This
is an English Translation of “Oodhaa Nira Viralgal”, a short story written by
M. Gopala Krishnan. Translated from Tamil by K. Saravanan. This is 24th
English Translation in the Classic Tamil Short Stories series. |
M Gopala Krishnan |
Even at the slightest movement of jaws, I could feel
an excruciating pain radiating from the skull. The corners of my ears were
aching causing a burning sensation. I was still unable to understand why he
slapped me with such a brute force. He smacked my cheeks before I could escape
his punches as I didn’t even have any hint till the very last moment that he
would give a blow like that. The very moment I was beaten, my entire body
shivered with shock. It was a single room; the very thought of getting beaten
subsequently made me shudder with fear. After beating me, he left the place. I
could feel the blood streaking out at the corners of my lips, burning with
pain, pungent in taste while licking it with tongue. Tears rolled down from the
eyes, fell upon my elbows. Victim of police brutality! If anyone had predicted
by a couple of hours before that such a rare opportunity was waiting for me to
get beaten by the police, I wouldn’t have believed in it. However, I would have
got frightened at it and could have done something of my best to avoid that
situation. But, it was all over, I had got beaten now. ‘Was it the final
blow? Or will they beat me whenever they want? My body is so frail that it
wouldn’t be able to withstand further blows. Would it?’ I was seriously
frightened. I felt a terrible discomfort in the abdomen as the bladder was full
with urine.
It all happened when I was standing on the shiny
corridor of the newly constructed building of Tiruppur City Corporation. I was
waiting for the arrival of the house tax Inspector of North Zone. It was a
dull, post-lunch afternoon; extremely scorching sun light outside. The room
where the electric fans were running at greater speed didn’t get its visitor
yet, and so many persons like me were waiting there outside. I saw Chinnu, the
personal assistant of the Inspector, entering the room with his mobile phone on
his ears, talking to someone. Exactly at the very moment I thought of asking
him when the inspector would arrive, I saw him coming out of the room, rushing
out in lightning speed. As he was a known person to me, I stood on his way and
smiled at him thinking that he would be able to identify me.
Chinnu stowed some currency notes hurriedly into my
shirt pocket, and said while rushing out, “I’ll meet you in a while” and
disappeared in the crowd outside. I stood totally confused at what had
happened, and at a flash of the moment I took out those currency notes from my
pocket, someone grasped my right hand. It appeared that he was standing there incognito
till then. I wasn’t sure about it. It was a strong grip, holding me tightly,
not allowing it to move. Another person came in front of me with a camera in
his hand as if he was waiting for this episode to unravel. His camera flashed
and he captured some pictures in quick sequence. The corridor, till then
slumbering dully, became alert at once. People started gathering there, lining
up from nowhere. ‘Where were they till then?’ They were trying to
capture pictures of mine in their mobile phones, crushing against each other.
Two persons pushed them aside, “Move away…move away…”, and took me inside the
room.
Even amidst that commotion, I was still unable to
understand what was exactly happening there. I thought of asking them; but couldn’t
speak. They made me sit on a stool inside the room.
He was standing with camera readily. When they asked
me to dip my fingers in a glass full of water, tears welled up in my eyes
insentiently. While I was staring at the water vacantly, it changed its colour
into blue hue at the touch of my fingers. ‘Were they my fingers? Why did the
water change its colour?’ Everything seemed beyond my comprehension. All
that had happened around me a while ago, was totally out of my control. My body
still kept on shivering. My lips were spluttering, trying to talk to someone
around there. Neither any one did pay attention towards me; nor asked me about
anything.
The men who ran out chasing Chinnu returned empty
handed. The one who came inside angrily, with his shirt soaked in sweat,
panting, threw a frowning stare at me. A sharp invective came out of his mouth,
sprinkled along with his spittle. When I was looking at him, he gave a strong
slap on my face in a flick of a second - manifestation of his anger of not
being able to catch Chinnu. I couldn’t raise my head. Sheer Insult! Fear!
Utterly confused at knowing nothing around there! He pulled my back with his
hands, made me sit straight. ‘Was he going to hit me again?’ My body
curled inwards out of fear. With the shaking legs, I treaded. My feet were
tottering uncontrollably in the air. Massive pain in lips and cheeks! The whole
of my head hang, with the heaviness of pain.
When I came out, the scorching yellowish rays of the
sun were extremely harsh, burnt my face. I was thirsty, my lips were drying up.
Once I boarded the car, two men sat on my sides, almost crushing me in between
them. I couldn’t identify the person who had slapped me. Feeling thirsty, I
wanted to ask for water. But couldn’t ask after seeing their face. I could feel
that the eyes of people gathered over there, were upon me. ‘Where are they
taking me?’. When I turned my head,
thinking of asking it to someone, I saw my bike parked in the parking bay.
“It’s there, my bike” my voice came out so feebly. Those men were sitting with
the fixed stare on the road, as if nothing had fallen into their ears. I turned
back, and saw that the crowd was dispersing.
As the car approached Pushpa Theatre, my cellular
phone in my pocket rang. ‘Why haven’t I thought about informing someone
during this turmoil? I could have called Thangaraju, and informed him. What
story will I narrate?’ Meanwhile,
one of the persons, sitting on my right picked up my phone from my pocket, saw
it. It was Thangaraju who had phoned me. The person who was sitting beside the
driver seat, with trimmed moustache and stiff appearance must be an officer. He
asked, “Is the call for him?”. He just nodded his head ‘yes’. “Switch it off
and put it in the pocket” he said. He switched the phone off swiftly, and kept
it in his pocket.
I told them, “It’s my son. Let me ask him why he had
called”. My words didn’t fall into their ears.
Only when the car was racing through the Avinasi Road,
it became certain that we were moving out of the city limit. My mind which was already
so much troubled out of fright, became furthermore tense now. ‘There is no
doubt that they are Anti-Corruption Bureau officials. But why are they taking
me? After stowing the currency notes into my pocket, Chinnu had run
away, escaped. It is he who should have been caught. They had come there only
for that. Hadn’t they? Without catching him, why are they taking me? Where are
they taking me? What are they going to do with me? The interrogation scenes
I had watched in movies caused my abdomen rumble with uneasiness. It seemed
that my burden would ease if someone was, at least, ready to listen to my
words. Even it happened, I suspected whether they would believe in what I would
be saying. Would they? ‘What else I could do?’
I closed my eyes. My wife, Saroja used to tell me that
I should pray to Lord Murugan whenever I face such crisis. ‘Can I pray to
Him?’ She would be worried now as I
hadn’t returned home. She would be sitting in the loom by now with her one eye
on the silk yarns and the other on the street, expecting my arrival.
The evening rays of the sun fell on the glass of the
car, penetrated, and fell onto my face too. ‘How long will they conduct
enquiry? Will they send me back home after the enquiry? As they are
taking me in the car, I think they are taking me to Coimbatore. Will they bring
me back in the same car? No…I don’t need it. It is enough if they leave me at
once. I can catch a bus and reach my home myself. My bike is standing at the
Municipal Corporation Office compound. Will it remain at the same place? Can I
go there in the morning to pick it up? I can tell Thanga Raju to pick it up
provided they permit me to use my phone. Even if they permit to call him, I
won’t be able to give the details of persons travelling with me and the place
where I will be available as it is not even known to me. O! God! Why did I go
to this doomed place today and caught in this mess? Ever since the day Sandhya
constructed the house, such unsavoury things keep happening- some problems are
readily trailing behind me one way or the other’
Actually, it was a housing plot purchased for her
before her marriage. As it was cheaply available adjacent to a quarry in
Pommanayakkan Palayam, I purchased it. Five and half cents of land were
sold at a paltry sum of forty thousand rupees. ‘Now, one cent of land is being
sold for more than five lakh rupees.’ The troubles started on the day
itself - an auspicious day, when we laid the foundation stone after due
assessment of appropriate Vastu… When we measured the plot for starting
the construction work, we came to know that our neighbour had constructed his
house by encroaching one and half feet on our plot. He seemed to be a
Southerner. He purchased his plot only in the last year and constructed his
house there. Despite measuring the plot multiple times, we couldn’t reconcile
the missing one and half feet land in the eastern side of the plot. I sent
Thangaraj to inform Venkat Raman, and to bring him. Fortunately, he was
available at his home. Venkat Raman was an expert in dealing with land property
related disputes. Chewing betel leaves, he browsed the land documents
patiently. He walked along the plot east-west, folding up his dhoti. Stood
aside, looked at the plot once again. He spat the betel leaves juices out, sat
in the shade of a neem tree standing near the torch wood fence.
