Hopeless Hope (Part 13)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“What are you thinking about,” she smiled so sweetly that Paritosh felt the urge to pull her towards him and kiss her madly right there.

Outwardly he let out a sigh, “How do I undo what I had done wrong last time?”

“You had done nothing wrong last time,” she hastily assured him, “Why would you think so?”

“Nothing?” he smiled sadly, “You are too forgiving.”

“Dr. Khanna,” Rupali spoke earnestly, “Sometimes I feel that you are scared of happiness. And you probably have good reasons to be sceptical. You have always kept other people’s interests ahead of yourself. But you didn’t get the happiness and peace you deserved in return. But can you try and trust me? If I wasn’t happy with you, if I wanted you to regret something, if I wanted to punish you for something, if I had any grudges against you, we would not be here today and I would not be telling you this. All I want is to be happy with you. We have lost a lot of time. But I don’t want to lose any more time moaning over the spilt milk. Let’s forget about it.”

“Your conscience, Rupali, is clear. You didn’t doubt, you didn’t falter, you didn’t misunderstand. That is not the case with me.”

“Actually… I had my share of doubts, misunderstanding, everything. And someday we can talk about all of it. But not with any regrets. Only for sharing ourselves with each other. Today, right now, I only want to share a meal. Please don’t be sad Dr. Khanna. For my sake. Yes. That makes sense. That is something you can do. Put my wishes ahead of your regrets? You can do that easily, right?”

Paritosh smiled and shook his head. How could he ever doubt her sincerity towards himself? “Shall we order?” he asked.

“Same dishes as last time?”

“Sure.”

Their conversation was not necessarily smooth in the evening. There was a gap of years to be filled, many explanations to be given, many oddities to be explained. But Rupali did not want to get overwhelmed by all of that in just one evening. He understood and respected that. So, they talked of inane daily stuff, work, colleagues, institute, research, publications, everything but themselves. When they got back in the car, however, a strange tension filled the environment. The evening was ending and it seemed like there was something to be said, to be done, which wasn’t done. They drove back mostly in silence.

He also got out of the car when he pulled over in front of her house and walked around to her side. Memories flooded both their minds. But this time there was no uncertainty, not scruples, no hesitations. His hands still trembled as he cupped her face. But he did not stop. He kissed her. A long, deep, needy, urgent, desperate kiss, which she responded with gusto. Beads of sweat appeared on his forehead by the time they finally withdrew. Both of them were panting and her eyes were moist.

He lifted her chin to make her look directly at him. “What happened?” he asked softly.

She smiled slightly and shook her head, “Nothing bad. Nothing bad at all.”

He also smiled and stepped back.  “So? Good night, then?”

“We can’t continue to be night-owls I believe,” she said sportingly, but the tinge of disappointment in her voice was quite obvious.

“Well… Why not?”

“Really?” her eyes shone in excitement. In that moment Paritosh could see the young, spirited student he knew come back.

He shrugged with a broad smile conveying “Why not?” again.

“I will check if Ma is still awake. She shouldn’t be kept waiting for me. Why don’t you come inside as well?”

“Sure.”

Mouli had stepped out just in time to overhear the last part of their conversation. She had heard the sound of the car, and when Rupali did not come back, she grew curious and came out. But on hearing this, she hurried back inside and went straight to her room. “Crazy love-birds,” she mumbled amusedly to herself and pretended to be asleep when Rupali peeped into her room. “But then we all are. In our days, in our time…” she added afterwards.

“Can I ask you something, Rupali?”

“If you ask permission through a question to ask me a question that is recursion without a base case. You will go in an infinite loop.”

He chuckled, and not wanting to spoil the nice mood, withdrew, “Let it be then.”

“Arr.. No. Ask me. What was it?”

“Nothing important.”

“Then why make me curious and make an issue out of it. Whatever it was, ask now.”

