Monday, May 20, 2013

Tides of Time (unfinished)


                                                  ~ 1 ~
The present day…
It was 2 a.m. and Mohan woke up to the sound of 'dhinka chika' blaring in his ears. "What in hell..." he exclaimed quite apparently pissed off at being startled from his utopian dreams by this untimed phone call. He snaked his hand out of his blanket and without even looking at the screen, disconnected it. He covered his head quite snugly under an extra pillow, and tried to go back to sleep. "Dhinka chika re e e e"...the cell phone started ringing again.
"Son of a gun!" he yelled. Who was calling him at this ungodly hour? "It better not be the bloody customer care", he said aloud as he straightened the phone to see who the caller was. Rohini, her name flashed on the screen. Mohan's irritation gave way to anxiousness. He picked it up at the last ring.
"Hello, Rohini?"  
No reply.
"What's the matter? Is everything all right? Hello?"                      
Silence.
"Rohi...uh!"                      
His words were abruptly greeted by the dial tone.
Mohan twitched his eyebrows in confusion. He stared at the phone for a few seconds, half expecting something. After bargaining about whether to call her back or not, he decided against it and finally put his mobile on the bedside table. Putting his hands over his head (like he always did when he was thinking hard about something), he stared into the dark ceiling.
"And there goes my sleep", he thought aloud. 
Why was she calling him so late at night? And why then, did she not say anything? Maybe something was troubling her, and she wanted to get it off her mind. Maybe she needed help. Maybe she was feeling lonely. Maybe she wanted to talk to him. As soon as he thought of this, his conscience chided him for being so foolish. Why would she want to share her personal thoughts with him, of all people? That too at two 'o' clock in the dead of the night? No, maybe it was one of those calls that got connected by mistake. Like when unknowingly the caller applies pressure on the buttons of the mobile; that mostly results in random numbers getting typed on the screen, or blank messages and sometimes even unintended calls. Yes, that's what it was. He tried to sketch out the possible scenario. She must have been sleeping with the phone on her bed, and had rolled over on it; when the buttons, aided by the SIM card, deviously hatched a plot to connect a call to him and deprive him of his precious slumber. That brought him to the image of her sleeping. Was she even sleeping or...? I mean, it was not as if she had the bed all to herself.
Mohan pulled himself back from such melancholy assumptions. They only gave him heartburn. But, if the call was mistakenly connected, then why did it get disconnected? Maybe she was calling him. Was she? Mohan steeled himself again. He would not let his heart fall prey to worthless hope. He knew the perfect explanation. Yes, it was because she realised that she had called him by mistake, and so as not to disturb him further, she’d silently cut the call. Was it Mohan's sleep or something else that she didn't want to interrupt? "Stop it, Mohan", he said to himself. He forced his eyes shut. But they were strained for some reason and the harder that he tried to fall asleep, the more they hurt. He knew there was no going back to sleep again.
        
                                                  ~ 2 ~
About a week ago…
The day was sultry and suffocating, as was expected in the month of May in Kolkata. Not that it could be used as an excuse to skip work. Mohan had picked up his assignment from his employer’s office, and now rode on his second hand khatara bike in the heat and humidity through the streets of the Gariahat-Rashbehari connector to his destination for the day. Lakeview was a posh residential area nestled beside lush green parks and the lake after which it was named. He was vaguely pleased, as it meant a change for the better from the squalid locality he had to visit the previous day.
Mohan was a sales representative and maintenance agent, for a company that dealt in assorted kitchen appliances. And he did his job well. Apart from maintenance and repair, which he had got quite skilled at- thanks to the numerous opportunities for practice-he also had the traits that convinced people very easily. He spoke with confidence, no doubt, but there was an honesty and innocence in his eyes that worked together to influence his customers. He was the guy with that do-no-harm kind of personality. People trusted him. He was 28 years old, a contented bachelor, and lived alone in a small but cozy rented room in one of the cheaper suburbs of the city. He basically had no family left, none worthy of the term anyway, since his mother passed away about two years ago. He had left his home soon after, for the city where one of his acquaintances had got him the job. He could afford his basic necessities, gather savings and even spend some money on recreation- the TV, a touchscreen phone and his bike. His salary was enough to sustain him, and since he intended not to extend the number of mouths to be fed, anytime in the near future, he was quite satisfied. Not blissfully happy, no, but satisfied. In the absence of any kind of responsibility to anyone else, he lived in the moment; figuring things out as they came his way. No planning, no procrastinations, no preconceptions.