“Yes…he had encroached one and
half feet on your land. Now, how to settle this issue? Is he available at his
home? Have you met him?” he asked.
I was ready with the reply as I
had already enquired about neighbour’s presence at his home in advance. His
bullet bike was standing in front of his house. Thangaraju knocked at the door.
A well-built, hirsute man in his vest, with reddened eyes, a thick gold chain
tangling in his neck, peeped out of the door. I got frightened at seeing his
frame.
Venkat Raman explained everything
to him. He listened to him patiently, went inside, brought the copy of the
title deed. The document was found neatly calculated and perfect in details.
When Venkat Raman asked him hesitatingly to permit us to measure the house, he
didn’t become angry, accepted his suggestion readily, and told, “When we have
reason to suspect, it has to be sorted out in beginning itself. After all, he
is going to be my neighbour. Knowingly we must not allow such disputes to
grow”. My uneasiness was greatly reduced. ‘We shouldn’t judge a person by
his appearance’, I thought. While measuring the house, we came to know that
he had placed the stones wrongly and hence encroached on my land unknowingly.
As it wasn’t feasible to demolish the compound wall just for one and half feet
of encroached land, he accepted to compensate it by giving the cost of the
encroached land as suggested by Venkat Raman. The issue was settled amicably.
Another issue came up when we started digging up the land for erecting the base
for the building. The crow bar couldn’t penetrate into the land beyond two
feet. Rocky layers all around!
I felt someone patting on my
shoulder. I opened my eyes. I had had slept without even knowing that I had
come to Coimbatore. ‘When did I fall asleep? Which place is this?’ Thick
darkness, dim light at the entrance, the road which was full of trees didn’t
have signs of any human activity. Neon lights were shining at the top of
six-floor building standing at a distance. It was an old bungalow converted
into an office. The one who was sitting in the front room got up and gave a
salute. There were two chairs and a long wooden bench on the left in the room.
The newspapers were found stacked. The cat which was lying underneath the cot
raised its head once, and then curled itself.
“Do you want to go to the loo?”
the one who took pictures asked me. I didn’t know how I became numb for such a
long time. I followed him. There was a small walking path around the house. It
appeared that someone in the neighbouring building was singing aloud. The
intense fragrance of coral jasmine was wafting through in the air. It was a
washroom with a thatch made of asbestos. Water was dripping from the tap and a
copious amount of urine flowed from me, non-stop. As the bladder got emptied, I
became calm, stable. Sweat on the back of my neck. I wanted to wash my face. I
collected the water from the tap, splashed it on my face, cleaned it. My lips
were burning with pain as if they were burnt in fire. I could feel that they
had swollen. The same dreadful fear overwhelmed me once again. When I was
gargling, spitting the water out of my mouth, he knocked at the door. He threw
a loathsome look at me when I came out of the wash room wiping my face. He must
have run out of patience as he was waiting for me. I followed him as he walked
in the front. A strong aroma of spices cooked in one of the houses in the
vicinity was dense in the air. The moment I thought of asking about it, he made
me sit on the bench and left. I wondered how these men were gifted with such
unfriendly faces.
The tint of blue was still
sticking in my fingers. I stared blankly at it. It was the evidence. I was not
the one who received bribe, but the one who gave! ‘Giving and receiving
bribe is a crime. Isn’t it? What is the punishment for it? Does the law punish
someone who is implicated as giver of bribe without anyone to receive it? Do I
deserve all these? Why did I go to that place and stand there at that time?
When I left home, Saroja told me to go out after the sun light became less
harsh. If I had listened to her words and delayed my schedule by some minutes,
I wouldn’t have stood at that place and all these tumults enacted there would
have got completed. I would have also returned home thinking that the inspector
hadn’t arrived on that day and could have weaved four yards of cloth in my
loom. It was all my bad time. Wasn’t it? It was my bad time that made me stand
there when all these happened.
Why should Chinnu stow the cash
specifically into my pocket when there were so many persons waiting in the
corridor? It was not Chinnu who picked me up, it was my bad time that made his
hands enter my pocket. The bad time would come in blue colour. Wouldn’t it?’
I would feel good if someone was
there to talk. Making me sit, wait at a heavily silent and lonely place was
completely unbearable for me. Sitting idle without knowing what for this wait
was a very big punishment. ‘Can I go inside to ask them why they had brought
me there and what mistake I had made. They would have the courtesy to reply.
Wouldn’t they? What will I do if they smack my face once again without giving
reply?’ The slap I received earlier was still paining. The very thought of
getting beaten made my legs shiver. The body started sweating. I was convinced
that I would be beaten again. I was sure that someone would appear now, push me
inside at any time and I would be beaten immediately after a couple of
questions. I lost my strength to withstand beatings anymore. Even a small nudge
would be sufficient enough to break me.
‘How would they justify their
beatings?- Would they ask whether I had come there to give bribe? Or who did I
want to bribe? Or how much I wanted to bribe? Only these many questions they
might ask, I thought. Very simple questions indeed! I could reply easily as I
didn’t find any trouble answering those questions. Did I?’ In this,
where was the need of slapping someone? Wasn’t it enough if I narrated
everything as it was? They came to nab the official who accepted bribes and his
assistant Chinnu. They couldn’t nab Chinnu. I had some amount in pocket when
Chinnu whisked away. So they caught me. They also knew that it was only Chinnu who
stowed the cash in my pocket while running away. By all means, they shouldn’t
have anything more to ask; should they?? I too had nothing more to explain.’
As I started believing that there
was nothing to enquire, my mind calmed down. I could wait; I didn’t have any
other way either. I would have to spend the whole night there. ‘My family
members should be informed of it. I could inform that I had come to Coimbatore
on some urgent work and would return home next day morning. They might ask me
about the urgency of work that demanded overnight stay. On reaching home in the
morning, I can explain everything to them. It would be just enough to say that
I was safe. What is the time now? It must be seven or half past seven.
Thangaraj must have gone to Municipal Office in search of me as I hadn’t
returned yet. He could have seen my vehicle standing unattended. Who would be
available there to enquire about me? The watch man only would be available to
ask. He mightn’t know that it was I who they had taken along with them. But he
could give some details about a person arrested in the afternoon and his sandal
colour shirt. Even if he was able to hint at those details, it would be
sufficient for anyone to guess. The situation would be miserable if he wasn’t
available. I wasn’t sure if the said watchman was sitting there when I was
arrested. Would he continue his night shift too after doing afternoon shift
duty? Even if he hadn’t said anything, narratives cooked up by people as per
their whims about my arrest would have spread to so many people by now.