He sighed and spoke slowly, “Since you came back, there was something about you that bothered me. You always looked very unsure, nervous, almost miserable. You weren’t like this earlier. You aren’t like that now. But have you been like that all these years? Was it… was it because of me?”

Rupali stiffened. She regretted urging him to ask. How was she supposed to handle this? Her mother had talked about Paritosh’ insecurities. How could she answer it so that she didn’t have to lie and he wouldn’t go on a guilt trip? After a moment’s thought, she decided to share it all with him.

“Let me show you something,” she said and brought out her phone. She navigated to the app that was now in disuse, but which had been a constant companion of hers for the six years in US. Then he handed it to him. There were many unread Google Alerts in it.

“What is it?”

“An app that collects Google Alert on your name and pushes them on my mobile.”

“What?” he was incredulous for a while and then started laughing, “Now that could be marketed as an award-winning way of stalking.” She merely smiled. But Paritosh grew serious after this, “So, this is how you had come to know about my talk at IIMT and the video?”

She nodded, “And a lot of other things. I couldn’t move on Dr. Khanna. God is my witness that I had tried. But I couldn’t.”

“You never tried to tell me!” he grew emotional.

“I was scared. You were so angry. I didn’t think you’d believe me.”

He sighed. He couldn’t blame her for thinking so. “So, you were indeed miserable. And it was because of me.”

“Ma says…” she started, but hesitated for a moment. Then decided to continue anyway, “That you were the one feeling insecure in this relationship. I hope this tells you how much power you have over me. If I were you, I won’t ever feel insecure.”

Paritosh smiled sadly, “Yes. I can see the power and I…” he stopped. He was going to say “I abused it”, but realized that if he wallowed in self-pity, Rupali would feel bad about sharing her story honestly with him.

“And you?” she could never stand his half-completed sentences or stories.

“And I will try my best not to abuse it,” he changed what he was originally saying. But he meant it and promised to himself to stand by it.

“I know that you won’t. Else I wouldn’t have told you.”

Her faith scared him. And it warmed his heart!

“Paritosh. Come in. What a surprise!” Mouli was glad to see Paritosh next day. Rupali was in the office.

“Surprise?” he chuckled, “Why! You are talking like I have come to meet you for the first time.”

“No, you aren’t. But I didn’t think you’d have time for me any longer,” she teased him good-humouredly.

“Come on Mrs. Banerjee,” he tried to keep a brave and straight face, but a blush crept in.

Mouli laughed, “Come now. Sit down. Tell me, how are you doing?”

“I am doing fine. How is your health?”

“I would say it is fine till I am alive.”

“Don’t talk so negatively. You are all right.”

Mouli sighed, “Forget about me. Just keep her happy, Paritosh.”

“I haven’t done too well there till now. But I promise that I will try my best. Any tips?”

“It can’t be too difficult,” Mouli smiled fondly, “She doesn’t ask for too much, does she? Or am I biased as a mother?”

“No. You are not biased. She doesn’t ask for much. But that makes things difficult sometimes. I do want to give.”

“I don’t know if she wants it. But if you give her some indulgence, I’d be very happy.”

“Indulgence?”

“Pamper her. Indulge her. Let her have her way. Something I never had time or resource to do. I was too busy earning enough, saving enough to pay for her studies and career.”

“For someone who doesn’t expect much, how difficult can pampering her be? Rest assured, Mrs. Banerjee. And there was something I wanted to tell you.”

“Go ahead.”

“Thank you. Thanks a lot for understanding me and my issues. You might have done it for your daughter, but you have done me a much, much bigger favour.”

“Oh my God! What is this Dr. Khanna?” Rupali was wide-eyed with surprise. Or was it shock?

“What?” He got worried.

“This house… What have you done to it? It looks like a five star hotel.” Rupali’s surprise was not misplaced. The interiors of Paritosh’ house was completely redone and it looked nothing like a normal house in the faculty quarter of the institute. The decor, the furniture, the design, everything reminded Rupali of the time when she had been to Cathy’s parents’ house in the US. They were super-rich and she had felt completely out of place there. But in comparison to even that, Paritosh’ house seemed constrained only by the size. And he had no control over size. It was a standard house all the senior faculty members were allotted.

