Coming Around (Part 6)

Posted 6 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

The restaurant was unusually crowded. Paridhi and Subrato had to wait outside for a table to get free.

“Paridhi. What are you doing here?” A woman in her early 50s recognized her.

Paridhi was startled, but managed to reply, “Hello Auntie. Actually we had a class dinner. This is our professor – Dr. Sen. Both of us reached early. We are waiting for others to come.”

“Ah! Okay. You people have luxurious ways of studying. Professors taking you to dinner and all,” it was difficult to figure out if she was impressed or being skeptical, “In our days, we used to be scared of our professors.”

“Educators have realized over time,” Subrato chipped in, “That being friends with students is a better way of getting them to learn than scaring them.”

“Sure. Of course,” the woman found it difficult to counter that and took their leave.

“You are a smooth liar,” Subrato grinned after the woman had left.

She was not amused, “It was a bad idea. We shouldn’t have come.”

“Hey. What happened? Who was she, anyway?”

“A prospective mother-in-law. She lives in Lucknow. I don’t know what will she tell Mummy now…”

“Relax. Your story was good. And if needed I will stand your witness. Come on now. We had come here to cheer you up. Don’t get depressed again.”

“Yes. Of course. Sorry. I think our table is ready…”

“Paridhi. I…” he started saying when they were seated.

“Why do you pronounce my name like that? It’s Pa-ri-dhi and not Po-ri-di!” she was extremely irritated.

“What is my name?” he asked calmly.

“Excuse me?”

“How do you pronounce my name?”

“I… I don’t know. I never call you by your name.”

“Try it.”

“Subrat… I mean Subrato Sen,” she replied awkwardly.

He laughed out loud at her discomfort in getting the Bengali pronunciation of his name right. “I think it does not matter how you call someone. What matters is whom you are calling.”

“I am sorry. And I have lost count of how many times I have said sorry to you…”

“It’s all right. You are worried and…”

“No. It’s not. It is unfair that you bear the brunt of my frustrations…”

“Well. Today I am the reason of your frustration. It was my idea to bring you here.”

“It was up to me to accept or reject it. How could you possibly have known…”

“Stop being so hard on yourself.”

Paridhi sighed and changed the subject, “Shall we order?”

“Yeah.”

“You remember when I had given a surprise test in the class?” Subrato asked during dinner.

“Yes. Very well. You never gave another surprise test. You didn’t care about attendance either. Wonder what had come upon you?”

“I was very upset that day. I didn’t think I could teach. That was a last moment solution to avoid having to work.”

“What made you so upset?”

“It was something that had happened a year ago actually,” Subrato said and then narrated the story of Stacey.

“I… I’m sorry about that,” Paidhi looked genuinely affected.

“I am trying to get over it. I guess I am already quite successful.”

“But doesn’t talking about it bring back the bad memories?”

“You mean to ask why I shared it with you?”

“Well… yeah…”

“Two reasons. One is that willingly or unwillingly, you shared some of your most personal problems with me. I liked that you did so. And I did not want you to be uncomfortable about it. Now, we both have each other’s secrets. So, we can feel secure about our own being kept safe.”

Paridhi chuckled at that and asked, “And second?”

“Second is that I needed to share it with someone who won’t react by extolling the virtues of Indian arranged marriages.”

Paridhi laughed out loud at that, “That was very clever of you indeed. Choosing someone who is a victim of arranged marriage system to share it with. You get all the sympathies. All the options look very bleak for both of us then.”

“They do, don’t they? And thank God. You laughed. Even if it was at the bleakness of options.”

“You make it sound like I am always crying or something. I have nothing against laughing.”

“No. You don’t. That’s what makes it heartbreaking when you are sad or distressed.”

She sighed and shrugged, “I wish God thought about it the way you do. He seems to revel in creating troubles for me… For all of us…”

“God is a tricky topic to discuss. We should stay focused on the topic of marriages.”

“Or food. How did you like the kebabs?”

“They are delicious. Good choice of restaurant.”

“Thanks. But you must really try the road-side ones. I don’t know if it’s the pollution, the dust or the unhygienic water, but they taste much better.”

“Wow! With that description, you just pushed the possibility of me eating them a few years further in future.”

“Your loss!”

“Indeed!”

“Really? Your marriage is fixed? With that woman’s son?”

“Looks like.”

“So, I didn’t do much harm, after all. She didn’t have any complaints against you roaming around with another man?” Subrato grinned.

“Looks like, she didn’t.”

Subrato looked at her for a second and then asked with concern, “You don’t look happy. You don’t like the guy?”

“How would I know? I haven’t met him.”

“Excuse me? How can the marriage be fixed like that?”

“How do I explain something to you, which I myself don’t understand?” she looked dejected and was on the verge of tears.

“I’m sorry, Paridhi. I am, obviously, not helping. I wish I could… But you definitely would know better than me on how to handle the situation. Obviously asking you to rebel against your family is not a solution.”

“No. It isn’t. Thanks for understanding that.”

“Can I help in any way?”

She shrugged with a sad smile. How could he possibly help?

“But I can listen. And I will try to listen without falling for the temptation of giving advice that is not useful to you.”

“You know what. There is one man in the world who I can marry this blindly.”

“Who?” Subrato asked with a raised eyebrow wondering what she was talking about.

“The man for whom your American girlfriend left you. He is supposedly better than even you, right?” she laughed at her own joke.

“Now arranging that would be some revenge I could take on her, and help you at the same time. But I think we will have to do with something more practical.”

“Like discussing the project.”

“Sure. Just one question. Why haven’t you met the guy? Where is he?”

“In US. New York. He can’t keep coming to India all the time. So, he will come straight for the wedding.”

“And he doesn’t care about getting married to girl he doesn’t know at all?”

“Big, fat dowry – I guess that reduces the perceived risk a lot. And then he is supposedly this obedient, sanskari son, who trusts his parents blindly. Unlike me.”

“Your parents have met him?”

“No. But they trust the person who brought the proposal to them blindly. So, I am supposed to extend that blind trust as well.”

“Hmm…”

“Project?”

“Yeah. Sure! Let me see what have you done till now.”

To be continued

Coming Around (Part 5)

Posted 9 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

“No grade drop in Econometrics. Did you hear that, Pari?” Catherine was excited.

“Really? That’s great!”

“Of course. Especially for you. Now Sudhanshu does not stand a chance.”

“I am not competing with anybody, Cathy.”

“No? Why are you doing the independent study with him then?”

“What does that have to do with Sudhanshu?”

“Not Sudhanshu. But no grade drop in Econometrics? Why would Subrato Sen do that?”

“How do I know? Oh God! You are crazy Cathy. No, I haven’t talk to him about the grade drop at all. The study was Dr. Gupta’s idea. You really are crazy.”

“That cute face, and soft voice can make anyone go crazy.”

“If independent study helps with that, you can do that too.”

“I won’t spoil my chances. He has high standards. Independent study will reveal my limitations too quickly,” Cathy grinned, “You enjoy it.”

“Shut up!”

Paridhi had taken up independent study in the next trimester as suggested by Dr. Gupta and Subrato and was in Subrato’s office to discuss the first steps of her project. Suddenly her mobile rang. She looked at the name on the screen and disconnected the call to return to the conversation. But the phone kept ringing again and again.

“Why don’t you take the call and we can discuss after that?” he noticed that the call was from her mother and suggested helpfully.

“No,” she switched off the phone and said decisively, “Let’s continue. You were saying we could find records in the state library. But we would need someone who known Arabic and Persian, right?”

“Why is you relationship with your mother so strained?”

“Excuse me?” Paridhi was shocked.

