Distance of Age (Part 3)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Fan Fiction, Hinglish, Maneet (GHSP)

Maan was overwhelmed and his eyes were moist, “Bas Geet. Aur kuchh kahne ki zaroorat nahin hai. Main pagal tha Geet. Please mujhe maaf kar do.”

“Aaj bolne dijiye Maan. Mere college ke doston mein se koi soch bhi nahin sakta 18 saal ki umra mein shaadi karne ki, kyonki usse unki zindagi bandh jayegi. Shayad theek hi sochte hain. Lekin Maan, maine to bachpan se azaadi ke koi sapne dekhe hi nahin the. Mujhe to yahi sikhaya gaya tha ki mujhe 18 saal ki umra mein shaadi kar ke kissi ghar mein ek machine ki tarah rahna hoga. Jise jo kaha jaye sun le, jo kaha jaye kar le. Aur jo na kaha jaye woh karne ki soche bhi nahin. Jaise meri maa aur bhabhi rahte hain. Lekin main special thi Maan. 18 saal ki umra mein shaadi kar ke mujhe aisi azaadi mili hai, jiska koi andaza bhi nahin laga sakta. Ladkiyon ko shaadi karne se dar lagta hai kyonki unhein lagta hai ki unhein dabaya jayega. Mujhe to aapne hi sar utha kar jeena sikhaya hai, sachchai ke liye duniya se ladna sikhaya hai. Mere saath sab kuchh alag sa hua hai Maan. Main sabse alag hoon. Aur ismein mujhe koi sharmindgi nahin hai. Balki mujhe garv hai. Bahut khush hoon main ki main aapki patni hoon. Geet Khurana. Maan ki Geet, jo apni sharton par zindagi jee sakti hai. Maan ki wajah se.”

Geet took Maan’s hand in hers and pressed it. Then she smiled slightly and continued, “Pata hai Maan, sab ladkiyan mujhse kitna jalti hain. Malini bhi. Sab kahti hain ki unhein aapke jaisa jeevan-saathi chahiye. Lekin jab woh batati hain ki unke sapno ka ladka kaisa hoga to mujhe pata chalta hai aap mein jo kuchh hai, uska i tna sa hissa bhi unhein nahin chahiye – sapne mein bhi nahin. Unke sapne bahut chhote hain Maan. Main unka kya karoongi? Aur kya chahiye un sabko? Sabko life mein settle hona hai, achchha jeevan-saathi dhoondhna hai, apna ghar basana hai, khush rahna hai. Mere paas ye sab hai, aur usse bhi zyada. Dubara meri zindagi ko unse compare mat kijiyega Maan. Ye meri kismat ka apmaan hoga, jo mujh par bahut meharbaan hai. Mujhe usne aisa jeevan-saathi diya hai jo mere liye bhagwaan se bhi badh kar hai. Mujhe to bhagwaan ko bhi dhoondhne ki zaroorat nahin hai.”

He pulled her into a hug, “I am sorry Geet. Dubara aisa galti se bhi nahin sochoonga. Lekinn tum bhi mujhe bhagwaan banana band karo. Pahle khud hi bhagwaan banati ho aur phir khud hi gussa hoti ho ki main khud ko antaryaami kyon samajhta hoon.”

Geet smiled in the hug and then said, “Ek baat aur Maan. Aapke man mein jo bhi baat aati hai, please mujhe bataya kijiye. Aap akele mein kyon ghutte rahte hain. Main aapki patni hoon Maan. Koi bachchi nahin.”

Maan broke the hug, but kept his arms around her and looked at her naughtily, “Mujhe pata hai Geet ki tum bachchi nahin ho. Aur abhi samay aa gaya hai ki tumse bade logon waale kuchh kaam karwaye jayen.” Saying this he picked her up in his arms and took her to the bed.

“Maan! Ye aap kya kar rahe hain?” Geet asked nervously as he put her on the bed.

Maan took off his tie and threw it on the chair lying nearby, while he continued to look at Geet with suddenly aroused hunger in his eyes, “Ye mujhe tumhein batana padega Geet? Shaadi ke itne mahinon baad bhi?”

“Maan… Woh… Dadi Ma… ko aapse milna tha…”

“Aur tumhein Geet?” Maan had taken off his waistcoat by then and opened a few top buttons of the shirt too.

Just then they heard a knock on the door and Dadi Ma called Geet, “Geet beta.” Geet panicked, got down from the bed and ran towards the door. The door was shut, but not locked; so even Maan was flustered. Geet looked back at Maan nervously before opening the door and understanding her worry Maan walked into the bathroom. That would explain his state of undress to Dadi Ma.

“Geet bete. Maan aa gaye kya?” Dadi Ma walked in as soon as Geet opened the door.

“Ji Dadi Ma. Woh bathroom mein hain.”

“Are aapne unhein Mr. Garg ke invitation ke baare mein bataya ki nahin.”

Geet had completely forgotten about it in the emotional roller-coaster of last one hour. She spoke nervously, “Nahin Dadi Ma. Woh abhi abhi aaye hain. Thake hue the. Main bas abhi batane hi waali thi…”

Maan came out of the bathroom wiping his face with a towel and interrupted Geet’s blabberings, “Kya baat hai Dadi Ma?”

“Maan beta. Aap lagataar meetings mein the to hum aapko phone kar ke bata nahin paye. Mr. Garg ke yahan party hai, unka beta US ke apni padhai poori kar ke wapas aaya hai.  Isliye…”

“Dadi Ma! Hum wahan ja kar kya karenge?”

“Maan! Hum aapse poochh nahin rahe hain. Aapko bata rahe hain ki aap logon ko wahan jaana hai. Society mein bhi hamari kuchh zimmedariyan hoti hain. Aur ab is umra mein woh sab hum nahin nibha sakte. Ab ye zimmedariyan aap uthayenge, samjhe aap?”

“Maan! Dadi Ma theek kah rahi hain,” Geet said gently.

Maan glared at her, but agreed, “Theek hai Dadi Ma.” He was too hungry for his lovely wife to feel like going anywhere.

They got ready for the party in silence. Maan could not help but stare at Geet lustfully when she was draping her black Saree. The contrast of the Saree’s color against her fair skin appeared to be inviting a sensuous touch. But when Geet looked at him, he pretended to be angry about the interruption in his intended tryst with his wife.

Geet kept looking at him anxiously as he drove the car. He showed no signs of mellowing down.

“Maan.”

“Hmm”

“Aap gussa hain?”

Maan just glared at her once again and did not reply. Geet’s anxiety increased.

They located the hosts as soon as they entered the party and exchanged pleasantaries.

“Hello Mrs. Khurana. You are looking really hot today,” the jovial Mr. Garg complimented Geet and she could feel Maan clutching her hands hard and almost squirming. She knew her possessive husband and given his already bad mood she decided to lead him away by gracefully ending the conversation with Mr. Garg.

Geet was feeling thirsty. So, they headed towards the bar to get some fruit-juice for her. But they came across a client and he started talking to Maan. So, Geet asked him to stay while she got the juice from the bar. The bar was within sight and Maan let her go. When he finished his conversation with the client, he looked for Geet and saw someone talking to her.

“Can I invite you for a dance?” Maan overheard the guy saying as he reached Geet with long strides.

“No! She is with me,” he replied before Geet could say anything and without giving him the chance to respond, he dragged her away.

“Maan. Itni buri tarah se baat karne ki kya zaroorat thi. Main bhi to mana karne hi waali thi na?”

He again didn’t reply; instead just gave her an angry glare. She realized that there was no talking reasonably to him today and shut up. That she was getting too much attention from people in the party, thanks to her lovely looks in the black Saree, was not helping Maan’s mood. When he told her that they would go back home, she did not argue against it; just gently adviced him to inform the hosts before leaving. Thankfully he agreed to do that. When Mr. Garg wondered about why they were leaving so early, Geet had to come to the rescue by making an alibi, “Woh Dadi Ma ghar par akeli hain. Servants bhi chhutti par gaye hue hain. Isliye hamein wapas jaana zaroori hai.”

To be continued

Distance of Age (Part 2)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in Fan Fiction, Hinglish, Maneet (GHSP)

Geet didn’t have any classes that day; so she stayed back at home. She had spent some time with Dadi Ma and rest of the time studying. She had wanted to go to the office with Maan. Working on some projects with him helped her in her studies too. But today Maan forbade her from coming as he was extremely busy and he couldn’t have spent time explaining things to her. As the time for his return from the office drew nearer, Geet’s longing for his company increased and she could no longer focus on her studies. She realized how much she was missing the days when they would be in the office together, all the time. She had to wait for three and half years more before those days would come back in her life again. She put away her books. Not knowing what to do until he returned, she absentmindedly went to the cupboard. She startd touching all his clothes and took out the shirt he had worn the day before. On a sudden urge, she smelled the shirt deeply and it made her feel his presence around her. Then she laughed at what she had just done and murmured, “Geet. Pagli ho gayi hai tu bhi. Jaldi aaiye na Maan.”