Paritosh was laughing at her describing the house as a five star hotel. “That isn’t a bad thing, is it?” he had asked in amusement.

“No… I guess…” she was still stupefied.

“Come with me. I have something for you.”

She followed him to his bedroom and her eyes widened, when he opened a small box containing a pair of earrings for her.

“Oh my God! These are not…”

“Not?”

“Diamonds?”

“As a matter of fact, these are.”

“Oh!”

“You don’t like them?” a cloud appeared over his face.

Rupali realized that her reaction had been lukewarm. She quickly flashed a smile, “I love them. I was just… I don’t know… taken by surprise?”

“Will you try them?”

“Sure.” She hoped that he would offer to put them on her. But the expectation of a story-book romance won’t do with him, would it? That was not why she had fallen for him. She went to the dresser to change her ear-rings. She took the one she was wearing on her left ear out. But before she could put in the new ones, Paritosh walked up to her and stopped her.

“May I?” he asked softly.

Her heart leapt. She nodded nervously trying hard to hide her blush. But it couldn’t be hidden by the time he had finished putting on both the rings. He wasn’t complaining about it. It was gratifying to know that he had that effect on her.

There was something she wasn’t comfortable about, but which she could not put her hands on, and which he didn’t realize.

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 12)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

When she saw her daughter’s bloodshot eyes, obviously from crying, it wasn’t easy for her to not to say or do anything. But she left Paritosh in her room and came back without saying anything. Rupali was looking at them with puzzle, uncertainty and fear in her eyes. Despite the successful operation, Mouli could not let go of a nagging feeling that she won’t survive for long. She was going to leave Rupali alone. If she found love and guardianship in Paritosh, what could be better than that? But for that to happen, she had to let them resolve their issues themselves. She had given the push she could. She had tried to help Paritosh overcome his insecurities. Rupali didn’t seem to have any issues. If anything she was too sure of whom she wanted in her life. So sure that she couldn’t move on even when faced with the possibility that she might never get him. She sent up a silent prayer for her daughter’s happiness and lied down on the bed. Weakness and exhaustion put her to sleep despite her mental anxiety about what would be the outcome of Paritosh’ and Rupali’s meeting.

After her mother left, Rupali miserably looked around the room, trying to fix her eyes anywhere but at Paritosh.

“Rupali…”

“Why are you here now? I hate you,” she turned away from him.

“Do you?” he could not help smiling, despite feeling wretched for her as well as himself.

She did not reply and Paritosh realized that she had started crying again, silently this time. He went around so that he could stand facing her. He wiped her tears with his hands and said gently, “Please stop crying. I know I have been an idiot, a jerk. But I should be the one suffering for it. Not you.”

“I have been doomed to suffer since the day I attended your first class. I wish I had never met you.”

“I hope… I sincerely hope what you have said is not true, Rupali. That you are not doomed to suffer because of me. Because if that is true, how would I ever ask you for your love, company and friendship? I have no doubt that our not meeting would have made no difference in your life. If anything, you might have been happier than you would ever be with me. But for me… my life would have been a dead end forever. I would never have known what it is like to love and be loved.”

“You would have liked that better, wouldn’t you? After all someone as frivolous and fickle as me could not be serious.”

“I’m sorry. I am so sorry, Rupali. For every time I have misunderstood you. For every moment I mistrusted you. Punish me whichever way you want, but don’t keep it in your heart, please.”

“I never blamed you for mistrusting me earlier. But how could you not trust these nights? How could you be so grossly unfair?

“I wasn’t thinking straight Rupali. My mind was too clouded; I was too misguided in my beliefs…”

“What has brought about this change of heart anyway? What did Ma tell you? Did she beg you accept me or what?” her face contorted. She obviously detested the idea. But she thought it quite probable.

“She only helped me understand myself, Rupali.”