“Her calls always seem to trouble you.”

“I have no idea where that came from,” she replied with practiced toughness, “I am just trying to focus on work right now. Can we?”

“Right. Let’s continue,” he replied dryly and did not apologize with his presumption. He knew he was right.

But after their discussion ended, he decided to clear the air, “Listen. Paridhi. I didn’t mean to be intrusive earlier. It’s just…”

“And I didn’t mean to be rude. We all have to live with shortcomings. Sometimes our own, sometimes of the people around us. I don’t want to go around complaining.”

“I will keep that in mind for future.”

“Thanks.”

He kept up his promise and did not ask her about it again. He wasn’t taking any courses for her this trimester. So, they only met twice a week to discuss the progress on the project and the next steps to be taken.

She looked particularly distracted that day.

“Network was down in the hostel. I could not mail you some of the translated notes I had taken. Here they are in this USB drive.”

Subrato plugged the USB drive in, “It has a bunch of classical compositions. I doubt it has anything to do with economic policies of Nawabs of Oudh!”

“What… Oh… I brought the wrong… Let me check… I think I forgot… Do you have some time… I will go back and bring the right one…”

“Relax. Is it in your mailbox? You can access from here and download them.”

“It should be. I had sent it to the Maulana Wani for final confirmation.”

“Log in, then,” he turned his laptop over to her. Despite three attempts she could not log in.

“What happened?” he asked when he saw her looking frustrated.

“I can’t seem to remember my password.”

“You have it saved on your computer?”

“No. It’s… It makes no sense… I’m sorry. I am wasting your time. Can I come some other time?”

“Paridhi,” he said very softly, but surely, “You can come any time you want. And you can also share what is bugging you.”

She let out a loud sigh and looked at him with blank expressions.

“If you want,” he added hesitatingly wondering if he again crossed the line with her.

“We don’t always want the right things, do we?”

“I can’t imagine you wanting anything so sinister that you are so restless about it. But if it just about wanting to share your problems with friends – no. I don’t think there can be anything wrong with it.”

“I want to keep my mother happy. But…”

“But?”

“My mother and my grand-mother – they never wanted me to leave home. Staying in a hostel – away from the family. It was all just too modern for them. So, I had done my engineering also from a college in Allahabad only. But I fought with them to come here. Studying here – doing an MBA was my childhood dream. I didn’t know what would I do after this. But I just had to… And they had extracted a thousand promises from me that I won’t do anything that would bring shame on the family. And I haven’t… It’s making no sense to you, is it?” she suddenly asked.

“I am not an American. Why would it make no sense to me? Go ahead. Please!”

“Cathy could never understand. Nobody could. Cathy thinks I would be financially independent after MBA. Why should I care what they want? But how can I not care? She is my mother. She has brought me up.”

Subrato held back his thoughts on the issue and prodded her further, “What is the problem?”

“Everyday is a problem. They want me to get married at the earliest. Whatever time I had left with me after my summer internship, I have spent either getting lectures about how to behave myself to catch a good prospect or in meeting prospective in-laws and husbands. I begged them to wait for me to finish my MBA at least. But they are not willing to listen. They keep sending people to meet me here. And then pass on the feedback about everything from how my room was not clean, to how I was not dressed conservatively enough, how I came across as too modern etc. etc. Sometimes I manage to make my mother understand. But my grandmother starts blaming her for letting her daughter slip away and she loses it and takes out all her frustration on me. So, whenever she calls me I am told that I have slipped away from her hands, I don’t care about her or the family, what did she do wrong in bringing me up, why can’t I learn to be a bit more docile, why am I following the footsteps of my brother…” she suddenly stopped when she mentioned her brother.

“Your brother?”

“No. No brother. I don’t have a brother.”

“Paridhi?”

“He ran away. A few years ago. With a girl from lower cast. Untouchable actually. So now, finding a match for me is difficult if the prospects know about this black mark on the family. So, until I get married, I am the only child. I have no brother. And… nobody here knows either. In case people ask around… So…”

“Don’t worry. Your secrets are safe with me. But…”

“But?”

“Nothing.”

“Now, don’t leave me in a limbo. I have spoken too much anyway. At least I should know what you think about it.”

“Let it be. I don’t want to add to your worries.”

“Please. Speak up.”

“You are too young for marriage to be your first priority. What will happen to your career? Is that a concern in this entire process at all?”

“No. It’s not a concern at all. And… I don’t know what to do.”

“I’m sure some solution will turn up. But as a first step try to improve you mood,” Subrato smiled, “Do something to cheer yourself up.”

“Yeah. I guess so,” Paridhi forced a smile on herself, “I should leave now. I will send you the notes by e-mail and…”

“I have a better idea.”

“Yes?”

“Why don’t you take me to a place in the city where I can get good kebabs and hopefully rest of the dinner too?”

“Dinner?”

“Yes. If you don’t mind.”

“Okay… Yeah… Sure…” Paridhi still looked unsure, but agreed.

“Let’s go then. My car got delivered yesterday. So, we don’t have to depend on the autos and taxis this time. Do you want to change before leaving?”

“No. I am good.”

“So, where do we get great kebabs? Preferably not on the roadside.”

Paridhi smiled, “There is a restaurant in Hazratganj. It comes close, but at a much higher price.”

“Don’t worry. Dinner is on me. Let’s go.”

To be continued

Coming Around (Part 4)

Posted 18 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

Subrato was agitated. It had been exactly one year since Stacey had walked out on him.

“You are just not stable enough, Subrato,” she had told him.

He was shocked. He had been preparing to propose to her. He had the entire wedding planned out in his head.

“What are you talking about? What is not stable about me?”

“You keep running off to weird places.”

“I like exploring things, Stacey. You are an artist. You can understand that.”

“Yeah. I am an artist and I need more stable man in my life to make up for that.”

“Stacey. It’s not like I don’t hold jobs or something. I just take up experimental projects. I can easily provide for you and the family we will raise together. And if needed…” Her audible sigh had made him realize that he was getting into a futile discussion. He asked her, “That isn’t the point, is it?”

She had nodded not meeting his eyes.

“Who is he?” he had tried hard to conceal his fury.

“Let it be, Subrato. It doesn’t matter. It wasn’t working out between us. I just… I had been meaning to tell you for so long.”

“What went wrong?” he had asked realizing even himself how hopeless those questions were.

“It wasn’t meant to be. Good bye, Subrato.”

He had stood rooted to his place as she left. Then he had gone to his bedroom, picked up the ring he had bought and flushed it down the toilet. He had done a real experimental thing with his career and life after that. He had decided to move back to India, at least for a while. But it had taken several months to work that out. As soon as his posting at IIAM had been confirmed, he had left US taking a sabbatical from his job there. His joining was still four months away, but he just had to get away from that place.

Subrato jumped out of his office chair. He needed fresh air. His class was about to start. But he had anticipated his inability to work that day. He called the TA (teaching assistant) of the course and handed him the question papers for a surprise test in the class. It was to be an half-an-hour test. The students were to be let go after that.

He walked out of the office towards the ground where he usually went for his jogging. His reverie was broken by the sound of her voice. She was sitting on the lone bench on that ground, her mobile pressed on her right ear, while her head was partially buried in her hand.

