BOOKED TILL DECEMBER
“For
even as love crowns you so shall he crucify you”
Khalil Gibran
Part
2
“But
why do all your stories have to end that way?” she protested.
Prakarsh
realized that he had made a mistake. His life over the last year had changed
completely. He never went out. No more parties, picnics, movies, night outs. He
only wrote stories now in his leisure time. Sad ones.
In
his last story, the central character was killed in a car accident. Two weeks
later he had posted the first part of a new story. Her friend Sharmila Louis had
read it and she was skeptic that the ending would have a death again.
Prakarsh realized he was in a bus. Tact was
needed. He knew Sharmila would have a bunch of arguments ready for his answer.
“O.k
, I will ensure that this one has a happy ending.” he answered hoping she would
take it.
“Liar”,
she replied with anger. “You will kill the protagonist. Sad, sad, sad.”
“Oh
my God, we have reached our stop. Phew, how time flies.”
Sharmila
worked at an advertising agency at a stone’s throw from Prakarsh's new office.
Today as she was about to start for office, her driver announced that the car
had a broken tire. Reluctantly, she took a bus. And of all the people she had
expected to meet, she saw her college friend Prakarsh.
“Bye
for now. But remember Prakarsh, I will hate you if you kill the protagonist
this time.”
With
that, she walked to the alley leading to her workplace.
Prakarsh
turned to the opposite side of the pavement. As he walked towards his office,
Sharmila's words kept ringing in his head. Sad, sad, sad.
But
then, that was exactly what his life had become over the last year. Friends who
had known Prakarsh of the old would have never recognized this sober, somber
office going guy. It was the past. Prakarsh wondered how long it would continue
to haunt him. He had tried everything to escape the memories. Not one had
worked. Sometimes he wished if there was a potion to erase the past. Something
that would change his present for the better.
It
was almost an answer to his fancy that she shouted.
“You
are going to kill her aren't you?”
Prakarsh
stopped. The huskiness of the voice, the enchantment of the speech, the
mysterious interest that it invited, yes, he had heard the voice before.
He
turned back.
The
girl was right behind him. Dressed in a blue suit, she had lost some of the
radiance, but none of the innocence. The smile was still one that would make
people want to live, live an extra moment and thank god for it. Prakarsh noted
that her hairs were colored a shade of burgundy. They were untied, and as the
wind blew they swirled around her face. But she didn’t blink.
“Aren't
you?” she repeated.
For
a moment he was dumbfounded.
“What?”
he exclaimed.
“You
will kill the protagonist.”
“Excuse
me? Do we know each other?” Prakarsh asked.
“Don’t
tell me you have forgot me so easily? How many Patna trips have you missed?”
And
then it dawned on him.
“You?
I never thought I would be seeing you again”, he knew he was lying the moment
the words came out.
The
girl put her right arm on her hips. Dangling from the arm was a brown leather
purse.
The
girl had still not forgotten the one liner. The most innocent thing someone had
ever told her.
“Well
how could we not meet? I had to thank you.”
She
turned her left palm inside out and smiled again. The tattoo of the heart. He
saw it again.
“This
heart. It pumps the blood that you gave it” , with that she laughed.
Prakarsh
closed his eyes. Like all those memories that he had wanted to forget, this one
rushed up to his reminiscence too.
The
following day at the hospital. It was her......
The
Past
He rubbed his eyes and looked at
the watch. He realized he had had only 4 hours of sleep. He saw the message. It
was from Swapnil. “Prakarsh, can you please drive my parents to the hospital in
the morning. I am still at the hospital. Thanks yaar.”
Hours
ago he had seen Swapnil cry as her wife delivered a beautiful baby girl. How
happy he was! They both were so happy. The perfect couple. Sometimes love
works.
Sometimes it does not.
He was dead tired. He had a hell
lot of work pending. But for a friend, he could never say no.
He didn’t bother about having
breakfast. He took the train, went straight to Swapnil’s house and drove his
parents to the hospital.