Thangaraj and Saroja will be able to sleep peacefully tonight as long as they
don’t hear any of those narratives. Otherwise, they will keep searching for me
without any clue about my whereabouts and won’t sleep peacefully. If I am able
to inform them about me, I could remain peaceful. I peeped out of the room. There was no
movement in the inner room. The guard sitting in the front room was also
absent. Can I go out now? If no one was there, can I try escaping from the
place? Since it is the city of Coimbatore, I wouldn’t have trouble in knowing
the present location once I get out of that street. After that, I could catch a
bus and reach home. When I thought about that possibility, I could feel that my
legs were shaking even while standing. Lips got dried up. Is it possible for me
to escape? Is escaping from that place possible? Would they be that careless in
security? Or is it a well-designed scheme to get me into further troubles?
There is a possibility that I will be snooped when no one is around there.
There must be surveillance cameras at the corner of this room. It must be
monitoring my movements without raising any suspicion. My goodness! I didn’t
try walking outside. If had done that, they would have scooped me up as a whole
at the entrance of the building itself. The nature of the investigation would
change thenceforth, for sure. They would ask me, “If you say you have not done
the crime, why did you try to escape?”
A sound of footsteps was heard
from the front room. I peeped inside. The one who was sitting earlier, was
there.
“Sir…”
He turned back.
“I need to make a phone call”
“To whom?”
“I need to inform my family.
These people have brought me here without giving me a chance to talk to them”
He came near to me, told, “ ‘sir’
hasn’t arrived in yet. They are waiting for him. Only after his arrival we can
take a call on your request. Now you can’t make a call to anyone”. He was a
young man. His stiff uniform fit on him perfectly.
He went back to his seat, turned
towards me, asked, “Are you hungry?”
I was surprised at the nodding of
my head in affirmation. ‘Whatever the crisis, the stomach never stops its
demands.’
‘Even if Thangaraj collected the
information from the watch man, where would he go to search for me? In case he
enquired at the police station, they might guide him. Even if he was informed
that I had been taken to Coimbatore, would he be able to come here at this
time? Where will he get help in this night? He could seek assistance from
Rajendran. As Rajendran was a reporter in a local news channel, he wielded some
influence in that region. It gave me some sort of a hope that they could take
me along with them by tonight. They would have started their journey from
Tiruppur. Wouldn’t they? This guard has just mentioned someone as ‘sir’. Who’s
that ‘sir’? He must be a senior officer. They will conduct the enquiry only
after his arrival. Won’t they?’ I expected Rajendran to come with some people
before it so that I could escape beatings from them. ‘Even though those two
tight slaps were given on face in a rage due to impulsive momentary anger, the
slaps remained as slaps just to remind me my ignominious condition. Didn’t
they? No more excuses would rectify the insults sustained already. Wouldn’t it?
This place doesn’t seem to be a regular police station. It just looked like a
house. But the heavy silence prevailing there caused uneasy fear in the
abdomen’.
The cat mewed, lifted its head,
and threw its eyes over the entrance of the room. A boy, wearing an orange
colour vest, printed with two large staring eyes, peeped into the room. “Is it
for him?” he asked, kept the packet of food on the table. The aroma of Kuruma
induced my hunger. ‘Can I trust this food? I hope they haven’t mixed
something in it? Will there be any substance mixed in it to make me speak? I am
prepared to provide any details they want. Ain’t I? But there is no one to
listen to me. Now, I can’t bear my hunger any longer, whatever be the
circumstances! The aroma disturbs me, invitingly.’ The moment I thought of
opening the packet, the one sitting in the front room told me, “Water is here.
You can have it”. I came out, collected water in a tumbler. Those few steps of
walking had got me relaxed a bit. When I saw a similar food packet on the
guard’s table, I gained my trust in it.
It was Barotta1.
I flipped it in the kuruma 2 ate it, as the brazen, longing
eyes of the cat were still on me. While opening the mouth, a sharp pain
radiated on the left. Tasty vegetarian Kuruma! Even in that wretched situation,
I couldn’t help being appreciative of its taste. It is said that every cell of
the brain functions differently. Now I could understand it fully- indeed, my
brain directed me to give priority to flipping the Barotta in Kuruma
amidst the possibility of getting beaten. In spite of pain while chewing it, I
completed eating it somehow, slowly. Folded the leaf, threw it out into the
garbage bag, and drank water. Came back to the chair, and reclined. Spicy
Kuruma was still causing a burning sensation in my bruises. If permitted, I
would have slept in that chair itself. But the deadly silence of that place
didn't allow me to sleep and its persistent chirping kept on warning me.
‘Nothing would have been
different even if I had remained at home. I wouldn’t sit in the loom for
weaving after the dusk. After a brief bath, I would be served with a hot milk
tea.
Wearing my half sleeves shirt,
while stepping out of the house, my grand-daughter doing her homework, with her
head bent down, at the veranda would ask me aloud, “Grand pa…aren’t you going
to Pulla Temple?”. She wouldn’t be permitted to come along with me anywhere if
she didn’t complete her homework. In the middle of a garden located at the end
of the Second street, was there a Pillaiyar Temple (Ganesh Temple) under a
Peepal tree amidst the thickly grown neem trees, fry wood tree, Indian beech
and Indian rennet. By the time when I reach home after taking three rounds in
the garden, watching the branches where the birds are dwelling in, Saroja would
be ready with wheat dosai for me. One of the scenes in the serial sobs on
television would have left people teary eyed. I was not interested in it. I
would sit on the veranda, start rolling the yarns in the bobbins for weaving it
next day. Therpattikara Ponnan, sitting cross legged at the opposite veranda
after coming from his shift duty would ask me, “Haven’t you read the newspaper
today?”. It would be almost 10’ O clock when Saroja comes with milk mixed with
pepper powder and some tablets. After Ponnan leaving the place, I would swallow
the tablets and sleep.’
Today, it isn’t possible to take
the tablets. Is it? ‘Nothing will happen if I don’t take tablets for one
day. Nothing could have happened more than this. All these nervousness and
restlessness won’t get reduced with intake of tablets. Will it? The time
can’t be past ten. Despite the body had become weak, I didn’t feel sleepy. The
cat ran towards the entrance. The corridor became alive all at once. ‘The
‘sir’ might have arrived in.’ I feel a lump obstructing my throat. I rubbed
my eyes, as the head was still spinning. Tottered. I got up without being told,
stood meekly.
“What have you done, you blokes!!
I asked you all to go on a wild goose chase but you have caught a lice here?
How did you miss him? The voice of ‘sir’ went past the rooms. A voice, stern
and flawless. Very succinct in its expression to penetrate one’s senses! No one
replied. ‘What could be his age? Will he be above fifty six years like me?
People say that the eyes police officers can easily identify the criminals just
by their appearance. If so, will he be able to identify that I am an innocent
man?.’
I was standing there, waiting.
They might call me at any time. I was unable to bring the shiver in my legs
under my control. My tongue licked my swollen lips reflexively. The cat came
running inside. It paused for a second seeing me, curled its body a moment and
pushed its whiskers forward, mewed, left me without taking its eyes off from me
and settled at its place.
The one who was sitting on my
left in the car called me out.
“Come here”
I walked, as if a weightless
piece of something useless was tottering. Wiping the sweat of my palm on my
shirt, I followed him. There were rooms in different sizes. Both lighted and
dark walking paths. I felt that I was walking a long distance.
The room designed elongated, was
brightly lighted. The wavy cigarette smoke filled in the room. There was big
table at the left most corner of the room. Pictures were animating on the
computer screen. A man with striped shirt was watching the screen keenly. A
cigarette in his finger, still emitting smoke. He must be the ‘sir’. Once I
entered the room, he turned towards me. Plum cheeks and fully shaven face,
without moustache. He must be a north Indian. His tiny eyes looked at me as if
piercing me in a straight line. I was standing, confused as to whether to greet
him or not. He crushed the filter tip of the cigarette in an ash tray, looking
at me with disdain as if I was an ignoble piece shit or something.