“Just go away Dr. Khanna. I don’t want to talk to you.ow H”

“I will go away. I will be miserable, but I will go away, because I deserve the misery. But only if you promise and convince me that you won’t cry.”

“Fine. I promise,” she turned away and immediately started crying again.

“Oh God! Please Rupali,” he held her hand and turned her around, “What do I do to…” And in desperation he went down on his knees. “Please forgive me Rupali and give us another chance.”

“What are you doing?” Rupali was stunned by his gesture, “Please get up.” She was miserable and mortified. But he didn’t get up and remained there with his head bowed. She looked at him in desperate silence for a few moments. Then she too went down on her knees to face him. “Don’t do this. Please Dr. Khanna. I’m… I could not let go of you, even when you shunned me. How could I do so when you were ready to accept me? You didn’t need to do this. I would have come around by morning. Or probably the moment you had stepped out of this room…”

“You would have,” he looked at her and said in calm and collected voice now, “But I have to pay for what I have done to you. I have to be punished…”

“For the first time, Dr. Khanna, I got a chance to act out before you,” she smiled through her tears, “And I got carried away. I don’t want you to pay for anything. Or punish you… What could I possibly gain from that…”

“Then act out as much as you want, to your heart’s content.” He smiled back lovingly. They got up together. He cupped her face and caressed it for a moment before pulling her in his embrace. She happily obliged and responded. Tears started flowing again from her eyes, but this time in happiness and relief.

Rupali had peeped into her mother’s room after seeing Paritosh off. She was asleep. So, they met only in the morning. While Rupali had hardly been able to sleep with excitement and was out of the bed rather early, Mouli woke up later than usual. Her weak and tired body needed to make up for the exertion of the night. She immediately sought Rupali out on waking up. Rupali was having tea and breakfast in her room.

“Good morning, Ma. How are you? I was getting late, so didn’t wait for you for breakfast.”

“No problem, sweetie. But you tell me first. How are you?”

Rupali smiled nervously and blushed slightly. “I am fine, Ma. And I am sorry.”

“Sorry?”

“For what I had been doing.”

“I wish I had known sooner, Rupa.”

“Ma,” Rupali averted her eyes, “I was ashamed of myself. I was behaving very irresponsibly. I didn’t have the heart to tell you.”

Mouli looked sadly at her daughter. She was so terrified of being irresponsible, of letting her mother down. She deserved to relax a little. Hopefully in Paritosh’ company, she would be able to do that. Sometimes Mouli could not help wondering who felt more responsible for the other. She towards her daughter, or her daughter towards her.

“I have seen a little bit more of the world than you have, Rupa. I could have helped you.” Rupali nodded and didn’t say anything. Mouli spoke again, “There is something I want to tell you now. He is older than you and more mature. I can see that you respect him a lot. You probably think that he always knows better and is sure about things. That would be true most of the time. You would do well to listen to his advice when there is a difference of opinion between you. But as far as the power equation of this relationship is concerned, he is the one who is insecure. He has a past to deal with. He is the one concerned that he might be too old for you and that he may not live up to your expectations. Observe those signs of insecurities and make sure that you assure him of his insecurities being misplaced. I am not asking you to go overboard and make a speech about it every now and then. It is more subtle than that. I’m sure you understand, don’t you?”

Rupali mulled over it for a while and then said, “I think I do. Thanks Ma. I had never thought of it this way.” It dawned on her that what she had seen as his attempts at shunning her, were in reality his self-defence; an attempt to stop himself from dreaming too much and getting hurt when the dreams went unfulfilled.

“God bless you my child,” Mouli patted her head, “Now hurry up. You are getting late, aren’t you?”

“Your medicines and breakfast…”

“Don’t bother. Pammi would be here any moment,” she referred to their house help, “She will make me the breakfast.”

“And Ma,” Rupali added hesitantly and with slight blush, “I may… have to go out… for dinner tonight…”

“Have to?” Mouli laughed, “You want to darling. And you don’t have to take my permission.”