Two hours had passed. It was
already 12. He had to collate the sales figures of Eastern India. He was
rushing down the stairs, and he almost made it to the entrance. Then he heard
the announcement
“A girl in operation theatre 12
urgently needs A+ blood. Those willing to donate please contact the reception
immediately”
He noted the time, ignored the
announcement and left. But at the portico he heard it again.
This time the last of those words
caught his attention.
“THE BLOOD IS NEEDED ASAP. SOMEONE’S LIFE DEPENDS ON YOU.”
He stopped. About a year ago, he
had messaged the same thing to a person. Someone’s life depends on you.
He had seen how Swapnil had
broken down when the operation was taking place yesterday. Someone would be in
the same state today. He knew he was a universal donor. He looked at his watch and shrieked. “Bullshit”,
he muttered.
He called the one person who he
knew could save him. Ashraf. He had joined his sales team recently.
He rang him up. “Ashraf?”
“Prakarsh Sir? Kahaan hai aap?
Itna late?”
“Ashraf can you make the
presentation on the eastern sales figures and give it to the boss?”
“Umm… sure thing sir, where is
the data?”
“I am mailing it to you.”
“It will be done. You don’t worry
one bit.”
Prakarsh heaved a sigh of relief.
With Ashraf around he never felt uneasy.
“I owe you one buddy.”
The voice at the other end
chuckled.
“That you do Sir.”
Prakarsh mailed the sales figures from his
cell and started back to the reception desk.
It took 4 hours. Prakarsh kept
looking at the inflammation on his elbow where the needle had been pierced. 330
ml of blood. He wondered how much time it would take to get it back. As he was
pondering over this, he noticed a lady approaching him. Her attire looked that
of a nurse, but her cap gave her the look of a medieval Victorian maid.
“We will give you the certificate
a week later. You need to keep this memo. You can now get a blood transfusion
from any of our 5 hospitals”
She handed him a wafer thin piece
of paper. Prakarsh shoved it in his pocket and got off the hospital bed.
“Prakarsh,” he heard the nurse
call her again. He was scared they would ask him to donate again.
“Don’t you want to know the name
of the girl whose life you saved?”
Prakarsh scowled. I don’t give a
damn. I am starting to feel it was a mistake.
“Naah, I have a no names policy
in all my dealings. Thanks anyways.”
The nurse grinned.
She tried to stare and find out
more about this guy. She could not. He was impregnable.
“Anyways...I will tell you her
name”
She bend over and started typing haphazardly
on the key board.
“The girls name is Aasman....”
She looked up and realized he had
left. She periscoped her head to see if he was anywhere near. He had gone.
“Aasmaan Pervez” she nevertheless
completed the monologue.
................................................
“You
didn’t think we will not meet again did you? Not before I get a chance to thank
you.”
Prakarsh
just realized they were walking together.
He
was uncomfortable with words like Thank you, words that initiated a bonding
that he had now grown to hate.
“It
was nothing”, he remarked, “You work here?”
“Yes.
Very close to your office”, she said the words
as if to arouse a sense of conversation. Prakarsh didn’t take the hint.
“How
do you know where I work?”
Because
for the last three months I have been sitting right behind you in the bus that
you take, following your blog, your words. Following everything about the
person who gave me a life. She didn’t say anything.
“You
will kill the protagonist in your story, wont you?”
Prakarsh
looked blankly her.
“It
was nice talking to you. That is my office.” he turned to the pavement leading
to the office.
He
kept walking but he had a vague feeling she was still there. When he turned
back, she was gone.
That
night as he slept, he had a strange dream. Amidst the starry sky, he saw a face
covered in a black hijaab. Between
the cover he could just see the eyes, the kohl lining them and the serenity it
gave him. He moved forward to touch the face, but it disappeared almost
instantly. He woke up feeling terrible. The eyes, the blue eyes....it reminded
him of someone. He didn’t try to think too much about it. The sales figures of
Hindustan Unilever were more important. He got off from the bed.