“What’s your name?”
For some seconds, I couldn’t
understand that he asked the question to me. I said, “Arunachalam”, a delayed
reply.
“What are you doing?”
“Weaving…weaving silk”. Stood
confused whether I should add suffix with the sentence to sound more
respectful. Or should I add ‘sir’ at the end?
I could feel that his eyes were
surveying my fingers. The remains of blue tinge was still sticking to my
fingers. He lighted one more cigarette, waved the back of his palm dismissively
and delved into the computer screen. Was that the image on the screen mine?
Yes…it was. They took me to the room again. They had got everything- whatever
had happened in the afternoon were captured in pictures. A severe pain radiated
in the skull again. They had captured everything in pictures. This man is, now,
watching everything on the screen. The tremor in my body shot up.
“Please come” he brought me
outside. ‘Is everything over? Is the investigation over? Can I ask the
person walking in the front about it? Will they leave me now with all these
alone? They made me wait this long just to ask these questions. Didn’t they?
They had got those things written down in Tiruppur itself. Hadn’t they?’
“Why did you beat this man?” I
could hear the voice of ‘sir’ from inside. He must have replied to him. It was
inaudible.
I came back to the room, sat. He
went back. I called him out, “sir”
He turned back. “When can I leave
for my home?….”, I asked him. Before I could complete my sentence, he signaled
me with his forefinger on his mouth to keep quiet. “Sir will inform. Be quiet”
he left the place swiftly.
As I sat dejectedly, feeling
utterly helpless, I burst out crying. I covered my swollen lips with my hands,
wept in silence. After so many years, I cried like that. I could see the cat
lifting its head, looking at me. Its shiny eyes were staring at me. When I wiped
my face with my hand kerchief, I heard the sound of foot step. ‘Are they
coming out?’ I rose, went to the entrance of the room. ‘Sir’ came out
first, others followed him. On seeing me standing there, the ‘sir’ stood.
“Sir…may I leave?”
He moved ahead, nodding his head,
“Let me decide in the morning”
Quickly, I retorted, “Family
members will be worried as I haven’t gone there…sir”. I told him in a rather
raised voice.
He turned towards me, came near,
piercingly looked at me and told, “Don’t worry, they will inform your family”. ‘He
understood that I had wept. Didn’t he?’
The sound of vehicles leaving,
was heard. They fastened the latch outside. ‘The ‘sir’ has gone. That’s the
end of everything. I have to stay there throughout the night. Is it a jail? A
jail without rods. What to do next?’ Only the cat and I were in that room.
The constable came in, and told
me, “If you need water, it is over there. In case you want to go to the wash
room, do inform me”
I had seen his face earlier. He
travelled with me in the car. He came behind me, and asked, “Should I inform
your family right now? Or can I do it in the morning? To whom should I inform?”
His eyes were reddened. It was his rough hands that caught my hands when I took
out the currencies from my pocket at that time. Getting enormously irritated
and angry, I bent my head down, thought prudently. ‘If they inform them by
now, they may get unnecessarily panic. Let the things happen the way it was
destined. Let me alone spend this despicable night. At least they can sleep
peacefully till morning.’
“You can inform them in the
morning”
I didn’t like to see anyone’s
face. There was no use in explaining to them. The ‘sir’ has gone. What
decision he could have taken after watching those video footages and me? Here
every one knows that I was standing there accidentally and I hadn’t committed
any mistake. Despite knowing that, why do they make me sit in this manner?’
Wiping out the tears flowing down
the eyes, I leaned against the wall, sat down on the floor. Even in my wild
imagination I had never thought that such thing would happen to me. My affinity
with Tiruppur police station was nothing beyond a mere glance of it while going
by that way in the bus. Further I had heard that jail was located en-route to
the court at the rear side of the Taluk Office. ‘By next Aavani, I will
complete fifty six years. It has been written on my head that I should get
smacked on face at this age. Hasn’t it? It appeared that I was also under the
same spell of Ezharai Naattu Sani3 which had caught up Sandhya
too. Even the colour of pumpkin smeared
with saffron powder, thrown at in front of the house at the time of house
warming ceremony hasn’t yet got faded. But my wretched destiny has brought me
here. Hell with that house tax they levy. Why did I get worried about it? I
should have paid it, no matter how big amount it is. People told that I would
have to pay only one third of the levied amount if I could manage meeting the
Tax Inspector. More than half of the people who were present there had come for
doing such things anyway. But why is it me? What sin have I done? Am I the only
one scapegoat in this whole mess? They haven’t grilled me with questions. Nor
intimidated me! After that slap, they didn’t beat me. That was it. But why are they
still keeping me there, not sending me home? No one can ever reverse the
torture I underwent making it non-existent? Can they? The one who did all the
mistakes is sleeping comfortably at his home with his wife and children. The
one who is falsely implicated is standing here in utter despair.’
“Get up” I felt that someone
shook my shoulder gently. I opened my eyes. It was the same constable. I was
perplexed seeing him in lungi as I couldn’t identify him. I leaned
against the wall, stretched out my legs. Head was aching. Eyes were burning. I
must have cried a lot. It seemed that I lay there out of tiredness and slept
there itself. ‘What is the time now?’ I tried moving my jaws. A sharp,
shooting pain at the corners of ears!
“Who’s Thangaraj?” I lifted my
head as he asked this question.
“They have come here in search of
you.”
I got up. ‘Thangaraj has come.
Hasn’t he?’ A cry of dejection was about to break out from me. I peeped out
of the room. No one was there. The warmth of pain in the corners of ears made
my heart beating faster. Got up totteringly. The bruises on the lips were still
burning.
“Come after cleaning your face
with water. They are waiting for you inside.”
‘Why should he meet me in this
condition? Why is he waiting for me now? I told them yesterday not to inform
anyone. They must have called him from the contact numbers in my cellular
phone. When did he come here? Is he alone or with Saro…Aiyo…she shouldn’t see
me in this condition. She would break down.’ Went to the wash room, peeping
into the room. Yet they didn’t permit me to go inside. I wanted to have a
glance of my swollen face.
“Do you want tea?”
I didn’t say anything. Wiped my
tears. A mild vapour was coming from a small plastic tumbler- hot tea! I didn’t
want it. But I couldn’t resist myself from asking for it as I felt that I
needed something hot due to the severe head ache.
He turned towards me once and
looked at my face once as he drank the tea, flipping the pages of newspaper.
The cat wasn’t seen underneath the bench. ‘Even a cat had the freedom to run
away from that place, at any times it wants. I am the one confined in that
despicable place’. More sugar seemed to have been added in the tea. Saroja
used to give me tea without sugar. ‘Wouldn’t Thangaraj brought anyone along
with him? Hadn’t he met some lawyers with the help of Rajendran? Will these
people allow those people inside?’
The cat mewed and jumped on me
from somewhere in the top. I moved a step behind with an unexpected shock. But
didn’t fall down and regained my composure, got up. A lot of paper bundles,
boxes and plastic items were kept in the loft. The cat had been hiding there
till then.
“Come”
I got up, went inside. I couldn’t
control my trembling. Not sure whether the ‘sir’ has arrived in. Same room.
Thangaraj was writing something sitting opposite to the table. Rajendran was
sitting beside him. On their left, a man, unknown to me, was sitting. All three
turned their face towards me, looked at me. Rajendran came to me, held my hands
supportively. I couldn’t control my tears.
“When we inform you, he should be
brought here. Don’t avoid reporting with excuses like ‘lawyer says’ or ‘judge
says’. The matter will then become more complicated. Be careful about it.” the
Sub Inspector warned us in a very unsympathetic tone.
“I will take care of everything
sir. We won’t do such things” the third man politely told him and got up.
