M Gopala Krishnan |
This is an English Translation of Iravu, a short story written by M. Gopal
Krishnan. Translated by Saravanan. K . This story has appeared in Sahitya Akademi’s
Indian Literature journal (Nov- Dec 2022 Issue)
Thirumalai had a temperature, unbearable for him as if the bed had been strewn with embers, and he was unable to lie down on the bed as each atom of his body seemed to have been set afire. His condition demanded some immediate easings. He tried twisting his body but his hands and legs remained immobile with a lethargy in defiance of his wishes. When his Old Mother had him lain on the bed, she would assist him to keep his right hand across his chest. That day too, she had covered him with a shawl only after placing the right hand across his chest as usual. The left hand remained as such, stretched out. The legs seemed to have been attached with his body below his waist like plain wooden planks. All what he could was just to call someone aloud with a heavy voice and tell them his needs.
Old Mother was sleeping along with his
maternal and paternal aunts in the hall opposite. Usually, Thirumalai’s cot
would be kept at the corner of the hall. But his bed was arranged in veranda
today. Apart from being a comfortable place, it was the place where people
didn’t make a nuisance of themselves. Directly in front of his cot,
was the main thoroughfare of the household. To its left was a kitchen. Adjacent
to the kitchen was a room, along its wall. Of the rooms, this one was fairly
bigger with a window attached in the outer wall. The entry of air and light was
quite good in that room. Apart from all this, the hall was sultry even during
the day time. The said room did not command any specific importance till date.
But in it Ganesan’s First Night has been arranged today. It meant that room was
going to be Ganesan’s bed room henceforth. His room of romance! A mere
articulation of those words with himself was just enough to make Thirumalai’s
whole body burn with rage.
He
summoned all the pain in his soul and emitted a sharp scream, “mmmmaaa”. His
coarse voice dissipated the darkness with a huge amount of restiveness. For a
moment, it was doubtful whether that sound had reached the inner part of the
rooms. No reply came any from anyone. There was no movement noticed in the hall
either. Exhausted due to marriage related works, all were in deep sleep. ‘These
people might also sleep. But Ganesan would not have slept, for sure. The
charming components of that room will not allow his body to sleep. Will
they?’
He
mustered all his anger and agitations together once again, and shouted at high
pitch, “yammaa…yammaa” till his throat grew blocked. He was now fully
enervated. He panted. The heat of his breath that ran with a steady surge up
and down made him sweat.
A
sound was heard in the hall. Seconds later, a light was switched on. Old
Mother, tottering, came down the stairs of the hall. She called out to him,
“Thirumale…”- a sleepy call. She climbed the veranda stairs and switched on the
light. The yellow light of the incandescent bulb descended on the
veranda.
She
bent down and looked at Thirumalai who was lying in sweat. She wiped off his
forehead with the hem of her sari. “Are you alright? What happened
Thirumale”-she asked with a mild shiver in her voice.
Thirumalai’s
eyes looked at her fixedly. He quickened his normal breath intentionally to
make it look abnormal. He shut his eyes as he cleared his throat.
“Do
you need water Tirumale?” Thirumalai grew further irritated at seeing the old
lady not showing any signs of urgency.
“Yammaa…Yammma..”,
he held his breath for a second and drew it in with force, and screamed. His
breath stopped for a moment and started wheezing. In seconds, his face started
sweating. He pulled up his eyes upwards. ‘Now, the old lady would get
frightened at seeing it, for sure’. The sounds of footsteps were heard from
the hall.
“What
happened akka?” came his mother’s sister’s concerned voice.
Thirumalai’s
anger rose when he saw that the door of the house had still not
opened.
“Don’t
know. Seems to be severe wheezing problem. He is sweating. He has been alright
till now. I don’t know what has happened all of a sudden. I wanted to give him
some water, but he is not opening his eyes”, she told as she was wiping him
again with the hem of her sari.
They
heard the sound of front door opening. Once he understood that the light on the
entrance beam was on, Thirumalai felt relaxed. Not opening his eyes, he just
drew his breath in again without slackening its speed.
“What
happened Amma?” Ganesan had come there by then. The Old Mother explained her
state of confusion about his condition once again.
“Anna..”