Rupali grinned and went out.

“Wow! You still have the BMW?” Rupali exclaimed when Paritosh came to pick her up for dinner.

“What do you mean?”

“The last I had seen it was…” she left the sentence incomplete. He would know that she was talking about the last time they had gone for dinner. “I never saw you driving it recently. I thought you had sold it off.”

“No. I just bought a regular car. BMW is overkill for day to day driving.”

This was special driving, all right. But what struck her was something else. All those years back, she hadn’t thought much about him driving a luxury car. The entire world had seemed buyable then once you ‘started working’. But she knew better now. A professor’s salary was hardly enough to get loan for a sedan. BMW!! And then another car. Was he that rich? And extravagant? But her thoughts were soon occupied with his black suit, in which he looked so graceful and handsome. Was it the same one as the last time? Or given his casual purchase of a car, had he bought a few dozens since then?

He drove to the same restaurant. Not much had changed in its decor or menu. There couldn’t have been an environment more conducive for a déjà vu. Or rather one for bringing the memories back. When the headwaiter gave them options for the tables they could have, Paritosh chose the same one they were seated on last time. Rupali was nervous and excited at the same time.

“Do you drink?” he asked her when they were handed the menu.

She smiled slightly and nodded. Then without waiting for him she called the waiter, “Two mojitos, please.”

He laughed slightly, “You remember?”

“You do too, it seems.”

“Yes. I remember. I remember everything,” he said somberly, “I remember that you had said you’d come back after Ph. D. and you did!”

“Why are you looking so sad about it?”

“Not sad, Rupali. Thoughtful.”

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 11)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“The moon is up, Dr. Khanna. It is not a dark night. The world is not silhouettes and outlines. You can’t escape it,” Rupali did not open the gate, even though that was only a nominal barrier. Both of them stood taller than the low grill gate, as they talked.

“Yes,” his spoke in a mortified voice, “It was idiotic on my part to even try and escape it. I am sorry, Rupali. I am really sorry.”

“Sorry for what?”

“For dragging you into this bizarre foolish business. I don’t know what I was thinking. Probably I wasn’t thinking at all…”

“Bizarre yes. But foolish it wasn’t for me. What is your problem?”

“It is wrong, Rupali.”

“I have heard that before, and I had silently accepted that. But you can’t keep doing this to yourself and to me, Dr. Khanna. What is wrong?”

“You are so young Rupali.”

“I am not a minor. I am an adult and can take my decisions.”

“I’m an old, married man. My life is at a dead end.”

“It doesn’t have to.”

“But it is.”

“Why? I know you care for your wife. And I admire you so much for that. But do you love her so much that you can’t move on?”

“It’s not about me. It is about you, Rupali,” he said in a small voice.

“What about me?”

“I have told you that I am no longer angry about it. But when I had first come to know about the bet, I hadn’t acted sportingly. And you seem to be carrying the guilt and remorse since then. You don’t have to be stuck on it, or on me. You have a life full of possibilities before you. Go live it. I can’t punish you life-long for a small childish prank.”

Paritosh found her eyes downcast and she didn’t speak for a while. He assumed that she agreed with him and started moving away, when she finally spoke, “What you have been punishing me all these years for, Dr. Khanna, is a mistake I never made.” Her voice was low and sad, but firm.

“Excuse me?”

“You are so wise, so mature. How could you not see it, Dr. Khanna? It never was a bloody bet. It was never a bet, never a prank. Could you never see it? Not even in all these years? Not after all these years?”

“You are not serious, Rupali,” his voice quivered. He needed a confirmation.

