Dedicated to Ma &
Papa, who made me believe in unconditional love.
BOOKED
TILL DECEMBER
Nasrun min Allahi wa fathun
qareeb
(With the grace of Allah, victory
will be near.)
The
Holy Quoran
Part
3
WB-1734,
left Sealdah 10 mins ago.
He looked out through
the moving bus immediately after he sent the message. He tried to recall how
long he had followed this routine. 3 months. Every working day, he would get
into the bus, take a seat and message her the bus number. She would get on the
bus two stops later. She would offer her best smile to him, tuck the forehead
hair that would be flowing around her ears. He would just look at her, stand up
and give her the seat. And then the journey would commence. All along he would
just listen to her talk, pelting him with questions, stories about his
childhood, about his boss, the targets. At times Prakarsh stole a glance at
her, taking care that she never noticed. He would often wonder at the radiance
of her smile, the tattoo on her palm, her white skin, the precision with which
her hairs were interlocked before tying a knot out of them. He felt uneasy when
she looked at him. He felt weak. Nervous. It made him feel good and wretched at
the same time.
One day , around 3 weeks
ago, Aasman had just learned that Prakarsh didn’t bring his breakfast as he had
to leave home very early to catch the train.
“So you eat at that
dilapidated street dhaba? Every day?”
she exclaimed, shocked at the revelation.
He stretched his arms
and looked at himself.
“What is the big
deal? I am alive and kicking”
He thud his right leg
to support the latter assertion.
“It is dirty, filthy,
totally non vegetarian, and absolutely unhygienic”
“Why don’t you cook
some breakfast for me? Vegetarian and hygienic.”
He smiled at her in
sarcasm. She didn’t.
Two things changed
after that day. Aasmaan enrolled for classes on ethnic vegetarian cooking and
Prakarsh Tiwari never ate at the dhaba ever
again.
His chain of thoughts
broke only when she tapped his shoulder.
“Thinking something?”
she smiled.
He has got used to
her smile. The day felt impossible without a bit of it.
“No” he said, got up
and gave her the seat.
When they got down,
like the daily practice, Prakarsh was handed a Tupperware lunch box (it carried
his breakfast however). He was about to leave when Aasman stopped him.
“Prakarsh, I almost
forgot. I made this for you.”
She took out a neat
small box and handed it to him.
Prakarsh opened it. Sewaiyaan, sweetened vermicelli.
Prakarsh never said
no to anything that she offered. He did not know what to say.
“What about you?”
She smiled.
“It is Ramjaan. I
have my fast.”
Prakarsh put the tiny
box in his bag.
He was about to take
to the pavement of his office, when he realized something. The fast. It would
break in the evening.
He rushed to catch
her.
“Aasman...”
She stopped.
After some initial
struggle, he took the box out from his bag.
“Here, you keep this
for me. We will have it together in the evening on our way back.”
Aasman smiled and
took the box back into her bag.
Neither of them
noticed a guy clicking a picture of the two of them from his latest Iphone.
...........
He was with his brand
team when he first saw the lights go off.
About a minute later the lights were running again.
“They have put on the
generator. But the damn air conditioners won’t work.” Ashraf growled.
For reasons he never
understood, he wanted to message Aasman and ask what she was up to. During the
last few weeks that had been the most perceptible change. In seclusion, he
would open the inbox of his cell phone and read her messages. He would then
recall what his replies had been.
About an hour passed and nothing strange
happened. It was around that time Ashraf ran to him.
“Sirjee, save your
excel databases, we are about to be blacked out.”
Prakarsh merely glowered.
Being the brightest new sales manager, Ashraf always had the propensity for the
theatrical.
Ashraf raised both of
his hands in the air seeing that his words had not elicited the desired
response.
“The Eastern
electricity Grid. It has tripped. The entire state is out of electricity.”
Prakarsh thought for
a moment. The air conditioners were off for a long time now. He had himself
loosened his tie to combat the searing temperature.
But the computers. They
aren’t working on generators. The supply to the computers is still there.
He looked beneath to
confirm. The C.P.U was blinking.
“Sirjee we are lucky.
The Nightingale Hospital next to our Unilever Building. It is being provided
electricity because there are three emergency operations going on. So we are
also getting the supply. But it will close any moment.”
Prakarsh saved the
file he was working on. He came out of his workplace and went to the reception.
It was dark. He knew the blackout would last for a while.
He rang up Aasman.
He was about to hang
up when he heard a response from the other side.
“Prakarsh?” she
responded. He had never called during office hours.
“The electric supply
to your office ...is it there?”