“Mummy. How many times have I told you to call me at the night, if you have to talk this nonsense. I have classes to attend for God’s sake. How am I supposed to concentrate?…. Mummy. Please. Let me complete this year, get a job… Of course, you don’t care. You want me to live the life you have lived… Just… I have to go the class…”

Subrato got out of her line of sight as she got up, but he could figure out that she was upset and crying. And she would get a test in the class!! On an impulse, he took a clandestine route he had discovered from the ground to the academic area to reach the class before her. He had hoped to stop the TA from distributing the test papers. But by the time he reached there, the papers had already been distributed. She reached the class shortly after him. She was late by ten minutes for the test. She sighed and shook her head when she realized that a surprise test was waiting for her. She had washed her face, but Subrato did not miss the swelling around her eyes. He felt bad for her. But she just picked up a test paper and went to her seat to start working on it. Subrato let the TA go telling him that he would supervise the test himself. He decided to let the test go on for forty minutes, so that she got enough time for completing it. But he was surprised when she got up from her seat to submit her answer sheet even before the originally planned time for the test was over.

“Can I leave now?” she asked him not sure if he intended to continue the class after the test.

“Yes,” he nodded. She probably wasn’t in the right mental state to take the test, he thought.

But he was in for a surprise when she left the classroom and he casually turned the pages of her answer-sheet. She had answered all the questions. And in his quick assessment, she had answered them correctly. It was all in a horrible handwriting. She must have been eager to get over with it. But it was correct nevertheless. He turned back to the first page of the answer sheet and ran his hand over her name. Paridhi Chauhan. He finally knew her name. A small, mostly indiscernible, smile formed on his lips!

Paridhi knocked on Subrato’s office door and opened it when she heard “Yes?” from inside. Another senior faculty member was in the office with him.

“I… just wanted to submit the assignment. TA was not in his office,” she explained her presence hesitantly.

“Come in,” he invited her in, “You might be interested in what Dr. Gupta and I are discussing here. Dr. Gupta – she is the one who came up with the idea that Imambada’s story is very Keynesian.”

“That’s great,” Dr. Gupta replied, “If you are interested Paridhi, you could check out the research we are planning and join it for your independent study project in the next trimester.”

“Sure. I will check it out, Sir,” she told him courteously.

“I will take your leave now,” Dr. Gupta turned to Subrato and left after parting pleasantries.

“What was it about?” she asked Subrato.

“You remember the Imambada story and its resemblance to Keynesian theories, right?”

“Yes?”

“So, I have been thinking about it. While I am in Lucknow, I would like to take up a research project where I get an advantage by being in this city and zeroed on the idea of studying economic policies of Nawabs of Oudh. We might get more interesting insights like the Imambada one.”

“That would be some real Indian Economics research. Very good idea.”

“So yeah – like Dr. Gupta suggested, if you are taking up independent study in the next trimester and are interested in the idea, let me know.”

“I will think about it.”

“And you did very well on the surprise test. Congratulations.”

“You have graded the papers?”

“Mostly. Unless someone else throws a surprise at me, you have scored the highest. What do you guys call it. A batch-max?”

“It’s just a test.”

Subrato smiled and shook his head at her attempt of dismissing her performance, despite having achieved it under distress. And it wasn’t just a test. She was the batch topper based on cumulative performance as of now. If her Economics aptitude was anything to go by, Subrato had no doubts that she will graduate at the top of her class.

“I had to submit the assignment…”

“The deadline is until the midnight. You are already done with it?”

“I have to go out of the campus for some work. So…”

“Lonely trip to Chowk and Imambada?”

She laughed, although it looked like a sad laugh to Subrato, “No. Thankfully or unfortunately not lonely.”

“Paridhi. Is everything all right?” he suddenly asked. His question came out of nowhere as far as she was concerned. She hesitated for a moment. Something else was odd apart from his question. The way he called her name. There was a slight accent, a combination of Bengali and American accent, which was difficult to miss. How come she had not noticed it earlier? Was it the first time he was calling her by her name?

“Yes… Why do you ask?” she brought herself out of her confused thoughts and replied hesitantly.

“Nothing… Just… Sometimes you look distressed,” he became conscious of his sudden intrusion and withdrew with a vague explanation of his question.

“We all do. We all are distressed some times.”

“Right. All the best with whatever is taking you to the city today.”

“Thanks. I need it. Good night.”

“Good night,” he replied though could not help wondering about why she said ‘I need it’.

To be Continued

Coming Around (Part 3)

Posted 12 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

“Hello there!” Paridhi was startled by Subrato’s voice at Imambada.

“What are you doing here?” she asked abruptly.

“Now this… is definitely not a private property.”

“Actually it is,” Paridhi smiled, “Not mine though. Waqf board’s! I am sorry. You startled me.”

“Just saw a familiar face around… By the way. This is my cousin – Sonali. She is a Lucknow veteran and thinks I can’t survive in the city on my own. And Sonali – she is the one who gave me a ride to the institute on my arrival in the city. So, you can thank her for ridding you of your guilt…”

“Stop exaggerating my concern Subrato. I didn’t get your name… Oh. I have to take this call. Excuse me,” she walked away as her mobile rang.

“So, you came here alone?” Subrato asked Paridhi.

“Yeah.”

“Wow! I would find it very awkward to do stuff alone.”

“I come here alone very often.”

“Why?”

“Just like that. How many people would be interested in coming to Imambada with me? That too again and again.”

“What about your best friend?”

“My best friend?”

“Catherine, I think!”

“How do you know she is my best friend.”

“Well – the two of you are spotted together quite often in the campus.”

Paridhi laughed, “Yes. But outside the campus, she could be spotted more often with her boyfriend. That’s who she is with right now. So, I am left to my own devices and I am not complaining. Anyway, I was planning to leave now…”

“Sonali will drop me. We could give you a ride…”

“Oh no! Not needed. You should continue with your plan…”

“There is no plan… Here she is… Sonali…”

“Subrato,” Sonali looked hurried when she came back, “Emergency at work. Some client is going berserk. I need to go immediately. How do I drop you…”

“Oh. Don’t worry. I know enough about the city to find my way back.”

“But…”

“Don’t worry. You also have to go back, right?” Subrato turned to Paridhi.

“Yes. But I will be taking an auto…”

“Can we share it?”

“Sure. You don’t have to worry Ma’am.”

“Thank you so much. Subrato. I will catch up with you later. I am so sorry…”

“Don’t bother. Handle your work. See you later. Bye.”

“So, you don’t have a boyfriend?” Subrato asked Paridhi casually on their auto-ride back to the campus.

“Huh?”

“Sorry. That sounded intrusive. I was just continuing our earlier conversation.”

“How is that related to our earlier conversation?”

“You mentioned that your friend was with her boyfriend and you are left to your own devices. So, obviously the next question that came to my mind was this.”

“Hmm… Okay. Since you explain the origin of your question so logically, let me answer it. No. I don’t have a boyfriend. And I am unlikely to ever have one.”

Subrato laughed, “The second part of the answer is dishonest. I’m already surprised that you don’t have one and you are talking so strongly about not having one in future too.”

“Why are you surprised? You think girls with verbal diarrhea must have a boyfriend?”

That made him laugh again, “Verbal diarrhea?? You are saying that about yourself? You are very aware of your own self.”

“Whatever.”

“Anyway. To answer your question, if my college days experience are anything to go by, you are too intelligent and attractive to be left alone by boys.”

“Thanks for the compliment. But no. I can’t have a boyfriend.”

“Can’t? Why not?”

“Can’t afford those complications. My family is too conservative for that.”

“I see,” her honest confession about her situation suddenly made it awkward for Subrato.

“Anyway. Why are we talking about these things? What does your cousin do?” she changed the topic.

“She is a designer. For clothes and accessories. Specializes in bridal attire. Her customers keep going berserk all the time.”

“I can imagine! I have seen my cousins during the days leading to their wedding. They go crazy about every little thing. I don’t understand the madness.”

