Sacrifices (Part 4)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Ashni (KTLK), Fan Fiction, Hinglish

“So? How was the midnight hospital date?” Armaan asked Ashutosh when he went home at the breakfast time to change.

“Tujhe kya ho gaya hai, Armaan?”

“Mujhe kyon kuchh hone laga, Dr. Ashutosh? Hua to aapko hai?”

“Achchha! Mujhe kya hua hai?”

“Kambakht ishq.”

“Bakwaas mat kar, Armaan.”

“Come on, Ashu. Ye hamari umra nahin rahi hai in maamlon mein luka-chhipi khelne ka aur blush karne ki?”

“Right Armaan. To tujhe ye bhi samajh mein aata hoga ki ye meri umra nahin hai ek 24 saal ki ladki se pyaar karne ki.”

“Indeevar sahab bahut pyaar se likh gaye the aur Jagjit Singh ji ne badi achchhi aawaaz mein gaaya hai – Na umra ki seema ho… Aur unki saari mehnat par tu paani pher raha hai aisi baatein kar ke. Use bhi ghazalon ka shauk hai na? I think usne bhi suna hoga. Nidhi tujhse pyaar karti hai Ashutosh. Don’t fool yourself.”

“I know.”

“Phir? Problem kya hai?”

“Problem ye hai, Armaan, ki ye sab cheezein ghazalon mein, gaanon mein achchhi lagti hain. Real life ke sawaal different hote hain.”

“Jaise?”

“Jaise compatibility? Uski umra mein use jin cheezon mein interest hoga, unmein main kahan interest le paunga, uske doston mein kahan hil-mil paunga? Hazaron cheezein hoti hain, Armaan.”

“Usse baat to kar.”

“Theek hai. Maan lo ki hamare beech sab theek hai. We are compatible and we can adjust. Lekin Nidhi ki situation mere jaisi nahin hai, Armaan. Ki na koi aage, na koi peechhe. She has a family behind her. And a loving family on that. Armaan – woh kabhi nahin maanenge is rishte ke liye. Mujhe kissi se koi matlab nahin hai. Lekin unke rishtedaar honge, samaaj hoga, jinhein unhein jawaab dena padega. Aur in sabke beech phansega kaun? Nidhi, right? Main kabhi nahin chahunga ki meri wajah se use apne Baba ke khilaaf jaana pade. Woh dono ek doosre se itna pyaar karte hain, main tumhein bata nahin sakta. Main ye bhi nahin chahunga ki meri wajah se Nidhi ya uske parivaar par koi ungliyan uthaye. Main itna selfish nahin ho sakta, Armaan.”

“Par woh kya chahti hai?”

“She is too young. Is umra mein log plan nahin karte, future ki nahin sochte. Unhein lagta hai ki poori duniya unke kadmon ke neeche hai. No, Armaan. It won’t do to hold her to what she wants now. Ye decision lene ka time nahin hai uska. Kitni duniya dekhi hai usne abhi?”

“Tumse reason out kar ke jeetna mushkil hai Ashutosh. Lekin mera dil kahta hai ki tum ye sahi nahin kar rahe ho. Itne dinon baad khushiyan aayi hain tumhari zindagi mein…”

“Aur main unhein le kar selfish nahin ho sakta, Armaan.”

“Dr. Nidhi ne party ki arrangement kaafi achchhi ki thi,” Mallika took Ashutosh by surprise by saying this in a matter-of-fact tone. But he did not react. He just smiled and did not say anything.

“Tumne bataya kyon nahin ki party woh host kar rahi thi?” she prodded again.

“Kyonki woh host nahin kar rahi thi Mallika. Armaan kar raha tha. Usne Armaan ki help zaroor ki.”

“Come on, Ashutosh. Ab tum mujhse jhooth bologe?”

“Main jhooth kyon bolunga, Mallika? Kaisi baatein kar rahi ho?”

“Baatein main karoon ya na karoon, duniya karegi, Ashutosh. Tumhein andaaza to hai na ki Dr. Nidhi shayad tumse aadhi umra ki hain.”

“To?”

“To? To tumhara ye rishta samaaj ki nazron mein wahiyaat, inappropriate aur disgusting hoga.”

“Mallika!” Ashutosh grew angry.

“Mujh par chillane se kuchh nahin hoga, Ashutosh. Main bas apna farz samajhti hoon ki tumhein aagaah kar doon…”

“Mallika,” Ashutosh spoke calmly now, “Waise to meri life mein kya ho raha hai, ye mujhe kissi ko explain karne ki zaroorat nahin hai. Lekin Dr. Nidhi in cheezon mein entangle na ho jayen, is liye tumse bol raha hoon. Nidhi aur mere beech koi rishta nahin hai.”

“Rishta nahin hai, Ashutosh, to Dr. Nidhi Verma se Nidhi ka safar usne itni jaldi kaise tay kar liya? Jis ladki ko tum hospital mein bhi bardasht nahin kar sakte the, who tumhare ghar tak kaise pahunch gayi?”

“Look, Mallika. It’s no secret that she has a friendly disposition. Aur thodee chanchal hai. Sabke saath hansti, khelti hai, shararatein karti hai. She can draw any one out of their shells. I am no exception. Aur isse zyada main kuchh explain nahin kar raha.”

“Barah saalon se jaanti hoon tumhein,” Mallika’s eyes were moist, “Aur aaj tum use defend karne ke liye meri feelings ko hurt kar rahe ho. Lekin tumhare saamne kya shikayat karoon main? Mera dard kab dikhayi diya hai tumhein?” Mallika got up to leave.

“Mallika. Agar maine tumhara dil dukhaya hai to iski zimmedaari meri hai. Nidhi ka, ya kissi aur ka, isse koi lena-dena nahin hai. Aur Mallika, mera aur Nidhi ka koi bhi rishta ho, meri zindagi mein koi ho ya nahin ho. Lekin usse tumhari jagah meri zindagi mein nahin badalti. At least meri nazaron mein to nahin. Main tumhari dosti ki kadra karta raha hoon, aur hamesha karoonga. Lekin we can’t be anything else to each other. Ek registaan doosre registaan se paani nahin maang sakta. Main tumhari tanhaiyon ko, tumhari taqleefon ko door nahin kar sakta, Mallika. We will be terrible together.”

“Kaash! Kabhi tum meri nazaron se bhi dekh paate Ashutosh. Lekin ye tumhaare wash ki baat nahin hai. Pata nahin Dr. Nidhi ke saath bhi kya karoge? Mujhe barah saalon mein nahin samjhe. Unhein kya barah mahinon mein samajh jaoge?” With this Mallika left his office leaving him behind with his thoughts. He wasn’t affected by most of the things Mallika had said. But he did wonder if more people had noticed him and Nidhi and whether the rumours and gossips were indeed going to start doing their nefarious job.

“Sir, aapko ye to manna hi padega ki aapka ghar party dene ke liye ekdum perfect hai. Itna bada lawn hai – outdoor party ho sakti hai. Aur itna bada aur well-lit hall hai. Indoor party bhi ho sakti hai.”

Nidhi had come to discuss a case file, had brought tea for him and her visits to his office were never over without a little of her pointless, but pleasant chatter.

“To aap kya propose kar rahi hain?”

“Aapko har weekend par party karni chahiye.”

“Dr. Nidhi. Maine ek party de di, usse hi kaafi log shock mein hain. Main har weekend par party karoonga to logon ko heart attack aa jayega aur shahar ke saare hospitals mein jagah kam pad jayegi.”

“Ye to aapne Dr. Armaan ka joke chori kar liya.”

“To? Logon ko heart attack dilwane ka haq sirf aapka hai?”

Nidhi blushed for a moment, but that didn’t stop her from retorting, “Meri kahan mazaal ki main kissi ko heart attack doon. Who kaam to aapka hi hai. Ek baar gusse se dekhenge to achchhe-achchho ko heart attack aa jayega.”

“Ye aap kah rahi hain? Aapko to mere gusse se zaraa bhi dar nahin lagta.”

“Ye kisne kaha?”

“Dikh raha hai. Aaj kal aap PG ki preparation par kam dhyaan deti hain, aur parties par ya gappein maarne par zyaada.”

Nidhi’s face fell at his accusations. “Aisi baat nahin hai. Lekin agar aapko aisa laga to aage se aapko shikayat ka koi mauka nahin milega.” Then she felt the need to clarify, “Lekin haan. Aapke gusse se dar kar main PG ki preparation nahin kar rahi thi. Gussa kar ke mujhse koi kuchh nahin karwa sakta.”

“Hey Nidhi. I know!” Ashutosh said in a soft and earnest voice, “Main mazaak kar raha tha.”

Nidhi smiled, but she was still unhappy about what he had said.

“Lagta hai aap sach mein bura maan gayi. I will have to compensate. Chaliye, aapko coffee pilata hoon.”

“Ye canteen ki coffee se kaam nahin chalega. Kahin bahar chalna padega.”

She was too straight-forward. Direct! Despite himself Ashutosh realized that it made him even more fond of her, and not less.

“That’s too much Dr. Nidhi,” he tried to dissuade.

“Mujhe koi jaldi nahin hai. Jab aapko ye too-much na lage, tab pee lenge. Bye Sir.”

