Destined (Part 24)

Posted 1 CommentPosted in English, Inspired, Rupali-Paritosh

Absent-mindedly she walked towards the room where he had shown her the paintings. Some of them were still uncovered. Including Daar ji’s portrait. She stood before that for a while, as if wondering if this blood-related elder of hers would be able to help her. She looked around and realized that Chand’s painting had been covered again. And then she noticed a fresh painting… She walked closer and what she saw did not surprise her, but it made her cry again. He was making a portrait of hers. From memory. The entire face was outlined, but only the eyes, forehead and part of hair had been painted. She tore her eyes away from the painting and looked at Daar ji’s portrait again. Could she sort it out?

“Please call me as soon as he wakes up,” Rupali told the elderly housekeeper before leaving for the duty in the morning, “He might look for me and get worried. I need to go to the hospital.”

“Sure Dr. Rupali.”

She herself was tired and sleepy. But it wasn’t the first time she would be on duty in that state. Now, she was almost used to it. She informed the admin that Dr. Khanna might not come on duty and went about her work. She spent her breaks quietly on the terrace practicing how she will talk to Paritosh. And her mobile rang. It wasn’t the housekeeper, but Paritosh himself.

“Tai told me that you are in the hospital?” his voice told her that he had just woken up.

“Yeah. I woke up. So, I thought…”

“Or you didn’t sleep?”

She sighed, “I am fine Dr. Khanna. I will come back there once my duty is over. I have told the admin you won’t be coming today. So, you can just take rest.”

“But…”

“Please. I am fine. Really.”

“But why would you take her to Darjeeling, Dr. Khanna?” Sabyasachi and Paritosh were speaking on phone, “Isn’t that the reason why I had sent him away from Kolkata? That I didn’t want any trouble for either of them. Do you think it has been easy on me?”

“I had no clue that he was no longer in the facility? And why should she be restricted by where Rohan is? What is her fault?”

“Please Dr. Khanna. Try to understand. He was doing fine.”

“Fine enough trying to kill people,” Paritosh was rude and angry, “If that was fine, it is better that he is back in the hospital. Please try to understand Mr. Moitra. If you act like everything is normal, when it isn’t, it won’t be good for him either. Sooner or later, he would be in trouble.”

“How is Rupa?” The rational man inside Sabyasachi did not have any argument against Paritosh. So, he didn’t try to continue arguing. But he was torn between his rationality and his love for his family. It wasn’t just Rohan who had fallen apart, Damyanti too.

“Holding up. As ever,” Paritosh was not satisfied, but he realized that this argument would lead nowhere. And Rupali would definitely not be happy if he said anything inappropriate to Moitras. “It is me, who is shaken Mr. Moitra. She doesn’t know I called you. She went to Darjeeling because it had memories of her parents. They had met there. She didn’t even remember that Rohan was there. If you do think we were at fault, it was me. Not her. Please don’t say anything to her.”

“What can I say to her, Dr. Khanna, except to apologize, again and again, pointlessly.”

Paritosh sighed and changed the subject, “I will see you during the board meeting this Friday, then.”

“Sure Dr. Khanna. Bye.”

Sabyasachi called Rupali and much to her embarrassment apologized profusely. Then he asked her if he could meet her after her duty and drop her home too. Rupali hesitated for a while. She had to go to Paritosh’ house. What would Kaku think of her going there. But… how did any of it matter any longer. So, she agreed.

“I didn’t remember at all Kaku that he was there. I am sorry,” she apologized to him after getting into his car.

“You shouldn’t have to Rupa. But I know that you would not knowingly do that… And anyway he had no business being in the convention. I don’t know what took him there.”

“You didn’t go there, Kaku?”

“Your Kakima has gone. I have some work. You had come back by car, right? Why didn’t you take the day off?”

Rupali looked alarmed, “Dr. Khanna talked to you?”

Sabyasachi nodded.

“Kaku. He is angry… If he said anything, please…”

“He is angry, yes. But he didn’t say anything wrong. Are you not angry? Being on death’s door. Twice. Because of my son…”

“Kaku. Are you not angry? At me? If you hadn’t brought me home, none of this would have happened?”