“No. Why would I be serious?” she mistook his question to be a serious objection, “When have I ever been serious? Has there been anything serious in how much I respected you? Nor was I serious in admiring you for how nice, caring and generous you were. I wasn’t serious when I was so affected by your pain, your hurt that I desperately wanted to do something to ease it, wipe it off. I wasn’t serious when I was desperately trying to tell you that what you had heard in the lab that night was a gross misunderstanding. Yes! There had been a bet in a moment of frivolity that you are so willing to excuse. But I had long forgotten about it. But no. Why should that matter? I wasn’t serious, when minute by minute, day by day I was falling in love with you. And I wasn’t serious when in last six years in US I had tried hard to move on from you, from my heartbreak, but had failed miserably. I wasn’t serious when I had followed everything about you obsessively, so obsessively that everyone, all my friends, if I could ever make one, had given up on me. The most concerned ones sent me to a psychiatrist and he kept telling me how unhealthy all of this was. Still, I could not get over it. There was absolutely, nothing serious in any of it. And since coming here… No. Nothing. Zilch. Zero. No seriousness at all. I have been playing pranks with you, with myself, with my life, with my mother who worries so much about me and my future. How can I be serious? Running out of the house at midnight to spend those few moments with you which you would not grant me in daylight. It has all been a game for me, I have been immature, I have been an idiot and I, of course, don’t care about you. How can I be serious?”

She broke into a sob and stepped back. Just then Paritosh noticed someone stepping out of the verandah. Even if it had been a dark night, it wouldn’t have been a rocket science to guess who it was. But there was no need to guess. He saw Mouli very clearly and flushed with embarrassment. He was already regretting his visit to her in the morning. And now this. With Rupali crying. What an impression he was going to create on her? All his life, his reputation was all he had earned. Whatever be his personal miseries, nobody ever got a chance to point fingers at his public conduct or his behaviour with others. And now. In one stroke, he had undone it. But no. It wasn’t even one stroke that he could blame momentary lapse of judgement for it. He had been building up to his destruction and still he had not stopped himself.

Rupali turned her back at him to walk into the house and stopped in her tracks on seeing her mother. She got sick with worry.

“Ma. What happened? Are you all right?” she stopped crying from the shock of seeing her mother.

“I am fine. But obviously you are not,” Mouli replied.

“Ma.” Once assured of her wellbeing, Rupali’s own grief overwhelmed her again and tears came back.

Paritosh stood glued to his spot feeling foolish and mortified.

“Why don’t you open the gate and let Paritosh in?” Mouli said.

“I won’t.”

“This is no way to handle the problems, Rupa.”

“There is nothing to be handled, Ma. Please. Let’s go inside. This is no time for you to remain awake.”

“Open the gate for him and go inside. To your room.” Her voice was commanding this time and Rupali could not disobey. She walked to the gate, opened it and mumbled in a steely voice, “I will never forgive you if something happened to Ma.” Then she turned back without waiting for him or Mouli and went to her room. She started sobbing again once inside her room. Why this mess? What had she done to deserve this? Probably all the admonitions of her psychiatrist were correct. It wasn’t his American view of things that didn’t understand her love. Her feelings were indeed hopeless and unhealthy.

Meanwhile Paritosh walked in slowly, although he would have liked nothing better than running away from there and hiding in some remote corner of the world, where nobody could find and question him. But as Mouli had so wisely said, that was no way to handle the problems.

“Tell me more about yourself,” Mouli said after they were seated in the hall, Paritosh’ head bowed. He wasn’t able to meet her eyes.

“Excuse me?” He looked up surprised. He was expecting to be blasted, insulted, blamed, preached, questioned; anything but asked more about himself.

“My daughter has driven herself crazy after you, Paritosh. And from the little I heard, it has been the case for several years now. It is only fair that I should like to know more about you than I do.”

Paritosh took a deep breath before replying. His head was bowed again as he spoke, “I don’t even want to imagine what the circumstances make me look like. But I am not as bad a person, as I currently appear Mrs. Banerjee. I will never be able to justify some of the things I have done recently, but if anybody has to suffer for my mistakes it has to be me.”

“I heard your objections Paritosh. You said you were married. I hope my daughter is not foolish enough to be in love with a married man and try to make it work. I hope there is more to it… I haven’t seen your wife and you never spoke about her either.”