Ganesan called out, as he lovingly caressed his forehead. The scent of marriage
coming from him got Thirumalai further enraged. He sucked his breath in once
again and cleared his throat forcefully. His respiratory tract was
obstructed as if some blockage was being drawn up from the interiors of his
chest pit. He started prattling without opening his eyes.
“Anna…Annaa..What
is happening to you? Please look this way” Ganesan was sitting beside his cot.
His hands were shaking due to anxiety. “Amma…bring some water”. He wet the
towel with water. He wiped his face with the wet towel. Thirumalai brought his
breath under control and opened his eyes slowly.
“What
is happening to you…Anna? Thirumalai was embarrassed at seeing the uneasiness
on Ganesan’s face. He turned his face aside, spoke stammeringly, “Nothing…I just
felt that something has obstructed my chest. Now I am alright. You go…and
sleep.” His words trickled very heavily from him. His Old Mother kept
staring at him unwaveringly. Unable to bear her look, he diverted his gaze
towards the thatch with a blank expression. Without moving out of his seat,
Ganesan too was watching him intently.
“You
go inside…nothing has happened to him?” The emptiness found in his mother’s
voice pierced Thirumalai.
“Just
wait ma…Anna…do you want to go for a pee?”
Thirumalai
didn’t reply. His rage reared its head once again in him. With the odour of
marriage and a newly groomed vigour, Ganesan lifted him from the bed and made
him sit. Mother’s sister moved into the hall. “It is not required now. Just a
while ago, before sleeping, he went for urination” his mother sulked, went to
bring the urine collection pot. He lifted the dhoti up a bit, held the pot
down and asked Thirumalai to pee in it. There was a silence as if the fire of
jealousy burning inside Thirumalai had been calmed down. His mind became quiet,
releasing its hold on anxiety as if all his anger and rage which had till then,
held him to ransom had died at that moment. A satisfaction of chasing away the
scent of marriage! Putting him again on the bed, stretched out his legs comfortably,
Ganesan left. His eyes closed, lying on the bed, Thirumalai could still feel
that his Old Mother had thrown an unnerving stare at him for a moment.
“Call
me if you need any help…ma”- the sound of the latch being fastened by Ganesan
was heard again.
The
veranda and the hall delved into darkness once again. ‘Mother could not have
slept yet in the hall. The words which she keeps using within herself for
grumbling, would not allow her to sleep now. The questions she thought of
asking me many times might be forcing themselves to come out of her throat pit
now. But she was unable to throw those questions directly at my face. Only
because of her silence that emboldened me, I have been orchestrating this
stupidity lying on the bed’. He felt like laughing out loud. ‘The sound
of my laughter must emit light like a lightening piercing through the frozen
thickness of darkness. I know my lower lips would crook and be pulled
downward when I laugh. While laughing like that, even my regular laughter
would carry that crook in it. There is no need at all for me to take effort to
laugh with that crook’.
‘By
this time, he…’ Thirumalai’s thoughts took a step back. ‘What’s
this? The rage reared its head once again. Nevertheless, I, looking on from the
other good side of me, reproached myself for being able to think like this?
That too about Ganesan!. Every one won’t get a brother like Ganesan. Everyone
may be having siblings. But at the age of twenty-four, he has been carrying his
brother whose hands and legs are paralysed. I am nothing more than a torso with
life which is lying either on a woven chair or a cot. Just because there is
life in the torso, can it be called a human being? I cannot even pee on my own’.
Ganesan
would get up at five in the morning. But Thirumalai’s sleeping pattern was not
predictable. ‘Immediately after getting up from the bed, he would come
directly to the bed. His first job was to remove my shawl, make me sit straight
with both my legs dangling on both sides, lift my dhoti and collecting my urine
in the urine pot kept under the cot. Then he would take that pot to the wash
room, wash it and keep it upside down at a corner of the wash room. “Do you
want to sleep or should I make you sit on the cot?” he would ask me’. Most
of the times, Thirumalai preferred the chair. His hand woven chair was placed
right under the ceiling fan in the hall, just four feet away from the
television. He would make him sit on that chair, adjust his dhoti properly and
switch on the television. There would be no programmes other than some morning
prayers. Even though Thirumalai didn’t like them, he would watch them without
complaining.