“It was good I brought you home, Rupa. I, at least, have one child who is doing well for herself.”

“I am angry at him Kaku. But how can I be angry at you?”

“I won’t accept it before others. But what Dr. Khanna thinks is right. I did try to influence medical opinion with… I can hold myself together, work rationally, but your Kakima…”

“Kaku. I promise I will never ever go to Darjeeling again. Or if you want to send him somewhere else, or even bring him back to Kolkata, I won’t set foot in that city. Just tell me…”

“No. I won’t bring him to Kolkata.”

“I will ask Dr. Khanna not to speak to you about it again…”

“It’s okay child. He is a reasonable man. I am happy you have him.”

Rupali flushed. They stayed silent for a while, until they reached the signal from where hers and Paritosh’ homes were in different direction. She took and deep breath and spoke, “Kaku. Please drop me at Dr. Khanna’s place. I have to talk to him.”

“Not about…”

“No. Not about it.”

He nodded and took the turn towards Paritosh’ house. He dropped her there and left without going in. She could not insist either. If somebody’s life and relationships could be awkward, it was hers.

To be continued

Destined (Part 23)

Posted 6 CommentsPosted in English, Inspired, Rupali-Paritosh

He didn’t say a word to console and comfort her; just held her until her sobs had subsided. Then he gently spoke, “Wash your face, freshen up. We’ll leave right away.”

“But the convention…”

“It was a bad idea to begin with…”

“I had completely forgotten that Rohan was in Darjeeling…”

“I hadn’t. But I didn’t think a madman would be let lose like this.”

For the first time Rupali noticed that Paritosh was angry. Extremely angry. She vaguely remembered that he had called Rohan ‘mad’ even before other doctors, not a more medically appropriate “mentally disturbed”. And he had called him names. Very uncharacteristic of him. He was gentlemanliness personified. He called even people many years his junior by their surnames. His anger, his emotions were always controlled. But Rohan had made him forget his manners… Or… No… Rohan hadn’t. She had. She had made him forget his manners. He made his disgust and anger so obvious because her life was in danger… She had that effect on him…

“Keeping him in an institution would be better use of all the money Moitras have, than spending it on certifying him fit and trying to settle him into a normal life.”

“What are you talking about?”

“That son of a… I am sorry,” he suddenly became conscious of his digression, “He has a practice here. Set up with the help of his father, of course. How can a mentally disturbed person be entrusted to cure others. I am sorry, Rupali. But despite all the respect you have for them, I can not condone this senselessness on their part. Just because he is their son…” His voice trailed off.

“Let’s leave,” she said in a small voice and walked to the bathroom to wash her face.

Their train would leave only late at night. But Paritosh did not wait for it. He hired the cab the to take them all the way to Kolkata. Half way through their journey, he saw Rupali shifting uncomfortably in her seat. He had been brooding silently till then and hadn’t realized that it was too long a journey to be comfortably covered by car.

“Please stop at the next petrol pump or motel,” he told the driver, then turned to Rupali, “It was a bad idea, wasn’t it? It’s too long a journey for car. I’m sorry… I was angry.”

“Please don’t apologize,” Rupali said, fatigue and depression clearly affecting her spirits, “I was as eager to get away.”

“Do you want to stay somewhere for the night. We can start again in the morning…”

“No.”

“Okay. We’ll take a short break then. Here is a motel. Some tea or coffee would be good I think. Please stop the car.”

It was three in the morning, when the car finally pulled over in front of Paritosh’ house. They hadn’t talked about her going to his house, but she did not insist otherwise. Paritosh paid the driver and they got down. On entering the house, she automatically walked towards the room she had stayed in earlier.

“Take rest,” he said, “Do you need something?”