He smiled and shook his head after she left. How difficult it was to not love this girl. But the very next moment, his face stiffened. He couldn’t do that. He, thankfully, had a good alibi in her PG preparations. He would keep her away from himself by asking her to spend more time on it

To be continued

Sacrifices (Part 3)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Ashni (KTLK), Fan Fiction, Hinglish

“So. Dr. Ashutosh Mathur. Kaisa mahsoos kar rahe hain aap?” Armaan pushed a rolled newspaper before Ashutosh, as if it were a reporter’s mike.

“Bahut thaka hua mahsoos kar raha hoon aur mujhe sone ki zaroorat hai. Parties can be quite tiring.”

“Kamaal hai? Bade selfish hain aap, Dr. Ashutosh. Party ke liye din bhar mehnat ki Dr. Nidhi ne. Aur woh ab bhi hospital mein night duty de rahi hain. Aur thak aap gaye, Ashu maharaj?”

Ashutosh was taken aback.  Indeed! How did he forget about her?

“Armaan. Main hospital ja raha hoon.”

“Are. Lekin…”

“Use bhi to aaraam ki zaroorat hogi. Main thodee der uska kaam dekh sakta hoon.”

Ashutosh did not even change out of his party dress, picked up his car keys and rushed to the hospital.

“Dr. Ashutosh,” Nidhi was surprised as well as relieved to see him. She had been extremely worried, “Achchha hua aap aa gaye. Please is patient ko dekhiye.”

“Kya hua? Aap itni ghabrayi hui kyon hain, Dr. Nidhi?”

“Ek patient abhi abhi admit hua hai. Uska Asthama control nahin ho raha tha. Isliye uske ghar waale use yahan laye hain. Hum woh control karne ki koshish kar rahe hain, lekin kuchh kaam nahin kar raha hai. Aur abhi abhi use cough aane laga. With blood. TB to nahin lagta. Lekin x-ray karne ke layak bhi haalat nahin hai uski…”

“Dr. Sen kahan hain?” Ashutosh asked about the senior doctor who should have been on duty.

“Thodee der pahle emergency se unke liye call aayi thi. Wahin gaye hain. Main unhein phone karne ki koshish kar rahi thi, lekin I think who utha nahin pa rahe hain.”

They had reached the patient’s bed by then. The poor kid was coughing badly and was also short of breath.

“Blood Pressure check kijiye. Jaldi.”

“Blood Pressure?” Nidhi was puzzled.

“Quick. Dr. Nidhi,” Ashutosh was annoyed for a moment.

Nidhi got to work. “Oh God!” she exclaimed as she noticed the BP.

“Blood Pressure control mein laana hoga. This might be a case of Pulmonary Hypertension, not Asthama. Aap please cardiology mein call kijiye aur on-duty senior doctor ko bulaiye. Agar Dr. Khan ho duty par to best hoga.”

“Yes Sir.”

Nidhi followed his instructions precisely. When Dr. Khan reached there she assisted both of them. After a while they had the situation in control and the patient was put to sleep. Before discussing next steps with Dr. Khan. Ashutosh noticed Nidhi, who was standing at some distance from them. She was unable to comprehend what was going on. Patient’s condition had scared her and day’s work followed by the night duty had exhausted her.

“Dr. Nidhi,” Ashutosh addressed her, “The child is stable now. Nurse is looking after him. Mujhe Dr. Khan se aage ki patient-care discuss karni hai. Aap please mujhse dus minute mein mere office mein miliye. I will explain the case to you.” Ashutosh had carefully worded his instructions so that it didn’t sound odd to others. What he really wanted was not to discuss the case with her immediately, but rather for her to take rest in his office.

“Yes Sir,” she said listlessly and left.

Without having to mull over Ashutosh’ words, it came naturally to Nidhi that she should directly go to Ashutosh’ office and not wait elsewhere for ten minutes.

Ashutosh smiled when he entered his office. Nidhi had fallen asleep on the visitor’s chair. Her mouth was slightly open as she slept, which made her already innocent face look even more child-like. He walked towards her and caressed her head. He was almost in a trance as he did that. Then he came to himself with a start and stepped back. Nidhi woke up and sprang out from the chair seeing him, “I… I am sorry, Sir. Pata nahin kaise aankh lag gayi.” She explained embarrasedly trying hard to fight off her sleep.

“Sit down, Nidhi. It’s okay. You were tired, I could see that,” Ashutosh himself was yet to recover from the shock of what he had done just moments ago. What was he thinking!!

“Achchha hua aap aa gaye. Warna main to kabhi nahin samajh paati ki…”

“Aap kya padh rahi thi?” Ashutosh noticed a book in her hands. She was reading before drifting off to sleep.

Nidhi handed him the book. She was reading about Pulmonary Hypertension. Ashutosh smiled, “Aapne padhna bhi shuru kar diya. Good. I am impressed.”

“Main bahut dar gayi thi. Khaas kar ke jab mujhe realize hua ki meri diagnosis ki koshishein actual problem se bilkul tangential thi.”

“It’s okay. Calm down. Patient ke pichhle doctor ne misdiagnosis ki thi. Plus, to be honest, I wouldn’t expect you to be able to do it right. Ye cases roz roz aate nahin hain. Rare hote hain. I would not be surprised agar kai senior doctors bhi diagnose na kar payen. Unless they keep reading medical journals regularly. In fact, meri Dr. Khan se baat ho rahi thi. He was also caught off-guard. We may not even be equipped to treat him here. Hum uske parents ko advice karne waale hain ki use Delhi le jaayen. AIIMS mein. He would need a super-specialist’s care.”

“Oh!” the complication of the situation she was in was scary. She silently thanked her stars that Ashutosh came in time.

“You look tired. Aap abhi case further discuss karna chahengi? Ya hum kal bhi kar sakte hain.”

“Nahin. Abhi karte hain.”

“Okay,” she was eager to learn, and Ashutosh decided not to disappoint her. He explained her the details of the diseases, its symptoms, what all could it be confused with, diagnosis and treatment.

“Thank you Dr. Ashutosh.”

“Ismein thanks ki kya baat hai. Aapko explain karna mera kaam hai.”

“Nahin. Time par aane ke liye. Agar patient ko kuchh ho jaata to…”

“Yeah. It was not a good situation ki koi senior doctor nahin tha yahan. Hamein emergencies manage karne ke liye better system chahiye. Main administration se baat karoonga.”

“Ji. Waise aap aaye kyon the? Aap to din bhar bhi hospital mein the?“

Ashutosh laughed out loud, “Dr. Nidhi Verma. Aapko to police mein hona chahiye. Itna sab kuchh ho jaane ke baad bhi aap original question nahin bhooli. Aur mauka milte hi sawaal-jawaab shuru kar diya.”

“Nahin,” Nidhi was embarrassed, “I am sorry. Maine to aise hi poochha. Main chalti hoon.”

“Nidhi,” Ashutosh stopped her, “Tum chaho to ghar ja sakti ho. Main hoon yahan par.”

“Aap to Dadi Bua se bhi badtar hote ja rahe hain. Aapko aisa kyon lag raha hai ki main thaki hui hoon? Koi pahli baar night duty thode hi kar rahi hoon?”

“Lekin tum din bhar bhi kaam kar rahi thi. Obviously thaki hui ho. Dikh raha hai shakal par.”

“I am fine, Dr. Ashutosh. I really am. Aapko mere liye yahan rukne ki zaroorat nahin hai. Main to subah aaraam kar loongi. Lekin aapko phir hospital aana padega.”

Ashutosh nodded and Nidhi left. But he did not leave for home. He leaned further back into his chair and spent rest of the night thinking.

They were fond of each other, there was no denying this now. Nidhi’s feelings – he had heard from her own mouth. And he knew that he liked her. But he didn’t expect it to go anywhere. It was not supposed to. The idea was so ridiculous. He had hoped that their relationship will remain innocent and friendly. But…

What had possessed him when he had seen her sleeping in the chair? Why did he have to go and touch her? And feel like…

Nidhi was also confused as she walked out of his office. Was it in her dream that Ashutosh had caressed her head so lovingly? Because when she woke up, he wasn’t standing that close to her. And yet she had felt like an electrical shock run through her veins. It had to be a dream. Ashutosh could not be attracted to her. That was way too much to hope for. Yes – he did appear fond of her. He was friendly with her. He appeared to take special interest in her professional progress. Once in a while he said or did something that made her feel like he wanted her. But she might be seeing too much meaning in simple things. Hoping that any of that was a reflection of her own feelings might be too much. She didn’t want to hope for too much. She did not want to become another Mallika. She didn’t want to become bitter in love by expecting it to come back. She was happy giving love. She was happy with whatever little came back to her. Or even if nothing did. Loving him was enough to give her all the happiness in life.

To be continued

Sacrifices (Part 2)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Ashni (KTLK), Fan Fiction, Hinglish

Ashutosh was now grinning in amusement, “Main samajh gaya ki aapka calendars ka aur solar system ka knowledge bahut achchha hai, lekin hum achanak ye kyon discuss kar rahe hain?”

“Aapko ye samjhaane ke liye ki given this mess, ye unlikely hai ki humme se koi bhi apna birthday exact us din manata hai, jab sun ke hisaab se manana chahiye. Birthday par ek calendar date daalna sirf celebrate karne ka bahana hota hai. To bas hamare paas aapki birthday celebrate karne ke liye bhi ek date ka bahana hai. Aur kya chahiye hoga?”

His grin had turned into a sweet, admiring smile by the time Nidhi had finished. “Tumse  jeetna namumkin hai Nidhi,” he said throwing his hands up in a gesture of accepting defeat.

“To phir party kahan hai?”

“Party?”