He
would come once again before taking his bath. His Old Mother would have fed him
a coffee before that. There was not even a single instance where Thirumalai
drank coffee without making at least one complaint about it, no matter how much
delectable it was. One day, he would say it was not hot enough. Another day, he
would shout that she was deliberately giving it very hot because she wanted his
tongue scalded. Sometimes he would scream why she hadn’t put in enough sugar as
if she preferred to have him treated like a diabetic. He would rant that only
his legs and hands were paralysed and nothing else was wrong with him. On yet other
day, like a miracle, after drinking coffee without complaining about it, he
would stare at his mother who used to compliment wittily that rain might come
that day. He would reply, “Yes…for that only I didn’t complain about it.”,
laughing with his crooked lips. “It would have been better, had you complained
about it instead of making this comment” – the old lady would
reply.
Ganesan
would take him to the toilet, arm supporting him along with both hands. He
would have readied commode in advance. Once inside, he would lean him against
his own shoulders, remove his dhoti and underwear tied with a thread. Then he
would make him sit on the commode and wait for him. Once he would say, “I am
done” with his head down, Ganesan would wash him off and take him to the bath
room. After sitting him on a wooden stool, the Old lady would pour water on his
body. Ganesan would bathe his body. He would massage his limps as if he were a
baby. After that, he would wipe his body dry, wear him under wear and vest. He
would tie the dhoti around his waist tightly and bring him again, arm
supporting. He would make him sit on the hand woven chair, bring Vibhoothi1 from
inside and smear it on his forehead liberally.
He
worked in a Cooperative society. He would leave for his office at half past
nine in the morning and would return at half past one in the afternoon for
lunch. Before his arrival, the Old Mother would have given the kneaded rice to
Thirumalai transfixed by television programmes, sitting in his chair. Whenever
he felt hungry, the taste and aroma for him were nothing but only those of his
mother’s cooking. On Sundays, she would cook either chicken or mutton and would
feed him. And only on that day, he would like to have betel leaves in addition
to his regular food.
After
lunch, he would leave for his office only after asking whether Thirumalai
needed anything from outside. When he comes back, it would be dark. In the
evening, a group of people used to assemble there to play card in the outer
hall. A group would be formed with Anbarasu, Butcher shop Chithappa and a
retired spectacled teacher, and some others. Even Thirumalai’s hand woven chair
would also come to this card playing crowd. Whenever any hand was missing or
Thirumalai wants to play, he would be roped in. He would in turn engage Subbuni
for assistance.
Subbuni
would stack the cards, show them to him. Thirumalai would instruct him in a low
voice which one to be picked up and which to be removed. No matter how badly he
played, he wouldn’t face losses. Subbuni would get his due from the amount won
on that day for going to the movies. Anbarasu was Thirumalai’s childhood
friend. Along with Thirumalai, he also grew under the care of the Old
Mother. Whenever he didn’t have any work, he would spend his time with Thirumalai.
Thirumalai had been reading the Murasoli2 newspaper
since he was fifteen years old. Without reading the letters written to “brotheren”,
his day would be incomplete. Even now, he was the only person buying Murasoli
in Sirumugai. Soda Shop keeper Marimuthu didn’t mind bringing that
newspaper from Mettupalayam for him. It was Anbarasu who would read Murasoli
out to him. Reading books was an easy task for Thirumalai. Once the respective
pages are given to him, he could read it easily by placing a card board under
it. But reading newspaper was not that easy. Anbarasu would read out the news
of “Kazhagam3” with intended puns.
It
was also Anbarasu who was fulfilling Thirumalai’s secret requests. All the
planning and executions of those requests would take place during the playing
of cards.
On
Sunday, when the mutton stew was boiling, Anbarasu would be present.
Thirumalai’s heart would pounce at seeing a small liquor bottle swinging in
Anbarasu’s underwear pocket. On the pretext of reading out Murasoli for Thirumalai
in the outer hall, he would mix up the liquor and feed him without anyone’s
knowledge. At the most, two times in a small ever-silver tumbler. That too,
with a dilution of equal amount of water. Even that bit of intoxication would
make Thirumalai hang his head down throughout the rest of the day, and chuckle
at the people who he met, with his trademark downward pulled lips curled into a
crooked smile. When they were drinking, if Ganesan happened to come by that
way, he would avoid them. The Old Mother would bring pieces of meat taken out
of boiling stew, in a large bowl.