She shook her head. He walked over to his bedroom. Rupali changed her clothes. She was tired and lied down on the bed. But despite all energy having been drained out of her body, she could not sleep. She finally gave up and came out of the room. Across the hall, she saw that the light was on in Paritosh’ room too. She walked towards it. The door wasn’t locked, only shut. She opened it slightly and saw Paritosh sitting on a chair near his writing-table. There was a glass full of whiskey there and a bottle that was almost empty. He had been drinking. Rupali didn’t know if he drank. But she had never seen him doing so. She sighed and walked to the table.

“Aren’t you going to sleep?” she asked.

“Rupali… What am I to do with you… with us?”

“What… are you… talking about?” Was he drunk?

“It is not like I had planned it, is it? You coming into my life… me in yours… Our shared pain of being orphans… a history connected through Daar ji and your mother… I hadn’t planned any of it… I hadn’t expected any of it… And yet it happened. Why?”

Rupali felt scared to the core. Where was this going? “I don’t know Dr. Khanna… But you should not be so disturbed. Please… Not because of me…”

“No. No. No. Don’t walk away. Talk to me.”

“About what?”

“Just sort this out for me, okay?”

“Stay away from me and you will be sorted again,” her voice quivered and her eyes moistened. But she managed to not cry.

“Sorted again? No Rupali. There is no ‘again’ for me. Because I was never sorted. Not in a long time. But you came. And against my better judgment, against any semblance of rationality, I started feeling connected to you… But…”

“I was too messed up myself to sort anything for you.”

“No. No. Why don’t you listen, or try to understand? Why do you have to conclude everything on your own?”

“I’m sorry.” He was clearly drunk. And probably it was for good. Even if in a rambling fashion, he was speaking his heart out. Although Rupali did not know how should she react to him.

“Good. Now listen. What was I saying?” He had lost his train of thoughts, “Why don’t you sit down?” He held her hands and took her to the bed. She sat down at its edge gingerly. He also sat down after her. “It has been a frustrating to and fro ride, Rupali.” He looked directly into her eyes.

“What do you mean?” she tried to hold his gaze.

“Every time I take a step towards you, something or the other pushes either me or you ten steps away. First you were out-of-bounds. Engaged… To that… Never mind. Then that house… It made you so miserable, while all I had wanted was to make you happy… And then knowing your painful past… I wanted to stand by you… But I was afraid I was not enough… I tried to push you away when you could have done most with support…”

“That’s not true. You have stood by me. Always.”

“You are a simpleton… An idiot… You thought I was pushing you away because of Chand, didn’t you?”

She gulped. She had indeed thought so at one point of time. And when Paritosh had clarified that they couldn’t be together, she hadn’t been able to find any alternate explanation of his behavior. She had just pushed those questions away from her mind. But even that pushing away didn’t mean that he wasn’t there for her. Why…

“You thought that, didn’t you?” he repeated his question.

She nodded in reply. She couldn’t lie.

“You were an idiot. You put me on such pedestal that you couldn’t see how scared I was. Of my inadequacy.”

Tears started flowing from her eyes.

“And as if our own confusions were not enough, every guilty person in the world had to draw his or her own conclusion and scare and confuse me ever more… One was Mr. Moitra, who felt guilty for you. Another was Chand, who felt guilty for me…” ‘So, Chand’s tete-a-tete about their relationship had not been restricted only to her,’ Rupali thought somberly, ‘She had been vocal before him too.’

“And then you… You stupid girl .You thought that you were not good enough for me, because… what had you said… you were damaged?” Oh my God! He had heard her conversation with Chand, then. And she didn’t have a clue!

“Damaged? Do you know what that made me feel? My own inadequacy was not so difficult to accept. But you feeling damaged… And that I could have had something to do with that feeling… Do you have any idea how much it hurt?”

“Dr. Khanna… You had nothing to do with… Oh God!” Rupali was openly sobbing now.

“But there was one thing I knew at that instant. That both of us were playing this I-am-not-good-enough-game. And I could not just be a silent spectator. I was aware of your pain, hurt… And I knew about my own insecurities, the habit of loneliness, of being by myself. I couldn’t hurry myself; or you. But I knew I had to take a step. May be those nosy and guilty people had a point. And I tried. But like every other time earlier, Rohan just had to come in. This afternoon… And push you away. Scare you away from me… Why Rupali? Why?”