While coming out of the building,
I closed my eyes. The brightness of the day was so glaring that I couldn’t open
my eyes. The sun light was extremely harsh due to which I couldn’t even lift my
head. The cat jumped out from the wall. It stretched its back, contorted its
face. It was all only for a second. It jumped over the door readily and ran
away. Once the car moved out of the place, my trembling had reduced. I was
sitting alone in the rear seat. Thangaraj appeared to be very restless. Hadn’t
he seen my torn lips? He wanted to ask something, but was hesitating. Rajendran
was driving the car explaining the traffic jam caused by the construction of a
bridge. Both of them didn’t ask me what had happened. They must have thought of
not disturbing me at this juncture. Even if they had asked me, I couldn’t have
given any replies.
Once the car took a turn at the
corner of the street, I could understand that the matter had spread well ahead
of us. The entire street was unanimously excited. A huge crowd at the entrance
of the house as if someone had died. I was trying to get down from the car, but
my legs weren’t ready to budge. I couldn’t move. Saroja came to rescue, she
held my hands and took me inside.
I am walking silently, staring at
the ground, hanging my head. Someone or the other is coming near to me, some
holding my hands, some patting on my shoulders in all their attempts trying to
assuage me with assuring words. Nothing went into my ears. My eyes welled up
with tears.
“Please don’t trouble him. Let
him take rest” Rajendran told in an authoritative tone.
“Very pitiable fellow you are!
You are as innocent as a white corn. This shouldn’t have happened to you”
‘Who’s that? Voice of Sundari
Periyamma? Wasn’t it?’ Movement of planets isn’t in our favour. Suitable remedy
must be taken to address it” Segadanthali Mama’s voice fell into my ears with
his trademark tobacco scent. All the relative were assembled there. ‘How did
they know about it? The matter was known to everyone since they had started
searching for me. Hadn’t they? What would they have thought about me? How am I
going to face them?’
“Newspaper guys don’t distinguish
the bad and good. It is a police registered case. So they had published what
they had been told.”
‘What are they talking? Had this
news been published in the newspapers? Which newspaper? What was the news all
about?’
“Why don’t you shut your shitty
mouth and get lost from here?” the woman from Mannarai Village chided the
person who uttered it.
As I entered my bed room, Saroja
pulled the window curtains down, closed the windows. She wept desolately, not
being able to see my face. I took my shirt off, threw it out, lay on the floor.
The whole body was aching. ‘A humiliation worth giving my life. What is
going on here? Which force had had me incarcerated yesterday? Was it a jail? Why
is this woman crying now? Arunachalam was dead yesterday itself. Wasn’t he? What
is lying here is just his dead body. Isn’t it?’ My mind didn’t get attached
with anything. I kept staring at her. She wiped her tears, went away.
I didn’t like to meet anyone. She
led everyone through the hall to the entrance. The murmurs of the people were
heard through the closed doors. ‘I shouldn’t venture out under any
circumstances. But can I remain like that? How long will I be able to confine
myself in this manner? I can’t remain aloof without talking, seeing people for
long. If only I share my feeling with others, my burden will get reduced.
Mental stress will come down. However, I can’t do that too, at this time.
Rather, I should sleep like a corpse without any thoughts. I wanted to have a
glance of that newspaper. What has he written in that? Will it be ‘here is the
person who tried to give bribe’? Lakhs of copies must have been sold. Mustn’t
have? I have become a hot news in all papers. Everything seems to be over. I
have read so many such stories. Haven’t I? – A photo of a person trying to hide
his face with his hand kerchief with a caption “Assistant arrested for
receiving bribe”. When they took my pictures yesterday, I didn’t hide my face.
I was not even aware why they were taking my pictures. Didn’t they take
pictures in the car? Hell with those pictures! I had become a news. Mr
Arunachalam, Age 54, from Managalam Nagar, 4th Street, Tiruppur was
caught yesterday when he tried to give bribe. What a life time achievement it
is! This is how one earns name and fame. Doesn’t he? Saroja might ensure that
the newspaper doesn’t fall in my eyes. Any problem if I don’t see that? It was
just an incident happened that day. I have taken my due place in the history.
My name has been carved in the list of persons arrested by Anti-Corruption
Bureau. O! God! My worthless birth has been destined just to face this
ignominy. Hasn’t it?’
I felt that my chest grew choked,
sat up. Tears were rolling down the cheeks. ‘That one second had changed my
entire life. Hadn’t it? Will I be able to come out of this? This incident will
remain as an identity of my existence henceforth. It will remain as an
indelible dirt forever. Won’t it? Now, at this second I am lying in my house,
hiding, unable to show my head outside. Is my destiny designed like this? I
don’t need such a life anymore after this incident. Do I? I was staring at the
ceiling fan. I thought I could finish off everything with a yard length of
rope. No more insults! No more misery! Saroja would be weeping for sure, but
for how many days?! Everything will vanish one day.’ One bell rope is lying
behind the almirah. Starched, stiff, braided rope. I bent down, searched for it
under the almirah. I pulled the rope out. It was thick and long. I need to tie
the noose for my neck size. My hands were trembling for no reason.
Sound of knocking at the door!
Throwing out the rope under the almirah, I sat on the cot, wiping the tears. It
was Saroja…She couldn’t speak. She would shed tears if she saw my face.
“Can I bring idlies - they are
hot?”
I nodded my head blankly. I
hadn’t had anything since morning. I didn’t eat anything even when they stopped
their vehicle for having tea on the way. I was hungry.
She brought three hot idlies on a
plate. I washed my dusty hands in the water kept in the cauldron. The warm
taste of Tomato sambar went inside slowly. I lifted my head, looked at her. She
was sitting, kept looking at me. In the gap of a second, a drop of tear rolled
down her cheek.
“It’s alright. It’s nothing. I
have come safely. Haven’t I?”
Without uttering any word, she
poured the sambar on the plate. A while ago, I thought of tying knot with the
rope, but now asking her for the fifth idly.
…
On the tenth day, I was summoned
to come to Coimbatore. Thangaraju and Ranjendran took me there. Irukoor Ramesh,
our lawyer, was waiting there for us. He had already been informed about
everything. He was explaining the replies I had to give, succinctly yet clearly.
He was explaining clearly how I
should reply each question.
“They have added you only as a
witness. You are not the one they are searching for. So you don’t have to get
scared. They will ask questions only in this manner, might twist the questions
to get you confused. If they ask you anything more than this, just reply boldly
that you don’t know anything other than this. I will take care of the remaining
things.” His face exuding confidence! Sensitive eyes! Talking to Ramesh gave me
strength.
The building was looking an
ordinary one with its muted, dull yellow painting. The creepers thickly grown,
hanging from the top of windows with the light green leaves having some yellow
flowers in it. After getting down from the car, when I stepped into the
building, the same palpitation overwhelmed me. My steps were tottering. I stood
as I saw a man sitting behind the emaciated greenish reed partition. He was the
same person who stood guard in the previous night. ‘Should I smile at him?
Is it right to show my acquaintance with him? I don’t know. His face was stern,
no sign of anything.’ Once entered the front room, I looked into the room
on the left reflexively. The same wooden bench. Two men in dhoti quickly got up
from their seat, and then sat down, relaxed. I searched for the cat. ‘Was it
the cat I was searching for?’
They allowed only me to go
inside. The room which was well illuminated now, brought more fear in me. I
could understand that the Inspector was sitting there impatiently, tight faced,
and seemingly lost his balance of mind.
“Why did you go there at that
time?”
“Just to enquire about paying
house tax”
“To meet whom, did you go there?”
“My area inspector”
“What is his name?”
“I don’t know”
“Have you met him earlier?”