“Well. People want their special day to be perfect.”

“How does it matter? Especially if the rest of the life is going to be a compromise, something much less than perfect.”

“You sound very pessimistic about marriages?”

“I don’t know what’s wrong. Why are we going in the direction of discussing relationships and marriages again and again?”

“Your bad luck, I guess,” Subrato grinned, “Would you prefer discussing Econometrics?”

“I think so.”

“How are you finding the classes?”

“Good.”

“I was looking for some honest, critical feedback.”

“In that case, well… it’s too basic sometimes. But that’s the fate of most of the classes in any course. You have to take the entire class together. That’s your job.”

“Wow! You have a gift for this. You suddenly made my job sound very depressing.”

“I am sorry. That’s not what I meant,” Paridhi replied sounding sad.

“I was just joking!”

“It wasn’t a joke. I do tend to see too much bleakness in the world.”

“And the verbal diarrhea is a way to not let that show?”

“Are you an Economist or a Psychologist?”

“You don’t need to be either to have some common sense.”

“Well… ” her phone rang and she picked it up, “What… No Mummy… Not now… Let me at least reach the hostel room… I am with friends… No… Just stop… Okay? Stop it. I will call back! Bye.” It looked like she had disconnected the call against the wishes of her mother. She did not look at Subrato after the call and kept staring outside the auto. Subrato looked at her curiously, but decided not to interfere further.

“Do you know the story of Imambada?” she spoke suddenly with a perky voice that was characteristic of her usual verbal-diarrhea-self.

He knew the story. The tour guide at Imambada had narrated it to him just a while back when he was there with Sonali. But he still said no. She needed to talk to deal with whatever was bothering her. He decided to indulge her.

She explained the story to him in detail, adding a few exaggerations on her own from what the guide had told him. He couldn’t help noticing the exaggerations, though he did not point them out to her. She went on about how Nawab Asaf-Ud-Daula commissioned the construction of the Imambada in a time of famine to provide employment to people. The common people built the Imambada during the day time. The noblemen and elites broke it down at night as they could not do anything else. The see-saw continued until the famine was over.

“It is rather Keynesian, don’t you think so? And much before Keynes,” she added at the end.

“It indeed is,” Subrato was impressed by her economics related observation. It had  precisely been his thought too, when he had heard the story. This intervention was very similar to the one done in the US to overcome the great depression. And the economist behind the theory that guided the intervention was the legendary John M. Keynes. Imambada had happened much before that!

“Have you been to the Residency?”

“Not yet.”

“You can see the holes made by canons during the seize of 1857.”

“I see…”

“Though their size is rather small. I was underwhelmed when I saw them for the first time. I had imagined some huge holes in the walls.”

Subrato chuckled at that, “What else should I know about Lucknow?”

“Kebabs to eat, taanga to ride, chikan to wear, super-formal nawaabi language to speak and mujra to watch. I can’t help you with the last one though. Don’t know where can you find that.”

Subrato laughed out loud at that, “You are funny. And amazing. I think I can do without mujra. Where do you get good Kebabs?”

“Roadside.”

“Ah!”

“That won’t work for you, would it? You probably order bottled water in the restaurants.”

Subrato sighed, “As a matter of fact, I do. Is that too bad?”

“Not for me. But for you. There are things you can’t enjoy.”

“Right.”

“Did that sound offensive? I didn’t mean to…”

“Nope. That didn’t sound offensive at all. Only practical.”

“Great. We have reached. You can do the rest of your research on Lucknow on Wikipedia now,” she smiled.

“Or you can take me along on one of your lonely trips to the city and guide me.”

“I enjoy my lonely trips.”

“Did I disturb you today, then?”

“No. It’s good to break the monotony once in a while.”

“Hmm…”

“My hostel is here. I will pay…”

“This ride is on me. Good night.”

“Good night.”

To be continued

Coming Around (Part 2)

Posted 11 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

“Pari. Why aren’t you in the class?” Catherine sent her an SMS the next morning. Prof. Subrato Sen was already in the class and Paridhi had not reached there yet.

“Don’t feel like. Will catch you in the Marketing Strategy class,” she replied back. She was sitting in her room obsessively finding out everything she could about Subrato Sen on Internet.

A graduate of ISI Kolkata, he had done his Ph. D. from London School of Economics and had worked for over five years at World Bank and IMF before coming back to India and joining IIAM. She remembered reading some of his articles in a major financial newspapers and also a paper on RBI’s monetary policy.

And she had been advising him on how to cope with first year of MBA! But why the hell did he not tell her?

“Good morning!” Paridhi was startled by the greeting and the voice.

“What the… What are you doing here?” she spoke without thinking, when she saw Subrato there. He was in his shorts, t-shirts and jogging shoes, sweating profusely from the exercise. One of the earphone buds was in his left ear, while the other was hanging down. Faint sound of music escaped from it indicating that he had just taken it out, possibly after noticing her.

“Umm… Last time I checked this place was the property of the institute and a proper response to a ‘good morning’ greeting is a ‘good morning’, a ‘hello’, or a ‘hi’…”

Paridhi gulped, obviously embarrassed at her abrupt reaction, and also at having to face him after the fiasco of their first meeting. But she tried to put up a brave face and replied, “Good morning. Actually nobody comes here…”

“So, you have encroached the space?”

“You are making no sense at all!” she frowned.

“I was joking, of course. How are you?”

Why the hell was he indulging in small talk with her. Paridhi was confused. She responded with a question instead, “Why did you lie to me that day?”

“When did I lie to you?”

“The day we first met, when you came to join…”

“Ah! When did I tell you that I was a first year student?”

Paridhi frowned in confusion. “You didn’t?” she mumbled.

“No.”

“But you didn’t tell me that you were a prof either?”

“Would you have believed me?”

She shook her head reluctantly.

“And has it occurred to you that you don’t let other people speak?”

“I am sorry,” she pouted, but apologized. “Sir…” she added hastily after a pause.

“Subrato is fine.”

‘Of course, it is not,’ she thought to herself, but nodded before him.

“And I see that you are up fairly early. So, getting up in time can’t be your problem. Why don’t you come to the classes then?”

“You noticed that?”

He laughed out loud, “Don’t you think it will be a little hard for me not to notice that.”

“I had hoped it wasn’t,” she mumbled.

“Anyway. If our first encounter was the reason you stopped coming to the class, you can get over it now.”

“I have missed too many classes. I will get a grade-drop anyway,” the reply came automatically. She noticed his raised eyebrows and added hastily, “Of course. One should come to the classes to learn and all…”

Subrato shook his head with a grin on his face. She was unbelievably voluble and clumsy about the things she said. But there was something cute about it. “Have a good day,” he wished her and restarted his jogging. Paridhi walked back to her hostel wordlessly. The entire exchange was very awkward and strange for her. But the most discomforting part was that somebody had invaded her secret little space. Nobody ever came to that part of the campus. Although technically the area was owned by the institute, but it was some distance away from most of the buildings. This land was acquired by the institute with an eye on the future, when the number of students would increase and more construction might be needed. Right now, it was just a grassland. How that hell did he discover it so quickly, she wondered. Most people on the campus were not even aware of its existence, much less it being the institute’s property.

‘Whatever!’ she calmed herself down. This wasn’t her usual hour anyway. She has had a night-out and that’s how she was there that early in the morning. He would come only for jogging. So, she could still have the place to herself at other times, she concluded happily.

She decided to start attending his classes.

“So, these two variables are correlated. And very strongly so. What obvious problem do you see in concluding any causality from this?”