Fatigue and drinks took over him and he almost fell down on his bed while asking her “Why” again and again. She saw his eyes closing through her tears. She adjusted him on the bed as best as she could. Then found a shawl large enough to cover him. She tip-toed out of his room, trying hard to get her emotions in control.

To be continued

Destined (Part 14)

Posted 11 CommentsPosted in English, Inspired, Rupali-Paritosh

“I will take a taxi,” Rupali told Paritosh after they finished check ups at the orphanage.

“Why, I will drop you.”

“It’s no longer on your way…”

“You can invite me for a cup of tea…”

Rupali had to smile at that, “Of course.”

The decrepit sofa was absent from the hall, and there were a few plastic chairs around.

“I see that you have already started redecorating the place,” Paritosh said as a way of starting the conversation.

“There isn’t much decoration here,” Rupali gave an embarrassed grin, “Just making the place functional. Although, I am fully aware how inappropriate plastic furniture is for a house like this.”

“It’s yours. That is all that matters.”

Radha’s excitement at seeing a visitor was almost embarrassing for Rupali. She brought so much snacks with tea that not only Paritosh, even Rupali stared at it wide-eyed.

“Well,” Rupali spoke to dissolve the awkwardness, “I wouldn’t have known what all I should get. Thank God, Radha is here.”

“And I didn’t know what I was getting in to when I got myself invited for tea,” Paritosh also helped.

They smiled. Radha, however, offered an explanation, “Nobody ever comes here. I am so happy to see Doctor Babu today.” And it made the situation awkward again. Their eyes met and Rupali averted hers.

“Moitras never came to meet you?”

“Kaku is in Darjeeling with Rohan. Kakima probably feels very guilty, and possibly angry. They have called, of course.”

“Aren’t you lonely?”

“Have always been. Being alone has nothing to do with being lonely. You can be lonely even in a huge crowd.”

Paritosh smiled.

“And Dr. Khanna,” Rupali added somberly, “They are not to be blamed for it. They have done as much as they could do for me…”

“Rupali,” Paritosh intervened, mild irritation evident in his tone, “Why do you always assume that I am up in arms against them? I appreciate them as much as you do Rupali. For what they have done for you. And even if I think they could have been careful about Rohan, I don’t blame them for what he is. And I understand how much respect and gratitude you feel towards them. You don’t need to defend them before me.”

“I.. I am…” Rupali was embarrassed.

“Rupali. The only time I disagree with you is when you start holding yourself responsible. Blaming Rohan’s parents might be wrong, but blaming you is even more wrong than that. And that’s it. That’s all I would ever try to convince you of.”

“I am sorry. Please don’t be mad at me,” Rupali said in a small voice.

“Come on, Rupali. I am not mad at you.”

“I… I didn’t realize that I had started sounding like that. I know that you understand. And probably that’s the reason fate has pushed you in between all this. It wanted me to have some support. I am really sorry.”

“You are one difficult woman Rupali. Here I was trying to rid you of one guilt. And you have managed to start feeling another one. For me, this time. Will you stop this?”

Rupali smiled and threw her hands up in the air in resignation.

“That’s better,” Paritosh said with a patronizing smile.

“Rupali. So, you got the night duty tonight? Couldn’t go for Dr. Shekhar’s wedding, eh?” Paritosh found Rupali in the common room at night. Most of the doctors were going to attend their colleague’s wedding. So, Paritosh had decided to stay on for the night.

“I volunteered,” Rupali smiled in reply.

“Hmm… And I have noticed that you are volunteering a lot of extra duties these days.”

She just shrugged and continued smiling.

“Is that how you are coping with what happened? Because you aren’t talking much to me. Are you talking to anyone at all?” he asked and was taken by surprise when she giggled at his question.

“That sounds like a boss of mine I know.”

“Excuse me?”

“Being a workaholic to deal with things… loneliness, let’s say. That’s you Dr. Khanna?”

“And not you?”

“I am learning from the best.”

“In that case you are learning the wrong things.”

“Is it? Why do you practice wrong things then?”