“Haan. Birthday ki party. Gifts muft mein nahin milte hain.”

“Are. Nahin Dr. Nidhi. Birthday party… Maine kabhi nahin…”

“To kya hua? Har cheez pahli baar to hoti hai na? Aap chinta mat kijiye. Maine apni duty exchange kar li hai. Mere paas poora din hai. Main saara intezaam kar doongi.”

“Kahan?”

“Aapke ghar par?”

“Ghar par?”

“Haan. Maine Dr. Armaan se baat ki hai. Who meri madad kar denge.”

“Aapne to poori team khadi kar di hai mere khilaaf.”

“Is team mein koi bhi aapke khilaaf nahin hai. Aap unhein saath le kar chalne ki koshish to kijiye.”

“To mujhe kya karna hai?”

“Aap bas senior doctors ko invite kar lijiye aur apne personal friends ko. Shaam mein 7 baje. Boliyega ki Dr. Armaan host kar rahe hain. Baaki ke staff ko invite karne ka kaam main khud dekh loongi ya interns se karwa loongi.”

“Back out karne ka koi option hai?”

“Nahin. Bye Dr. Ashutosh. Aap please 6.30 tak ghar pahunch jaiyega.”

After she had left, Asuhtosh opened the gift she had brought for him. It was a nice, blue tie. Ashutosh could not help smiling. He had just placed the tie in his drawer when Mallika entered. Ashutosh felt annoyed that she didn’t knock before coming, but he greeted her courteously.

“Hi Mallika.”

“Hi Ashutosh. Kya baat hai? Itni broad smile. Bade khush dikh rahe ho.”

“Khush hone ka pata nahin. Lekin jo main abhi tumse kahne ja raha hoon, usse tum bhi utni hi surprised ho jaogi, jitna ki main hoon.”

“Achchha. Aisa kya hai?”

“Aaj shaam 7 baje mere ghar par party hai and you must come.”

“Party?” Mallika was incredulous, “Tum party de rahe ho Ashutosh? Kis liye?”

“Meri birthday ke liye.”

“Birthday? Tumhari? Tumhein pata bhi hai ki…” Mallika stopped herself just in time from blurting out that he didn’t even know his birthday. Ashutosh looked hurt for a split second, but it didn’t last.

He replied with child-like enthusiasm, “Celebrate karne ka bahana chahiye Mallika. Date ki authenticity ka main kuchh nahin kar sakta. Aur usse kya farq padta hai?”

“Yes. Of course,” responded Mallika in embarrassment, “It’s great. Lekin party ka idea aaya kaise tumhein? Tumhein maine kitni baar kaha tha…”

“Mallika. Aam khane se matlab rakho. Ped ginne se nahin. Armaan arrange kar raha hai. I hope to see you at 7. Abhi kuchh kaam tha? Mujhe ward mein jaana hai.”

“Nahin. Koi kaam nahin tha. Main to aise hi aayi thi. Main bhi chalti hoon. Will see you in the evening.”

Nidhi had juidiciously made Armaan play the host in the party so that no one should know that she was the one who had planned it. The guests were yet to come. She changed into a calf-length black dress for the party and waited for Ashutosh to get ready. When he came out, they stood staring at each other for a few seconds.

She looked very different. And it wasn’t just her dress. There was a marked difference in the impression she made. She had always enchanted Aashutosh by her girlish innocent beauty. Even when she had walked into Armaan’s tea-party wearing the blue saree and the high heals, creating a facade of mature looks, she had been able to maintain it only until she had lost her balance on the heals. But today… today she looked confidence personified. The confidence with which she had barged into his office with a birthday gift, the confidence with which she had already planned everything with Armaan and didn’t let him back out, the confidence with which she had explained to him why the authenticity of the date did not matter, all of it was oozing out of her. Along with all this, the black, sleeveless dress, which along with matching accessories created a sensual contrast against her skin, made her look… so… mature… and… desirable. Desirable! Ashutosh flushed as he the right word struck his mind and broke his gaze. He did complement her though, “Aap bahut achchhi lag rahi hain.”

“Aap bhi,” she replied happily. He was wearing the tie she had gifted him.

Ashutosh noticed her footwear and ended up asking, “To ab apko heals pahanne mein problem nahin hoti?”

“Ye? Ye heals nahin hai Dr. Ashutosh. Platforms hain. Ye aage se bhi oonche hote hain, to dikkat nahin hoti hai.”

“I see,” Ashutosh grinned foolishly.

They didn’t realize that Armaan was also there and had watched them stare at each other. He interjected at this point, “Koi hamari bhi taareef kar de zara.”

Ashutosh was baffled for a moment on hearing Armaan’s voice, but Nidhi was in control, “Aap to party ke centre of attention banne waale hain, Dr. Armaan.”

“Kahar to aap dha rahi hain, Dr. Nidhi. Mujhe to kya lagta hai Ashutosh, ki party khatam hote hote tak haemin saare guests ko emergency mein admit karwana padega aur hum sab logon ko night duty karni padegi.”

“Kya matlab?”

“Matlab inhein dekh kar sab logon ko heart attack jo aane waala hai?”

“Dr. Armaan!” Nidhi blushed and chided him.

“Khair chalo. Chalte hain. Party lawn mein hai Ashutosh. Aur guests ab aate hi honge.”

“Aap log chaliye. Main Hiraman Kaka ke saath ek baar kaam dekh leti hoon ki sab cheezein taiyaar hain ya nahin,” Nidhi said and stayed back. Nothing really needed to be checked up, but she did not want to be seen as the host. She had planned to slip into the party after it was already crowded so that no one would know that she had been there the entire day.

“Are Nidhi. Sabko bula kar tu khud kaise late ho gayi,” Priyanka asked Nidhi when she spotted her in the party. Nidhi liked the question. It meant that people hadn’t noticed her coming out of Ashutosh’ house itself.

“Ghar chali gayi thi change karne. Isliye der ho gayi.”

“Ekdum hot lag rahi hai.”

“Chup kar.”

Nobody had indeed noticed her, except Mallika. Ashutosh throwing a party or even agreeing to let Armaan throw one, that too for his birthday, was not like him at all. Mallika had known him for far too long to believe that it was Armaan’s doing. Even when Ashutosh was, otherwise, a happy-go-lucky person, he had never celebrated his birthday. Not in the college, not afterwards! So, when Ashutosh evaded answering her about the party earlier in the day, it didn’t take her long to do the arithmetic. Nidhi had exchanged her day-duty for night-shift. After reaching the party, Mallika looked for Nidhi everywhere. And she did find her. Coming out surreptitiously from a side door of the house. But it took her a while to corner Nidhi.

“I’m impressed, Dr. Nidhi.”

“Ji?”

“Ashutosh ko party ke liye, aur who bhi birthday party ke liye manana aasaan kaam nahin tha.”

“Ye aap mujhse kyon kah rahi hain?”

“Jiska kaam ho, tareef bhi to uski hi karni padegi.”

“Party Dr. Armaan ne di hai.”

“Dr. Armaan to Ashutosh ke saath bachpan se hain, Dr. Nidhi. Aaj tak to koi party nahin hui? Party to tab hui jab aapne kaha. Aur apni duty exchange kar ke uski taiyaariyan bhi ki. Kyon?”

Nidhi sighed, “Whatever. Jab party ho rahi hai, to ye court laga kar baithne ki bajay aap party enjoy kyon nahin karti?”

“Bahut tez zubaan hai aapki? Control mein rakhiye. Ashutosh ko badtamiziyan bardasht karne ki aadat nahin.”

“Aur woh badtamiziyan deserve karte bhi nahin.”

“Kahna kya chahti hain aap?” Nidhi had essentially told her that she deserved the insult and rudeness, “Ye mat bhooliye ki main aapki senior hoon…”

“Yahan nahin, Dr. Mallika, yahan nahin. Phir agar aap apni seniority ki maryada nahin nibhayengi aur mujhe badtamizi karne par majboor karengi to hospital mein bhi ye cover nahin rahega aapke paas,” Nidhi walked off leaving a fuming Mallika behind.

“Dr. Ashutosh. Mujhe nikalna hoga,” Nidhi found Ashutosh after a while.

“Kyon?” Ashutosh’ face fell, “Abhi to sab log yahin hain…”

“Meri duty ka time ho raha hai. Maine exchange ki thi na.”

“Ohh!” he, obviously, could not ask her to be late for the duty.

“I hope aapne enjoy kiya party ko,” she said looking eager.

“Ab tak to bahut kiya,” Ashutosh openly admitted his liking for her presence.

Nidhi blushed, “Aage bhi karenge. Itne log hain yahan. Mujhe to pata bhi nahin tha ki aap hospital ke bahar itne logon ko jaante honge.”

Ashutosh laughed, “Zindagi ke is padav par jaanne waale logon ki kami nahin hoti Dr. Nidhi. Pahchanne waale log nahin milte. Khair. Hospital ke liye late nahin hona chahiye aapko.”

“Ji. Chalti hoon,” she turned to go away when he called her.

“Nidhi!”

She turned back and looked at him questioningly.

He smiled, very slightly; but enough to tell her that he was genuine in what he said next, “Thanks a lot!”

To be continued

Sacrifices (Part 1)

Posted 4 CommentsPosted in Ashni (KTLK), Fan Fiction, Hinglish

Author’s Note: This is a variation of an earlier Ashni FF. Please read the notes before starting on this one.

“Dr. Mallika. Aapne mujhe bulaya?”