As she was putting the shirt back, she noticed a leather bound diary. Acting on her child-like curiosity, she picked up the diary and immediately turned the pages. When she noticed Maan’s handwriting, she did not think twice before deciding to read it. What could Maan have to hide from her?

“Jo 18 saal ki ladki apni job ke pahle din ek simple, green dress mein mere cabin mein aayi thi, jo mere na chahte hue bhi meri zindagi mein aise sama gayi jaise samandar mein nadi samati hai, uske saath kismat ne aisa khel khela tha ki majbooran woh apne 18 saalon se kahin zyada badi ho gayi thi. Use us zindagi ki chah hi nahin rah gayi thi jo ek 18 saal ki ladki ki honi chahiye. Maine bhi use jo diya woh usmein khush ho gayi. Maine bhi kabhi nahin socha ki uski zarooratein mujhse alag ho sakti hain. Kahin maine bahut badi galti to nahin kar di?”

“Geet apne doston ke saath movie dekhne nahin gayi. Use zaroor bura lag raha hoga, lekin meri wajah se woh ghar aa gayi. Shayad mujhe usse kahna chahiye tha ki woh chali jaye. Ya khud uske saath movie dekhne jaana chahiye tha. Lekin kya use mere saath ja kar mazaa aayega? Apni umra ke logon ke saath woh kitni khush rahti hai. Lekin main use lekar itna swarthi hoon ki jo bhi pal main uske saath bita sakta hoon, usmein use kissi aur ke saath jaane ko nahin kah pata. Main koshish kar sakta hoon use khush rakhne ki, lekin main uske doston ki tarah to nahin ban sakta. Meri zindagi mujhe us stage se bahut aage le aayi hai. Lekin Geet ne to abhi woh sab nahin dekha hai. Woh to us zindagi ko jeena chahti hogi. College, dost, masti – aur in sab ke beech uski shaadi, main, ye ghar? Pahle kismat ne use samay se pahle bada kar diya. Ab main bhi wahi to nahin kar raha?”

“Main dar gaya hoon ki kahin Geet badal na jaye. Kahin woh mujhse door na ho jaye. Woh Geet jise main jaanta hoon, aur jiski duniya mere chaaro or ghoomti hai, kahin kho na jaye. Agar aisa hota hai to Geet ke liye achchha hi hoga. Kyon woh samay se pahle badi ho? Use zindagi jeene, use enjoy karne ka haq hai. Lekin phir mera kya hoga? Pahli baar lag raha ki main uski khushi mein khush nahin ho paunga. Kya main itna swarthi hoon?”

Geet looked up with teary eyes towards to door to find Maan just entering the room. Maan panicked as soon as he saw tears in her eyes.

“Kya hua Geet?” he ran towards her and noticed the diary lying beisde her. He was taken by surprise and did not know what to say.

“Geet… Tumne…”

“Maan! Kya aapko sach much lagta hai ki main badal gayi hoon? Aut itna ki aap apne man ki baatein bhi mujhe nahin bata sakte?” Geet was choking on her words as she stood up to go near him.

“Nahin Geet. Aisa nahin hai. Please tum pareshaan mat ho. Ye mera pagalpan tha Geet…”

“Please mujhse jhooth mat boliye Maan. Aapko pata bhi hai ki jab aap apne man ki baat mujhe nahin batate to mujhe kitni takleef hoti hai. Aisa kya badal gaya hai Maan? Kya mere pyaar mein koi kami aa gayi hai?”

“Geet. Kuchh nahin badla hai. Tum mujhse utna hi pyaar karti ho – mujhe achchhe se pata hai. Lekin main dar gaya tha Geet.”

“Kyon?”

“Geet. Zindagi ne tumhein samay se pahle bada kar diya tha. Tumne mujhe waise apna liya jaisa main hoon. Tum meri umra ki zindagi jeene lagi Geet. Aur mujhe kabhi laga hi nahin ki ye natural nahin hai. Lekin jab tumhein tumhare doston ke saath dekha to laga ki har insaan to apni umra ke hisaab se zindagi jeeni chahiye na Geet. Tumhein tumhari umra mein jaise saathi ki zaroorat hai woh main kabhi nahin ban paunga. Ye faasla main nahin mita paunga. Aur tumhein kho kar main jee bhi nahin paunga. Main bahut dar gaya tha Geet,” Maan said everything in one breath, then looked away and added with embarrassment, “Main dara hua hoon Geet.”

“Nahin sudhrenge na aap? Kabhi nahin…”

“Geet!”

“Kabhi to mujhse poochh liya kijiye ki mujhe kya chahiye, meri khushi kismein hai? Padhte honge aap meri aankhein, lekin galti ho jati hai aapse. Koi antaryaami nahin hain aap.”

“Geet. Main…”

“Chup kijiye aap. Bilkul chup.”

Maan just stood there looking stupid, not knowing what to do or say while his sherni was roaring.

Geet started pacing up and down in front of him, as she started speaking at a speed no one other than Maan could have comprehended, “Kya chahte hain aap? Ki main apni umra ke doosre logon ki tarah rahoon. Kaise rahoon main unki tarah, jab mujhe usse bahut zyada ki aadat ho gayi hai?”

“Geet…”

“Chup chap meri baat suniye. Aapko pata bhi hai ki aaj jitna kuchh mere paas hai, jitni khushiyan meri zindagi mein hain, utne ka mere dost sapna bhi nahin dekhte hain. Main agar din bhar unke saath khush rahti hoon to isliye ki main jaanti hoon ki apni shaam main aapke saath bitaungi. Intezaar kar rahi hoon main us din ka jab meri padhai poori hogi aur main phir se aapke saath kaam karungi. Aur aapko lagta hai ki main ek movie nahin jaane se dukhi hoon? Agar mujhe movie dekhni hogi to kya main aapse zid nahin karoongi aur kya aap meri baat nahin maanenge?”

“Of course manoonga Geet. I am sorry.”

“Maan,” Geet’s tone turned emotional, “Aap apni hi kahi baat bhool gaye. Ki main 18 saal ki aur ladkiyon se alag hoon. Sach hai Maan ki main bahut special hoon. Main Maan ki Geet hoon. Meri zarooratein bahut zyada hain. Aur unhein Maan ke alawa koi poora nahin kar sakta. Logon ki kuchh zarooratein maa-baap poori karte hain, kuchh zarooratein dost, kuchh bhai-bahan, aur kuchh unke jeevan-saathi. Meri to saari zarooratein ek hi insaan se poori hoti hain – mere Maan se. Mujhe kissi aur ki zaroorat nahin hai Maan. Aur aapko dard dene ki to main sapne mein bhi nahin soch sakti. To mujhe apna koi aisa sapna poora nahin karna hai, jo aapko pareshaan kare. Mujhe nahin karni hai padhai. Mujhe nahin banane hain dost. Agar aapko sukoon milta hai to main is kamre ke bhi bahar kadam nahin rakhoongi Maan. Aur phir bhi main bahut khush rahungi.”

To be continued

Distance of Age (Part 1)

Posted 4 CommentsPosted in Fan Fiction, Hinglish, Maneet (GHSP)

“Lekin Maan yahan do hi pillars achchhe lagenge.”

“Geet tum aesthetics ke hisaab se theek kah rahi ho, lekin structure ki stability ke hisaab se ye kaam nahin karega.”

“Oh! Ye kaise pata chalta hai?”

“Padhai kar ke aur experience se. Ab chalo – mujhe ye approve kar ke bhejne hain. Tum bhi please apna kaam karo.”

Geet left his cabin, but she wasn’t happy.

“Geet – tumhari tabiyat to theek hai? Hum aadhe raaste pahunch chuke hain, aur tumne hardly kuchh bola hai.”

“Achchha! To ghuma phira kar kyon kah rahe hain? Aapko mera mazaak udana hai na ki main har samay bak-bak karti hoon. To seedhe boliye.”

“Geet!” Maan gave her a look that told her that he knew something was the matter and she better come out with it. Because she can’t keep anything from him anyway.

“Haan. Woh… mujhe achchha nahin lag raha hai.”

“Kya achchha nahin lag raha hai?”

“Ab aise to main kabhi koi kaam khud se nahin kar paungi. Aap mujhe architecture kyon nahin sikhate hain?”

“Kya?… Oh! Tum ab tak un pillars ko le kar pareshaan ho.”