When
he got on the bus, he was concerned about meeting the girl again. But with half
of the distance traversed, Prakarsh started breathing easy. Only when he was
about to get down that he felt her breath and realized the proximity between
them.
“So
have you decided yet?”
The
two got down but it was a while before she repeated her query.
“Prakarsh,
will you kill him in the story?”
Prakarsh
didn’t want to answer. It was stupid. Even caring to reply.
“How
does it matter? Why are you so hyper over such a trifle? I will kill him. That
is what I will do. Don’t start losing your sleep over it. No one else will.”
She
was a little taken aback by the brusqueness of his words. This was not the same
smiling guy who had flirted with her on the flight. But then, she had realized
that long time back.
The
traffic at the Theatre Road crossing had taken a turn for the worse and both of
them kept waiting. When the signal turned green, she spoke.
“It
does matter. The little things. They matter.”
Prakarsh
shook his head. He was walking briskly now. He had to get rid of this girl.
But
the girl quickened her pace.
“Yes
they do. The little things. Like this one.”
For
a moment, he thought she was pointing her hand to the taxi driver peeing across
the wall. But then the pink petal of the bougainvillea swirled and he knew that
is what she was mentioning.
The
petal landed right in front of his feet. He walked over it caring not to
trample, lest it encourage a new topic on plant inhumanity.
“You
know in the Mesopotamian civilization, they believe if you see the
bougainvillea flower fall in the spring, you fall in love.”
Prakarsh
almost halted. The word actually made him shudder these days. He felt a surge of
anger, the memories unleashed again. The past. His past.
“We
have three bougainvillea plants in our garden. But we stick the flowers with
glue. So thankfully they never fall.” He laughed at his stark sense of humor.
Hopefully this should shut her mouth.
“You
know when I was recuperating from”, she stopped and changed her words. “Whenever
I used to feel unwell in the last few months, I used to read your old stories,
stories with happy endings, of dreams coming true, of hopes getting a lease. It
matters Prakarsh. It does.”
She
stopped and took a turn. Prakarsh then realized she had reached the crossing
that led her office.
Had
Prakarsh looked a second later, Prakarsh would have missed her eyes. But then
he looked at her. The color of the eyes. They were deep blue.
It
was Thursday night. Prakarsh stared blankly at his laptop. The story for his
blog. He had to finish his story tonight. Deep down, he knew he had to kill the
hero. There were times when he had contemplated taking his life during the last
year. He could not muster the strength. It was then that he started writing
stories. Dark ones. In which he would kill the central character as a
manifestation of his own desire to do so. It made him feel good. It made him
feel under control.
It matters Prakarsh. It matters.
The words of the girl kept ringing. He tried not to think of her. But if heart
had the power to do what was right, wars would never have been. Her voice kept
ringing. Of hope, of dreams coming true.
“Bull
shit,” he muttered.
He
was relieved when next day he did not see her in the bus. He was scared she had
read the story and would give her views even when they were not welcomed.
But
the euphoria was short lived. When he was returning, on his way back, she got
on the same bus. He was not surprised when she approached him with a smile. He
looked around. All seats where occupied. He wanted to look up at the skies and
curse the heaven. She stood near him. She kept smiling. He stood up and offered
her the seat. She sat down. She was still smiling.
“So
what is so funny that I am missing”, Prakarsh asked.
“The
happy ending. I loved it. Thanks.”
Prakarsh
raised his eyebrows, “Thanks? For what? I never did it for any one. The story
demanded it. I kept him alive because I will bring a sequel to it.”
He
was relieved that he had answers ready for almost anything. A stint in
marketing selling detergents to villagers in Patna makes you good at that.
She
swiped her cell. Prakarsh noticed she was browsing through his blog. He
pretended not to notice.