“Yes. I have met”
“Where? When?”
“When the house was under
construction, he came and visited”
“What did he say?”
“He said that the tax has to be
paid”
“What else he did he tell you?”
“He told nothing other than that”
“Do you know who Chinna samy is?”
“I don’t know”
“Do you know at least where he is
working?”
“I don’t know”
“If then, why did he stow the
cash in your shirt pocket?”
“I don’t know why he did that”
“How much money they demanded
from you?”
“They asked nothing”
Everything went on just as Ramesh
had told. I gave simple, monosyllabic replies to each questions asked. Despite
being repeatedly asked, I didn’t twist any reply I gave. I said ‘I don’t know’
to most of the questions. It was visible that the inspector got angry. I could
hear his mumbling- ‘They have trained him well. If not today, he will be caught
on some other occasions. Won’t he be?’. They asked me to write everything on a
paper and attest it with my signature. I was unable to conceal my shaking
hands.
I lifted my head, saw him. He
looked into my eyes and nodded his head. I paid regards to him and came out of
the room. I could feel that his eyes were still following me. The cat which ran
across, stood for a second, mewed at seeing me. Its mewing sound sent a chill
down my spine.
I was shocked to see the revenue
inspector who was waiting for us in Ramesh’s office. Why did he come here? Is
one more episode of what had happened waiting for me? Rajendran was telling him
something. Nothing fell into my ears. I stood at the entrance itself, with a
frowning stare at the inspector.
A bright sandal vermilion on his
forehead, stiff white shirt with flower-patterns, face carrying an undying
lively smile- I was swayed by an unbridled anger after seeing him. I lost my
control. I turned my anger towards Thangaraj. “You have decided to send me to
the jail permanently. Haven’t you?” I yelled at him, threw a frowning stare at
him, walked past. Nothing I could do beyond this. Could I? I came out, swiftly
walking out. Rajendran held my hands, beseeched, “Don’t take hasty decisions
Anna. I will explain everything to you.”
I sat on the bench in a tea shop
under the shade of a rain tree. Oily raw Banana Bajjis 4 were shining
inside a glass box in the shop. A moderately thick rope with fire in its tip
was hanging, tied around the wooden pillar. Rajendran came to me, sat beside
me. I glanced at him questioningly. “Do you want to have a tea?” he asked me.
Without waiting for my reply, he told the shop keeper, “Two teas without
sugar”.
‘It’s me, the devotee of Lord Ram
I am the one, the devotee of Lord
Ram
It’s me, the devotee of Sita
I am the one, the devotee of
Sita’
A coarse voice turned my
attention. A man in Hanuman5 costume, came running towards me. He
was very short in height. A pale costume of a monkey. Curved tail. Some ten
rupees currency notes were flapping on the plate he was carrying. On seeing the
tea shop, the Hanuman stopped. He took off the mask which covered his
face, smiled at the shop keeper. Wiping his face soaked in sweat, he told, “I
will take two bajjis” and took out two bajjis from the glass box. Keeping his
Hanuman mask beside him, he sat on the bench, pressed the oily Bajji with the
old newspaper cuttings, ate it.
I glanced at Ramesh’s office
entrance. Thangaraj was still standing there. His face was still rigid.
“You do all these things at his
behest. Don’t you Rajendran?” When I asked this question, I felt crying.
“You are mistaken..na. That man
has come just to help us. He will take care of everything. I have discussed
everything with him. Please don’t be angry”
It seemed that I have lost all my
hope and everyone around me appeared to be cheaters.
“We are not known to each other. He himself enquired
about this incident and has come on his own to help us. I have explained
everything to him. He is remorseful now for what had happened.” I couldn’t pay attention to the assuaging
words of Ramesh.
“All is drama…you don’t
understand all these. How could you believe in that man?” I murmured myself
with anger.
“How could you say this as a
drama?”Ranjendran’s words came out harsher. I looked at him. ‘Rajendran is
shouting at me. Isn’t he?’
“We won’t leave this matter as
such. Will we? I can understand your anger. But it is advisable that we
shouldn’t come to a conclusion without making adequate enquiry about it. Please
get up…we can go inside” he held my hands, trying to get me up. On seeing
Thangaraj standing near, I got up.
“Let’s go to our home. If you
leave late, let me go by bus” I loosened my waist dhoti, shook it out, tied
again.
That man wore the Hanuman mask on
his face and started singing the song enthusiastically.
‘It’s me, the devotee of Lord
Ram’…
….
On the next day of my third visit
to Coimbatore, when I was lying in the room in the early morning darkness,
Saroja asked me, “Nothing will change if you keep confining yourself within
this dark room. Will it?”
I sat up, thinking about how to
reply her. I wasn’t able to concentrate on weaving. On the day when I dared to
sit in the loom for weaving out of frustration of spending my days futilely, it
became nothing lesser than a disaster. That day, I went to the loom in the
early morning, after cleaning my face, smearing Vibhoothi on forehead, and of
course with full of confidence. But the moment I got into the loom, the
incident came through my mind. My mind was fully occupied with the visual
details of every moment of that incident. I sat immobile. After drinking the hot
tea Saroja brought, I rose up again with the new vigour. Shaking my head, while
the leg pressed the treadle, my left hand, which was to pull the tape, missed
its synchronized movement. Before setting the things right as it was a wrong
pull, the tape having the sharp edge jumped ahead, cut the yarns off, and hit
the yarn tins kept on the loom platform forcefully. That was it. I ran into my
room, locked myself inside. I never attempted going to the loom after that.
“Whatever happened, it had just
happened. But you can’t afford wasting your days like this thinking about it
and lying here like a sick man. It makes no meaning. Does it?”
Saroja also lost her patience in
due course. Very often, I happened to listen to Thangaraj and Saroja talking
like this:
“We have just one and half saris
yet to be woven. If we complete it, we don’t have be in a hurry about other
things. If you think you won’t weave it, tell me so that I can do it”
‘Saroja knows everything about
weaving. Though she weaves slowly, she will complete weaving a sari in three
days. She is an expert weaver. What she was telling is actually true. But how
can I tell like that?’
“All of you are getting troubled
by this nuisance and expect me to go to the jail permanently. Aren’t you?” I
spoke in lower voice without even understanding what I was speaking.
She broke down in a second. “What
wrong thing have I spoken now?” All our conversation will end up either in
crying or fighting irrespective of whether we talked to each other or not.
“Yes…Yes…we are eagerly waiting
for you to go to the jail. Aren’t we?”
My obstinacy got further
stronger. “It would’ve been better had I not come out of the jail”
Wiping her tears, she got up.
“It’s said that even the mind of a noble man will get spoiled if he is jailed
for one day. It is correct now. Isn’t it?”
I rose up angrily. I went to her,
and stared at her frowningly. ‘Isn’t she endorsing the so called identity
which I have recently earned in the society?’ I too had expected that she
would speak like that one day. I gave a tight slap on her cheek. The moment I
felt the moisture of tears on my palms, she ran away. I was standing there,
legs still shaking. I didn’t know what to do next. A sort of a burning
sensations on my palms. ‘Her cheeks too will burn like this. Won’t it?’
I lied down, staring at the ceiling. Tears welled up. Rolled over, unable to
control my sniffle. I grew conscious of the fact that I was losing myself.
Every time I went to Coimbatore, I became more and more stubborn and grew more
loutish. I became aggressive at every small thing. Yelled at people without
getting provoked. ‘Where are these things going to end?’ I have been
confining myself within this room, unable to talk to anyone, unable to show my
head out.