At first he attended to the maintenance appointments he had in two different apartments; one for a microwave oven and the other for a gas cooking hob. He basically had to clean out colonies of tiny cockroaches from the former and replace a faulty knob of the latter. These alone took him more than three hours to complete and by the time he had finished having lunch in a dhaba-that surprisingly turned out to be more expensive than he’d anticipated (sabzi-roti for 7 bucks apiece)-it was already two p.m. in the afternoon. It was now time for door-to-door salesmanship, cold smiling refusals, the occasional buyer, getting doors shut in his face, the works. It was all very usual and expected; just the opposite of what was going to happen to him next.
He went from door to door and from floor to floor of the apartment building adjacent to the Kali temple. Since it was a hot summer afternoon, most people were enjoying their siestas, and naturally were annoyed by him. But patience was a virtue that was essential to his trade. In spite of the conditions, Mohan had succeeded in getting three prospective customers signed up for one of the ‘special offers’ sponsored by his company. He rang the bell of the door next in line and waited for an answer. He was feeling subtly happy, so he drummed his fingers on the frame of the large mahogany door, to the tune of a soppy Bollywood song.
“Who is it?” called a female voice from inside.
“I’m from Gemini kitchen appliances, Ma’am. My company is offering a special…”
“No, we don’t need anything.”
“Please, Ma’am. It will only take a minute; if you’d just have a look at the brochure.”
 It was followed by a momentary silence and then the voice exclaimed, “Mohan, is that you?”
Mohan was cut short by the opening of the door. And then he saw her standing there right in front of his eyes. He could not believe it; he’d never thought he’d meet her again. She was wearing a light blue saree and her hair was tied in a loose bun, the front parted with a line of sindoor in between. She had a faint smile on her lips, but somehow seemed fragile to him. Was it the bass in her voice or the dark circles under her eyes? He couldn’t decide. She looked beautiful, nevertheless. But then, she’d always looked beautiful through Mohan’s eyes; even when she was a mess. Her figure bore the slight buxomness that a few years of marriage brings with it. He would have kept staring at her like that, but in an effort not to seem rude, he regained his composure.
“Um, Rohini…” he said.
“What a pleasant surprise! I thought it sounded like you…what are you doing in Kolkata?”
“Work. What else?” he said pertly.
“No, uh I didn’t know...”
“Well, whatever. Do you have a kitchen chimney?” he broke the uneasiness. He was on his job, and he was going to make this unexpected meeting as formal as he could. Without waiting for an answer, he reached into his bag, and took out a pamphlet and handed it to her. “There you go. It’s the new Electra-X kitchen chimney, 10 litres, self-automated cleaning, just at Rs.25, 000. But if you sign up today, our company is offering a special discount of 10% and assured gifts”, he blurted out monotonously.
Rohini glanced at the brochure and then said to him, “Would you like to come in?”
“No, I am all right outside.”
“I insist. It’s been a long time. I’d like it. You can tell me about the offer inside. Please.”