Paritosh sighed, “You are difficult.”

“That’s not fair. You brought up the topic. So… Can I ask you something? About you?”

Paritosh looked quizzical, “Shoot.”

“If you don’t want to answer, you can just say so… Please don’t be offended if…”

“Ask the question Rupali. Let me hear it before I decide what do I want to do with it.”

“Why this loneliness?”

“We don’t decide to be lonely, Rupali. Life throws it at us.”

“In that case, a more specific question. Why didn’t you ever get married? That seems to be the ultimate cure for people’s loneliness.”

“Is it?”

“That’s what people say.”

“Hmm…”

“Hmm?”

“What should I tell you?”

“Whatever is the truth… To the extent you are comfortable in sharing it…”

“We have both been orphans, Rupali. But the difference is that… you know where you come from. I don’t…”

“That is… likely to be painful… at least at times… But what does it have to do with…”

“Why do you think Daar ji was so mad at your mother?”

“Because she married against his wishes? Outside the community?”

He nodded, “So, in this society where does someone with no idea whatsoever about his family stand? Nowhere!”

“Surely, not everyone is like Daar ji. And even he changed, didn’t he? Otherwise he would never have adopted you.”

“Right. Daar ji changed… But unfortunately not her father…”

“Whose?”

“Chand. She was the daughter of one of Daar ji’s friends.”

“Oh!”

“We were… well… I thought we were in love. I had heard Daar ji beg him for my… our happiness. But he was adamant. He couldn’t marry his daughter off to someone with a questionable blood line.”

“And she?”

“She wasn’t as headstrong as your mother,” Paritosh smiled sadly.

“I… I am sorry.”

“Thinking rationally, it really is not a big deal, Rupali. Today one can not get under my skin with such things… But we are much more insecure when we are younger. Small, little things can throw us off our game…”

“If you understand that, why didn’t you move on later?”

“I don’t know. I don’t have all the answers. Probably some things are not meant to be.”

That seemed to resonate with her, as she nodded her head thoughtfully. “Some things are not meant to be…” she mumbled after him.

“You are learning the wrong thing again?” he spoke with a chuckle drawing her attention back.

“Excuse me?”

“What you need to learn is that when we are young, things affect us much more. We shouldn’t let those experiences dictate our entire life.”

Rupali smiled fondly, “You should be a motivational speaker or something…”

“I am not sure if that is a complement or sarcasm.”

“Complement,” she replied, “Time for me to take another round.”

He felt like joining her, but resisted. He shouldn’t suffocate her by imposing too much. Although he did worry a lot about how she was doing. He proposed something, “After the night duty, could we have breakfast together?”

She appeared surprised at this, but smiled immediately, “Sure. Where?”

“At my home?”

“Okay,” she nodded and left.

To be continued

Destined (Part 6)

Posted 4 CommentsPosted in English, Inspired, Rupali-Paritosh

“Should I drop you home? Or at the mall again?” Paritosh asked when they left the orphanage.

“The signal before the mall,” she replied.

“The signal?”

“Rohan doesn’t know I come here. He might be at the mall.”

“Why are you engaged to him? Because you feel indebted to his parents?” he suddenly asked.

Rupali wasn’t surprised at his question. Given everything he knew and had witnessed, he would obviously guess that. But she was hoping that he wouldn’t actually voice it out.

She sighed audibly, but did not reply. Paritosh looked at her once, but otherwise kept his eyes on the road. He stopped at the signal as she had asked him to.

“Good night, Dr. Khanna. And thanks for the ride.”

“Good night, Dr. Banerjee.”

Paritosh took out the keys from his drawer and fiddled with them as he thought to the day Daar ji had died. He hadn’t wanted to be admitted to the hospital even in extreme illness. So, Paritosh had arranged everything possible at home. But he was sinking day by day. As a doctor Paritosh could not have fought the nature. He was helpless. The real shock for him, however, had come when Daar ji had started crying.

“Daar ji!” he had held his hands unable to think of what to say. The man had been fierce in his life. Was the death scaring him so much?