“Yes Dr. Nidhi. Socha saath mein coffee pi jaye.”

“Achchha!” Nidhi knew that wasn’t her motive.

“Waise zara apna haath to dikhaiye Dr. Nidhi. Aapki luck line zaroor bahut strong hogi. Kabhi lottery lagi hai aapki?”

“Nahin,” Nidhi said dryly and walked towards the coffee machine.

“Dr. Ashutosh ki personality bahut hi charming hai, magnetic hai” Mallika came to the point, “Unki taraf attract hote logon ko der nahin lagti.”

Nidhi got the coffee and sat across her on a chair. She did not react to what Mallika had said. So, Mallika continued, “Aur phir woh ameer bhi to bahut hain?”

“So?”

“Anyway. Ye to aap jaanti hain.”

“Ye aap mujhse zyada jaanti hain shayad.”

“Haan. Ashutosh ko mujhse zyada koi nahin jaanta. Isliye tumhein samjhaane ki koshish kar rahi hoon. Don’t waste your time Nidhi. Warna ek din pachhtaogi.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Samajh jaogi. Lekin tab tak bahut der ho chuki hogi. Tum kabhi bhi is age-gap ko khatam nahin kar sakti Nidhi. And if you tried, which I think you will, then…”

“Aap ye sab kyon suna rahi hain mujhe?”

“Agar tum galat raaste par chalo, to mera haq hai ki main tumhein rokoon.”

“Ji nahin. Maine ye haq aapko kabhi nahin diya hai. And you don’t have to worry about me Dr. Mallika. Lekin achchha kiya ki aapne ye baat seedhe seedhe kar li. You are right. I like Dr. Ashutosh. And I don’t care ki woh mujhse pyaar karte hain ya nahin, kabhi bhi karenege ya nahin, ya phir woh mujhse kitne bade hain. Kyonki pyaar koi business nahin hota, Len-den nahin hota. Aapne apni life mein pyaar ke badle hamehsa kuchh paane ki koshish ki hai. Shayad isliye itni disappoint hui hain.”

Nidhi walked out of the room, not realizing that Ashutosh was standing near the door listening to her conversation with Mallika.

Ashutosh was away for three days to attend All India Medical Convention (AIMC) in Mumbai. He had been away for only a day till then, but Nidhi missed him. She realized how she had gotten used to his presence. Especially in the recent days, he had been around almost all the time she was on duty. Nidhi smiled at the bitter-sweet pain she felt.

Her duty was about to get over. She went to the notice board to check when she had to come back and for which ward. What she saw there surprised her.

She went to look for Dr. Mallika to clarify. But could not find her. She ran into Dr. Rangnath though.

“Dr. Rangnath. Ye meri duty agle do dinon ke liye…”

“Record room mein hai Dr. Nidhi.”

“Lekin iska kya matlab hai? Why do you need a doctor in the record room? Ye to clerical kaam hai. Koi bhi staff kar sakta hai.”

“I know Dr. Nidhi. Maine Dr. Mallika se kaha bhi tha, lekin woh nahin maani.”

“Aur woh abhi hain bhi nahin yahan.”

“Yeah. I think aap kal to aa hi jaiye. Phir woh aas paas hon to unse baat kar lijiye.”

“Okay.”

Nidhi’s heart skipped a beat when she saw Ashutosh entering the record room. It was the first glimpse she had gotten of him after four days. He was surprised to see her there though and stopped in his tracks.

“Dr. Nidhi,” Ashutosh also smiled widely, “Aap yahan kya kar rahi hain?”

“Meri duty yahan lagi hai.”

“Duty? Record room mein?” Ashutosh was surprised, “Aisa kya kaam hai yahan?”

“Kuchh khaas nahin. Patients ki files update karni hain.”

“Lekin…” Ashutosh was about to say that it didn’t need a doctor to be there. Then he realized that it must be Mallika’s doing.

“Anyway. I will see you later,” he said, picked up the files he needed and went out of the room.

Nidhi wanted to talk to him. But she could not hold him back in the reord room, obviously. She looked at her watch. She could take a break in another ten minutes.

Nidhi was about to walk into Ashutosh’ room with a cup of tea, when his controlled, but angry voice made her stop in her tracks, “Mallika. Record room mein ek doctor ki duty lagane ki kya zaroorat hai?”

“Agar tum Dr. Nidhi Verma ki baat kar rahe ho to woh wahin theek hain.”

“Koi bhi doctor wahan theek nahin hai Mallika. This will not be done. I will not allow is here.”

“To tum mere kaam mein interfere karoge?”

“Yes Mallika,” Ashutosh said and it was at this moment that Nidhi came to his office, but stopped at the door on hearing his voice, “Apni dosti ke liye main unprofessionalism bardasht nahin kar sakta. Tum Dr. Nidhi ke baare mein personally kya sochti ho, ya main kya sochta hoon, that doesn’t matter in this hospital. Only things that matter are what are professionally right and what are good for the patients and the hospital. No further dicussions on this Dr. Mallika. Let her complete today’s duty, but this must not happen again. Thank you.”

Nidhi realized that Mallika would be coming out of his office anytime. So, she moved away from there to avoid any awkward confrontation.

‘Tum Dr. Nidhi ke baare mein personally kya sochti ho, ya main kya sochta hoon, that doesn’t matter in this hospital,’ she recalled Ashutosh’ word and murmured, “Kya sochte hain aap mere bare mein Dr. Ashutosh?” She looked at the tea she had carried for him, smiled and took a sip from it.

“Good Morning Dr. Ashutosh,” Nidhi didn’t even knock before barging into his office that day.

“Good Morning Dr. Nidhi. Aaj itni jaldi kaise? Abhi to aapki duty shuru nahin hui hogi?”he didn’t seem to mind the liberties she took.

“Aap bhi to hain?”

Ashutosh laughed, “Mujhse compare kyon karti hain aap? Mere liye to ghar par hona, hospital mein hona sab baraabar hai.”

“Haan. Aapse mera comparison kahan hai?” Nidhi pouted.

“Are. Aap bura kyon maan rahi hain?”

Nidhi smiled, “Main mazaak kar rahi hoon. Main to bas aapko ye dene aayi thi.”

Ashutosh took the packet she handed him looking confused.

“Ye kya hai?”

“Happy Birthday Dr. Ashutosh.”

“Birthday? Aur… ye aap mere liye… gift laayi hain?” Ashutosh looked incredulous.

“Haan. Ye to hum bachpan se hi karte aa rahe hain.”

“Kya?”

“Jinki birthday ho, unhein gift dete hain.”

“Yeah… Lekin…”

“Kya hua?” Nidhi didn’t understand his lack of enthusiasm.

“Aapko kisne bataya ki aaj mera birthday hai?”

“Main jab record room mein thi to wahan employees ki files bhi thi… Usmein dekh li thi main…. I know – they are confidential. Sorry about that! I swear maine kuchh aur nahin dekha. Aur maine kissi aur ki file bhi nahin dekhi.”

Her innocence disarmed Ashutosh. He wasn’t going to scold her for looking at his file after this. He smiled, but still looked uncomfortable about the birthday and the gift.

“Kya baat hai?”Nidhi asked again.

“Well,” he decided to come clean to her. It wasn’t going to be possible for him to hide something from her or lie to her, “Aap jaanti hai ki main adopted hoon. Aur meri real birthday to Baba ko bhi nahin pata thi. Us zamane mein birth certificates zaroori nahin hote the. To bas Baba ne school mein woh date likhwa di jab who mujhe laaye the aur andaaze se year bhi bhar diya. To obviously ye mera real birthday to hai nahin.”

“Dr. Ashutosh. Aapko solar system ke bare mein kuchh bhi pata nahin hai kya?”

“Kya matlab?”

“Aapko pata hai ki leap year kyon hota hai?”

“Of course pata hai.”

“Kyon hota hai?”

“Kyonki calendar year aur earth ke rotation period mein kareeb aadhe din ka farq hota hai. To use adjust karne ke liye har chaar saal mein…”

“Aur uske baawzood hundred years mein phir ek din adjust karne ki zaroorat par jaati hai. To har 100th year leap year nahin hota hai.”

“Okay?” Ashutosh was half-inclined to think that Nidhi was either drunk or delirious.

“Lekin… lekin… har 4th 100th year, yani ki har 400th year leap year hota hai. Kyonki itni kalaakari karne ke baad bhi hum calendar year aur earth ke rotation time ko balance nahin kar paate.”

To be continued

Next-door (Variation) (Part 10)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

Mrinal waited before picking up the call. It was Raksha’s father. What would he say?

“Mrinal. Police was here a while back.”

Mrinal sighed silently.

“Did she really do it?”

“It does look like her, Uncle. We won’t know until Mahi is found.”

“She is her mother…” Was he trying to plead for his daughter? To treat her leniently if she is caught?

Mrinal wanted to give a befitting reply, but it won’t do to make them a foe at this junction. So, he desisted. “Where is Raksha, Uncle?”

“She had called from Singapore that she would be coming soon. She has left him too…” Antara had told him what problem Raksha had come to her with. So, he wasn’t surprised that her relationship was over again.

“Where is she?”

“If she has already come, she hasn’t contacted us yet. I have given whatever information I could to police. There is a flat whose keys are with her…”

“Uncle. I will call you back. I am getting a call from police…”

Mrinal and Antara were panting by the time they reached the pediatric ward in the hospital.