“Baat un pillars ki nahin hai. Main achchhe se kaam karna chahti hoon.”

“Hmm…”

“Haan aur hmm mat kijiye.”

“Tum chaar saalon ki padhai karne ko taiyaar ho?”

“Padhai?”

“Dekho Geet. Agar tumhein sach mein sab kaam karna hai to thoda bahut idhar-udhar seekh kar kaam nahin chalega. Theek se padhai karni padegi.”

“Main padhai kar sakti hoon?” Geet’s eyes shone with happiness.

“Bilkul. Kaun rokega tumhein Geet?” Maan smiled patronizingly looking at her happy face.

“Lekin Dadi Ma maanengi?”

“Geet tumhein padhai karni hai, kisi ka katl karne thode hi na ja rahi ho? Ismein Dadi Ma kyon nahin maanengei?”

“Haan. Ye bhi theek hai,” Geet said innocently.

“Pagal ladki hai,” Maan murmured and nodded his head as if in disbelief.

But Geet was too happy to hear his murmurs. Instead she started her happy chatter, “Pata hai Maan. Mujhe padhne ka bahut shauk tha. Agar Maa kabhi kissi kam ke liye ghar par rukne ko kahti bhi thi to bhi main chhup kar school chali jaaya karti thi. Papaji meri madad karte the aur Daarji se bhi baat chhipate the. Warna Daarji aur Brij Veerji to… Unhone hi mujhe apni padhai bhi poori nahin karne di aur jaldbaazi mein shaadi karwa di. Main nahin karna chahti thi…” What had started as a happy chatter turned into sad ramblings as Geet was reminded of the dreadful days that followed her fake wedding.

Maan looked for a suitable place and stopped the car. He took her hand in his and said, “Geet. Kyon phir se yaad kar rahi ho un dinon ko? Woh din ab beet gaye Geet. Tumhein pata hai ki tumhein aise dekh kar mere dil par kya guzarti hai? Please Geet. Apne liye nahin to mere liye. Bhool jao.”

Geet smiled, “Aap theek kah rahe hain Maan. Main bhi bekaar mein kabhi-kabhi… Promise ab main bilkul udaas nahin houngi.”

“Waise Geet – tum shaadi nahin karna chahti thi – lekin iska main kuchh nahin kar sakta,” Maan said jokingly to relieve the tension and then turned serious, “Uske liye ab bahut der ho chuki hai. Tumhari bina main ek pal bhi nahin rah sakta. To ab mujhse to chhutkara nahin milega tumhein. Haan tumhari padhai karne ki ichchha poori ho sakti hai.”

“Kise chhutkara chahiye Maan? Jab main shaadi nahin karna chahti thi, tab meri shaadi aapse thode hi na ho rahi thi,” Geet smiled lovingly and Maan restarted the car.

Three months later new session had started and Geet had joined an Architecture course.

It was her first day in the class. Geet had come to the class enthusiastically, but once she entered it, she started feeling unsure. She felt out of place. In age she wasn’t much older than the other students, probably a year or so that she had lost dealing with the worst and the best in her life. Yet, looking at the carefree students donning jeans and sport-shoes with funny hair-styles, she felt much older. She was definitely older by experience and somehow it did not feel like an advantage. Other students looked at her curiously and then moved on to sit at other places. One girl entered almost with the professor and in a hurry she quickly glanced around to find an empty seat and grabbed the one next to Geet.

“Hi! I am Malini. Malini Biswas.”

“Geet Khurana,” Geet replied with a smile. The professor had entered the class by then and they could not continue the conversation.

After giving an introduction to the course, the professor asked the class as to why they joined an Architecture course. Most of the answers were predictable ones like “I have always been fascinated with buildings”, “It is a hot field with good career prospects” etc. When Geet’s turn came she stood up looking unsure of what to answer. Then she narrated in simple words the incident that had resulted in her deciding to continue the study. She had the attention of the entire class when she spoke about how going by the aesthetics she wanted only two pillars in the design, but her boss pointed out that the structure will not be stable with that design. Then she concluded, “Aisi cheezon se mujhe pata chala ki agar mujhe kuchh achchha kaam karna hai to mujhe Architecture ki padhai karne ki zaroorat hai. Koi short-cut nahin hai.” She had, of course, skipped mentioning the name of the company and her relation to it.

The professor was impressed with her genuine answer and wished her luck. Other students in the class also started looking beyond her appearance and saw the sincere and genuine fellow student that she was. It worked well for Geet as after that she was not made to feel like an outsider by her class-mates. Most of them were at least courteous to her after that.

Malini, her accidental neighbour in the first class, became a good friend of Geet. They also became friendly with two boys Sandeep and Mihir and the four of them formed a group of sorts. They hung out together all the time.

“So a movie tonight. What do you say Geet?”

“Nahin. Tum log jao. Main nahin aa sakti.”

“Kyon yaar?”

“Maan mera intezaar karenge ghar par.”

“Oye – hoye. The married woman. Ek din nahin rah sakte kya tumhare bina?” Malini winked at her.

Geet blushed and smiled, but did not say anything.

“To tu Maan ko bhi saath le na?”

“Nahin Malini, unhein ye sab pasand nahin hai.”

“How boring!”

Geet did not say anything to that. Just then Sandeep noticed the car waiting for Geet and told her about it. She took a leave from them and went to the car.

She was surprised to see Maan in the car, “Maan aap yahan? Aap office mein nahin hain?”

“Kyon main apni biwi ko lene nahin aa sakta kya?” Maan pulled her legs.

“Aisa maine kab kaha? Lekin aapko apni biwi ke liye fursat mil gayi?”

Both of them smiled and Maan drove her home. Maan wasn’t sure what it was, but something kept bothering him the entire evening.

There was something very pleasant about their conversation. They were mimicking some professor of theirs and having great fun at his expense. Geet herself was laughing like crazy and Maan could not help staring at her pleasant face for a while before walking in to the hall where the four friends were having tea and snacks.

“Maan aap aaj jaldi aa gaye?” Geet asked with a smile.

“Haan Geet. Abhi ek client ke yahan meeting scheduled thi, par woh cancel ho gayi. To maine socha ghar hi aa jaun,” Maan replied taking his place beside her on the sofa and then turned towards her friends, “How are you all doing?”

“Great Mr. Khurana!” replied Sandeep and Mihir together and then laughed nervously as they realized this.

Some formal pleasantaries were exchanged and then they decided to leave. Geet asked them to stay for a while more but they took their leave.

Maan once again felt bad about something, but he couldn’t say anything to Geet.

To be continued

Next-door (Part 15)

Posted 7 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

But she did not stop. “And then I remembered. That frantic afternoon. When I had realized that my diary was missing. I was scared. Terrified. What if it reached Chachiji? What if Chachaji had picked it up thinking it was his? Because he used so many of the company diaries? Even though Pikku was sympathetic to me, what would he think, if he read it? How ungrateful I would sound towards his parents! Worst still what if some neighbour had it…”

“Antara. Stop, please….”

“Then I realized that it had happened before the wedding talks cropped up! Wedding talks that had taken the diary off my mind. Because I was probably more scared about the wedding than the diary.”

Mrinal looked at her puzzled. What was she rambling about? Where was this going?

“Scared about the wedding?” he muttered.

“Have you ever known that fear, Mrinal? When you effortlessly get something you could only have dreamed about, but knew that you did not deserve. And you are scared that someone will come any moment, tell you that it was a mistake and take it away?”

Mrinal could do nothing but stare at her wide-eyed.

“I was that scared. It was through your mother’s constant complaints, but I had come to know so much about you. And had liked everything she complained about. I should have been jumping about with glee during the wedding, except that the fear was gnawing at me. How could you have decided to marry me? You had been resisting all pressure from your mother and family, because you won’t blindly enter into a marriage with someone you didn’t know or like. And you knew nothing about me. It wasn’t even possible to think about love.  My broken heart was not the only thing I had to worry about if you changed your mind. Chachiji’s heart would have been broken a thousand times over and it would all have come out on me. Her constant lecturing about how to behave myself before you had worn me down so much that I thought I did everything wrong in that one meeting we had. But you were cool about it. It calmed my nerves down a bit, but the question was still looming large. All the love, respect, happiness, encouragement you gave me… you made me so happy, Mrinal. But I had really not taken you seriously on your claim that you knew more about me than I thought. How could you? And the question bothered me. Every now and then. Sending me into panic in the moments I was alone. Then you came home, smiled at me, spoiled me, pampered me, and loved me. And I forgot everything else. Until at some point of time it again raised its ugly head. And so it went on. I didn’t ask you. I was too afraid that you would suddenly accept and realize that you got into it with your eyes closed and need to walk out. And as I thought about all this, I looked at the diary again. This little thing…  This had all the answers, did it not? You had read it before deciding, hadn’t you?”