“Right,” he could see that Mouli was getting impatient with his ramblings and worried about her daughter, she was more interested in getting facts. Briefly he told her about his wife.

“I am sorry,” Mouli felt for him. She had known the pain of loneliness all her life. “I appreciate your care for your wife, Paritosh. But I hope you understand that there is nothing wrong in you moving on.”

“No. There isn’t, I guess.”

“Then? Are her feelings one-sided? It seems unlikely, otherwise what were you doing here at this hour?”

Paritosh rubbed his face with his palms and let out a sigh, “No. I had thought mine to be one-sided. And misunderstood her repeatedly. But either way, I am ashamed of myself for how I feel.”

“Why?”

“I… am… surprised that you are asking me that, Mrs. Banerjee. She has been my student. She is so much younger to me…”

“I know,” Mouli interrupted and looked thoughtful for a moment. She was trying to gather her thoughts. “But Paritosh. She is not an idiot and you are not unscrupulous. I can see that much.”

“I have tried not to be. Although I am afraid I have failed miserably at times. Otherwise this would not have happened.”

“Paritosh. I have seen a bit of the world. And the relationships. The most unusual, unexpected ones sometimes become most successful. And the ones everyone looks forward to may fall apart. Because at the end of the day, what the world thinks essential does not matter in a relationship. Only the two people making the relationship matter. If the two of you can find happiness with each other, why should anything else matter?”

“This… comes from… such an unexpected quarter that I don’t know what to say. Forget about me, are you convinced that she has made the right decision for herself?”

Mouli sighed, “We – mother & daughter – are close. But it is a strange closeness. She doesn’t always talk to me. So, I don’t know what is going on in her mind. However, she hasn’t made wrong decisions for herself for most part. She has grown up fatherless, Paritosh. She has seen me struggle as a single parent. I think she grew mature for her age. I never had to scold her for her studies. For anything, in fact. She never asked for extra pocket-money, never got into any kind of trouble. She has been responsible since she was fairly young. So, when I don’t see anything obviously wrong, I trust her decisions.”

Paritosh sighed and appeared to be contemplating on what Mouli said.

“And Paritosh,” Mouli added as an afterthought, “As I told you, she has grown fatherless. She didn’t even have a father-figure in her life. Her uncle was too young, and at best like an older brother to her. So, I would not be surprised, if she looks for maturity and responsibility in her life partner. It is possible that you being older is not only not a negative, but actually a positive for her, although she doesn’t probably consciously think about it this way. And one final thing… I have never seen her cry this badly. Not when her exams went bad, or when she hurt herself physically, not even when she had been told as six-year old that her beloved Baba would never ever come back home…” Mouli looked like she was reliving the time of her husband’s death. Sadness and pain obvious on her face.

Her words jolted Paritosh out of his thoughts. She had been crying so piteously. And he was busy resolving his own confusions! He stood up suddenly, “Mrs. Banerjee. With everything that has already happened, there is hardly any pretence of appropriateness left. Can I please meet her? Where is her room?”

Mouli nodded and got up herself, “I will take you there.”

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 10)

Posted 3 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“Beautiful night! Sombre mother of Day!
Scarcely less resplendent and delightful,
And even more mysteriously lovely!”

Paritosh recited a poem sitting on Rupali’s verandah.

“You wrote that?” Rupali asked.

“No. It is by somebody called C. B. Langston. Had read it on Internet. Don’t know anything about the poet though.”

“But it must have been written for a night like this.”

“Hmm…”

“Why did you fall in love with night, Dr. Khanna?”

“It obscures everything I don’t want to see. What remains are silhouettes, outlines… You can fill them with your imaginations. Your imaginations can be as happy as you want.”

“I had never thought I would find night so attractive?”

“Why did you fall in love with it?”

“Because it started giving me what I couldn’t have at any other time.”

“But night is ephemeral. It won’t last. Nor would anything it gives you.”