Raksha had changed her name officially. Police were able to trace her on a flight to Mumbai from Singapore. It took some time to figure out where she was staying. Because it wasn’t in the flat her parents had told the police about. After asking around the cab drivers and taxi services operators on airport, they found the hotel she was staying in. Mahi was also there.

“She had kept her sedated most of the time, it seems,” the doctor explained to them, “Thankfully, there was no overdose. The child is weak. But she would be fine. She should be awake in couple of hours.”

“Can we see her doctor? Please!”

“Be careful. Don’t try to wake her up or talk to her. She is on IV to help recover her strength.”

They nodded and were led to the room where little Mahi was lying on a bed too large for her size. Her eyes were closed and face pale. But she was there. In flesh and blood. And she would be alright, the doctor had assured them. Antara prayed like she had never before done in her life. Even Mrinal did!

“She is my daughter,” Raksha was defiant, when they went to the police station to give statements, “I have rights over her.”

Mrinal banged hard on the table, got up and looked at her with bloodshot eyes. “She is not your bloody daughter. She was ten-days old when you had left her. For greener pastures. And she wasn’t even a month old when this woman had gently rocked her to sleep. It was her wedding night and she had heartily accepted a baby abandoned by her own mother! If you ever say that again….” Mrinal stopped because Antara held his hand and pressed it! She didn’t want him to say anything untoward. He gritted his teeth and turned away from Raksha.

“We have given our statements, Sir,” he told the officer present, “You have seen the state our daughter was in. My wife is a counsellor who has met this woman in a professional capacity and she thinks that Raksha… Priya Malhotra is mentally unstable. Please look into that aspect as well.”

The officer was more than sympathetic to them and he nodded.

But Antara had her issues too. Having been sedated most of the time, Mahi didn’t remember much of her kidnapping and did not show any signs of mental trauma. Still, Antara hadn’t sent her to the playschool even after she had recovered.  And she wasn’t going to her office either. She had bought stacks of dairy milk and fed it to Mahi so often that the child now didn’t want them any longer.

Mrinal came home early to find Mahi begging to be let go to play with Shyama. Antara had become so clingy towards her that she wasn’t leaving her even with Shyama. There was no choice left now. He would have to confront Antara. This wasn’t healthy for anyone.

“Let her go, Antara,” he said.

“But it’s time for her to drink milk,” Antara gave an excuse.

“Now?” Mrinal looked at the clock and then back to her.

“Soon.”

“Not for at least half an hour. And Shayama knows her timings. Let her go.”

Antara put the child down, but she wasn’t relenting yet. “Shyama might forget.”

“Then you will remember, right?”

Mahi ran out to go to Shyama’s room. “Wait Mahi. Let me call Shyama Auntie…”

“Let her go, Antara,” Mrinal interrupted again, “She knows her way around the house.”

Antara didn’t counter him, but sat there sulking.

Mrinal washed his hands and face; then came back to her.

“Antara. You have not resumed office yet,” he said as he sat down beside her on the sofa. For some reason, he remembered that it was the same sofa she had been sitting on the evening he had brought Shashank home! That terrible and then beautiful evening.

“There aren’t many enquiries,” she gave a lame excuse again.

“You were refusing clients couple of weeks ago because there wasn’t enough time. You are telling me that it has changed all of a sudden?”

Antara looked down at her hands lying in her lap. She looked so miserable that Mrinal could not help feeling that there was something more to all of this. He put his arms around her.

“What is it Antara? What is eating you up?”

“She managed to lure her away because I hadn’t given her a bar of chocolate,” Antara said in a quivering voice. Police investigation had revealed that Raksha had lured Mahi with a Dairy Milk. Apparently she had been asking Antara for one throughout their shopping, but Antara had refused because it was lunch time. “How bad a mother am I!”

“You had done the right thing. Since when did giving into the uninformed, uneducated whims of children become good parenting? Of course, you need to feed her properly and not give chocolates in lunch time. Forget about it Antara. It wasn’t your fault.”

She did not respond and she did not look up.

“What is wrong? Talk to me, Antara. Please.”

“Before the mall, I had gone to the gynecologist’s office. I had picked up my reports…”

She sounded so depressed that Mrinal was alarmed, “Gynecologist? What did the report say?”

“I am pregnant,” she said and started sobbing.

Mrinal looked at her uncertainly for a moment. Why was she crying? This was what they had wanted! He gave in to his own emotion.  He held her kissed her forehead. Then he let himself loose and kissed her all over her face even as she continued crying. He hadn’t experienced this elation earlier. Mahi was his lifeline now. He would give his life for her sake. But that bond had developed only after she was born. When he had planned for a child with Raksha, it was under a lot of uncertainty. It had been more of a way of salvaging their relationship than a desire for a child. It was different this time. He was looking forward to having a child with Antara. This eager anticipation was a first! “Stop crying, you stupid girl,” he said after he stopped kissing. “Is this how you break such a great news? And all this crying can’t be good for the baby. Stop it. Right now.”

“You don’t understand,” Antara was still gloomy.

Mrinal turned serious, “Then tell me. What is worrying you?”

“I got my pregnancy report… And then I lost Mahi… Because of my own carelessness… How does that sound?” she finally looked up at him.

Mrinal paused for a moment before replying, “That sounds like a horrible, horrible coincidence. But that still doesn’t sound like your fault to me. It doesn’t Antara. You are the best mother in the world. Pull yourself together. You can’t do this to yourself, to me, to Mahi, to our baby! That won’t do at all. You are trying to make up for a mistake you never made. You are hurting everyone with this. Mahi doesn’t like this mother of hers, who is smothering her out of fear. I want her mother to be a role-model for her. Not someone who is afraid of facing the world; who will destroy, with her own hands, a career she has so painstakingly built, because of a madwoman. She needs her mother back. And I need my Antara back. Antara, who had pulled me out from the depths of rejection and betrayal. Please Antara. Don’t do this. Not to yourself. Not to us.”

He pulled her in his arms and she let him. She cried some more, but was better after that.

“Give me a minute,” Mrinal pulled away from her and went out. Antara waited wondering what he was up to.

She saw him coming back with Mahi. He whispered something in the child’s ear and let her go. She ran to Antara and jumped in her lap. “Mahi wants a little brother or sister,” she said. A smile slowly broke on Antara’s face and it soon turned to a grin.

Mrinal also came to them and took his seat beside Antara. He put his arms around her again and smiled. “We will make a perfect family,” he whispered in Antara’s ear.

“Okay,” Antara said to her daughter, “We will bring one for Mahi next year.”

“Can I go and play?”

“Yes. And tell Shyama Auntie that she should give you milk in ten minutes.”

“Okay Mamma,” Mahi slipped out of Antara’s lap and ran outside as Mrinal and Antara watched fondly.

– The End –

Next-door (Variation) (Part 9)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

“Mrinal. Mrinal. Where are you?” Antara was frantic on phone.

“At the university. What happened?”

“Mrinal. Mahi…”

“What happened to Mahi?”

Antara barely managed to make herself intelligible, “Mahi is missing.”

“What? Where are you?”

“At Phoenix mall. Mahi… She was here… Just…”

“Talk to the security. Tell them to make announcements and look for her. I am leaving for Phoenix mall right now… Stay calm…”

But how could she stay calm? Where was her baby? How scared she must be? How did she just disappear? Antara managed to talk to the head of security at the mall and a frantic search started. They checked out every nook and corner of the mall. Shops, play area, restaurants, food court, bathrooms… Multiple announcements were made asking people to look out for a two and a half-year old girl, wearing a pale-blue frock, matching hairband and shoes. By the time Mrinal arrived, it was clear that police will need to be called in. It was probably a deliberate kidnapping and not just the child wandering off.

“How can that…” Antara was dying with worry and guilt. “She was there… Just a minute back she was there…”

“Where did it happen?” Mrinal asked, himself sick with worry, but trying to keep a cool head.

“We came out of that grocery store and went to the baggage counter to pick up the stored bags… She was holding my dupatta. And…. Then the moment I looked back after picking up the bags, she was not there…” Antara broke into pitiful sobs. “Where… is… she…” she kept asking through her sobs.

Police came and started with watching the CCTV recording that covered the baggage counter. At around the time mentioned by Antara, they could see her and Mahi coming to the counter. Then as Antara waited for the bags, they saw Mahi looking at someone, who could not be seen on camera. She hesitated, but then moved away from Antara.  Then the camera lost her.

Antara looked on anxiously as the police officers tried to get more information. “Any enemies? Anybody who would like to harm either of you?”

Mrinal shook his head. On the verge of a breakdown, he was no longer talking. Then he looked at Antara. Antara also shook her head.

Some officers started talking to other visitors in the mall, while couple of them decided to start looking at the CCTV footage of all the exits after Mahi was last seen with Antara.

“I will also see those,” Antara said.

“Ma’am. There are multiple exits. Two of us will look at the two different footages in parallel. And it will take a lot of time.”

“I will do it. I will sit with one of you. I will recognize her better.”

For several hours Antara sat with one of the officers. She would sometimes be called by the other to see if someone they had spotted was Mahi. Mrinal meanwhile accompanied the other set of officers in canvassing the mall and nearby areas.

The officers viewing the CCTV footage were on a break when Mrinal came back, looking dejected and forlorn. Antara had not abandoned her station though. She was going through the footages watched by the other officer, whom she had not accompanied earlier.

“That’s her!” she shouted and Mrinal rushed to her. “Mrinal. That’s her. In different clothes.” The quality of CCTV footage was bad. But Mrinal peered in and concurred with Antara.