Mrinal nodded, still looking guilty. “It is not a justification. But yes that’s what had happened.”

“Don’t ever do that again.”

“I won’t. Antara. But can I assume that you have forgiven me this time?”

“I owe my life’s happiness to this abominable act of yours,” she smiled through her moist eyes. Her face was still puffy from her recent crying, “What choice do I have?”

“I had gone crazy, Antara. To be doing this…”

“How crazy?”

“Mad crazy. Desperate crazy. Uncontrollable teenager crazy,” he replied and tightened his arms around her, “I will explain. But later. I have been through hell in last couple of hours. I need assurance.”

She pulled away for a bit. “I’m sorry,” she said somberly, “For worrying you about the diary so much. I had sorted through it. I had come out to tell you that it was okay… But then… Bad fiction happened.” She smiled looking repentant for his pain.

“I deserved worse, much worse. You know you talked about the fear. Of losing something that you got effortlessly, and didn’t think you deserve. I have that fear now, Antara. Of losing you…”

“I am not going anywhere,” she said and leaned into him.

He lowered her on the sofa along with himself. He didn’t have the patience to go to the bedroom.

“So, my mother’s complaints had made you fall in love with me?” he asked in an amused voice as they lay spent on the sofa later. There was only so much space there, and she was lying on top of him, her head resting on his heaving, sweaty chest.

“I know it is weird…” she replied sheepishly.

“Hmm… Yeah… I think weirder than falling in love because of a diary.”

“Don’t tease me.”

“But is that true? You were in love with me?” he asked earnestly this time.

She raised her head a bit to look at him. He expected some smart reply. But she just looked into his eyes and said with a smile, “Yes.” Then she went back to resting her head on his chest.

“So, what have we been? Soul-mates, growing up as next-door neighbours, woefully unaware of our destinies?” he said somewhat philosophically.

“Not exactly next-door. But yeah…”

“How did I never notice you?”

“You were too busy running away.”

“I guess so. You had seen me around?”

“Of course. Everybody knew you.”

“I told you right, I had gone crazy. It was not a figure of speech. I can’t explain what had happened to me when I had seen you walking in with tea.”

“What?”

“I was attracted. Fatally attracted. I had never felt like this even for a hot teacher in school,” he chuckled, drawing a soft laughter from her too. “But… you didn’t show any signs of even noticing me until I had spoken about the sugar.”

“I was nervous. And Chachiji’s insult didn’t help either,” her voice grew sad as she remembered how Mrs. Gupta had treated her that day.

“Hey. I am sorry,” he recognized the change of her voice, “I didn’t mean to remind you… I am really sorry.”

“Don’t be. All that is past. Thanks to you,” he could hear smile in her voice again and took a deep breath.

He then went on to tell her about what he had done the next morning; how he had seen her paintings and gotten hold of her diary.

“I regretted doing that so much. But I was also too tempted to not read it,” he explained at the end.

She just kissed his chest in reply.

He suddenly remembered something. “Antara. Do you feel financially insecure?”

“Huh? Where did that come from?”

He nudged her and they both sat up.

“When you were angry…” he spoke cautiously, “You had said something like you had no one to go to. And you were not financially independent. Is that why you have been doing those portraits?”

She bit her lips and shook her head.

“Is there something I should know?”

“I… just… But no. This has nothing to do with us, Mrinal. I feel absolutely safe and secure with you. Financially or otherwise.”

“Tell me, whatever it is.”

“You believe that everyone should be financially independent, irrespective of gender, family money etc. I think that is right thinking. And I also wanted to be…” she hesitated before adding, “good enough for you.”

“But I also believe that we can’t sell our souls for money, Antara. You don’t like doing those portraits. Do you?”

“I have started hating them.”

“It may not make as much money, but there are other ways of finding financial security. Gallery sales are picking up. Plus… you have a reputation now. You could teach painting.”

Her eyebrows knit together as she thought about it. “I probably have a bias towards the profession of teaching,” he said somewhat apologetically, “But I am sure we can find other options as well. You are psychology graduate. You could get trained as a counsellor…”

“Do you think I can teach?” she interrupted.

“Of course. With your talent and patience, you would be a great teacher.”

She smiled.

“Settled then?”

She nodded, “I am going to return the advance for a job I was commissioned for.”

“Great,” he said and was about the lie down again, but she stopped him.

“We should go to Raksha and tell her about our plan. She would be anxious.”

“Are you really, really sure about this, Antara?”

“Yes. Although….”

“Although?”

“She is your daughter, Mrinal. That’s enough for me and I promise that I will love her like mine. But I do want to carry your child,” she blushed and gulped hard as she finished, but she managed to say it in one breath.

He bent forward and kissed her on forehead, “At this point, Antara, you could have asked me to walk on burning coal. And I would have agreed. This is much nobler! You are too kind.”

“I know all your apprehensions about parenting and children, Mrinal. But I think it’s those apprehension that will help us be good as parents. We will be cautious.”

“It is your sensitivity that will help us be good. Let’s go.”

– The End –

Next-door (Part 14)

Posted 1 CommentPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

“Raksha. I… I need time,” he said miserably.

She nodded and left immediately. This wasn’t exactly a visit that would attract prolonged goodbyes.

Antara also made to go away to the bedroom once Raksha left.

“Antara,” Mrinal cried desperately, “Talk to me. Say something. Shout at me… Berate me… Hit me… Kill me, if you want, but don’t walk away. Don’t fall silent. Please…”

She stopped, but did not speak.

“This has been a horrible day, Antara,” his spoke more calmly as he walked close to her and stood facing her, “Your trust in me would be broken. And some of it is difficult even for me to grasp. But God is my witness, Antara, that I have loved you like I didn’t know I was capable of loving. If you have felt that love even for a moment in last few months, please don’t just shun me and end it all. Please give me one more chance and I will explain what I can and atone for others in whichever way you want me to. Please don’t finish our story, Antara…”

“Do I have a choice?” tears clouded her eyes, “I do not have any parents to go back to. I am not financially and emotionally strong like Raksha to live alone…”

“Antara!”

“That is the reality of my situation.”

Oh God! How bitter she was. She, who had never uttered a word of complaint against her fate, who had put up with all wrongs and all the hypocrisies of people around her with a smile…

“No,” he said emphatically, “That is not the reality of your situation. You may reject me emotionally, Antara. But even then, legally speaking, whatever is mine is yours. At least half of it. And your art career is taking off. And once you tell my parents what my past is like, they will take you in like your parents wouldn’t have.  Not having support is not the reality of your situation. But that will be my reality, if you go away. You don’t need to, Antara, but I am begging you to stay.”

“I need time,” she echoed what he had said to Raksha and went back to the bedroom.

Mrinal slumped on the sofa with nothing to do but reflect on what was going on. The diary issue was one kind of bad… But what about this daughter that had suddenly cropped up. This was the unsolvable kind of bad for their relationship. What was he going to do? How was he going to resolve it all? Was it resolvable? Who should he do right by? His daughter? She is young, and helpless. But he didn’t even know of her existence till an hour ago. Or Antara, who he had married of his own accord and whom he had given so much hope?

He was still on the sofa with his arm flung across his forehead covering his eyes.

“What do you plan to do?” she asked.

He got up with a start. “I… I am sorry. About?”

“About Raksha? About that little girl?”

“Antara I… I don’t know. Even if she is my daughter, it’s not her that I am thinking about right now. It’s you. I probably sound like a horrible person, but I am not going to lose you for her sake. I will make whatever arrangement I have to make for her. Send her to a hostel. To an orphanage. To someplace…” Antara looked stunned. “And if I am wrong,” he continued, correct me. If I am right, support me. But don’t leave me alone, Antara. Please…”

“She has her father. Why should she be sent to someplace… to live like an orphan?”

“What good a father like me will do to her? If I couldn’t keep a woman with simple pleasures like you happy, what good will I do to a child who will have infinite demands growing up?”

Antara stood silent with her eyes downcast.

Mrinal fell on his knees startling her. He touched her for the first time during the conversation by holding her hand, “I am a flawed man, Antara. But if there is one reason in my life to try and become better, it is you. Before I met you, I couldn’t have imagined saying this for anyone, but I will not be able to live without you. Please save my life. My soul.”

Antara also kneeled to face him and started crying. They didn’t know who initiated it first, but soon both of them were crying in each other’s arms. Antara was hurt; she needed a shoulder to cry on. Mrinal was scared to the bones at the possibility of losing her. He needed a shoulder to cry on. Who else could they have gone to? They had each other; and only each other.

“I didn’t know about her, Antara… I don’t even know how it happened. I was always cautious…” they were sitting on the sofa, more collected now.