At
times, Thirumalai would show immense interest in reading historical novels. But
he wouldn’t read those historical story books keeping them on his lap like
other books. Keeping Anbarasu beside him, he would read those stories as fast
as he could. Anbarasu, sitting down near his legs would be browsing through
some other books. Thirumalai felt that the nights of those days were stretching
longer with pain and longingness of an intractable desert. He would be waiting
painfully for the first sign of dawn with the feel of sultry and suffocation as
if the bodies confined within the walls of the room were rolling down near him.
Yet, he wouldn’t be able to reject the books brought by Anbarasu. The
earnestness of his interest to read them next day morning would put aside all
the mental agonies of previous night.
When
they started talking about Ganesan’s marriage, this mental agony had started to
burn in Thirumalai. Ganesan was four years younger. For the last two years, he
had been postponing all the marriage plans. He had even, reasoned with an open
heart that when Thirumalai was suffering with such an ailment, his getting
himself married could never be a good proposition.
Whenever
he postponed his marriage like that, an intrinsic concern would blossom in
Thirumalai for Ganesan. He would call him upon to change his mind, ‘Ganesa! It
is indeed painful for me when you postpone your marriage citing my condition as
the reason. Think about our Old Mother. You know I won’t be able to do
anything. She would like to see you getting married. Wouldn’t she? Please agree
to this marriage.’
Only
after his genuine persuasive efforts, did Ganesan agree to get married. Now, it
seems to be quite unbelievable that he could have ever spoken such lovable
words to him. ‘I should have been very happy when he refused to get married.
Shouldn’t I have? Both the sense of gratitude for Ganesan’s matured attitude
regarding me and the concern towards mother must have pressurized me as an
intolerable misery at that time. Mustn’t it have?’
…
It
has been fifteen years now. The Old Mother sent him off with tearful eyes who
left happily for Melkundha after getting a job in Electricity Department. Her
son who never stayed outside even for a night! Her eldest son. But
it was a government job. She sent him off with pride on one side and tears on
the other.
The
idyllic Ooty hilly roads and the enthusiasm about the new job made Thirumalai
forget the distance of the journey. After Ooty, when he reached Melkundha, the
icy wind and the cold greenery engulfed him. The green pastures and the top of
the trees were shining in the crimson light of the afternoon. When he opened
the windows of the house allotted to him in the Electrical Residential area, a
quick inflow of icy air filled the rooms. The clouds cradled by the sunshine
were moving at the fringes of the hills in the distance. For a moment, the
loneliness of that night ahead frightened him. The small stone-walled room,
wooden cot, a blanket rolled up like a python and a rug in dark hue of blood
spread on the floor seemed disagreeable to his temperament.
He
hurriedly locked the door and went down. It was getting dark. Children wearing
caps and sweaters were playing in the children park located at the centre of
residential area. He remembered that his appointment letter had carried the
information regarding winter essentials such as caps, sweaters and hand cloves.
There was no need of such winter clothes in Sirumugai. He must have purchased
them after getting down at Ooty. But he had felt that it was better to reach an
unknown place during day time, and so set off directly. He would buy all those
items after making some enquiries about them in the office in the morning. He
started walking along the peripheral road of the campus.
It
must have been only six or half past six. But, it was heavily dark without any
glimmer of daylight. Would be there anything to eat nearby? A Gurkha watchman
wearing a cap and a muffler wrapped around his neck, was sitting in a wooden
cabin designed for a man to stand and sit, smoking a bidi. When he saw
Thirumalai walking near him, he looked at him intently. He was a new face in
that place. ‘This fellow must be the replacement of the person who had been
there when he came in the afternoon’. The Gurkha gave him a customary
salute. It looked as if he had booked that salute for some use in future. It
was kind of a salute given by him to officers when they were on surprise
visits.
Thirumalai
introduced himself, saying he had come there for the first time, gave him his
house number and enquired about the availability of restaurants around the
area. Thirumalai could see Gurkha’s face bearing a friendly expression. The man
told him that there were no such restaurants nearby. Further, he told him that
there was a small restaurant outside Melkundha bus stand and it wouldn’t be
open at night. The Gurkha further said that it would be always better to cook
food for oneself at home in such hilly regions. He also asked him whether he
had the habit of smoking bidi. Thirumalai also felt that he needed the
warmth of cigarette smoke in that icy weather. But he was not ready to degrade
himself to the level of smoking bidi. The Gurkha warned him not to
venture out of the house without cap on head and sweater on body and explained
how the sudden changes in temperature would result in dangerous effects on
one’s body. Thirumalai felt that conversing with Gurkha who was speaking in
broken Tamil gave him a better feeling of comfort rather than bemoaning his
loneliness on the taut silence of a lonely room. He didn’t feel
hungry as yet. Perhaps, one might not feel hungry as the stomach gets indolent
in cold regions. He had some bananas and some pieces of breads in his bag, though.