“You are right,” he said cautiously, almost willing himself to not get too hopeful lest the hopes be crushed.

“The officer didn’t realize because she changed her clothes…” Their attention shifted to the woman on whose shoulders Mahi was asleep. “It’s a woman. It’s a kidnapping. Who is she?” The woman was looking down and the angle of the camera was such that her face was obscured by her hair and Mahi slung over on her shoulder.

Mrinal frowned. Antara looked at him. Was he able to place her… “What?” she asked.

“It’s weird… But she… she reminds me of… Raksha. The hairstyle… And height…”

Antara looked back at the paused footage. The hairstyle and the woman’s height was reminding her of someone else… But why… And a thought struck her. “I need to see a photo of Raksha ji.”

“They would be in the store-room probably…” Mrinal replied. He was focused on the image on screen. If only he could see the woman from another angle!

“Something online? Somewhere?”

Mrinal handed her his phone. “Check my flickr account. Probably in some old private albums.”

Antara grabbed it and started browsing through the albums. The officers had come in meanwhile. Mrinal showed them the image and told them about his suspicion of it being Raksha, his first wife.

“Your first wife?”

Mrinal explained, as calmly as he could, their history.

“You are talking about her real mother?” one of the officers asked looking incredulous.

“Her biological mother. Real mothers don’t do what she did.”

“Her full name?”

“She would go by Raksha Malhotra,” Mrinal said, “Or Raksha Agarwal. Or…” he took a deep breath as he took the name of her lover, “Raksha Singhania.”

“It’s her!” Antara cried.

“Who?” Mrinal and the officers asked in chorus.

Antara rubbed her forehead trying to get her thoughts together. Then she explained, “She came to my office, consulted me using a false name. What was the name… Yes… Priya… Priyal Malhotra – that was the name she had told me.”

“Oh God!” It was premeditated. That well-planned! Mrinal couldn’t believe it. He had come to terms with her betrayal and insensitivity. But now she had turned into a criminal too? Abducting the daughter who she had mercilessly abandoned as an infant? “I should talk to her parents…” he mumbled and made to dial the number. He hadn’t kept in touch, but knew that they were still in the city.

“Wait Mr. Agarwal. Are you sure they are not involved? It would be better if we did it our way,” the senior officer interrupted him.

He looked incredulous at the idea. “They can’t be… But… now I don’t believe anyone. Please note down their number and address.”

“And I think you should go home now. Your being out won’t help. As soon as we find something, we will call you.”

“I don’t know how to apologize to you, Mrinal,” Antara said while they were driving home, “When I will never be able to forgive myself.” And with that despite the hope they had about Raksha’s lead, she broke down.

Mrinal stopped the car and looked at her for a moment. She had been berating herself so hard that he hadn’t said anything unkind to her. But he realized that he had not been particularly reassuring either. They both were worried and sad, but she was carrying the additional burden of guilt!

“Antara. It wasn’t your fault.”

“It was my fault. It was my fault. If I hadn’t been careless…”

“It wasn’t your fault, Antara,” he repeated and pulled her towards himself across the gearbox. “Calm down. It will be all right. She would be all right… We will find her. Raksha can’t just disappear…”

And then he started crying himself.  But they got hold of themselves after a while and drove back home.

To be continued

Next-door (Variation) (Part 8)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

“No,” he turned serious, “I am damn serious. I love you, Antara. Don’t ever be a thickhead about it again.”

Then he lied back on the bed and pulled her closer to him.

“Just a minute,” she remembered something, reached out for the drawer of the side table, took out an envelope and handed it to him.

“What is it?”

“Parikshit had sent this on our one-month anniversary.”

Mrinal opened the envelope. Inside it was a coupon for one night at the presidential suite of a five-star hotel in the city. Amongst the amenities included in the package, there was baby-sitting service as well.

“It is still valid,” Antara explained even as her face turned crimson, “Next week is our six-month-anniversary. So, I thought…. If you have time that is…” She stopped as she noticed him looking guilty and perplexed. “What… what happened?” she stammered. Did she do something wrong?

“I… just realized that… Antara. You helped me with all my social obligations and issues. It couldn’t have been so easy on me, if you hadn’t cooperated… Not just cooperated but actively worked to socialize with all my friends and make it all comfortable for me. I never asked about you… What did you, for example, tell your cousin about this gift all these days?”

“Why would I tell him anything, Mrinal ji? He is my younger brother. I mean… he is not going to ask me about…” she paused, but Mrinal stayed silent. “Let’s just put this back if it disturbs you so much,” she added, slightly disappointed.

“No! Oh God… I’m just… I’m so at loss about so many things right now. Antara. All I want to say is that if there are things I haven’t asked you about, if there are things that have been difficult because of me, you can tell me now.”

“Mrinal ji. The only person I had to lie to was your mother. She kept asking me, every weekend, when she called me or I did, and I kept telling her that everything was fine. She insisted that I send a photograph of the three of us together. You, me and Mahi. I…”

“What?”

“I edited one and sent it,” she gulped nervously as she said that. But Mrinal did not seem bothered about that at all.

“What about your family?”

“The only one who genuinely takes interest in my life is Parikshit. And he is younger to me. He can’t ask much even if he wants to.”

“What about others?”

Antara replied in slow, deliberate and low voice, “I am an orphan, Mrinal ji. Luckier than many others that Chachaji and Chachiji thought they were sufficiently well off and did not think that I was a financial burden. But willingness to spend money isn’t the same thing as caring.”

Mrinal looked sad. He kept the coupon on the side table and held her. “And then you got married to me? Someone who didn’t care either?”

“I had my priorities and I took my chances.”

“What were those?”

“Over time – I had learned to live without love. It was not that difficult. And then Parikshit was there. His genuine attachment to me compensated for many other things, I believe. What I could not come to terms with was not being treated with dignity. Like I told you earlier today, whatever I had known about you, I had hoped that you would grant me that. A basic dignity. And you did! You weren’t sure about this marriage and you honestly told me on our wedding night that we didn’t know each other and implicitly admitted the limitations it introduced. Someone else could still have used me, even without the acceptance or the emotional connect. Most men I know wouldn’t have bothered about these things, Mrinal ji. You did. And do you really want me to repeat all the praise I have already heaped on you?”

“You have seen good in everything that could be bad about me, Antara. Today I promise that I will do whatever it takes to make you happy in future. Shall I keep this?” he pointed towards the coupon, “I will get the reservations done.”

Antara nodded with moist eyes. Then she said, “I had learned to live without love. But that doesn’t mean that I am not supremely happy to get it.”

“Then you should forget about how to live without love.  Till I am alive, you won’t live without it, Antara. I promise.”

2 years later

“So, tell me Priya. What brings you here?” Antara made her new client comfortable and started the conversation. Her practice had grown in last two years. She had rented an office and no longer worked from home. “All kinds of people come to the office now,” she had explained to Mrinal, “I don’t like the idea of them coming home.” She had also hired a full-time assistant to manage her appointments and also to manage office.

“I am not happy. In my marriage.”

“What makes you unhappy?”

“He is selfish, self-centered.”

Antara sighed inwardly. Ever since her client profile had expanded to include adults, unhappy-with-marriage type were all too common. Some had genuine issues, but for most others, Antara was surprised at how naïve people could get. Why was it so difficult for them to understand that two different people cannot always think or feel the same way. Some differences were inevitable and everyone had to live with them. The only time she and Mrinal had not fought was in the first six months of their marriage; when they did not have any relationship!!  Since then every little thing had given them the reason to fight at one point of time or the other. Mrinal spending too much time in the bathroom, Antara getting late with her clients, one of them scolding Mahi and the other finding it unreasonable, or even one of them buying something for Mahi and the other thinking that it would spoil her! The best part of the fights was the make-up though. Antara effortfully stopped herself from blushing and brought her thoughts back to her client.

“How so?”

“In many ways.”

“Tell me about it. Some example…”

“He doesn’t want me to talk about my past. But I can’t just… That past is a part of me. I can’t just cast it aside.”

“Is it something unpleasant?”

“Well… Nothing he doesn’t know about. This is my second marriage.”

“Hmm… Why did the first marriage end?”

“It wasn’t working out…”

Antara had such a natural urge to raise her eyebrows. She was unhappy in her first marriage too! And ended it because of that? ‘Be professional,’ she told herself as she often did in such moments, ‘Don’t be judgemental.’

She probed her, tried to make her think objectively about her life and people – what had been her role in both her relationships? Could she have done something to make it better? She wasn’t particularly hopeful about her though. ‘Lacks empathy,’ she wrote in her notes. Not something she would tell her. But she needed a reference for herself; it helped in subsequent sessions.

Priya was her last client before lunch. So, they came out together. Mahi, now a two and a half year old toddler was busy in her baby talks with Antara’s assistant. Shyama must have brought her back from the play school. Antara brightened up on seeing her.

“Arre! Look who is here,” she went to the child and picked her up in her arms. “Come here, come here. Come to Mamma. What did Mahi do in school today?”

“Played in garden,” Mahi responded and then giggled for some reason. She hid her face in Antara’s shoulders. Antara realized that she had noticed a stranger.

“This is my daughter, Mahi,” she introduced her to Priya. “Mahi. Say hello to Priya Auntie!” The child kept giggling and refused to look up. “Silly girl. Is Mahi a silly girl? Or is she a smart girl? Come on now… say hello.”

Even as she was talking to her daughter, Antara did not miss the strange expressions on Priya’s face. She looked overwhelmed and uneasy.