A few hands went up in the class, including Paridhi’s. The other faces had become familiar to Subrato by now. They were the ones who answered most often in the class. But this girl had missed so many of the classes. He did not expect her to know the answer. So, he decided to test her and indicated towards her.

“We have time series data in both variables. It is likely that both of them are increasing with time. This is likely a spurious correlation.”

“How do you determine definitely whether or not they are really correlated?”

“We take the differential and see the correlation in that data.”

“Excellent!” Subrato was genuinely impressed.

“Why are you attending the classes after you have already missed enough for a grade-drop,” Catherine was curious after the class.

“He teaches well.”

“How did you know? You never attended a class.”

“Some of his recorded talks are available on you tube.”

“Ah! So, why didn’t you come earlier?”

“I just couldn’t get up early enough for an 8 ‘o class.”

“Hmm.” Catherine looked like she did not believe her, but did not say anything other than looking at her questioningly. Paridhi ignored that.

“By the way,” Catherine changed the topic and spoke excitedly, “We have found out all about him.”

“About whom?”

“Subrato Sen, yaar. Who else?”

“I see. What did you find?” Paridhi asked, though she herself had done enough research on him to know almost everything that was there to know.

“He is single!”

That was something she hadn’t thought about finding out. But it wasn’t surprising. Nothing she found about him on Internet seemed to indicate that he was married. And anyway! How did it matter?

“Good for you,” she replied.

“And you Ms. Prudent act all detached. Don’t tell me you don’t have a little crush on him.”

“Really? If that were the case, why wouldn’t I attend his classes?”

“If you ask me, it is the case. That’s why you have started attending his classes even after missing enough for a grade-drop.”

“You are crazy Cathy.”

“Am I? So be it.”

“Right. Let’s quickly grab a puff or something to eat before the next class. I missed my breakfast.”

To be continued

Coming Around (Part 1)

Posted 14 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Subrato-Paridhi

“I will get an auto for IIAM from the station, right? … Yeah, yeah… Don’t worry… I have to stay here now… I, of course, have to find my way around…” Subrato assured his cousin on phone.

“Going to join IIAM?” Paridhi asked her co-passenger on the train. The train was about to reach Lucknow from Delhi. She had boarded it in Allahabad. She was coming back after summer vacation to start her second year of MBA programme at Indian Institute of Administration and Management.

“Yes,” Subrato nodded with a smile.

“PGP1?” she asked. “I mean first year?” she added when she felt that he didn’t understand what she meant as she had used a term from campus-specific vocabulary.

“No…”

“All right,” Paridhi interrupted him saucily, “Don’t try to pass yourself off as a senior. I know everyone in my batch.”

“I am not doing anything of that sort,” Subrato replied patiently. But she interrupted before he could explain.

“Don’t tell me you are joining Ph. D.?” she raised her eyebrows. He looked too young for that.

“I am not. In fact…”

She interrupted with a loud laughter this time, “Then what? You are a Prof there or something?”

Instead of replying Subrato also joined her in the laughter convincing her that he was a first year student trying to pass off as a senior to avoid ragging.

“Were you lying to avoid ragging?”

“Uh… Umm… Yeah… I tried…”

“You would do well to learn, then, that you can’t escape me,” she replied with attitude, “Remember my face.”

“I will,” Subrato nodded in compliance.

“You shouldn’t worry about ragging though. Nobody in MBA programme has time for all that really. If anything happens at all, it would really be joke of a ragging. Especially after engineering college… Are you an engineer though?”

“I am not. I am an Economist.”

She laughed again, “No offense. But which BA programme in this country makes anyone an Economist?”

“None taken. No BA programme does.”

“But apart from engineering and Mathematics, Economics is one of the best subjects to study before MBA. You won’t have problem in quant subjects.”

“That’s… really good to know…”

“Do you have work experience?”

“Yeah…”

“That makes things tough you know… You lose the touch with student life. Classes, studies, mugging up for exams and all that… People with work experience may have better understanding of subjects like HR. But they find difficult to adjust to the study pressure.”

“I will keep that in mind. You are very helpful.”

“That I am. So, I will give you a ride to the institute. Even though you tried to lie to me. I have called a taxi. The way auto-wallahs try to loot you this early in the morning, booking a taxi is actually cheaper.”

“That’d be very helpful.”

Subrato listened to Paridhi’s chatter and endless advises about how to settle and do well at the institute during the rest of their train journey and the ride to the institute.

“This is my hostel. Can you see that building? That’s the administrative building. You should ask for the office of Dean of Student Affairs. You need to report there. Do you want me to take you there?”

“No. Don’t trouble yourself anymore. I will find the place. Thanks a lot.”

“You are welcome. And just because I gave you a ride, don’t think you can escape ragging.”

“I won’t dare!”

“Good. The taxi will drop you there. It’s pre-paid. No need to pay. Bye!”

“Bye! Have a good day. And thanks a lot for the ride.”

Subrato got down from the taxi in front of the administrative building and asked someone passing by, “Excuse me. Where is the office of Dean of Faculty Affairs?”

The next day was the first day of classes for the new trimester. Paridhi was walking towards the academic area with a group of her friends.

“I have decided that in this trimester my strategy will be to not miss a single class until I have my 85% compulsory attendance. Then towards the end, I will chill out completely.” she informed everyone decisively.

“You are going to attend each and every class till then?” her friend was incredulous.

“Of course.”

“You missing 85% attendance is the only chance of anyone else getting better grade than you, because you will have a grade drop. If that isn’t happening, Sudhanshu can forget about his rivalry with you.”

Paridhi Chauhan was the batch topper after first year and Sudhanshu Mishra was her closest competitor.

“Who cares about grades, yaar? It’s just fun to game the system.”

One of the guys in the group sighed as he replied, “Those who get the grades easily don’t care.”

“Whatever!” Paridhi dismissed his point and started talking about something else.

“Oh! I forgot to tell you,” she whispered to Catherine as they made to their seats, “I met this fresher on the train yesterday…” Catherine was her best friend in the college.

“You were going around the train scouting for the freshers?”

“Shut up, Cathy. His seat was next to mine. This guy is really cute-looking. But he was trying to act over-smart. He tried to pass himself off as a second year student…”

“Really?”

“Yeah. And…”

Suddenly everyone in the class fell silent, a sign of the professor entering. She looked up to see who the new Economics professor was. Her eyes widened in surprise. She stared at him agape as he introduced himself.

“Hi. My name is Subrato Sen. I have joined the Economics department just now. And I will be taking your advanced Econometrics class. That you can, of course, guess,” he joked, “Else I won’t be standing before you in this classroom at this ungodly hour. Disturbing your as well as my own sleep,” It drew a laughter from everyone except Paridhi.

Subrato scanned the faces of people sitting in the class and Paridhi cringed as she felt his eyes linger at her for a couple of seconds. She even discerned a scorning smile on his face for a split second.

“What has happened to you?” Catherine asked her after the class, “You didn’t speak a single word in the class.”

“Umm… Nothing. I just didn’t feel like. There wasn’t anything interesting going on,” she cooked up an alibi.

“He asked so many questions, which nobody knew the answer to. I am sure you did… By the way, doesn’t the new Prof look too young to be a Prof?”

“I think so…” Of course, she did!

“And very, very cute. I hope he is unmarried. Time for the next class. Let’s go…”

To be continued

Forbidden Fruit (Part 11 – Last Part)

Posted 18 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

Four years later…

Paritosh had just delivered a guest lecture for Rupali’s class at JHU (Johns Hopkins University). She was now an Assistant Professor there. Paritosh was in the US to attend a conference at UCB (University of California, Berkeley), but he had made a stop at JHU to meet her.