He could manage somehow with that.
When
he returned to his house after a long while, the entire campus was taking
refuge in the warmth afforded by the glass windows. On reaching his room, he
threw his body on the cot after eating the fruit. The chill made his body
shiver. Once he covered his body with the blanket, the shivering grew
aggravated. He covered his body up to his neck. As the trapped heat of his body
spread inside the blanket that was weighing down on him, the warmth inside grew
cozier. He felt that it would be further better, if he closed his ears too.
There was a cotton roll in the shaving set. But he was too lazy to get up to
fetch it. He took the dual fibre towel placed at the edge of the cot and tied
it around his ears tightly.
That
night, which taught him the severity of winter for the first time in his life
had sowed the seeds of massive fear in him. He was under the illusion that the
whole cot had become a snow bed and he was lying inside it as a puppet. He had
a brief dream that his lips, eye lids and other parts of his body had a layer
of dew drops like ashes resulting in his body getting frozen and eventually
dying. He dreamt that a person wearing black woollen clothes and gumboots with
a shawl on his shoulders, walking through the thick snow bed full of thickly
grown cedar trees with icy bundles on their heads, was digging a burial pit for
him. Overwhelmed with fear, he woke and got up from the bed. The water in the
bottle was frozen, an icy slab. He feared that even the pipes in the toilet
might emit smog. The only solace for him was that blanket which had steadfastly
been with him through all his fears.
When
the light of dawn penetrated through the glass windows, he was asleep.
Of
the three engineers working in his section in the office, only Ponmoorthy lived
alone. When he came to know that Thirumalai was also staying alone, he invited
him to his house. He made all the arrangements for his visit that evening
itself. He told him that there was no need to cook food at home. He got him
introduced to a mess situated at an upper ground of the road on the way to
their office. It was modest with two dining tables meant for four persons to
have meals in the front hall of the house. Only Parvathi and her daughter Selvi
served food there. The mess didn’t have an elaborate list of menu. It
provided idli or dosai or sometimes Poori in
the morning, a simple meal with Sambar, Rasam with fried vegetable in the
afternoon and chappathi in the night. If needed, one could order
amlette or fried egg. That was it. Those who had monthly account with the mess
and placed pre-orders could only avail that mess
facility. Selvarasu, Parvathi’s husband would always be found
sitting either chopping cabbage or onion or something like that into tiny
pieces. It seemed that his entire world was revolving around with the speed of
his vegetable cutting knife. Without uttering a single word, his whole
attention would be on chopping the vegetables with his head bent down.
Only
after going to Ponmoorthy’s room, Thirumalai came to know about a new world
which he had not known of yet. In Thirumalai’s world, women who existed in his
life merely as part of indecisive imaginations and incomplete paintings had themselves
metamorphosed into a much bigger space with unusual marvels, colours and
absorbing interests. Ponmoorthy was a married man and had two children. His
family was living in Tiruppur. He would visit his family once in a week. The
story of the women who he met in the bus, the story of a woman who sat on his
lap as she could not stand in the bus during a rainy day, the friendship he
developed with a lady who was sitting in the opposite seat in the train while
going to Bhopal, the story of his going to that lady’s home after going to
Bhopal- each night thus become the nights of tales.
Though
his uninhibited delivery of dialogues and descriptions made Thirumalai feel shy
in the beginning, he grew accustomed with it quickly.
Moorthy’s
descriptions and embellished commentaries filled in Thirumalai’s dreams.
With an assurance of getting him married immediately in the month of Vaikasi4,
the way his Old Mother immersed herself in the marriage arrangements served to
whet Thirumalai’s cravings.
It
was the last week of December. Ponmoorthy was in the town that week. The impact
of winter and its intensity was more severe than usual from the very start of
December. One Saturday, there was a festival in a village in the hills located
three kilometres from Melkundha. Chantha, who worked in the office, had invited
them. Thirumalai went along with Moorthy.