The sound of weaving was heard
with its perfect cadence. An expert weaver could only weave the yarns with this
beat. When my mind merges with weaving, even my weaving would produce such a
cadence. But it wouldn’t be this faster. It was a weaving with patience and
precision. The sound stopped suddenly. Someone holds my hands tightly. My wrist
area is aching. While the loom was running silently, the noose falls onto my
neck. Currency notes from my shirt pocket kept on the loom platform are flying.
The unfriendly faces picking up those papers stare at me contemptuously. The
water drops down with the fragrance of coral jasmine. Even the cat which jumps
out of the beam has one currency note in its mouth. I could see that when it
mews with its tongue out. Its blue tinged tongue fondles my scars. The
pepperiness of Kuruma! While rolling up the banana leaves shrunk due to heat, I
look at it keenly. The crumbled paper had my photo in it! I am walking behind
him, with my head hanging. Is it me? Even it is not visible clearly, Chinnu is
yelling that it’s me. A black cloth obstructs my face, followed by a cracking
sound. I scream, ‘I am innocent…It’s not me’, holding the rope strangling my
neck, tightly. A strong smack on my cheek again! Only darkness around!. Thick
darkness where one could hear only chirping. Suddenly, the sound of water
falling down. It soaks my feet and ascends. I climb up, holding the rope,
noosed around my neck. The water also rises as swift as I climb. I run for my
life, trying to save myself from the meandering water chasing me through its
zigzag course. Someone pulls the rope swiftly. That moment I look up and fall
down. The Inspector is standing, laughing in his flower-patterned white shirt.
The blue hued flood submerges me.
I rolled over the bed, fell down.
When I opened my eyes, my grand-daughter opened the door, peeping into the room
“Grandpa…” her lisp woke me up.
I got up, wiped my face. I hadn’t
even allowed her to come near to me.
“Have you fallen down Grand pa?”
I nodded my head to her, said
‘no’, lifted her and kept on my lap.
“Is your health not alright?”
I adjusted her hair, fluttering
on the side of her ear and nodded my head, ‘yes’.
“Did you have injection?”
“mmm…”
“Was it painful?”
“mmm”
“Is it alright now?”
“mmm”- I could feel that my voice
was shaking. Tears might come out at any time.
“If then, can we go to Pulla
Temple?”
Getting her down from my lap, I
got up and looked upwards. Shaking out my dhoti, wore it as I cleared my
‘tear-swelled’ nose. It was very long since I had taken her to the Ganesh
Temple. Wasn’t it? I saw my face in the mirror kept near window. Sunken
eyes, darkened face and a thickly grown grey beard. I bore an appearance which
I couldn’t even identify. Finger combed my hair. I must get rid of the rigidity
settled on my face which had almost forgotten what laughter was. I tried to
bring a pleasing smile on my face, moistening my lips. Lips tried to smile but
no grin on face yet. Uncooperative eyes threw a frowning look.
“You feeble crying Old man! If
you don’t come, I’ll go on my own” my grand-daughter twisted her lips, jumped
out, ran away from there. I looked at my face once again in the mirror.
Yes!...it was the face of a feeble crying old man anyway!
***
The weaving sound of the loom was
heard. I came out. On seeing me, Saroja halted the loom. I looked at her intently
without saying anything. ‘It was long ago since I heard this sound of the
loom. Wasn’t it? I was still unable to think of sitting on the loom for
weaving. Without concentration of mind, it is impossible to weave in the loom.
After that fateful day, I was unable to go near to the loom. Only one and half
saris were still to be weaved. At the same time, we can’t afford leaving it as
such without completing it. Can we?’ The yarns will lose its tension, tear
off and become useless. As I stood still without uttering anything, she resumed
her weaving. I used to weave slowly, without any signs of urgency. But on
seeing Saroja weaving, I understood she weaved slower than me.
“That fellow came here. Didn’t
he?” I asked her.
Halting the weaving, “Who?” she
asked. She came out of the loom as she appeared to have guessed who I was
referring to.
….
Now-a-days, the assistant of the
Inspector frequents to our house just a day before I am scheduled to go to
Coimbatore. He never listens to the requests not to come like that, despite
repeated appeals from Thangaraj. He used to come just an empty-handed visitor,
overtly polite, and says, “Our master has requested you to inform him anything
you want”. Rajendran too tried his words with him as he feared that it might bring
uninvited troubles. But he didn’t listen to him too, never stopped coming to
us. I didn’t meet him in person. Rather, it would better say that I didn’t like
to meet him. Only when he leaves by his new model bullet bike, I used to see
him through the window. He was an enthusiastic youth in white shirt and blue
colour jeans pant, with waving hair in the air. Why does the inspector try to
get me impressed with all these? He is afraid of getting caught during the
course of investigation. Isn’t he? Sometimes, I used to think what will happen
if I say that I had gone there only to give bribe to him. They will arrest him
and imprison him and linger the investigation for months. Won’t they? His photo
will also appear in the newspapers.
If I get him caught in this, the
case will become more complicated. The investigation will go on for longer
period. I have become a totally useless piece of person by confining myself in
the darkness. I won’t be able to sustain in this manner. Will I?”
I can extort money from this man.
If demanded, he would give away for sure. He is not going to give his
hard-earned money. Is he? He would give the money he had looted from others,
and in turn, and will loot the amount he gave me from others. Cyclic! I don’t
want commit that sin. I have had enough for the sins I have already done. Not
ready to add up to the bundles of sins anymore. Once he comes in person, I must
talk to him to explain my stand.
At the end of eighth month, the
investigation of the case came to an end and the judgment was scheduled on
eighteenth of the month. Saroja used to light lamps for Goddess Durga during
Tuesdays; that day she left in the early morning for the temple. While
Rajendran was jubilant about the affairs, I could see Thangaraj’s face was
still gloomy, rigid. He might be apprehensive about the possibility of
un-favourable judgement. The possibility of not coming back home was also
looming around- the possibility I have had already thought over. I couldn’t
sleep yesterday night too. My mind was pensively brooding the incident occurred
on that day again and again. The blue hued fingers were holding me tightly.
They were able to arrest only Chinnu. They failed in their attempt to implicate
the inspector. “Actually, it is in our favour”, Ramesh told. As I thought that
the same might turn against me, I told him, “The destiny which forced Chinnu to
put his hands in my pocket shouldn’t descend in the pen of the judge while
writing the verdict”.
….
The court campus was very crowded
as if it was an auspicious day. A lot of glaring white clad men were roaming
around there. I was standing under a Tamarind tree, thoughts frozen, and mind was
empty. Ramesh came running towards me, wiping the sweat on his forehead, and told
me, “All your miseries will come to an end by today.” I gave him an empty look.
“He wants to talk to you”, he
told hesitatingly.
Without speaking anything I
looked at him. Rajendran came running to me, hurriedly.
“We can talk later Ramesh”. Both
of them left the place.
The Revenue inspector was still standing
somewhere here. He was watching me. I knew it. ‘Here…even in this second, I
can make him locked up behind the bars. That fear will keep chasing him. Only
this fear has made Ramesh as his messenger. Hasn’t it? What would happen if I
tell what the truth is?’
I didn’t speak anything in front
of the judge. The same familiar questions, asked earlier. The same replies given
by me. Nothing was new. As I came out of the witness box, I signed in a thick
register as usual. Chinnu had told the court clearly that I was no way related
to the money he stowed in my pocket. When he was walking along with the police
men, I watched him standing at a corner. Rajendram came running to me, face
brimming with smile, held my hands, shook it, and patted on my shoulder, in a
quite assuring manner. I came out, looking down. Not expecting anyone to
accompany me, I walked past. I could hear Thangaraj calling me out. I didn’t
stop.
I kept walking past, at faster
paces from the court room. Extremely scorching sun! Wiping the sweat in my
neck, while turning I found the bus standing at the bus stop. I glanced at the
name board. ‘Marutha Malai’. Momentary, impulsive decision taken at that
moment, I ran behind the moving bus, and boarded it.