“What time is your flight?” she asked.

“We have about six hours before I have to leave for the airport.”

“We… can go… home… if that is fine by you,” Rupali proposed hesitatingly.

“Sure. I need to compensate for all the hostel day celebrations I missed.”

She chuckled, looking embarrassed, “I really pestered you about it, didn’t I?”

“And then you forgot about it when I was all prepared to go.”

“Yes,” she became thoughtful and nostalgic.

“And since that year,” Paritosh spoke after a pause, “I have not missed a single hostel day. And it is silly, but somehow I always find myself looking for you when I go there, before reminding myself that you are not there.”

She smiled uncertainly.

“I wonder though. I always see the otherwise nerdy engineering students all decked up for the hostel day. Did you do that too? Or did you attend that also in your I-am-forever-a-teenager attire?” they had reached her home and she was parking her car.

“You disliked my attire so much?” she frowned.

“No. On the contrary, I liked them very much. But that doesn’t stop me from wondering how you would look all decked up.”

Rupali paused to open the door and spoke once they were inside her house, “I can show you the photos.”

“Or I could see it in real life.”

“Now?”

“No. On a suitable occasion.”

“What occasion?”

“I was hoping you have someone in your life by now. And someday soon, I would see you all decked up. In a traditional Bengali wedding. Actually, even an American wedding would do.”

“Dr. Khanna!” Rupali should have known that he wouldn’t try to flirt with her. What wasn’t right in his eyes four years ago was not going to miraculously become right now. But as irrational as they were, her hopes had a tendency to rekindle themselves at the slightest of the pretexts. The way the conversation was going had given them more than ample reasons. But he had stayed true to his character and had given the conversation just the turn that was expected of him. Rupali was embarrassed for more than one reasons.

“It is difficult to ask these things over e-mails or phone, Rupali. But I… I do feel responsible. And I need to know that you have moved on. You are young and you have your entire life before you.”

“If moving on is your problem, then rest assured. I have dated, I have had relationships. But don’t demand a commitment from me.”

“You haven’t found the right person yet?”

“May be. It is difficult to find someone who thinks that I being myself is all right and that it even makes me special.” Paritosh chuckled at that and Rupali joined in. Then she added, “But more likely I am not the right person for someone to settled with.”

“Says who?”

“Says me. I am scared of commitment.”

“Why?”

“What if someday I realize that committing to that person was not a good idea?”

“You mean what if someday you find yourself in my position?”

“That’s not what I said.”

“I do know you well enough, Rupali. Unfortunately I became your role-model even where I shouldn’t have.”

“Don’t blame yourself for that, please.”

“Rupali. You don’t have anything to fear. You are not going to commit in the world I committed in. My world didn’t allow for personal considerations or tastes, it did not allow two individuals to make decisions for themselves. It was always about others. First about your parents, society, then about the helpless girl you married, then about your kids. If that is the kind of commitment you are asked to make, don’t make it. But you can do better. You can make commitments for your own happiness.”

“Tell me the story of your marriage,” she switched on the coffee-maker and brought out some snacks from the kitchen cabinet.

“There is no story. My mother was ill. She wouldn’t leave our village for her treatment though. Her only wish was to see me back in India and get me married. I complied. The girl, of course, had to be ready to stay with her in the village and take care of her even if I worked elsewhere. She, with the help of my relatives, chose Amrit. And Amrit was the very incarnation of my mother’s idea of a good daughter-in-law. She took care of my mother till she drew her last breath. She did things I have seen professional nurses wince at. The old woman died peacefully. I am indebted to my wife for that.”

Rupali smiled, “You have always been thinking about others. Since those days.”

“Don’t make me sound like a martyr. Those were the circumstances, and those were the expectations people like us were brought up with. There are many like me.”

“May be. But in my life there is only one like you.”

“Have it your way, then. But don’t let my experience dictate yours.”

“I will keep that in mind. Coffee is ready. Let me get you some. I still don’t cook much. We can go out for lunch. Any preferences?”

“You are the host! By the way Amrit sent something for you.”

“She knows you are here?”

“Yes. Here are some home-made mathris. I wasn’t sure it would make past customs. But I couldn’t explain that to her. Thankfully, customs did not bother,” he took out a box from his suitcase and handed it over to her.

“Wow! Thank her on my behalf. And–” she suddenly fell silent.

“What happened?”

“I feel guilty that she thinks so well of me. I was more comfortable with her feelings towards me for the few days when she hated me.”

“What do you have to feel guilty about?”

“My feelings?”

“They don’t matter in her world, Rupali. What you do is all that matters. And you haven’t done anything to feel guilty. If my conscience is clear, yours should be too.”

“You are right,” Rupali smiled weakly.

“By the way,” Paritosh chuckled as he thought of what he was going to tell her next, “Amrit thinks that I am responsible for you not getting married.”

“How so?” Rupali was alarmed.

“She thinks that the incident where you had told the police that we were together that night has marred your reputation and no good proposals come your way now.”

“What?” Rupali laughed out loud.

Paritosh smiled fondly, “Thank God. You are still as loud.”

“Not many people thank God for that,” her laughter vanished and didn’t leave even a smile in its wake.

“You will find the one person who will. And that is all that would matter.”

Hours flew by as they alternately experienced the feelings of hilarity, camaraderie and longing for each other through their conversation. Soon Rupali had parked the car at the airport to send Paritosh off. They did not talk for the last few minutes. As they stood in the terminal facing each other, unspoken emotions clouded their faces and mind yet again. And yet again, it fell to Paritosh to break the silence, “It’s time. Take care, Rupali.”

She nodded and forced a smile, while blinking back her tears. “Dr. Khanna,” she called him just as he turned to leave, “Forgive me for this, but I have to.” Then giving him no time to prepare, she went forward and hugged him tight. Paritosh was startled, but then he let go of the strolley bag he was holding and put his arms around her. His left hand went over her back, while with the right hand he protectively held her head, pressing it into his chest. He could feel a drop or two of her tears wetting his t-shirt.

They separated after a few moments. Paritosh turned and walked off wordlessly. The volcano became active whenever they were together. He couldn’t risk being near it any longer!

– The End –

P. S. I can anticipate the demands of uniting them ultimately 🙂 But not all love stories are the same. This isn’t a story of passion and romance and union. This is a story of longing and separation and unfulfilled desires. The pain is what will keep them going. There will be no continuation!

Forbidden Fruit (Part 10)

Posted 7 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“Rupali. It’s time for some future planning.”

“Excuse me?”

“Your course work gets over next semester, right?”

“Yes.”

“With the amount of research output you have already produced, after that within four to five months you should be ready to defend your Ph. D. thesis.”

Rupali stared at him, astonished, while he continued, “That means you would have finished your Ph. D. in one year from now. You should start looking up the places you would want to do a post-doc at and start applying.”

“This is so sudden!” she said, not quite knowing how to react.

“Not really. I am planning for next one year. But yes, in the time frame of research world, it’s fairly short.”

“I have been here for barely eighteen months.”

“Yes. So, you will get a Ph. D. in record time. That isn’t surprising. If you had joined after an MS or M. Tech. your course work requirement would have been lesser and you would have finished even earlier.”

“Right,” Rupali mumbled. It was all she could do to not burst out with everything she had been keeping buried inside her. So, this was his plan for “not for long”. He was preparing to throw her out of his life. She felt tears welling up in her eyes. But she did not want to cry before him again. “Excuse me,” she said and got up.