“Raksha herself admitted that it was her carelessness… ”

“You really think she is my… I would have gone ahead with DNA test…”

“She wasn’t lying, Mrinal.”

“What do I do?” he was agitated.

“We need to adopt her… Formally…”

“We?”

“Who else?”

“This isn’t you mess to clean, Antara,” he said in a low, drowning voice…

“If we are together, Mrinal, we are together in everything. And do you really think I can leave a little girl to be orphaned when it is in my power to prevent it? I might not be big-hearted woman. But this… this situation is too close to heart…”

“You are a big-hearted woman,” Mrinal said with a finality that did not leave any scope for further discussion.

“We are adopting her, then?”

“When you are ready, how can I… Oh God! Antara. I am nervous. Really nervous. I wasn’t prepared for this? I am not prepared…”

“You are a caring man. You will make a great father.”

He grew too overwhelmed to say anything. He just hugged her tight. So tight that she thought he would make love to her right then. But he withdrew.

“This looks like bad fiction, Antara. How could two revelations that could destroy me, happen on the same day. But… if you accept this for me, you would probably forgive me about the diary…”

“I felt violated… And betrayed…” her tone suddenly became solemn.

He kept his eyes downcast like a guilty child and nodded; accepting that she was right in feelings so.

“For a while I could not reconcile with the idea that you… you who has given me so much respect as a person… would do something like this to me…”

Mrinal closed his eyes and pressed his temple, as if unable to take in all she was implying.

“You aren’t that kind of person; that much I know by now. You wouldn’t go around reading people’s diaries for voyeuristic pleasures. What was it then, I wondered. Did you not trust me? Were you looking for the past ghosts… the relationships that I had denied…”

“Oh God! Antara. Please stop,” Mrinal cried miserably. Even if justified, her accusations were going beyond his tolerance. Why weren’t the right words coming to his lips? Surely there was some way of explaining this that will absolve him of such sinister motives.

To be continued

Next-door (Part 13)

Posted 1 CommentPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

One thing had led to another and some of Antara’s paintings had found a place in one of the city’s most prestigious galleries. One of the paintings there was a portrait she had created of Mrinal. She didn’t usually do portraits. But she had wanted to make one of him.

“You are making me famous,” he had joked when that painting was accepted in the gallery.

“It is the other way round,” she had protested, “It is because I painted you that I might become famous.”

“Amen to that!”

Some of her paintings started selling too. And a few were licensed for use in designs.

And then a request came from one the prominent industrialists of the city. He had seen her portrait of Mrinal and wanted her to do a portrait of his wife as a birthday gift from him. She wasn’t sure initially. She hadn’t practiced portraits extensively, nor was she trained. But the price he had named was beyond anything she had hoped to make anytime soon. After initial hesitation she agreed. When she asked for Mrinal’s advice, he told her to decide for herself. He trusted that she would do all right either way.

She wasn’t sure if it was the elite society’s appreciation of art, or just the copycat tendencies, but after that portrait, she started getting requests for many more.

“You haven’t painted anything new in a while,” Mrinal said. He had noticed that all his time was going in doing portraits and was not happy about it. But he didn’t say anything to her directly. If she enjoyed it, he wouldn’t interfere.

“Not getting any time at all. Haven’t even finished the book I had you issue from the library. You have to return it, right?”

“I can re-issue it when you have time. Are you enjoying all these portrait assignments?”

She sighed. “No. Doing your portrait was different. These things are… mechanical, calculated. I am finding myself touching up the paintings to make them look good in it. It is an ego-boosting exercise for rich, jobless women.”

“Don’t do it, then, Antara.”

“They pay so well.”

“But… Hadn’t you always wanted a life where your expressions were not bounded by other people’s ego?”

She looked startled. “When… did… I… say that?”

Mrinal himself jolted back. He had made the mistake of his life. She had never said that… It was in her diary. Should he lie? Should he claim that she had indeed said that sometime or the other and try to get away with it? Or should he treat this as the opportunity, the right time? To confess his misdemeanor of stealing and reading her diary?

He took a deep breath, preparing himself for the worst, leaned away from her, and said, “Please try not to get mad…” He took out the diary from his pocket. He still kept it with him all the time; only skillfully slipping it under his pillow or into his side of the drawer at night.

Antara was so shocked; she couldn’t react at all for a while.

“Antara… I know how this looks… But please…”

She gave him a perplexed and pained look; then ran off to their bedroom.

“Antara… Please, talk to me…”

The doorbell rang just then distracting him and he stopped for a moment. She had locked herself in the room by then. Mrinal stood there motionless and stupefied. The doorbell rang again. He listlessly walked to the door and opened it.

“Raksha?” she was the last person he would have liked to see at that moment, “What are you doing here?”

“Wow!” she smiled nervously, “That was… I think I am disturbing you… I should have called…”

He realized immediately that he had been extremely rude. “I… I’m sorry. Please come in,” he tried to talk as calmly as possible. What was Antara thinking? What would she do now? Even as he led Raksha inside, his thoughts were so consumed by his wife that he didn’t notice a barely two-year old girl tumbling along in her tow, until they sat down on the sofa. Even then he didn’t think much of the child.

“Antara is not around?” Raksha asked cautiously.

“No… Umm… Yes… I mean she is in the bedroom. She isn’t feeling well.”

“Oh! Nothing serious, I hope.”

“No. Nothing… serious… I think… I will see if she is awake…” he wanted some alibi, any alibi to go check on her.

“No. No Mrinal. Let her take rest. Actually we can spare her. I came here because I had something really important to talk to you about.”

Mrinal stared at her. It had been two years. Despite the ups and downs they had parted on good terms. But they hadn’t kept in touch. He hadn’t seen her after that until that chance meeting in Mauritius. What important could she have to talk to him about?

“Mrinal… I… I am not well… Actually I am dying…”

“What? What did you say?” That was shocking enough to distract him from Antara at least for the time being.

“Lung cancer… All that smoking… I won’t survive it…”

“Don’t say that. I’m sure there is something…”

“I’m not worried about myself, Mrinal… Not any longer… Impending death makes you humble… It is Mahi that I am worried about…”

“Mahi?”

Raksha picked up the girl who had fallen silent in strange surroundings and put her on her lap. “Mahi. My daughter.”

“Oh! I… I didn’t know you were… We have been out of touch all this while… Where is her father?”

She took a deep breath and a long pause before speaking. “You are her father.”

Mrinal literally jumped in shock. “That is a bad joke, Raksha,” he grew angry.

Raksha seated Mahi on the sofa and stood up herself. “Your shock and disbelief are reasonable, Mrinal. But…”

“Reasonable? What is reasonable about any of this? If what you are saying is right, why didn’t I know all this time? You can’t just come up with some…”

“I realized I was pregnant after we had broken up. You were always so careful. It was my fault, when I had said it was safe… So, I didn’t want to burden you. And I couldn’t get myself to abort… But life… luck isn’t helping me. If I am gone… my family doesn’t even want to acknowledge her presence. I am being selfish by bringing you into this now… But where do I take her? She is too young…”

Mrinal stared at the child. Perplexed and Pained. Was that how Antara felt when she saw the diary with him? And how will she feel when she sees the child? His child? But he didn’t feel anything about the girl. No natural fatherly emotion claimed him. He was just confounded, annoyed and angry.

“Humiliating as it is to me, Mrinal, you can go ahead with a DNA test…”

“That isn’t needed…” Antara’s voice surprised them both.

“Antara…” Mrinal tried to say something, but words refused to come out of his throat.

“Look at her eyes. And nose,” Antara continued in a flat voice, “No DNA test is needed.”

Mrinal hadn’t thought of trying to match the physical features. He hadn’t thought of anything at all. The idea just wasn’t sinking in. But Antara had just finalized it. There would be no running away now. But… where was he to go? What was he to do?

To be continued

Next-door (Part 12)

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

When Mrinal entered the bedroom that night, he found Antara looking thoughtful.

“What happened?” he asked.

“Nothing,” she managed to smile at him.

“Tired? There were many people.”

She hadn’t cooked. Mrinal hadn’t agreed to it. It would be too exhausting, he had insisted. So, he had only made some kheer for dessert and rest of the food had been ordered from outside. Unlike him social interaction did not tire her out. But that was the best alibi to explain her subdued mood.

“Yes.”

He snuggled up close to her. “How tired?” he asked with a mischievous look in his eyes. He needed his fix. And probably today even she could do with a fix.

“Not that tired,” she replied and put her arms around him. But her body did not respond to the foreplay. They both felt it.

“What is it, Antara?” his control and ability to withdraw surprised her more than his vigor.

“Nothing. You… don’t need to stop…”

“Come on. You know me better than that.”