“No, the generators
were running till now. But it has given up now.”
Prakarsh felt strange
asking the next question.
“You are fasting. Right?
You are ok?”
On the other side,
Aasman smiled. In the last three months, she knew she had someone who cared
more about her than she herself did. Only thing was Prakarsh never made this
explicit. Aasman knew it would have taken a great effort on his part to ask her
this question.
“Yes Prakarsh, I am
fine. You have got loads of work?”
“I will complete it
in my home. You let me know when you will leave. I will meet you at the bus
stop.”
“If I finish early, I
will come to the Unilever building.” she said.
“Okay. The one who
finishes work early will reach the other’s office. We will take a cab if need
be.”
“Ahem, ahem,” she
coughed.
There was a moment of silence.
Prakarsh remembered.
“And the
vermicelli... We will have it on our way back.”
It was about 5 pm,
when the security staff of the Unilever Building called all the employees for
something important. They all gathered in the cafeteria. Ashraf was the one
most excited. No more branding plans, no more storyboards. Every adversity had
a flip side, and Ashraf thrived on it. Prakarsh could not feel the same wave of
enthusiasm. His mind hovered around a girl, who had not had lunch.
After some time, Mr.
Devang Mehra, the man responsible for the logistics of the Unilever building,
entered. He was carrying a rock in his hand.
The entire room went
quiet. Mr. Mehra was pleased at the effect his entry had produced.
“You know what this
is?” Mr. Mehra interrogated as he threw up the rock from his hand and caught
it.
“The ingredient of
our new fairness cream.”
Everybody turned back. Ashraf looked at them
with an innocence that is the badge of a salesman. The entire staff laughed. A
senior manager stared at Ashraf gesturing him to shut up.
Mr. Mehra was livid.
The momentum. The idiot had broken the momentum he had managed to pick.
“No Mr. Ashraf. Novel
as your thought process is, that is not the case.”
He looked at the
others dourly. Pin drop silence. This was the fifteen seconds of fame moment he
had dreamed of all his life.
“We are under attack.”
Some ladies gasped.
Other men just looked bewildered. Prakarsh was unimpressed.
“A girl was molested
near Nagaland house about an hour ago. We don’t know about her identification
yet. People started pelting stones at the traffic policeman nearby. As he was
trying to save himself a car crushed him.”
He paused for a
moment for the story to sink in.
“Gentleman and dear
ladies, we have a mini riot going on outside.”
This time the gasps
were louder. The exclamations more pronounced.
Devang barked, “The
police have secured the area. You are out of bounds. All of you. We don’t know
when the electricity will be back. We are trying to make arrangements for
dinner. Stay put fellas. We have a long night ahead of us.” he looked at the
staff for a few seconds knowing very well his moment of limelight won’t come
again.
Prakarsh felt uneasy.
If I finish early, I will come to the Unilever
building.
He shuddered.
Prakarsh went to the corner of the cafeteria,
and looked out through the frosted glass.
He could see a swarm
of people gathered around the hospital gate, very close to the crossing. A motley
group of armed men were trying to control them.
Boom....at first he
thought only he was the one to hear the blast. But when Ashraf clutched his hand,
he knew.....this was no Hindi movie scene which would get over as soon as the
director blurted CUT.
He felt a weakness in
his chest he had seldom felt. He quickly moved to his place and dialed her
number. The line could not be connected. He tried again. But it still could not
connect to his cell.
He had a vague
sensation that a part of him was quivering.At times like these the mind can
recollect all the horror stories one reads in the newspaper. Prakarsh shook his
head.
It was only a matter of time before he made
the decision.
His work place was on
the 7th floor. He would take the stairs. He wondered how long before he
encountered opposition. He got his answer earlier than he expected. Ashraf
caught hold of him as he was about to descend down the stairs.
“Sirjee, where are
you going?”
“Ashraf, I need to
leave. It is a matter of life and death.”
Ashraf had known
Prakarsh for the last six months. He had been the happiest when Prakarsh had
been transferred to the Theatre road office. He often wondered how easily
Prakarsh achieved his sales targets. Twice he had given Ashraf leads so that he
could achieve more than the assigned sales volume.
Ashraf idolized
Prakarsh, but was only too scared to say it. He had never seen him smile. He
wondered how someone like him could be so serious.
A
matter of life and death. He knew Prakarsh was not exaggerating.
“Sir, someone from
security or the police will stop you midway. The police just fired a tear gas
to disperse the mob.”
Prakarsh did not say
anything. He looked at Ashraf with resignation.
Ashraf gave the
situation a thought. He looked at Prakarsh and gestured him to follow.