Half
an hour later, Aasman, raised her head. She had reached her stop. As she stood,
she grinned and asked, “Prakarsh , the sequel. Will that have a happy ending
too?”
Prakarsh
lost his cool. This girl was too much to take. He knew he was in a bus so he
said in a hushed voice.
“You
know it does not matter. I will kill everyone in the story. These things don’t
matter. Your little things. Hope, dreams and all of your beliefs. Baloney. Life
is about the misery God offers to punish all of us. All of this hope, beautiful
life crap, I don’t believe in a shit of it.”
When
he stopped, he marveled as to how softly he could say all of those words.
Aasman
turned grim. She was about to leave when she said, “You can believe in anything
that you put your heart in. I always do.”
She
got off. The bus was stuck in a jam. Prakarsh took the seat vacated by her. He
looked through the window. She was standing on the pedestrian pavement very
close to the bus. Almost wanting to whisper something to him. He turned and
looked at her.
“Prakarsh
there is no such thing about the bougainvillea plant in the Mesopotamian
civilization, but you know, I do believe in it.” she walked away.
The jam cleared and the bus moved.
That
night before sleeping he checked his blog. He read the story. A happy ending.
It had been a while since he had written stories like that. He felt good. All
his life, he had been good at making people smile. He was good at it. How things
had changed!
He
was about to log off when he saw a comment on his blog.
He
noted the name.
AASMAN
PERVEZ
A
muslim. For a flicker of a second, his thought went on the hijaab that he saw in the dream.
Then
he read her comment on the story.
A perfect ending for a perfect
story. Made me smile and happy, and is not that the reason why stories are
written in the first place.
He
shut down his laptop. He just remembered tomorrow was Saturday, a holiday. He
would have to wake up early and bring milk. He set his alarm clock. He had the
strange dream again. However this time he could see her face clearly, the eyes,
the curvature of the lips, the smile.
He
woke up. He gulped water and slept again. And as he slept, he admitted a fact
to himself. Aasman Pervez may not be the typical friend he would ever have, but
after that day he knew they were not strangers anymore.
The
alarm clock rang harshly. Prakarsh moved his hands around the side table hoping
to choke the clock. He could not. He woke up. Saturday. He loved the fact that
he would not have to deal with sales figures. He hated the fact that it was
milk day.
He
took his brush and moved to the balcony. He looked down at his garden infront.
There was a sea of pink. Bougainvillea flowers scattered all over. In the
corners, on the railings of the boundary wall, near the artificial fountain,
the sea of pink was everywhere. The gardener was using a shovel to put them
together. Prakarsh saw his father growling at the gardener. Prakarsh did not
laugh. How did this....
His
father looked up at him.
“The
Norwester. It came last night. And look at the havoc. We will not be planting
any bougainvillea this year. Such a mess.”
After
that explanation was offered, Prakarsh's father went back to hurling abuses at
the inefficiency of the gardener.
Prakarsh
went to the wash basin. He looked at his face in the mirror.
The
words came back to him.
You believe in anything that you
want to.
Prakarsh
gargled and went back to bed. He pulled over his blanket and shut his eyes.
“God
please, please, please....I don’t want it to begin again.”
The
only problem was.....
It
had already begun.
A
story by Pranay Tiwari
Part
3 next week.
I would request you to post your comments on the blog itself.
I would request you to post your comments on the blog itself.

I have a feeling this one is going to be best thing u have ever written...very different approach and style ..and its getting interesting nt predictable like previous ones !!!
ReplyDelete"you believe in anything that you want to.." awesome!! loved d note of optimism.. sometimes some people inflict d sense of hope in our life to make it worth living.. waiting for the next part.. :)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAll I can say is... you have matured as an author. Honestly, this is it.
ReplyDeleteAmazing lines...every single event comes alive as I read through... you have not just written it, you have painted some unforgettable scenes.
Keep writing, I shall keep waiting for more more & more...
@ shahid .. coming from you it means a hell lot ... :)
ReplyDelete