“Hello,” Mahi quickly looked up and then went back to hiding her face.

“She is being such a drama queen,” Antara tried to sound apologetic, but her fondness for Mahi was obvious and she was almost feeling proud at her antics.

“Lovely child,” Priya said, and ran her hands over Mahi’s hair once. Antara noticed that her hands were trembling. What was the matter? She had said that she didn’t have any children. Such emotional reaction to a child pointed to some complication. Was there a history of miscarriage or abortion, Antara wondered. She would have to find out next time.

“Mahi hungry…” They heard the child mumble.

“Hungry? Let’s go and eat then. What will you eat for lunch?” Antara asked as Priya silently waved her ‘bye’ and started leaving.

“Dairy Milk.”

“Dairy Milk, indeed. Listen to our princess. Dairy Milk is not food, Sweetie. We will have roti, and rice and dal.”

“Dairy Milk,” Mahi repeated.

“Not now, Mahi.”

To be continued

Next-door (Variation) (Part 7)

Posted 3 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

Antara looked at the clock and noticed the time. “Oh! It’s eight already. I need to be online…”

“To talk to your friend?” Mrinal asked. He wanted her to stay with him. He expected that. This was too important a time in their lives for her to go away to talk to her friend, even though it was now clear that the friend was not his rival!

“Friend? That was… Didn’t I tell you? It was just an alibi. This is when I talk to my… clients? The students…”

“Right!” Mrinal shook his head wondering what all had he misread, “I should have thought of that.”

“I’m sorry. But this is an appointment. I must…” Antara explained sensing his desire. She also shared it! She would have to restructure her day. Even though she was no longer doing it under wraps, she hadn’t shifted these sessions with her earlier clients to the working hours. She would have to do that.

“Yes. Of course. Don’t worry. I will still be here,” a fond smile broke on his lips.

“Mahi needs food,” she told him.

“I’ll manage. You go ahead.”

They finished their dinner, put Mahi to bed and then came out on the verandah. They still had a lot to talk about. They sat down on the floor, side by side, sprawled against a wall and looking out at the dark sky. It was a moonless night. Mrinal put his arm around Antara. She shivered, but stayed put.

“So, I think I need to thank this stalker of yours. If not for him, we’d never have talked.”

But she looked worried, “It isn’t funny, Mrinal ji. He is completely disillusioned. He just manages to fit reality in his illusions. Despite my rejection today, he would probably have concluded that I pretended to not recognize him, or not like him, because I was scared of you; or something like that. I know what his problem is. It is called erotomania. Believing that someone is in love with you. But who is going to take him to a psychologist?”

“Antara. Don’t worry,” he looked her in the eyes, “If he creates any troubles, I will do whatever it takes to get rid of him. Police, security, hiring goons, whatsoever.” Antara noticed how self-confident he was as he said that. The confidence that had been snatched away from him by Raksha’s betrayal. His life, again, had a purpose. And she? She had a confidant for the first time in her life. And she had her love!

They stayed silent for a while; then Antara broke it. “Mrinal ji. I just want to apologize. I hurt you today by mentioning her again and again. It was mean of me…”

He turned to her and replied, “You can hurt me as much as you want. I deserve all the punishment for ignoring you for so long. What you shouldn’t do is compare yourself to her.”

Antara gulped. She couldn’t measure up to Raksha, then!

“She didn’t think twice before abandoning her new-born baby,” he continued, “And you didn’t think twice before accepting someone else’s baby right from your wedding night. She left me when I loved her. You accepted me when I was a jilted lover, broken to the core, in love with someone else, with all my past and baggage. There is no comparison. Jealous of her? You? Doesn’t make sense, Antara.”

“Can I ask then,” Antara blinked back her tears as she spoke, “Why did you never tell me how you felt about me?”

“I don’t know. Things didn’t happen overnight, did they? Initially, I was too absorbed in my miseries. I couldn’t even figure out what this marriage meant to me, to you. And then when I discovered you as a person, when I started respecting you so much… It was just difficult to believe that life can still be good to me. Somewhere I was convinced that it was a mirage, and if I tried to reach out, it would fall apart. ”

“Can you be happy with me?” she asked in a quivering voice.

He gathered her in his arms and kissed her forehead. “What do you think?” his voice was heavy.

“Say it,” she insisted.

“I will show you,” he said as he put one of his hands at the back of her head for safety, and lowered her on the bare floor.

“Mrinal ji,” she protested as he kissed her face all over.

“Am I being hasty?” he asked patiently even as his voice was thick with arousal.

“Someone might come here,” she was merely uncomfortable about the place.

Nobody would have. All the house helps were already in their respective room for the night and those rooms were not attached to the main house. Raksha wouldn’t have minded either way. “I’d do what I want. If someone has a problem, they should look the other way,” she would have said. Didn’t he love her attitude? But Antara wasn’t Raksha. And it was a good thing. He wouldn’t try to mould her into Raksha-sans-the-irresponsibility. He would love her for what she was. For being a rock-solid support for him; and for her shyness. He already did.

“Let’s get a room, then,” he said and helped her get up.

Mahi was fast asleep in her crib. He closed the door and pressed her against it. As if he did not have the patience to go to the bed. She did not offer any resistance as he kissed and caressed her body and had a tough time suppressing her moans.

“I don’t know how I have stopped myself all these days,” he whispered in her ears, “You can’t possibly have an idea just how beautiful you are.”

This unabashed approval touched something deep in her and tears started flowing down her cheeks as she clutched him and hugged him.

“What happened?” he asked concerned.

“Nothing bad,” she replied smiling through her tears.

“That’s good,” he replied, as he finally led her to the bed. He was afraid that he might get too rough and hurt her against the door. Bed was safer!

She thought it was a miracle that Mahi hadn’t woken up by the time they were finished. They had made a lot of noise despite trying their best to suppress it.

Mrinal took some time to catch his breath and then propped himself up on his arms to look at her directly. She blushed heavily. “What happened?” she asked.

He ran his palms against her cheeks and replied, “I ignored you initially. And even when I could no longer ignore you, I kept away. I didn’t give you what you deserved, Antara. I’m sorry for that. And if it is any consolation, I have hurt myself in the process too. It has been a punishment for me too.”

“Mrinal ji. It is true that I am happier today than I have ever remember being in my life. But in last six months, you have always given me more than I had expected. I was afraid you wouldn’t trust me with Mahi. You did. I wasn’t sure you would share your feelings with me. You did — when you honestly shared with me your dilemma of how to explain your situation to people in your social circle. I hadn’t thought you would take my advice seriously. You did. I hadn’t thought that you would willingly introduce me to all those people. You did. And I had absolutely not thought that you would take my career so seriously. Nobody had. But you did that too. I have been a thickhead too. I took it all to be your kindness. Never thought that it could be…” her voice trailed. Should she use the word? He hadn’t.

He waited for a moment to see if she would continue. “Love?” he completed the sentence for her with a question, when she didn’t.

She just smiled in reply. He smiled back. “Yes. That is convenient for me,” he bent down and kissed her on forehead, “Because I have been in love with you since… well… I don’t know when it happened. But you were the thickhead to not have realized it. Absolutely! I haven’t been an idiot. Not at all.”

“Are you making fun of me?”

To be continued

Next-door (Variation) (Part 6)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

Antara thought for a moment. She recalled that he had just acknowledged that she had been of use to him. “I don’t know what I would have done without you,” he had said. This emboldened her. She went close to him and held his hands. The gesture surprised him. She looked down at their hands as she spoke. “It has been over five years, but I haven’t forgotten that incident. I never will. It was my usual route while coming back from the college. Pretty close to home, but I was still terrified near that street. A group of boys was ever-present there, and I used to be so scared of them. That day I felt like they would not just stop at eve-teasing from far, but would actually molest me. I ran as fast as I could and ran into someone… He was my neighbor. At least his parents were. He did not know that. He didn’t know me either. He didn’t stay at home much; had always stayed away for studies or job. And his mother constantly complained about how disconnected he was from the family and how disinterested in the society around him. I mumbled an apology and he asked if I was all right. I looked back at the boys and he understood. He smiled. It was a condescending smile, but I didn’t mind that because of what he told me next. He told me that those were just confused kids, not some hard-core criminals. What they needed was someone to give them a tight slap. By getting scared and running away I was making them feel the power they didn’t have. And that more often than not, the source of fear is inside us, not outside. But despite the preaching, he did walk by my side for a while and only after I was safely away from the street did he go back. The next day I did precisely what he had told me. I asked one of them to come with me. And as soon as he came closer, I gave him a tight slap. I was never bothered by them again.”

She looked up to see astonishment in Mrinal’s face. She smiled weakly at him. “If you remember the incident, yes, that girl was me. If you don’t… Well that girl was still me. I know it sounds corny, but that was a defining moment for me. There was a lot more that I stopped fearing. Like Chachiji and her admonitions. I wasn’t exactly declaring independence there. It was more difficult than just slapping a teenager. But even the idea of lying to her to do the counselling course… Or running a service online…”

“That sounds like a confident, brave man you had run into. I am not that man. Not any longer.”

“You still are that caring and that understanding man. And you know how to love, whosoever you love. That is all that matters to me. Is it so difficult to believe?”

“It was much easier for me to believe that you had someone else – more deserving – in your life. It was much was easier for me to believe that letter…”

“Letter? Is that how… You read his letters?” she looked surprised and let go of his hands.