The
village was located in the heart of mountain slopes along the grove in the
woods. With the boozing and dancing, in the light of flaming torches the
village was in the peak festive mood. The roars of hide musical instruments making
one’s nerves shudder, synchronized rhythms and the coordinated voluptuous
bodily movements of those thickly dark skinned women shining in the dim light
with inviting smiles - it all made Thirumalai faint with passion. He could not
drink the brew with its counterfeit sweetness, arid flavour as if mixed with
sand, not palatable to tongue. He was not in a position to take Chantha’s
advice that drinking that beverage was must to withstand the winter cold. He
could feel the eyes of that woman, wearing a bunch of crimson colour flowers in
her coiffured tresses, fondling him again and again during her dance.
Snow
began to descend like a drizzle in the jungle blanketed in darkness. The bitter
icy wind entered every nerve of the body and froze the blood circulation.
Moorthy was dancing amidst girls. Chantha kept filling in his glass when it
emptied. It seemed that no one other than the eyes of that woman took notice of
Thirumalai. In the fever of intemperance, that tiny ground was booming with the
rhythmic beats of drums.
In
Thirumalai’s body, which was burning with passion and desires for the pleasure
from a woman’s body, winter toxins welled up. The warm clothes he was wearing
were of no use in the face of the intense thirsts of that night. It seemed just
enough for him to go near to her and cuddle her who was dancing with the
semblance of her every nerve impregnated with lightening. The tingle of winter
and the frenzy of lust made his body shudder.
At
that moment, as he stood over-whelmed by possibly by an unknown fear or
hesitation, a lightning bolt flashed for fraction of a second, struck his chest
and disappeared. Completely losing his senses, Thirumalai fell down on the
ground. When he realized that the woman came running to him, held him in her
hands, he could see nothing other than darkness around him.
He
could open his eyes only on the evening of the third day. No one was near him.
With the blue colour curtains rippling around on all four sides, he lay on the
bed as if his body did not belong to him. Some liquids dripped through the
pipes inserted in both arms. The tubes attached on his chest and head were
running circuitously, joining at one place and twisting at another. The mild
traces of that pain were still there in the chest. A nurse with her mouth
closed with a green napkin rushed to him. She pulled his eye bags down and
examined it, checked his pulses and scribbled something hastily on the card
kept at the foot of his bed. Thirumalai wanted to ask her so many questions,
but at the same time he felt it was better not to. He closed his eyes.
When
he was brought back to his home after one and a half months, his body was not
under his control. Something like severest winter or extreme stroke or a stroke
of some sort had rendered his nerves, necessary for body function, totally
incapacitated. All the miracles of medical advancements could not rebuild his
nervous system.
…
The
clock in the hall rang once, stopped. ‘The time was 1’O clock. Wasn’t it? Or
was it half past one? Has anyone heard this sound of the clock? How many nights
I had kept watching the movement of this clock’s hands? Now all are sleeping
out of tiredness. Yet, two persons must have heard this sound. Or they may be
lying at a distance where they can’t hear that sound. As they cuddle each
other, they can’t hear it. Can they?’ His mind determined doggedly to
interrupt their privacy.
He
threw his voice from his throat pit with ferocity. This time, it came out like
the roar of an animal. He felt suffocated. Severe pain on the chest! He closed
his eyes tightly. “What Thirumale!” the edgy voice of his mother came from the
hall. Just for a second. After that, only her sharp eyes kept staring at him
piercingly. The sound of the latch being released was heard from the inner
hall. Thirumalai tried to keep his face normal. Just to reinforce his state of
mind, he coughed once again. “Ganesa! You go to bed. I will take care of him”
Old Mother got up and came to him. But before that, Ganesan had gone to him
after putting on the veranda light.
His
hands touched Thirumalai’s forehead. “What had happened Anna? Here…look at me”-
he massaged his chest caringly. Thirumalai bobbed his head agitatedly as if he
was writhing in pain. Sitting at the edge of the cot, Ganesan, asked him, “Is
your chest paining? Just a second…” and massaged his chest gently. The Old
Mother turned once again to Ganesan, told him, “It is nothing Ganesa! It must
be some petty chest burn. It will be alright soon. You go inside”
“He
was quite well in the evening. Wasn’t he? Did something he ate not suit him?