As she left, Paritosh was engulfed with a suffocating sense of wretchedness. His face distorted in pain as he looked at her receding form. He had pushed his luck here. He hadn’t expected it to be so easy. He  had expected her to be furious. He  had expected her to fight back, and fight hard. And then he had hoped that she would agree to his plan like she always did. Giving up, despite disagreeing. But none of that happened. He felt that he had killed something vital inside her. He had broken her. Of all the people in the world, he shouldn’t have been the one to break her like that.

And yet! What else could he have done? He had to do what was ultimately right for her.They couldn’t be living near an active volcano for long.

Rupali worked like a maniac for next eight months. She often spent entire nights in the lab, going back to the hostel only to shower and change, then coming back to the lab again. Dark circles were evident around her eyes.

Paritosh grew worried. “You will fall ill at this rate, Rupali,” he tried to bring her to her senses, “Slow down. You are not running out of time.”

“I’m fine.”

“Research is a long-distance race, Rupali. You can’t burn yourself out like this.”

“I told you, I’m fine.”

He had once believed that Rupali ultimately gave in to him despite fighting him. As if it was something she couldn’t help. But now he realized that she gave in only when she wanted to. In the beginning, he had been unable to change her mind about going to the US for Ph. D. or about writing GATE. Now again, he could do nothing to rein her in. She refused to take care of herself, to observe any limits for her health and well-being. So he started doing whatever he could to take care of her. One day she found her drawer filled with energy bars. At other times, he would summon her to his office and force her to have milk, tea or food. She resisted even that initially, but afterwards started obliging him by eating whatever he offered. While that made the situation slightly better, it was by no means healthy. But she did not let Paritosh change her mind about anything else at all.

“Sir,” Vineeta, a final year undergraduate student doing her B. Tech. Project with him, was at the door.

“Yes, Vineeta. Come in.”

“Sir. Day after is our hostel day. If Rupali has not already invited you, I would like to invite you and your family for it.” Paritosh was taken aback. It had been a year already? Why did Rupali not invite him? It was not the Diwali week and he wasn’t going anywhere else either.

“Thanks, Vineeta. Rupali had asked me. But I am not sure I will be able to make it. If I can, I will definitely meet you there. But don’t get coupons for me. Rupali would have it. Thanks a lot for the invitation and sorry.”

“No problem, Sir. But I hope you are able to make it. The celebrations are going to be really good this time. Our batch is organizing it.”

“I am sure,” he smiled.

He kept waiting for next two days. Rupali did not invite him. He realized, finally, that she wasn’t even aware of the hostel day this time. The evening when her hostel-mates were celebrating, she was in the lab. Most of her experiments and simulations were already over. She was now working on writing her thesis.

He walked into the lab, which was deserted, except for Rupali. “Rupali. You–”

“Dr. Khanna,” she said excitedly, “I think I am done. I only have to proof-read it. Otherwise my thesis is ready. And I can defend any time.”

“That’s great,” he tried hard, but could not match the enthusiasm she showed.

“What happened?”

“Nothing.”

“You don’t have to keep up any pretenses around me now, Dr. Khanna. Nor do you have to worry about me. I am going to leave you alone very soon.”

“And that’s what you have been overworking yourself for all these days, rather months?”

“You wanted me to finish quickly, didn’t you?”

“I did, didn’t I? But I wanted it because I knew you were capable of it. That didn’t mean I wanted you to torture yourself like this. Why would you not listen to me, Rupali? I did not want any harm to come to you. I have always wanted the best for you. And I always will.”

“I know. I just–,” she averted her eyes and she choked on her words for a moment. She spoke again after clearing her throat, “I did not want to be the reason behind any troubles in your life.”

“I will miss you, Rupali,” Paritosh finally let his guards down and spoke his heart out, “I will miss you terribly. In fact, I have already been missing you for last so many months. The Rupali I knew has been lost to me, already. But at least you were around. There was a hope that one fine morning you will change back to your usual self. And then you will come to my office excited about a new paper you stumbled upon, fight with me over something trivial, invite me for the hostel day, get upset with me if I missed it. You had stopped doing all of that. But there was still a hope. Now that will be gone too. I will miss you.”

Both their eyes were moist.

“But you will not stop me?” she asked after a pause.

“No. Not for the life of mine.”

They stood in silence, their eyes locked on each other, for once not trying to stop them from revealing the raw emotions of their hearts.

Finally, Paritosh broke the trance by asking, “Where have you decided to take up the post-doc?”

“JHU. A great machine learning and NLP group.” Rupali played her part by answering.

“Good choice.”

“Dr. Khanna?”

“Hmm?”

“Will you keep in touch? Or is that also–”

“When did I say I won’t? I’m hoping to collaborate with you.”

“Why do you want to send me away, then?”

“One, it’s not good for you career to be staying here all your life. Two, us being in proximity is like an active volcano. If it erupts, too many people will be hurt. I can’t take that on my conscience. Nor can you.”

Rupali looked away. She couldn’t argue with that.

“If possible, Rupali, don’t be mad at me. I could have done better by you. I am letting you down. But I am torn between responsibilities. And I am not rebellious enough to–”

“Even in this,” she interrupted, “You are my role-model. I will miss you, but I will always admire how you thought about others before yourself. Not just your family, you also prioritized my career, my future and my well-being over your feelings.”

Paritosh closed his eyes and took a few moment to gain control of himself and of the situation he was in. Then he said, “Take some rest tonight. You look ill. Let’s discuss your defense tomorrow morning.”

He walked out before he could do something stupid and damaging. Rupali sank down in her chair and cried her heart out.

To be continued

Forbidden Fruit (Part 9)

Posted 5 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

Paritosh was aware that trying to resolve this on the street will create a scene. So, even though it meant losing a few minutes he took out his car. Driving, he managed to catch up with Rupali within minutes.

“Get in,” he pulled up beside her and lowered the window.

“I’m fine,” she tried to avoid him.

“Get in, Rupali,” he drove slowly to keep pace with her.

For how long could she avoid and resist him? She stopped walking, and climbed in. They drove to the department, then walked to his office in silence.

“Will you tell me what happened?” he asked after they were assured of complete privacy inside his office.

“I don’t know. Nothing happened. I don’t know why I broke down.”

“I think you know. But you don’t want to say it.”

Rupali gulped hard and looked at him. Did he want her to say it?

“And that is a wise thing to do,” he added, “Some things in life are best left unsaid. Some feelings are best left unexpressed. But that does not mean they are not understood and appreciated.”

She lowered her eyes. Did it mean he understood?

“But don’t feel dejected, Rupali, if they can’t be reciprocated. We are social animals. We live for people other than ourselves. Do you understand?”

Of course, she did. He was well-respected man. Married, with a family to look after. He couldn’t reciprocate her feelings.

“What is important is to not get stuck on people who can’t reciprocate your feelings. Whatever be their reasons, it’s not you. Your feelings are beautiful, you heart is loving. You must bestow them on someone deserving.”

Silent tears started flowing from her eyes again. “Please don’t cry. If not for yourself, for the sake of people who don’t like seeing you unhappy. Please, Rupali. Tears can hurt.”

She had hero-worshipped him for years. But nothing he had said over the years had touched her like that did. She hoped that her goosebumps were not visible. Outwardly, she nodded and wiped off her tears.

“There is no water in this bottle. Let me get you some. Sit down untill then.”

He brought her water from the water cooler located in the common room.

She took a sip, then said, “I should go back to the hostel now. You should also go home. Your family will be waiting.”

“Yes. But your eyes are swollen. Unless you want to explain this to everybody, you might want to wait here for a while and leave after you are better. I am leaving the spare keys of the office. Keep them with you.”

“Thanks!”

“Just don’t think of jumping off the window,” he joked, but with a sad smile as he recalled the face of the dead student.