“Find her Paritosh! Please find her.”

“Whom?”

“My daughter. I didn’t do anything for her. All my life.”

“Daar ji. Please calm down. Don’t work yourself up like this.”

“Open that cupboard, Paritosh. There is a small box on the bottom shelf.”

Paritosh had complied and opened the box on Daar ji’s instructions. There was an old photograph of a young girl, a bunch of keys and some papers.

“These are the papers and keys for the house I had bought for her. Please find her and give it to her.”

“Where is she, Daar ji?”

“I don’t know. Find her. You will find her, won’t you? Promise me. Please promise me.”

Paritosh didn’t have time to think it through. Daar ji was so agitated, he had to promise him. That had calmed him down. He had talked a bit more.

His wife had died at childbirth. He had brought his daughter up himself, and loved her to death. He had wanted her to be a doctor and did not want to spare anything in her education. He had sent her to a boarding school in Darjeeling so that she got the best education. In her last year at school, the seventeen year-old girl had fallen in love with a young teacher there. Daar ji had gotten to know about it and had been extremely angry. As much as he believed in educating his daughter and in having a career for her, his daughter falling in love and especially with a possibility of an inter-caste marriage was a strict no for him. He had been furious and had announced that he will get her married as soon as she turned eighteen. And she had run away!

He had felt betrayed by her. To avoid the social embarrassment, he had shifted to Kolkata from the small town where he had lived all his life. The loneliness had started troubling him in couple of years though and that’s when he had started spending time in Paritosh’ orphanage. He helped kids with their studies. Paritosh was intelligent and they grew close. Finally he had adopted him.

“I felt betrayed by her, and I was angry. Childishly angry. So, I adopted a boy, not a girl. And I insisted so much on you becoming a doctor. As if to tell her, that I didn’t need her to fulfill my dreams. Paritosh. Don’t get me wrong. I have loved you, I have loved you like any father loves his child. But I can’t forget her. I have been unfair to her. I acted as childishly as she did. I failed her as a father. Find her for me Paritosh and give her that house. May be my failings would be slightly atoned. Everything else is for you.”

Daar ji had been tired by then. He had drifted off to sleep. Never to wake up. Paritosh could not even note the accurate time of death. Daar ji had forgotten to tell him the name of his daughter. How in the world was Paritosh supposed to find her?

Daar ji had done everything for him. He would be ungrateful if he didn’t acknowledge that. Despite being a fierce, strong man of business otherwise, he had been a loving and caring father to him. And yet since that day, Paritosh could not let go of the nagging feeling. That he was a substitute.

But he would have liked to fulfill Daar ji’s last wish. But where would he even start looking for her? He had tried asking some of Daar ji’s business associates and the few friends he had in Kolkata. But none of them seemed to have much idea of about Daar ji’s life before he shifted to Kolkata. From his property papers, Paritosh figured that he had sold off everything in his hometown and it was unlikely that anyone there would have any information. He had hired a private detective nonetheless and he hadn’t come back with much even after several trips to the town.

Paritosh had confused feelings about his life as an orphan and then as an adopted son. He had been luckier than most. And yet he felt dissatisfied. But he had never shared these feelings with anyone. Until that evening in the orphanage. It wasn’t intentional on either of their parts, but he had come to know about some of Rupali’s most personal issues and feelings. He felt that he owed it to her to share some of his own too. And it had been easy after knowing that she was also an orphan. But that act of sharing had also been cathartic to him. He felt good. He smiled, looked at the keys again before keeping them back in the drawer. Then he went to sleep.

He felt something tugging at his heart, when he saw Rupali getting out of Rohan’s car at the hospital next morning. He felt guilty. He had slept smiling last night, feeling good about having shared his feelings with someone, who would have understood. But he hadn’t spared a thought about the fate of this girl. The fate that he himself had spelled out so clearly for her last evening. That she was engaged to, and was probably going to be married to, a hopelessly possessive and obsessive man, was aware of her situation and yet could not pull out of it because she was indebted. She was indebted because she was an orphan. Like him. How did she sleep last night?

To be continued