“I don’t know, Mrinal,” she felt miserable, “Probably… Just…” she hesitated. They hadn’t yet had any occasion to talk about it, “I am expecting my periods soon. I might not be feeling well because of that…”

“Oh! Why are you so miserable about it, you stupid girl. Just tell me. It is true that I can never have enough of you. But it is truer that I hate seeing you in discomfort.”

“I know,” she said. Whatever emotion she was feeling, it was overwhelming her and she feared that tears would betray her. Partly to hide the tears from him, and partly to feel the warmth of his embrace, she buried her head in his chest. He reached out and switched off the lights; then slipped down on the bed while holding her in his embrace.

“Why did you marry me, Mrinal?” she asked quietly.

“Because,” his reply was unhesitant and firm, “I had fallen in love with you.”

The next day her periods indeed started and neither of them were put to the love-making test. She started working on another painting and Mrinal looked like an excited child waiting for the cookies to be baked!

Few days later, Mrinal was ecstatic when he came back. “Guess who called me today.”

“Who?”

“Remember Arti Sinha?”

“Yeah. Very well.”

“She wants to use your painting on the cover of her publication’s upcoming book. It’s a collection of literary short stories.”

“Really?”

“Yeah. I told her that you will call back to talk further and confirm if you want this. But I guess… you would want this, won’t you?”

“This is so unexpected. But yeah… Any reason I shouldn’t want this?”

“None!” he kissed her forehead. “I am really proud of you, Antara. You should never underestimate yourself.”

Her eyes grew moist. He wasn’t only playing the role of a lover and husband in her life. But also that of the parents she had long lost. Parents who would have cared about her. He had gone a step ahead and was playing the parent she wouldn’t have had even if her biological parents were alive. Because while they had cared about her, she had no reason to believe that their ultimate aim would have been any different than that of her uncle and aunt. To get her married and settled. They would have encouraged her painting because it made for a good matrimonial ad. But this man saw in her the person she was. Beyond being his wife.

She hugged him and rubbed her face against his chest.

“Don’t do that,” his voice was hoarse and he pushed her slightly, “Not unless you are ready.”

She leaned towards him again and kissed his chest. He dragged her to bed without even waiting to change. Antara could feel elation in his love-making.

“Just switch that thing off. It is so depressing,” Mrinal complained.

“It is. But it is also the reality.”

They had been watching a crime show on TV, which was supposedly based on real incidents. That episode was about a couple whose abuse and neglect led to the death of their baby girl.

“Yes. And you know what is the most sickening part of it all. That our society makes us believe that we all must have children. And every Tom, Dick, Harry goes about producing babies.”

“Should it be dictated by some authorities who can or cannot have babies?”

“Why not? Come to think of it. If you want to adopt, you have to bend over backwards to prove that you will be an able and a good parent. But if you just decide to have babies, there is no need to prove your parenting abilities. How logical is that?”

Antara found his statement strange. “That’s pretty harsh. Isn’t wanting children a natural thing?”

“I am not so sure, Antara.”

“How so?”

“Come to think of it. Why do most people around us have children? Because it is considered natural. Now, there is indeed a Darwinian urge to multiply and gain dominance for your species. But humans are so evolved that their contribution to their species’ dominance is not limited to producing children. Even if many of us don’t have children, we contribute in other ways. By making the world a better and safer place for fellow humans. So, even with lesser reproduction rate, the species would do fine. But let’s forget something as obscure as Darwin. Just think of all the parents around us. What do they do with their children apart from taking care of them? They boast about them, show them off. It’s silly. Because every parent goes ga-ga over the same set of things every normal child does. What is really happening is that after a point in life, people do not know what more to do with their lives. But there is a need to feel important, successful. Children become a way to fulfill that need. They can’t continue being happy about their own abilities that have stopped developing. Nor do they have any significant achievement to show off. They don’t have a purpose in life either, which will keep them busy. So, they take pride in their children’s developing abilities and achievements. In most cases the abilities and achievements of their children is not significantly different from others of the same age and background. But that little fact is easily ignored. The children become the purpose that they otherwise don’t have. And then they start thinking that they have done some kind of favour to their kids by bringing them in this world and doing all those ‘wonderful’ things for them. But firstly – most parents are quite mediocre at parenting, no better than the next door mediocre parent. Secondly – it was your fucking decision to bring the child to this world. Why should he or she be under some kind of debt? Indian parents are the worst offenders here. The entire thing is so unhealthy from the very beginning that it is doomed. You shouldn’t have a baby, unless you can be a good parent. And have the time as well as resources.”

He was almost panting in excitement when he finished his long monologue. Antara’s amazed stare made him self-conscious.

“I sounded weird, didn’t I?” he gave a self-deprecating smile.

She shook her head and broke into a smile, “No. Just rational. And brutally honest, as usual.”

He chuckled; then turned serious. “Anyway. You needn’t worry. We don’t have to decide now. We have time.”

That made her blush.

“And thank God we live in an era when birth control is possible. So, abstinence is not exactly required,” he grinned and pulled her towards him.

To be continued

Next-door (Part 11)

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

It was their last day in Mauritius. Antara had told him that she was expected to buy gifts for everybody at home. So, they were going out for shopping. As they were leaving the resort, she realized that she had forgotten her sunglasses. She went back to the room to get it, while Mrinal waited in the lobby. He was talking to a woman almost his own age, when she came out. Mrinal introduced them. “This is Antara, my wife. Antara. This is Raksha. We went to the same university for post-graduation.”

“But I am not a nerd like him,” Raksha interrupted smiling.

“No. She is an MBA and a tough business woman.”

Antara would remember her as a tall, beautiful and confident-looking woman. “Nice to meet you Raksha. Do you stay in Mauritius?”

“No. I am also based in Mumbai. I am here for some work.”

“Oh. Staying here?”

“No. In a hotel closer to the city. But a client wanted a meeting here. So…”

“Okay. Well – hope to see you at our home in Mumbai.”

Mrinal looked fondly at Antara. She was not in the least bit awkward, or intimidated. Her social skills could not be faulted.

“Yeah. Definitely. What do you do, Antara?”

“She is a painter,” Mrinal replied before Antara could declare that she wasn’t working at the moment.

“Oh! Wow! That would suit you very well, Mrinal,” Raksha smiled. Antara wondered if she noticed a hint of sadness in that smile. “Well. I won’t detain you guys any longer. Not on your honeymoon. It’s almost time for my meeting too. Congratulations to both of you. Have a good day.”

Mrinal looked distracted during shopping. Antara attributed it to his disinterest in buying gifts for people. But he wasn’t quite himself even after they returned to the resort. Antara had decided to finish packing beforehand, so that they didn’t have to wake up too early in the morning for their flight. But he interrupted her as she was opening one of the suitcases. The few weeks that she had been with him had been enough for her to know what the look in his eyes meant. It wasn’t unusual either. Not only did he have a high level of sexual energy, his love-making was also a way for him to express or deal with his emotions. There were those moments on raw physical desire; and then those where he slowly savored her, reflecting his contentment. At other times he released his stress and frustrations. It was different each time; she could feel it, but he never gave her any reasons to complain. He always displayed the same patience and care for her which he had shown the first time by withdrawing at the peak of his arousal. What was it today though? It was different from all of his emotions she had known till now. He appeared… clingy! For a while she ceased to think about it, as he drove her desire also to its peak with his now expert handling of her body. She could be ready any moment for this man! But as they lay exhausted on the bed, and the thought of their imminent departure and packing returned to her, so did the concern over his mood.

“We need to pack,” she said to start the conversation.

“Yeah,” he said still not looking quite okay. The look he gave her before getting out of the bed was strange. Was he scared of something?

Still not confronting him directly, she got dressed and started packing. “Did you really like Mauritius that much?” she asked casually as Mrinal handed her one of his pants to pack.

“Huh?”

“You look sad to be leaving.”

He gave a half smile; then suddenly held her hands and absentmindedly played with her fingers. She looked at him curiously. Was he planning to take her to the bed again?

“Antara. There is something I need to tell you,” he spoke finally.

She exaggerated her sigh on purpose, “You are an expert at scaring me with your preambles. I am not falling for it now. What is it? It can’t be anything so bad.” It couldn’t be!

Mrinal’s heart warmed up at the camaraderie they had developed and also how easy and relaxed she was with him now. It had happened faster than any relationship he had been in earlier. Probably there was some truth to the things advocates of arranged marriages said. It was treating him very well.

“No. I hope not. Just that… Antara. I have had relationships in past. Most not serious, except… Raksha. We were in a serious relationship at one point of time.”

“Hmm… And?”

“And? And nothing else. We broke up. About two years ago.”

“Okay. Then what is the problem?”