Prakarsh switched on
the torch of his cell. It was very dark. He had a faint idea he was going
through the emergency exit.As he kept descending into a never ending hollow
pit, Ashraf remarked, “I come here to smoke sometimes.”
It was a while after
which they both saw the faint outline of the moon. They had evaded the security
guards.
“This road leads to
the American Centre. Please be careful. If they get hold of you today, they
will think they have a jackpot.”
Prakarsh looked at
the boundary wall he would have to cross. His wrist watch beeped. It was 6. He
thought about Aasman.
“Ashraf, I owe you
one.”
“That you do Sir.”
Ashraf replied as he saw the lanky outline of Prakarsh disappear in the dusk.
The road was
surprisingly empty. Prakarsh tried to understand his location. He knew he could
not take the direct road to the alley that lead to Aasman’s workplace. He would
surely be caught. He tried to recall the name of the building. Amherst Towers.
He did not know where she worked. Come to think about it, he did not know
anything about her at all. A pang of guilt bit him. In these three months, she
had asked everything about him, his favorite color, the sneakers he wore on
Fridays, what his brother’s favorite song was, how his three year old nephew
pestered him when he returned from office - she had grilled him better than a
cop. He did not even know where she worked. He trembled that he may be too
late.
The indirect route which Prakarsh took to reach the building helped him avoid cops all right. But it took him an hour to reach there. As he approached the building he could see a large crowd in front of the portico. He wondered if the effect of the riot had reached so far. He did not want to think about it. He struggled through the crowd. When he reached the entrance, two heavily built men stopped him. One of them lighted a torch and pointed the pen of light right on to his face.
The indirect route which Prakarsh took to reach the building helped him avoid cops all right. But it took him an hour to reach there. As he approached the building he could see a large crowd in front of the portico. He wondered if the effect of the riot had reached so far. He did not want to think about it. He struggled through the crowd. When he reached the entrance, two heavily built men stopped him. One of them lighted a torch and pointed the pen of light right on to his face.
“Where to, Sahib?”
one of the men asked.
“I am looking for a
friend, Aasman Pervez.” He hoped they would not ask where she worked. He did
not have the answer.
Prakarsh waited for
an answer from either of them.
The older one looked
gravely. He twirled his moustache and remarked, “I am afraid Sir we had to
evacuate the entire building once we heard about the riot.”
Prakarsh turned back.
For most of the past three months, Aasman returned with him. He had adjusted
his work schedule deftly. He attended most of the client calls early morning,
his presentations in the afternoons and the inhouse team meetings early in the
evening. He waited for her at the bus stop. The entire day, he waited for the
20 minutes of the return journey on the bus. Every minute of it. With her. Just with her.
In ways he could never imagine, Aasman Pervez
had turned his life upside down. And she had managed the feat with just a smile
and a Tupperware lunch box.
He walked back to the
entrance portico of Ahmerst towers. He looked around the swarm of people
meandering near the pavement. No sign of her. As he was brooding over his next
course of action, he heard someone.
“And that is the whole
summary of my life, when I need the cell phone network, the connectivity is
zero. No network. Great.” He looked at the direction from where the voice came.
A young man was looking at his phone in disgust. Some of his friends were
giggling at the young man’s plight.
It was then that it
dawned on him. Some of the cell phone towers run on electricity too, others use
a generator. He prayed that the former was the reason why Aasman’s phone was
not getting connected.
He looked at his
watch. 7 pm. He raised his head and looked at the darkness all around. He would
wait. Nothing can happen to her.
She is fine. Absolutely fine.
He sat down on the stairs of one of the electronic
shops that had closed for the day. His
cell phone had lost its network. This time he did not think too much about the
newly generated travesty.
She is fine. He kept
muttering.
...........
She looked at the
watch. 7 pm. She realized she was only 10 minutes from his office.
She had left office
almost immediately after she got the news of the riot.
The
one who finishes work early will reach the other’s office.
She trembled at the consequences of those words. She had tried to call but
there was no connectivity .She kept walking close to the pavement. Far away she
could hear the vociferous bleating of a large crowd. She looked around. She
only saw two more people walking behind her. The street was deserted.
It was then that she
heard the explosion.
Almost on reflex, she
rushed to take shelter in a boutique nearby. The two other men behind her also
entered the shop. The shopkeeper did not want to invite any more guests. This was
a boutique not the American Embassy. He lit a candle. Then he rushed forward
and closed the front door of the shop.
“I will open this
door only when I am sure this place is out of trouble. If you want to leave,
now is the time.”