The apartment was a lavish one and the drawing room boasted of a dark leather sofa set, a green marble centre table and a home theatre. While brocade curtains concealed a wide window, a Greek bust stood in the corner and a couple of portraits adorned the wall facing them. The air conditioner was turned on full force and it gave him comfort from the prickling heat outside. He sat down on a sofa chair and was joined by her on the one adjacent to his. He glanced from here to there-observing the features of the room, while she stared at her hands before finally breaking the ice, “How is Ira mashi?”
Mohan looked up at her for a second and then lowered his gaze. “She is, um…no more”, he took in a sharp breath and continued, “Cervical cancer. It was discovered late. We tried chemo, but…” he shook his head and pursed his lips. Rohini was visibly shocked, “B…but she was so young…I can’t...I mean w…when?” she managed to ask.
“Two years ago in August.”
There was a painful silence in the room. Mohan stared at the ground while Rohini stared at him in disbelief. Before it became too much, he spoke up. “Can I have some water, please?”
She was glad of the interruption and recollected herself. “Tch, I’m so sorry. How rude of me! Wait a minute, I’ll get you something.”
“No, please. I just had lunch. I’m thirsty, that’s all.”
She ignored him and went into the kitchen behind the drawing room. Five minutes later, she returned with a glass of aampanna and a bowl of chilled watermelon cubes. Mohan had his elbow propped on his leg, and was massaging between his eyebrows. “Do you have a headache?” Rohini asked with sincere concern.
He lifted his head, “No, I’m just tired. Actually I was all sweaty when I came in, and the A.C. may have got to me. I’m not really used to it.”
“Oh, should I turn it off? Or would it be okay with you if I raised the temperature?”
“Sounds good. But, why did you go to such trouble?” he exclaimed looking at the refreshments she’d got for him, “I’m really on a full stomach.” She turned the A.C. down and said, “Oh it’s just some fruit. It’s the first time you came to our home. You didn’t think that I’d let you leave without having something. And anyway, it’s not like I had to cook.”
He did not argue. She was behaving more as if he was a visitor rather than a salesman. It should have made him feel good, but he didn’t understand why it annoyed him so much. He could almost have laughed satirically at the situation if she wasn’t sitting there in front of him. Instead, he obediently began to drink the sherbet placed before him.
“So, are all salesmen bestowed with such hospitality in this household?” he said, with a hint of sarcasm.
“Not really”, she said absent-mindedly. He resumed eating, and she observed him intently.
She tried to make small talk, “So you live here now; in Kolkata?”
He popped a piece of watermelon in his mouth and said, “Yeah, near Tollygunge. I figured that there was nothing left for me back in Chandannagar.” He did not notice her flinch at this statement. “I guess it was time for a fresh start, you know. I like it here. Yeaaah, anyway, enough about me; what are you doing in Kolkata? Last time I heard, you were living in Siliguri.”
“Vikram got transferred to Kolkata in November. We’ve been here since.”
Mohan nodded. He didn’t ask her any more questions. The mere mention of her husband’s name had made him uneasy. Moreover, he didn’t want to seem too prying.
Rohini sensed his discomfort and tried to make him feel at ease with a general comment, “You’ve changed quite a lot since the last time I saw you…you’ve grown stubble now. It suits you.”
He flashed a genuine smile and teased her, “Yeah, well; you’ve gained weight.” pointing to what he thought was a trace of a pot-belly.
“Oh that. Um, actually I’m pregnant.” She said matter-of-factly.
He would have almost spit out his food from shock, but saved himself from humiliation in the nick of time. “Ah, well…um Congratulations! I guess…” he managed with a cough followed by a fake smile.
“Thank you. It’s been about five months…” she said, almost to herself rather than him.
He nodded in response and again a noisy silence ensued between them.
“Um, I’m getting late. You should take a look at the brochure now”, he said finally, keeping the glass on the table.
“Yeah, sure”, she extended her left hand to him. Mohan was about to give her the pamphlet, when he noticed a small dark bruise on her wrist. It was concealed until then under her aanchal but now the thin gold bangles had been displaced revealing the wound. When she caught him staring at it, she nervously drew her hand back and smiled, “Oh its nothing.” “It’s just a small burn from the coffee maker. I was silly enough to try to hold it while it was still hot”, she added almost as an afterthought. Clarifying herself thus to Mohan, who hadn’t asked for an explanation, she took the brochure from his hands and started flipping through its pages.
He praised all the features of the kitchen chimney in question with a fervour that only salesmen possessed. He was in the middle of explaining to her the price and the discount being offered, when the door of the next room opened and a little girl came running towards Rohini. She was a toddler, three to four years old, with big eyes on a plump but cute face. He couldn’t help but smile. On seeing Mohan she stopped in her steps, and then warily proceeded forward to her mother. “Ma, why did you leave me alone in the bedroom?” she said and climbed onto her lap.
“She’s afraid of sleeping alone”, Rohini explained to him. Then she caressed her daughter’s hair and said, “See who’s here. Say ‘hi’ to uncle, Moni.”
“Hi”, the little girl obeyed, apprehensive of the stranger.
“Hello, Moni! What a pretty pet name you have!” Mohan said shaking her hand. “What is your bhalonaam?”
“My name is Mohini Banerjee. What is your name?” she replied promptly with tutored confidence, apparently having lost all her former wariness.
He laughed a little at this and answered with a similar accent, “My name is Mohan Sengupta, Ma’am.”
She curved her brow in thought and remarked, “Our names are similar; Mohini and Mohan.”
“Yes, surprisingly, they are”, he realised. He looked up to Rohini and saw that her countenance had turned serious. “I should get going.”
She nodded, “I’m sorry. I can’t confirm and sign up for the offer without consulting with my husband. I’m keeping the brochure, if that’s not a problem. Give me your card and I’ll get back to you.”
“A salesman with a card?” Mohan said gravely. “Oh…” she was clearly embarrassed. “I’ll write my number down for you”, he offered with a smile, and scribbled his phone number on the pamphlet.
“Bye-bye, Moni.”
“Bye-bye”, the little girl repeated.
“It was nice meeting you”, he confessed to Rohini.
“Same here. Bye.”
“Bye.” Mohan left and descended the stairwell outside the apartment. She waited for him to disappear as he turned on the landing, before closing the large mahogany door.