“If I have to jump off, I will find somebody else’s office. I will never put you in trouble, Dr. Khanna. Come what may,” Rupali replied resolutely.

“I know,” he smiled, looked her over helplessly. He would have liked to pull her into a tight hug, but he was bound by his sense of propriety and duty.

Rupali was about to enter Paritosh’ office when she heard Milind’s voice and stopped.

“That’s straight out of Bollywood movies, Paritosh. Too bad I wasn’t here to witness it. She must be madly in love with you to do something like that.”

“Hmm…” Paritosh didn’t react to that, not even to deny it.

“Did I cross a line there? But come on, Paritosh. We are friends. I’m not going to go around complaining to Amrit.”

Paritosh chuckled, “That is not my worry, MM. Even if you tell Amrit, she is not going to listen to a word against Rupali now. After that incident–”

“Lucky man.”

Paritosh laughed this time and Rupali felt her chest tighten, “You don’t give me much credit for being a nice and honest man, MM. Just because a young girl hero-worships me, you think I am going to take advantage of her and cheat on my wife?”

“The bourgeois notions of right and wrong, some would say. Number one, I think you are as head over heals in love with her, as she is with you. Number two, are you happy in your marriage?”

“Number one is irrelevant. About number two – how should I define happiness? If marital happiness is in finding an intellectual companion, an equal person to be your partner, with whom you can look at the life and the world together, then I would be miserable. But happiness could mean simpler things. A cozy home, a caring wife, a wonderful kid, peaceful life. I should be very happy from that perspective.”

“Are you?”

“When I had married Amrit, I hadn’t given her a checklist of what my happiness would mean. She tries to keep me happy the way she knows. I have to do the same. That’s the deal.”

“And Rupali? Is it fair to her?”

“She might come across as a brat sometimes, MM. But she is mature. And she understands things. Nobody can do anything about their feelings. But she knows that there is no relationship and no future in these feelings. Period.”

“That’s an active volcano you are living with.”

“Not for long.”

Milind’s mobile rang just then.

“Excuse me, I have to take this call. I will catch up with you later,” As Milind came out of the office, Rupali moved away from the door, so that he didn’t see her. Then she went in pretending she hadn’t heard anything. “Not for long” was stuck in her mind though. What did Paritosh mean by that?

To be continued

Forbidden Fruit (Part 8)

Posted 9 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“I just got a call from Ma. Nimrit is missing,” Amrit ignored Rupali and addressed Paritosh. She was distressed and disoriented.

“I will come back later,” Rupali said and made to go, but Paritosh stopped her, “No Rupali. Wait.” It was the time to come out clean.

“What does she have to do in this?” Amrit broke down, “I don’t know where my sister is. In what condition? I didn’t know she was this immature. How could she… It has been almost two weeks–”

“Nimrit is safe, Amrit. She is fine.”

“What? How do you know?”

“She contacted me.”

“She is in Delhi?”

“Yes.”

“Why didn’t you tell me?”

“What do you think we should do about her?”

“Why? Send her back to her in-laws, what else?”

“That’s why I didn’t tell you.”

“What do you mean?”

“It has taken her years to gather courage and run away from her oppressive and abusive in-laws. I can’t send her back to that hell.”

“You don’t understand. That’s not how it works. Not in our society. She was always impatient. But I didn’t think she would act so immaturely. She has to go back. What will people say? Her in-laws and my parents have covered it up till now. But for how long?”

“And all this is more important to you than your sister’s life?”

“She exaggerates. That’s how she has always been. She is my baby sister. Take me to her. I will give her a piece of mind. It’s nothing.”

“What you are calling ‘nothing’ is years of abuse according to the doctor.”

“What?”

“Yes.”

“Take me to her.”

“Only if you agree to not tell anyone in the family about it.”

“All the relations will break down when people come to know of this,” Amrit was desolate.

“And why is it so important to you?”

“You wouldn’t understand,” she said, sounding defeated, “You don’t understand the sanctity of relations.” She threw a tearful glance at Rupali.

Rupali stood like a statue, but Paritosh couldn’t. “Stop blaming Rupali, Amrit,” he said, “I was with Nimrit that night. Not with Rupali.”

“What?”

“Why must our relationships become a scourge for us? Can’t they be about protecting each other, instead?”

Amrit sank down on the chair Rupali had occupied earlier.

“Your sister,” Paritosh continued, “Is terrified of everybody. Her in-laws would come after her life if they knew where she was. She knew even you would want to send her back. So, I couldn’t reveal her identity when this murder case popped up all of a sudden. That’s why Rupali had to step in to vouch for me. Rupali did it without even knowing why I wanted to protect Nimrit. What relationship did she have with your sister? But she protected her. And you want to let your sister continue getting abused by those brutes. What relationship is worth that?”

“What do I do?” Amrit mumbled.

“Ma’am. I know I should not be interfering. But you know your husband is an intelligent man. Do what he says,” Rupali pressed Amrit’s shoulders to comfort her. “I will see you later, Dr. Khanna,” she went out of the room.

“Take me to her,” Amrit said finally.

“You promise not to tell anybody about her until I have made some arrangements for her safety.”

“I promise.”

“Rupali. Are you free?” Paritosh called her up later in the day.

“Yes. Why?”

“Amrit wants to meet you. Where can I pick you up from?”

“I am in the hostel. I can come on my own.”

“I will be outside your hostel in five minutes.”

“Where is your sister-in-law?” Rupali asked after she climbed into the passenger seat of his car.

“We brought her home.”

“Good for her. Staying alone in a hotel couldn’t have been ideal.”

“Yes.”

“Why does Mrs. Khanna want to meet me?”

“To apologize, I hope!”

Rupali suddenly looked guilty. “It isn’t needed,” she mumbled.

“You are uncomfortable. I can see that. But do me a favor one last time. We need a closure on this.”

“I’m fine. It’s not a big deal,” she forced a smile.

“Rupali. I don’t even know how to start apologizing,” Amrit  was so apologetic, and Rupali felt really small.

“It’s okay, Ma’am. How could you have known?” she managed to respond, fighting the urge to just disappear from the scene.

“Even if no one else did, I should have trusted my husband. But when your name came up, it was easy to lose that trust. He talks about you all the time. I never remember the name of any of his students, but you…” Rupali was surprised and her eyes automatically shot over Amrit’s shoulders towards  Paritosh. Away from Amrit’s eyes, even his face reflected unguarded surprise. Did he talk that much about Rupali at home? Amrit continued, “Every time he has to go back to the office, or has to stay late working into the night, it ends up being related to you. I know, of course, that its just because you are as hard-working as he is. But it was easy for me to take it all in the wrong way. Please forgive me, and thank you. Thanks a lot for protecting my husband from the disaster, and for protecting my sister too.”

“That’s enough, Ma’am. It really is. None of it was your fault, and Dr. Khanna is my– my role-model. What I have done was my duty. Anybody in my place would have done it.”

Amrit threw another surprise at her by suddenly hugging her, “You have no idea what you have done for me by protecting my husband. I will never forget this and will forever be indebted to you.”

Rupali hugged her back slightly, but her eyes welled up. Paritosh was still standing behind Amrit and could see her. So, she tried hard, but tears started running down her cheeks. Paritosh noticed and questioned her with a hand gesture, but it was futile. When Amrit broke the hug, Rupali could not control herself at all. She started sobbing and ran away from there.

“What– What happened?” Amrit asked, worried, “Did I say something wrong?”

“No. You didn’t. Must be something else. I will talk to her,” Paritosh assured Amrit, then ran after Rupali.

To be continued