“Nothing,” he smiled, “If you understand and are cool about it.”

“You are too much. Sometimes it almost feels like you are scared of me, Mrinal.”

“Sometimes I am indeed scared. Not of you, but of losing you.”

“Losing me? I can’t fathom why any of your earlier girlfriends let you go. I fancy I am more intelligent than them.”

“Ah! You surely do a lot of good to my ego. I am not complaining, though.”

“Can I ask, though, why you broke up with her?”

“It didn’t work out. At a fundamental level we weren’t compatible. Our ambitions were different.”

“How so?”

“Happiness to her was the next promotion, the doubling and tripling of salary. There was no way I could have kept up with it. She needed people’s approval. She would smoke because she thought it got her the respect of her male colleagues. She would have been happy if I had joined my family business, but I was happy with my meager, slow-to-increase salary, and with my Physics, and other little things I enjoy.”

“I am so happy you are that way,” she said fondly, then tip-toed to give him a quick peck on lips. He hugged her tight.

One of the first things they had bought after returning from Mauritius was an easel and canvasses for her to paint on.

“You are too indulgent,” she had said.

“You are too humble,” his comeback was swift, “But tell me honestly. You like painting, don’t you?”

She had to accept, “Yes.”

“Then you don’t have to be apologetic about it.”

She was elated one day when he came back from work.

“Thank you so much for buying this. Oil paint works much better on a canvass.”

“Let me see what you have made.”

“It is still work in progress.”

“That’s fine.”

In her excitement, she barely took a week to finish the painting. Mrinal got it framed and had it installed in the drawing hall.

The coming weekend, he invited some of his colleagues for lunch. He hadn’t gotten time to invite them for the wedding. So, this was to introduce Antara to them.

“Oh wow! Is this done by you, Antara?” asked Arti Sinha, wife of one of the professors, who worked for a publishing house, about the painting in the hall.

Antara smiled and nodded modestly.

“Beautiful. It is beautiful. I hope you are planning to take up painting professionally.”

Antara grew self-conscious, “You are being very generous.”

“Not at all. You are being very self-effacing.”

“Which is what I have been trying to tell her,” Mrinal jumped into the conversation, “But I won’t be taken seriously, I think. May be you can help.”

“Mrinal!” Antara chided him lovingly even as she blushed heavily.

“Do you mind if I take a picture of it?” Arti asked.

“Please! Go ahead. You don’t need to ask,” Antara replied.

When the time for desserts came, they had run out of spoons. Antara went to the kitchen to get some plastic spoons they had bought for such emergency.

“If I think about the society, here is what I have to say,” Antara stopped near the door when she heard Mrinal talking about something very passionately, “If even the intellectual elites of the society, the educators and the likes, think that a women’s career must be sacrificed for the sake of children, then I see little hope for the cause of women emancipation from the rest of the country. And talking about an individual, I think it is stupid on part of anyone – man or woman – to give up their financial independence.”

“Well… people have different priorities.”

“Whatever be the priorities, giving up on your career doesn’t make sense. Financial independence may not be all you need for a secure life, but is a must. Whether you are a man or a woman.”

“All right,” someone intervened as Antara entered with the spoons, “It’s not very often that Mrinal gets so stubborn about something.” That made Antara smile inwardly. He could get stubborn about too many things. Family, business, money, marriage! But she didn’t say anything. “Now that he has gotten so stubborn,” the person continued, “I think everybody else needs to back off. Because he won’t leave any stones unturned.”

That drew good humored laughter from everyone and the topic of the conversation changed.

To be continued

Next-door (Part 10)

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

“Everybody loves you. I don’t remember when was the last time anybody came to drop me to the airport.” They had needed three big cars to accommodate everyone on their way to the airport. Mrinal’s parents, sisters, brother-in-law, nephew and nieces had accompanied them to the airport. So had Parikshit and Antara’s uncle.

“They all love you. You shun them,” she said in an indulgent, and not a complaining tone.

Mrinal sighed and leaned back on the chair. They had completed the check-in and security check, and were waiting for the boarding.

“I don’t know when it happened, Antara. But I just lost connect. There is just too much hypocrisy. Even love is selfish and loved ones a means to achieve some other end. Get married so that we can host a lavish wedding and prove to everyone in the market that we are a “strong party”. Or get married traditionally so that I can show off the dowry my daughter-in-law has brought. Or get married quickly so that I live long enough to see and flaunt my grandchildren and see their wedding too.”

Antara chuckled. “I understand the hypocrisy part, but you can be funny about it.”

“I sound weird, don’t I?”

“No,” she frowned, “Absolutely not. Just brutally honest.”

“And is it okay? To be brutally honest with you?”

“What kind of a question is that? Of course, Mrinal ji…”

“Then let’s start with this. Please stop calling me Mrinal ji.”

“What else do I call you?”

“I have a name.”

“That’s what I am using…”

“Mrinal ji?” he emphasized on ji.

“Oh!” she looked away nervously.

“What?”

“I’m not used to it…”

“Come on. It can’t be that difficult. It’s not like you have been addressing me like this for years.”

Actually she had been. He didn’t know how often his mother would talk about him before neighbors, relatives, acquaintances and anyone who would listen. And there couldn’t have been a more patient listener than Antara. Mohini Agarwal’s focus was mostly on his weird ways, his not being interested in family business, his ascetic lifestyle and his unwillingness to get married. But Antara would often try to picture the real person behind her rants. And she had always referred to him as Mrinal ji.

Presently she smiled and acquiesced, “Okay.”

“Okay? Then let’s test it.”

“What?”

“Call me by my name.”

“Huh?”

He shrugged and looked on expectantly.

She threw up her hands and gave in, “Fine. Mrinal. Happy?”

“Very.”

She shook her head smiling.

Mrinal grew nervous as they approached his house in the campus. How would she find the small two-bedroom house allotted to him in faculty quarters?

“This is a humble teacher’s abode,” he said as he unlocked the door, “I don’t know if you will find it livable.”

Antara looked at him surprised. In the short time that she has known him, he had taken charge of their relationship; making decisions, leading her, assuring her… This sudden display of anxiety on his part was new to her.

She waited until they had stepped in to reply, “It is ours, right?”

Mrinal felt like a huge burden was lifted off his chest. He smiled looking relieved, “Yes. It is. That is until I get promoted and hopefully get another one with one more bedroom,” he said, still sounding self-deprecating, but comfortable.

“We will worry about it when it comes,” she spoke in jest and walked around the hall they had stepped in.

“Antara,” he went to her and held her hands, “I know you would be overwhelmed with all the exhaustion and dealing with so much change, not to mention my demands and questions… And I am not asking you to make an immediate decision…”

“Mrinal ji!” she grew alarmed and forgot her promise to call him by name only. What was it leading to? “What is it?”

“No. Nothing to worry about. Come. Sit here,” he led her to the sofa lying in the hall, “Antara. There was something important about me that I should have told you before the wedding, or before the wedding was decided. But I skipped it. Partly due to circumstances. But more importantly because I am willing to change it for you.”

Despite his assurance, Antara’s face looked deadly pale. Was the incredibly good future that was smiling at her a mirage after all? Was something horrible going to be revealed?

“Antara. It’s not just the family and family business I have distanced myself from, but also the family money. I live off my own salary. It doesn’t feel uncomfortable to me. But it can’t sustain the lifestyle that they lead back in Kolkata. At my or your house. This isn’t a choice that you have made, however.  And this isn’t a choice you are bound by. Papa transfers money to an account of mine every month. If you want to use it…”

Antara had gradually relaxed and was smiling by now. “Mrinal,” she interrupted and remembered her promise in addressing him, “I also know a bit more about you than you think. Auntie had described your meager accommodation in gory details to me multiple times, bemoaning why you were inflicting this hardship on yourself; and why you won’t use family money. I have walked into this marriage with my eyes open. Stop worrying.”

“But it still wasn’t your choice…”

“But this is a choice I am proud of. I can’t promise, Mrinal, that it would all be smooth. Money or no money, I have never run a house. I don’t even know what your salary is. I don’t know what our monthly budget should be for everything. I don’t know what can or cannot be accommodated in that monthly budget. I don’t know if we can afford this honeymoon in Mauritius. But I am more than willing to learn; happy to learn. And… I don’t know if I am worthy enough… But I would like to contribute…”

Antara watched astonished as Mrinal’s eyes moistened. “I can’t believe my luck,” his voice was thick. He embraced her gently at first. But the hormones that he had suppressed with efforts for last two days were fueled by his emotional high and they raged beyond his control. He caressed, then rubbed her hair and back. Still aware of his assurance to her that he would go slow, he tried to pull away, but she put her arms around him. “Don’t stop,” she mumbled through her shallow breathing, “Don’t stop today whatever happens.” Encouraged, he threw the caution out of window, leaned forward and nibbled at her ear lobes. They turned out to be extremely sensitive, and she moaned out aloud.