                                                 ~3~

10 years ago…
“Ira mashi O Ira mashi, open the door! Ma has sent some fish roe fritters for you”, 17 year old Rohini shouted outside her neighbours’ house.
“Where, let me see?” Mohan opened the door on her face and without a warning, snatched up one of the fritters from the bowl in her hand.
“What? UGH!”
“Mmm, they’re good” he raised his eyebrows at her. He then grabbed the bowl and went back in; leaving her at the porch without even as much as an invitation to come inside.
“MOHAN!” she stomped her foot and then ran after him.
“What’s the matter with you two again?” Mohan’s mother said in disapproval, although she was used to the cock-and-bull story that the teenagers lived.
“See for yourself what your darling son is up to! I brought the fritters for you and he vanished with the entire lot instead.”
Uff, this boy doesn’t give me a moment’s rest. Ei Mo…”
“There you go Ma. I was just doing a quality test. These fritters are fit for consumption”, he piped in, handing his mother the bowl, which showed a much reduced number of fritters. Rohini gave him a death stare. “What?” he looked at her with irreverence. Then he gave a little push to her head before heading off upstairs to his room. “Follow me.”
“Why?” she asked, but got no reply. She looked first at Ira mashi, then at the stairs; and climbed them up to his room.
“Why did you ask me to follow you?”
Mohan was searching for something under his bed. He looked up and said, “I’ve got something to show you. Close the door.”
“What is it? Why do I have the close the door? What are you doing under the bed?”
“Why the hell do you have so many questions? Just shut up for a minute and close the door.”
“First tell me what it is.”
Mohan looked up again, this time his teeth clenched. Rohini gave up.
“Okay Okay! I’ll close it. But I don’t like the direction this is going in.”
“Here it is.” He stood up with a book in his hand.
“A book? You kept a book under your bed? I thought it was something dangerous.”
“It is. Come and see”, he sat on the bed and patted the place next to him.
Rohini sat down next to him to observe this supposedly ‘dangerous’ book.
“The Kama…THE KAMASUTRA!”
“Shh”, he placed a finger on her lips “Don’t shout, you silly pig!”
“The Kamasutra? Where’d you get this thing?” she whispered.
“From someone”, Mohan said with feigned authority.
She shoved him in the guts with her elbow, “Who? Tell me or I’ll tell Ira mashi that you read obscene literature.”
“What in god’s name is your problem, Rohini?”
“Who?”
“A friend of a friend of a friend.” She was clearly not satisfied with this answer.
“Okay! I got it from Kingshuk’s neighbour’s cousin. We met him at the Strand a week ago. He lent it to me; for two days only. I’ve got to return it tomorrow. So, I wanted to show it to you. And now I think that was a pretty bad decision.”
“Whatever. Have you read it yet?”
He nodded, “Last night.”
“And?”
“Well, read it yourself.”
He opened the book for her. She gasped at almost every single heading or illustration. The turning of the pages was punctuated by a “What in hell…”, “Ew!” or “Oh my god!” from her.
“Hey! Stop doing that.”
“What? I can’t help but be surprised. I am not that…you know…as you are.”
“Just be normal. You’ve got like a million expressions going through your face within a second right now.”
“I can’t be normal when I am looking at THIS sitting next to a guy.”
“What’s wrong with that?”
She rolled her eyes at him. “Don’t be stupid, Mohan. You know what.”
“No I don’t. You’re being silly.”
“Oh! Just move away for a while and let me read this by myself.” She pushed him away.
He pushed her back. “Ugh!” she cried and pushed him harder. But he did not budge.
And their game began. Rohini struggling to push him off of her, and Mohan sitting there stuck to her side like a thorn refusing to move. Their game continued for a couple of minutes before his mother banged on the door, “What are you two up to?”
Mohan regained his wits and opened the door, “Oh nothing she was just helping me with one of the passages in the English book.”
Rohini smiled foolishly and waved the book at her, taking care to keep the title out of vision.
Ira mashi looked suspiciously at them for a moment and said, “Okay. Don’t fight. And keep the door open.” Then she left.
“Phew!” Mohan said, wiping off imaginary beads of sweat from his forehead.
“What must she have thought we were doing?” Rohini was tensed.
“You worry too much, Rohini. Now give the book back.” She did not protest and he hid it under the bed.
She was looking out the window and thinking of something. “What’s bothering you?” he asked.
“Hm? Nothing”, she shook her head. Mohan lounged upon the bed, his head resting on his palm, and his eyes fixed on her. Rohini fiddled with the bed-sheet. “Arre tell me na! What are you thinking?” he persisted.
“I’m getting late. Bye”, she got up and started towards the door. He pulled her back by her arm, “What happened?”
“I’ve got to go, Mohan. Ma will be worrying.” She went out and down the stairs.
“No she won’t”, he called back but she was already gone. Making an angry face, he lay down on the bed. He looked out the window from where he could see Rohini’s house. He held the shutter and banged it close. After a few seconds, he opened it. He closed it again. And then he kept repeating this, until his mother finally dragged him down for his bath.

                                                                                         

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