When I stood at the entrance of
my house with my tonsured head, Saroja screamed, wept desolately. She ran
inside. Perhaps, she must have been aware of it. But she couldn’t have expected
that I would do such thing. Till at the very last momentary impulsive decision,
even I didn’t have any idea of having my head shaved off.
While taking bath, I felt hungry.
Sat there itself immobile, water dripping. Even now, Saroja was unable to
control her tears. She was sitting with a blank stare at me, her lips shivering,
mumbling some mantras. Dal rice hotly served
was lying in front of me. When Sandhya poured ghee in it, its aroma induced my
hunger pangs more. I crushed the papad, mixed with rice, and made a
ball. My grand-daughter, with eagerness, came to me. I gave her the first
morsel of it in her hands.
“sss…it’s hot, Grand pa…” she
whined, ate it.
At the time when we, both of us,
completed our food, Rajendran and Thangaraj entered. My shaven head got them
stunned. They stood hesitatingly for a second.
“If you had told us, we would
have taken you to the temple. Wouldn’t we?” Rajendran told. Wiping my wet hand,
I picked up the remote control and pressed its button, sitting on the sofa. I
was watching the news bulletin silently.
“Has your grand pa brought Panjamirtham?”6
Thangaraj asked the child, took her on his lap. I could feel that he was
staring at my tonsured head.
***
As the light came inside, I
opened my eyes. It seemed I was still sleeping for a long time even after the
dawn broke. I looked through the window. The sun light was very bright. The sound
of songs came through the air from Ganesh Temple. “Soup….Soup…eiii”- one man
was carrying soup made of goat legs on his head, went by the street, bawling. ‘I
have slept for such a long time. Haven’t I?’ I looked at myself in the
mirror. I was shocked for a second. The hairless head had changed my appearance
totally. Is it me? This question occurred all of a sudden. ‘Will he
come today? Yes…He will come. He will come for sure. There is nothing in
between us to discuss. Isn’t it?’ Despite my mind’s comforting words, it was
certain that he would come.
I didn’t meet him till now and
shouldn’t meet him today. The fear in him must not go away from him at any
cost. If I meet him, speak to him, then that fear will vanish. He must also
undergo the same miserable life I had undergone till now for some more days. He
shouldn’t be allowed to enjoy peace at lesser cost.
I took bath hurriedly. ‘I must
leave this place before he comes. When he arrives in here, I shouldn’t be
available at home. Each and every day, he must wait with the same fear, at
least for my sake.’
“Where are you leaving?” Saroja
asked from the kitchen.
“To Pulla Temple”
She must have got convinced with
my reply. This was what she had been expecting since long. “Just wait a second.
Let me make coffee for you”
“No…I can’t wait. I will drink it
after I am back”
The moment I stepped out of my
house wearing my sandals, a car came and stopped in front of the house. It was
a familiar car. The car which I had seen frequently. I returned, went inside
the house, hastily though. Rajendran’s voice stopped me.
“Have you slept well? He couldn’t
go inside by neglecting my presence there.
I turned, looked at him, smiled.
I saw him alighting from the car at the same time. The same fellow whom I saw
in Ramesh’s office on that day. No…something has changed in him. When I was
looking at him absorbedly, he folded his hands, and smiled at me.
“Please come in…” I looked at him
again, uttering this sentence unreceptively. I was stupefied. He also had his
head shaved off.
Thangaraj came out, wiping his
face and peeked at the inspector, welcomed him, “Please come in…na”. He offered
a chair to him.
He was wearing an embroidered
white shirt. Grinning eyes inside his spectacles. He glanced the pictures
hanging in the hall. “Is she your grand- daughter?” he asked.
“Yes…she is the daughter of
Thangaraj.” When Rajendran replied with excitement, the inspector kept watching
my face.
Saroja brought a jug full of
water.
As he drank the water with the
sense of some urgency, he looked at her, and told, “I have caused a lot of
troubles for you all. Please don’t keep in your heart.”
She wiped her tears, told, “It’s
all due to our bad time. How can you be responsible for it?”
The inspector kept staring at me
keenly. “You must be very much angry with me. Justifiable anger anyway. I
thought of meeting you in person so that I could absolve myself of my guilt” he
told.
Rajendran spoke in a rather
convincing tone, “He is a simple man. He doesn’t know talking much and keeping
such things in mind either. You please don’t take these things by your heart.
Can we have tea?”
While going inside, Saroja asked,
“can I add some more sugar in it?”
The inspector nodded his head to
her, told, “It doesn’t matter. You may add sugar in it”. Smiled.
Sitting there without uttering
any word seemed to be too heavy to bear. He was eagerly waiting for a word from
my mouth. It looked as if he had also waited, expected for so many days like me
for this to happen.
“It must have been a bad time.
Mustn’t it? It so happened as destined! Nothing was pre-decided anyway.
Everything was purely circumstantial, coincidental. That buffoon, Chinnu had
caught you into such a problem inadvertently while trying to escape the spot.”
He removed his spectacles, cleaned it and continued, “The case lingered on. I
wanted to close the issue at the earliest but in vain. He bent his head down as
if he had delved into some serious thoughts. Seconds later, he lifted his head,
looked at me, and told, “Let’s not talk about that matter anymore. It can’t be
rectified, reversed, no matter how much I repent for it. I beg you not to keep
it in your heart.” He got up, came near, held my hands. I was aghast for a
second. My hands were shaking. The slap I got on my cheek flashed like a lightning
in my skull.
“It’s alright…You please sit
down…” with my words stammering, I pressed his shoulder gently, asked him to
sit.
“We are habituated with such
things. It happens very often too. But we don’t carry anything in our heart.
Forgetting it, we will start looking after other works after that. But you are
not like us. It is my big mistake that I had become a reason for a person like
you to come to such a place.”, he took his hand bag as he was speaking. “It is
just for my satisfaction. I beseech you to accept it” he took out a white
envelope, and placed it on my hands.
I pulled my hands back
reflexively. My hands went to my shirt pockets, covered them involuntarily. The
envelope slipped on the floor, the currency notes from it fell down and scattered
all around. I moved away from it. My legs became numb, immobile, shivering. I
looked at my fingers involuntarily. I felt that the blue hue has stuck to my
fingers. Looking at it repulsively, I wiped my hands on my shirt. Rajendran
told me, endearingly patted on my shoulder, “It’s nothing naa…Please sit”
Saroja brought hot tea, looking angry
faced, and was sulking. Without telling anything, she gave the tea. I remained
silent for a second. I wiped my hands once again, took the tea cup, gave it to
him, “Please drink it sir” I told him.
Rajendran collected all the
scattered currency notes, put all of them in his hand bag. With his spectacles
still in his hands, the inspector drank the hot tea in sips. After two gulps, I
told him, “It was not your fault alone. You may leave sir”
With his hands folded, he left
the place. I walked towards the loom.
***Ended***
Note:
1.
A food item made of Maida,
popular in Tamil Nadu.
2.
It is a side dish given along
with Barotta.
3.
Ezharai naattu sani- when a
person has a troubled life, it is said that his luck has been influenced by the
God Saneeswaran. Colloquially it is said that he is under the spell of Ezharai
Naattu Sani.
4.
An oil food stuff made of gram
flour.
5.
A character in Ramayana,
messenger of Lord Rama.
6.
It is an offering made of fruits,
jaggery and honey, predominantly popular in Lord Murugan Temples in Tamil
Nadu.
Translated from Tamil by K. Saravanan
Source: “Oothaa Nira Viralgal”, a short story written by
M. Gopala Krishnan. This translation has been published in this blog with the
permission from the author.
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