“Come inside,” he whispered in her ear and then led her to the bedroom. The sheets hadn’t been changed in weeks, but neither of them were in a position to care. He seated her on the edge of the bed and approached her left shoulder with trembling hands. He unpinned her aanchal from her blouse. The pleats spread out covering her arms. “Is there another pin?” he asked. She shook her head. There were no insurmountable barriers now! He sat on the bed and pulled her down. He took care to penetrate her slowly. She herself was prepared and did not let even an accidental sound slip. What came out of her were tears. Not of pain, but of pleasure. And happiness! She wouldn’t have admitted it earlier. But now there could be no harm. She was in love with this man. Through his mother’s complaints, she had been falling in love, bit by bit. She could never have imagined that she would have him for herself one day. And that too so easily!

To be continued

Next-door (Part 9)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in Antara-Mrinal, English, Original

She did not go to the dresser at all after shower and came directly to him. He had changed into comfortable night dress and was already waiting for her on the bed. He lent her a hand as she climbed on the bed and welcomed her with a kiss on her forehead. She looked down and waited in anxiety as well as excitement for his next move. It took forever! He spoke.

“You look gorgeous in red,” his voice was hoarse. Seeing her in red saree that morning had stunned him. That’s why he had chosen red for the night-dress too. He hadn’t erred.

Her throat went dry and she gulped hard. His hands slipped down her shoulders, caressing her arms ever so lightly, finally reaching down to her palms, which he held in his. He coughed before willing himself to speak in a normal voice, “If you are not ready, or feel uncomfortable, you can stop me. Right now. Or at any point of time. Okay?”

Even with her inexperience, she could feel desire oozing out of his body. How could he still be so careful… so caring… so much in control. “Men need what they need,” Chachiji was definitely not talking about men like him. Were there men like him? Or was he the only one.

“You must do that, Anatara. Tell me that you understand,” he spoke again when she did not answer his earlier question.

She wasn’t looking at him. But she could feel his intense gaze on herself. She nodded slowly. There was no way words were coming out of her throat in such an overwhelming situation. He pulled away for a moment as he reached out and switched off the light. The next moment she was in his arms, in a bone-crushing hug. After breaking the hug, he didn’t give her even a moment’s respite. He flung open the gown of her nightdress. Inside it was a knee-length dress with noodle strap. He didn’t bother about it. It didn’t offer him much resistance. He laid her down on the bed. She got unsettled when he kissed her feet. She sat up with a start. “Mrinal ji… No… Don’t…”

He cupped her face and replied, “Even saints have worshipped beauty, Antara. I am a mere mortal and there is such beauty before me today… Don’t stop me. Relax and enjoy. Please.”

He was gentle, but he knew what he wanted. And in a way that could not be described in words, he was demanding it from her. She wouldn’t deny him anything he wanted. He kissed her on the lips and made her lie down again.  He covered every inch of her body with kisses. Despite his arousal he keenly observed when she enjoyed and when she flinched, adjusting his position accordingly. She was writhing under him, her own desire shooting through the roof with the foreplay, when he finally straddled her. But hers was virgin body. When he entered her, despite his precaution, it hurt. It came unexpectedly to her, and she let out a cry. He stopped immediately, pulling away.

“Antara!”

When she realized what had happened, she grew tongue-tied. Hadn’t all those Internet articles and columns in women’s magazines warned her? Why wasn’t she prepared? She should have anticipated and not cried out!

“It’s okay, it’s okay,” he didn’t sense her mortification and was more worried about her pain. He helped her sit up. Before he could do or say something more coherent, however, he needed to calm himself down. “Give me a minute,” he said, grabbed his clothes and went to the bathroom.

She was sobbing by the time he came back.

“What… what happened, Antara. Talk to me. Are you hurt? Please…”

“Don’t be so nice to me,” came the listless reply through her sobs. Then the obvious realization dawned on him. It wasn’t the pain. She was embarrassed.

“Rest assured,” his tone suddenly become playful, “I’m not going to be nice at all. You have no idea how many sleepless nights lie in wait for you. You have tortured me since the first time I saw you.”

Her sobs subsided. How did he manage to switch gears like that, she wondered.

“But Antara,” he was more somber now, “It’s doesn’t happen like in romance novels. What happened was natural. It takes time getting used to it, getting used to each other. We have an entire lifetime before us. We have time to get comfortable. And we should use that. Ideally I shouldn’t have pushed you so early on…. But I got carried away…. You do that to me!” He smiled and kissed her hands.

“How do I thank you…”

“What do you want to thank me for?”

“It has barely been two days with you,” she spoke in a low voice. The lights were still switched off, and in the dim floor-light it was difficult to make out expressions on her face. “And in these two days I have been asked about what I want, or how I am feeling, or whether I am comfortable more number of times than in last fifteen years of my life. I am almost afraid that I will get used to it.”

“Antara!” she had revealed probably one of the deepest emotions to him. Despite not being used to pryaing, he prayed that he would never break her trust. “You weren’t happy at your Uncle’s place?” he asked wanting to hear her talk.

“No. Don’t get me wrong. I wasn’t starved or abused… In fact, you see all these suitcases… You had stumped everyone with your insistence on no dowry. They did their best to make up for it with lavishness of wedding, all these clothes, jewelry, expensive gifts and what not.”

“Most of which you are not interested in taking with you.”

“None of it is for me, Mrinal ji. I always had expensive things and luxuries. But not because I would be comfortable in them; rather because they can’t be seen as grudging the responsibility of their unfortunate, orphaned niece.”

Mrinal sighed. Her parents hadn’t died poor. As the elder brother, her father had more to do with the family business than her uncle and he inherited the fruits of his brother’s labour. Still, because she was a girl child, she was a burden. If they took care of her, it was a favour. Nobody thought that all that money was hers too.

“It’s all over, Antara. You can leave all of this behind you. You must,” he said as he pulled her closer in his embrace.

“How did you pack your paintings?”

“Paintings?”

“Your paintings.”

“I… That’s nothing serious. I didn’t bring them at all.”

“Arr… Why not? Can somebody fetch them?”

“Who told you I paint?”

“I have seen your paintings.”

“When? Where?”

Mrinal sighed and then broke in to a smile, “Just trust me. I have seen them and they are damn serious. How do we get them? Do you want to make a quick trip home…”

“I don’t know if they would even be there. Chachiji was planning to remodel my room…”

“She couldn’t have just thrown them away…. Anyway, let’s at least try.”

“I will ask Pikku to check.”

“Call right away. He might already be on his way here.”

“Why?”

“I asked him to come.”

“For what?”

“How possessive you are being! Can’t I talk to him?”

“Of course, you can…” she turned away feeling confused and foolish. Mrinal grinned behind her.

Parikshit handed her a cylindrical box. “Here. All your paintings. I packed them when Mummy started cleaning the room.”

Mrs. Gupta had indeed started on her plans to reclaim Antara’s room already!

“Thank you. Where did you get this box from?” Antara felt overwhelmed and asked to distract herself.

“It came with one of the posters I had ordered. Should keep them safe in the journey.”

“Thank you, Parikshit,” Mrinal interposed and handed him a gift-wrapped box, “This is for you.”

“What is this?”

“Open it.”

Parikshit eagerly opened the box and gave a cry of joy when he saw the sealed box of a mobile phone. It was the same model Mrinal had bought for Antara earlier.

“Wow! Thank you so much, Mrinal Bhai…. Rather Jijaji,” he grinned happily, “How did you know I wanted this phone?”

“It was no rocket science. You were so interested and excited when I had given you Antara’s phone.”

“It wasn’t needed,” Antara told Mrinal after Parikshit had left, “He has already been spoiled during the wedding. He might have extracted more gifts for himself than were bought for me.” She was smiling fondly thinking about her brother.

“It wasn’t needed. It was just to acknowledge that he matters to you; hence to me too.”

Antara looked grateful, “Yes. He matters to me. I have practically brought him up.”

“Yeah?”

“When my parents died he was barely one- year old. And Chachiji was frantic about having been saddled with the responsibility of another seven-year old child, that too a girl. I was so scared and insecure. I felt the need to prove my worth. That’s why I started looking after him. To prove to her that I would not be a burden. But afterwards… I was thankful I did that. He has been my solace. Probably this is what being a mother feels like. And after growing up, he has been a great support and companion.”

“But he doesn’t stay at home.”

“He went off only last year.”

“And you have been lonely?”

“Very.”

“Well. Not any longer.”

She smiled shyly.

To be continued