Ganesan still kept on massaging his chest.
His
touch was unbearable for Thirumalai. Ganesan had been touching him hundred
times daily. But today Thirumalai could not bear his touch. There was a
distance. He could feel the lack of warmth in it. ‘He would have been with
her, cuddling by this time. Wouldn’t he? Or he would have been narrating my
story with heart full of despair.’ Thirumalai felt laughing even in that
situation. ‘If it had been so, what would have been her situation listening
to his story?’ His graphic visualization of the room which had lost its
sheen in an inopportune time had made Thirumalai immensely happy.
Ganesan
took his hands off Thirumalai.
“To
be on the safer side, we can call the doctor tomorrow morning to see him. Can
we give him a hot tea?”
“It
is not needed…da! It will be alright soon. It is just an ordinary cough. We can
provide him some herbal concoction tomorrow morning. Now you go and sleep
peacefully. Tomorrow morning, you should leave for the town. Shouldn’t you?”-
The Old Mother was insistent on sending him
inside.
‘Once
the body lost its synchronicity, would it be possible for it to renew its
vigour? With the rhythmic beats of drums at the back ground, the movements of her
dark body in an elegant dance in the space infused with light and night had
made this body shudder with passionate longings during that winter night. How
many miserable nights I have spent on this cot thinking about that night
repeatedly with an unquenched lust and a completely disobliging body? Who will
get impregnated with my seeds that explode during my union with her body in the
air, dancing in the empty space of the night? O! Mother! There is no
justifiable reason for you to know about the silent pain of sex without body. I
know you prefer cursing me to have me dead at this moment. I too have felt like
that many nights. What am I going to achieve by being alive with this body
which had become a burden even for myself?’
‘There
was no reply from Ganesan. He never sulked about it even for a day. Despite
having other important works to do, and facing discomforts, he never complained
about looking after him. His Old Mother had problems of both senility and
defencelessness which might have forced her to complain. But, not a single
murmur had ever come from Ganesan. ‘However, the seeds of irritation and ire
must have been sprouted today even in Ganesan. Even if doesn’t happen today, my
existence and helplessness will become an inevitable encumbrance for him one
day once he gets used to the pleasure from her. The moment he understands my
discomforts of these nights, it might change into either self-pity or mere
boorishness or whatever.’
Unable
to bear the silence of both of them for a long time, he opened his eyes
slowly. Sitting on the veranda, Ganesan was looking up the sky
strewn with stars. As if she was waiting for him to open his eyes, Old mother came
near to Thirumalai. Her eyes bored his eyes. She bent down, mumbled something
into his ears.
“Why
are you doing this, Thirumalai? Do you think it is right what you are doing? It
is a sin. Isn’t it?”
Thirumalai
stared at her angrily.
“Yes...it
is sinful. Then give me some poison. All the sins will be absolved. Won’t it?
As
he spoke these words with his lips crooked, his Old Mother started weeping.
Without understanding what they were saying to each other, Ganesan rose up
hurriedly, and came up.
“What
happened ma? Anything serious? Anna! How do you feel now? Are you feeling very
unwell?”
Thirumalai
just nodded emptily. Tears started rolling down on his cheeks without his
control. Seeing both of them weeping, Ganesan came near. His face was stern.
The sternness of his face made the Old Mother nervous. She wiped her eyes
swiftly and wiped Thirumalai’s face too with the hem of her sari.
“Haven’t
I told you? I told you that I don’t need all this marriage and its chores. You
haven’t paid attention to it. Have you? He uttered softly in a dry tone.
Thirumalai’s heart was quivering with guilt. He broke down. He felt like
hugging Ganesan. As his chest was beaming with guilt, his trembling lips
emitted violent sobs. Old Mother turned slowly. Wiping her tears with the
back of her palm, she turned to Ganesan. She couldn’t see his face clearly as
it was obfuscated by the shading caused by the light. Ganesan’s expression was
immobile marked by depth of darkness and grief without light. A monstrous fear
of unknown rose up from the abdomen of Old Mother.
***Ended***
Note:
1. Vibhoothi-
sacred ash one applies on forehead while worshipping God.
2. Murasoli-
A newspaper run by the political party, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam
3. Kazhagam-
The political party, DMK
4.
Vaikashi- Second month of
Tamil year (April- May)