“I don’t want to imagine how that sounds. But when I felt that you were hiding something, and were not willing to discuss it with me, and when I found that letter in the bathroom cabinet, I could not stop myself. I am sorry…”

She sighed, “If you have read any of his letters I can’t blame you for believing him. His delusions are complete and coherent. Trust me, Mrinal ji, I didn’t even know him…”

“You don’t need to explain.”

She nodded and looked disappointed.

He understood the look. “But you also need to talk, don’t you?”

“I have been terrified. It has been over a year since he started stalking… I had to close my facebook account, change my e-mail id, phone number… Nothing worked…” her voice quivered as her eyes moistened.

“You never told anyone at home?”

Chachiji would not have believed that I was a victim. She would have blamed me for doing things to attract attention from boys. Especially with those stories of his… You also believed them…”

“Antara. I am sorry that I never inspired enough confidence in you to share your problems with me. But trust me. I would have believed you if you had told me. It’s just that I saw the letter first. And I was so… insecure… It was easy for me to believe that you had been pressurized by your family for this marriage and that you weren’t given a choice.”

“I had a choice, if you must know.”

He looked at her questioningly.

“I had a choice,” she continued, “Of marrying a man, who didn’t have a past so-to-say, not like you. No infants to take care of. But whom I knew a bit too well. He wanted a wife because that is what everyone did. Get a good-looking wife at home — decked up in expensive clothes and jewelry with the family money — who he could show off to his friends, and who would keep his kitchen and bed warm. One who wouldn’t question why he was a womanizer and a drunkard, while pretending to be this obedient, samskaari son at home. The other option was marrying a man I admired. From that incident and from all the complaints his mother heaped on him. I knew that I may never be able to win his love. But I did think I would have a dignified life with him. And till now… I haven’t been proven wrong.

“Antara!”

“I am talking too much today… But none of this means that you have any obligation towards me…”

“Could you be… happy with me, Antara?” His anticipation and anxiety were impossible to miss, as he cautiously asked that.

“Jealous and bitter as I sometimes feel about her… it still doesn’t stop me from wanting to be here, with you.”

“Jealous and bitter? You? Are you even capable of such lowly emotions?” she saw him smiling through his tears.

“I am a mere mortal.”

“Mere mortal with infinite ability to keep her emotions under lid? You never talked to me, Antara. Never told me any of this.” He moved closer and held her by arms.

A complaint would never have been sounded so much like music to anyone’s ears earlier. “I had married a man whom I admired. But he was also the one who had never noticed me even as his neighbour. And the one who was in love with someone else. And broken as a jilted lover. It didn’t look like that he needed me even for the purported purpose of this marriage — looking after his daughter. I had to learn even the diaper-changing from him. What could I have said? Silence was awkward, but proclamation of love wasn’t exactly going to be… You were not the only one who was insecure. And yet, despite knowing what I had chosen, I couldn’t help hoping… That someday… you will notice me…” she confessed.

His hands moved up her arms, to her shoulders and neck, until they finally cupped her face. She shivered and closed her eyes. He bent down and pressed his lips against hers. She didn’t resist as he hungrily plundered her mouth. Suddenly they heard Mahi cry and withdrew. Mrinal looked perplexed, while Antara chuckled at the situation. Mrinal also smiled after her and together they walked towards the bed. Mahi was trying to reach a toy hanging from the baby gym, which had somehow been tangled up and had gone beyond her reach. Antara untangled it, and the baby was happy to be playing with it again.

To be continued

Next-door (Variation) (Part 5)

Posted 3 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

Mrinal felt unsure of the entire idea, when he met Shashank. He was a short, stocky man, who looked anxious and fidgety. He would look around sheepishly as if seeking approval from people around him. Mrinal just couldn’t think of him as a match for the calm, dignified and self-composed Antara. But he shouldn’t go by the external appearances. How he looked could convey nothing about what he was like as a person. His anxiety might just be a result of unusual circumstances. You didn’t have a meeting with your lover’s spouse every day, as Antara would have put it.

“Hi!” Antara looked up from the magazine she was reading, when Mrinal reached home with Shashank. But she showed no signs of recognizing Shashank.  She waited for Mrinal to introduce them. Was she capable of so much deception?

Mrinal looked at Shashank, who cleared his throat and smiled at Antara. “Antara. It has been so long…”

Antara frowned, but tried to smile politely, “I… I’m sorry. But do we know each other?”

“There is no need to pretend any longer, Antara. He knows… and understands…” Shashank took a step towards her and she recoiled.

“What.. what’s going on, Mrinal ji?” she addressed him, “Who is he?”

Mrinal was alarmed now. He came closer so that he could come between Shashank and Antara if needed. “You don’t know him? Shashank?”

Her eyes widened in horror and she looked anxiously from Mrinal to Shashank and back. “How did you… What did he tell you… Oh God!” She sounded miserable; but then her voice turned stern and she shouted at Shashank, “Leave. Now!”

“Antara. Why are you doing this? This is the time to set everything all right…” Shashank moved further towards her. But Mrinal came in between.

“Call the security. Make him leave right away,” she addressed Mrinal this time, still sounding mad.

“Let’s go,” Mrinal took Shashank away himself. He wasn’t physically strong. Mrinal did not feel any threat on that count.

“She is just shy and nervous,” Shashank tried to reason with Mrinal on his way out, “Let me talk to her alone.”

“Later!” Mrinal replied, “You should leave now.”

“I will wait outside.”

“Don’t do anything like that. Leave now.”

“I’m not leaving.”

“Don’t make me call the security,” Mrinal glared at him and he cowered.

Antara was pacing up and down the hall when Mrinal returned. She was furious. Mrinal was already confused to the core. When she came charging at him and started hitting him on the chest, he could do nothing but stand motionless. It wasn’t hurting him physically. In fact, in a strange way, this was the most intimate contact they had ever had.

“Do you have any idea what you have done? You have brought a disillusioned stalker home,” she cried.

“Antara. I…”

“How could you do this? You have a baby at home. Did you think of her safety before bringing a stranger home like that? Did you think of my safety? Your own?” she had stepped away from him now, but her anger showed no signs of subsiding.

Mrinal just stared agape. He had pictured lovers reuniting at the end of this evening. This was going totally astray.

“I want a safe home for myself, for my family. I don’t care what your free-spirited ex-wife would have thought….” She suddenly fell silent, realizing how mean and inappropriate her words became with the mention of Raksha. They were standing in the hall. Anybody, Shayama, the cook or other house help could have come in. It was just a lucky coincidence that none of them were in the house right now.

But Shyama did come back just then with Mahi. She had taken her out as was their regular routine. But Mahi had started crying. “I think it’s the teething troubles, Didi,” Shyama started explaining as she brought Mahi to Antara, but she hesitated when she noticed the state she was in. Something was definitely the matter the way Mrinal and Antara were standing and looking at each other. Shayama hesitated, “But don’t worry. I will take care of her…”

“No,” Antara replied. Although she regretted her outburst, she was still very angry with Mrinal, “Let me take her. At least she trusts me, even without the power of understanding.”

Without sparing even a glance at Mrinal, she walked to the bedroom. After Shayama left to go to her room, Mrinal ran after Antara. Antara washed one of her hands, while still carrying Mahi with the other; and then gently massaged her gums with the clean hand. It soothed the baby’s gums. She looked around for a teether. Mrinal fetched one and brought it to her. He looked like a young child trying to please an angry parent. After Mahi calmed down, Antara laid her down on her baby gym. Soon, she got busy with the toys hanging around her. Antara left her to play, and sat down on a chair. All this time, she did not acknowledge Mrinal’s presence in the room.

“I messed up, didn’t I?” Mrinal finally broke the silence. He was standing at some distance against a wall.

“I didn’t even know him by face. Whatever you suspected, couldn’t you have asked me first?”

“Antara… I…” he was at a loss for explanation.

“I know that you loved her, Mrinal ji,” she spoke in a deliberately controlled and low voice, and kept her eyes downcast, “You loved Raksha ji. You probably still do. And you will probably never be able to love me. Our marriage happened in the circumstances that were not acceptable to you. Still I have to ask. In all these months that we have spent under the same roof, did I not give you any reason to put at least a little bit of trust in me?”

Mrinal stayed silent. Things had gone haywire as it is. To top that Antara was repeatedly talking about Raksha, comparing herself with her, reminding him of all he wanted to forget, things that wore him down. This wasn’t something she often did. Why now!

“Or has my presence in your life become so intolerable that you are just waiting for an honourable reason to get rid of me?”

She looked up when he still did not say anything and was shocked to see silent tears running down in cheeks.

“Oh my God!” she got up worried, “What have I done… I… I am sorry… Mrinal ji.”

“No. I am sorry. I am not supposed to break down. I am a father, a husband… a man… I am not supposed to be weak…”

“No. That’s not how it works. Everyone is allowed to be weak… When life doles out such… I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have reminded you of her…”

“I don’t know what I would have done without you, Antara,” he burst forth with a completely unexpected declaration for her. “Yes. I was a broken man. I still am. You are right that I had loved her. Despite all the troubles in our married life, I had loved her. Probably marrying so early had been a mistake on my part. But that didn’t change the fact that I had loved her. For all her free-spiritedness, I hadn’t seen this coming. Not after Mahi…”

Tears continued to fall down his cheeks even as he wiped them.

“You have never talked about it, have you?” she asked in a soft, concerned voice.

He shook his head, “But why do you care, Antara? Why should you care? I had loved her and she didn’t care… Why should you?”

To be continued