem in every situation, it was an ample one.

I, being a very religious person, had strong disagreements with Dr. Rawuthor in many of his statements. But I had such a strong sense of respect for him that I never reported it straight at his face. Other matters in which I have disagreements with him includes him assigning me at the labor room in the case of absence of Dr. Prameela just because I was the only remaining lady doctor, and his silence at Shahid, the recently joined pharmacist who frequently preach his love for me. Both the matters disturb me equally.

Once nurse Rosey told me that she had an infatuation on Shahid from the very first day he joined the clinic but when she approached him, he had told that he had already fallen for me. She added how he described how much he admired the twinkle in my eyes every evening when I go to the gates to receive my Riya returning from school. For a widow in her thirties another love life is not forbidden in our society unless it becomes illegal or immoral. But for me, I already feel like in my fifties. I have the whole memory of my youth in my heart that I had spent with my Rustham. At this state the advances of someone in his twenties makes an impression of insult though I doubt I may be secretly enjoying his strange descriptions of my charisma. But accepting another man in my life is so far from possibility as I could still sense Rustham everywhere. 

Everybody in the clinic is now well aware of Shahid’s fascination for me but we had never had any talk in person except him occasionally offering chocolates to my little Riya which I had never permitted her to accept. But today, during the lunch break he suddenly dragged me to the not so easily noticeable room at the corner of the stairs. The room is used to keep wheelchairs and stretchers which are stored for emergency cases. Those frequently used ones are often left in the corners of verandahs. The room was barely lit. I could not see his full face except the eyes that was visible through the narrow light passed through the door. I never thought I had such fear for death. I had always thought that death was a cruel companion in my life and when it arrives I shall shake hands and join the rest of my family with pleasure. But when I was alone at that room even though the way he held my arm was not hurting, all I could think was my little Riya crying alone at the clinic’s gates unknown of her dead mother. I gathered my strength and broke the silence, “You cannot kill me.”

“What makes you think that I would kill you when all I said was how much I love you.”

“Do you think this bearded and your fake love will hide the little murderer you were?”

“I know… I had known this since I came here that you had recognized me. I always kept an eye on 
you if you would anytime disclose it out here. But you never did and I wonder why.”

“Everyone shall have a fair chance to repent but to trust again is a different story.”

“You are right. But haven’t you ever thought why would a young boy of fourteen do such a crime? Or who made him do it.?”

“Every murderer has a justifying story. One should be brave to take revenge but it takes much greater courage to forgive.”

There was an empty desk at one corner of the room. He freed my arm, moved slowly, sat down on the desk and asked, “Would you mind sitting here? I have been carrying this heavy burden for so long. I wish I had someone to speak to.”

He was so emotionally taken aback, inhaling forcefully to prevent him weep. I couldn’t be that rude to leave the room. So I decided to listen to his story. He said, “That man impregnated my mother and abandoned her. Soon after my birth, she committed suicide out of the shame of being alive. Remember Shanthi? She was my aunt. To prevent her from the same tragic story of my mother’s, I had to end that cruel man’s life. Who will help a teenager to kill somebody? I didn’t know why but I asked Dr. Rawuthor for help. He gave me the solution and a new life and identity. But the poor soul of my aunt couldn’t bear the pain…”

He couldn’t say all that he wanted to because his tears had already covered his face. As for me, I felt a sense of shock as well as regret at the same time. I had felt Shanthi had been really close to me, yet I couldn’t realize the pain she had gone through. I couldn’t help either of them. I remained a silent witness who never even tried to seek the truth. I didn’t know what to do then. I just tapped his shoulders. I couldn’t say a word. I left the room silently. At the evening, when Riya arrived, I was waiting for her at the gates. Shahid came and offered her a chocolate. As always she looked at me to know if she could have it. And for the first time I nodded my head. She smiled and received the chocolate and said “Thank you Bayya!”

Thinking about it, I don’t really feel it right how Dr. Rawuthor made a young boy commit a crime. But he has always been a man of insight and I could only list it as one of the many disagreements I have with him but never discuss. If only Rustham was here! If only I had someone to speak to!