He looked at the
faces of the three people. Only the girl looked like revolting to the
proposition.
A minority.
He locked the door from inside.
..........
He looked at his watch. 10 pm. Then he looked at
his cell phone. No network. He kept gazing at the far end of the street hoping
to see her.
Almost at that
instant he saw the lights coming on. Some people gathered and pointed to the
traffic lights that had just sprung to life. Then his cell phone rang.
He did not even need
to see the number. It had to be her.
“Where are you Aasman?
I am at your office.” he corrected himself
instantly,” I am at the entrance of Ahmerst Towers. Are you all right?
Have you reached home yet?” he was panting as the words came out.
There was an eerie
sense of silence.
“Aasman where are
you?” he repeated.
“Prakarsh…” Aasman
called from the other end. “I am in front of your Unilever building.”
Prakarsh looked at
his watch. Everyone at the office must be out. She must have waited for him
like he did.
“Aasman you should
have returned home. Your parents must be worried. You should have returned. Why
did you need to wait?”
Aasman did not reply.
She just clutched a tiny circular box containing sweetened vermicelli.
………………………………..
As he puffed out the
smoke of his bidi, Bishnuram nudged the elbow of his fellow security staff. He
pointed the fellow’s attention to the couple sitting on a bench just close to
the entrance of Ahmerst Towers. During nights he often saw young couples
sitting on the bench. The ritual that would follow next was almost routine. The
girl would sit on the boy’s thighs and start biting his ear, while the boy
would caress the breasts of the girl with one hand and try to undress some part
of her clothing with the other.
Bishnuram had come to take a voyeuristic pleasure in that. He only
intervened when the moaning of the girl exceeded the mandated decibel level of
the posh society. Today as he was taking the mandatory nocturnal rounds of the
Ahmerst Towers, he saw a boy and a girl sitting on that notorious bench. None
of them talked. A small round box was placed on the bench between them and they
took turns to eat something from it using a lone spoon.
Yes, that was the strange
part. No one talked.
“And I thought I had
seen it all.” he remarked knocking down the charred ashes of his bidi.
………………………
She looked at his
message immediately after she closed the door of her room and shut the lights.
“I got the train. You
go to sleep.” Aasman had now memorized
the travelling pattern of Prakarsh. After the bus journey, he would take a
train from Sealdah. The whole train journey took him an hour. You go to sleep. She smiled as she read
the message again.
She typed the reply.
“I will be awake. Let
me know when you reach home.”
She looked across the
road from her window. Her father had been livid with her being late. However he
did not tell anything. He never did after what had happened in the past. His
brother on the other hand was loud in his remonstrations. He had called all her
friends at the office. They had reached their homes long back. What was she
doing so late?
Aasman told him about
getting locked down in the boutique. She told him about the blast.
“And where the hell
is your bag?” he barked. Aasman’s father did not react.
“I kept it in my
office. I was afraid it would be snatched in the mob frenzy.” she answered
quickly.
“But you remembered
to take this vermicelli box with you?”
This time, Aasman did
not reply.
Half an hour passed.
Her cell phone
beeped. He must have reached. She quickly rolled over the bed and grabbed the
cell.
An unknown number.
She opened the message. It had an attachment. She raised her eyebrow. While the
attachment downloaded, she read the message.
She wished she had not.
“Saw you with this
guy today. I knew there was a slut in you the first time I saw you. Then why
all the drama that day? All I wanted was to give it to you just once. But if
you think I will let you go, you are wrong. I will make your life such a hell
you would wish it was over that day itself. My fucking whore.”
She trembled as she
opened the attachment. It was a picture of her handing Prakarsh a tiny box. She
shuddered.
Her cell phone beeped
again. She fumbled with her phone. Reluctantly she looked at the message. She
wiped the tears off her eyes to clear her vision. She was shaking.
“I have reached. Now
get a good night’s sleep. And thanks for the vermicelli. It was worth the
wait.”
Now
get a good night’s sleep.
Had the message not
been from Prakarsh she would have found the lines almost cruel. There would be
no sleep tonight. Not anymore.
She put her head on
the pillow and stared at the ceiling above. The past. She had forced herself to
forget everything. The memories. They swarmed back.
A speck of glistening
tear rolled from the corner of her eye. As she was fighting to force back those
memories into depths of void, she kept mumbling the only words she could
remember.
Nasrun min Allahi wa fathun
qareeb
6 months ago she had
heard her father say the exact words as he had looked over the corpse of his
wife, vacillating from a ceiling fan.
The next day Aasman
had slashed her right wrist with a knife.
Part 4 Next Week.
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