“So is the day. What is not ephemeral?” She bent and rested her head on his knees, “But while the night lasts, it is a bliss.”

She felt his hands patting and caressing her head. She was woken up by him after a while. She did not know what time it was. He whispered to her, “Close the gate after me. Sleep well.”

“You write poetry, don’t you Dr. Khanna?”

“How do you know?”

“When I asked you yesterday if the poem was yours, you weren’t surprised. So, it could have been yours.”

Paritosh would have laughed. But he couldn’t make that kind of noise at night. So, he controlled it to a chuckle. “Very clever, Dr. Banerjee.”

“Recite something for me, please.”

“Poets are known to be narcissists, who write boring stuff and think very clever of themselves.”

“I wish… The only one I know is so full of self-doubt that… Anyway. Recite one, please.”

“It’s in Hindi.”

“I understand Hindi.”

“मन के पीछे चलने वाले,
मन के साथ भटकना होगा।

हाँ, अभी देखी थी मन ने
रंग-बिरंगी-सी वह तितली
फूल-फूल पे भटक रही थी
जाने किसकी खोज में पगली।

पर वह पीछे छूट गई है
इन्द्रधनुष जो वह सुन्दर है
अब उसको ही तकना होगा।”

(Author’s Note: If you don’t read or understand Hindi, please see the transliteration and translation in the previous post)

She stayed silent for a moment, then asked, “You believe that, Dr. Khanna?”

“Here. Now. In this world. I do.”

He leaned towards her and put his arms around her. She was sleeping on his shoulders, when he woke her up. “Close the gate after me, Rupali. Good night.”

“This coolness in air,
Tranquillity, silence so rare,
No concerns, not a care,
Dreams and imaginations flare.

Who are those unfortunate creatures,
Who lose their peace at night?
A thousand sunny days cannot
Match up to a moment this bright.”

“This one is yours,” Rupali declared.

“How do you know?”

“I just know.”

“You are so sure?”

“Now I am.”

“Now?”

“If it wasn’t, you would have objected as soon as I claimed it was yours. In the true spirit of avoiding plagiarism and giving accurate citations.”

Paritosh chuckled.

“I am dead serious,” Rupali pouted and although he could not see it, he could feel it.

“I’m sure you are.”

“I tried finding poems about night on Internet. But most people, including poets, seem to find nights gloomy.”

“Why don’t you write one yourself?”

“I don’t have the talent.”

“You have the heart. Don’t worry about rhyming or techniques. People like us don’t have to adorn the pages of literary textbooks.”

It was her turn to chuckle, “I guess not.”

He put his arms around her and pulled her closer, “We can write for ourselves.”

“And for each other,” she mumbled as her heavy eyelids closed. The next thing she remembered was being woken up by him. Her head had been resting on his chest. “Close the door, Rupali. And go to your bed.”

And so the days… rather the nights went by. It had been over a week since Rupali and Paritosh had met accidentally after midnight. And effect of their surreal nightly meetings was evident in how she felt the entire day. Happy, spirited. Despite the fact that the entire week she hadn’t seen him during the day at all. After the first night, she had thought of meeting him the first thing in the morning. But then she had remembered. “There is a beautiful, peaceful world we see here, Rupali. But it would be impossible to recreate it in the morning.” She didn’t think so. But if he did, what choice did she have except to respect it? She would not see him during the day unless absolutely necessary.

If she told her psychiatrist in US about this, he’d definitely declare them both unstable and in the need of psychiatric care. Probably he’d be right. But she didn’t care. She was happy and she wanted to be happy.

But the world of dreams could not last forever. It was close to six in the evening. She was about to leave, but had some administrative work to take care of. Meher was not at her seat and she had to wait for her. When Meher came back, she was visibly disturbed.

“Everything all right?” Rupali asked her.

“I don’t know Dr. Banerjee. What has come upon Dr. Khanna?”

“What about Dr. Khanna?” she was immediately alarmed.

“The last few months that he has been here, I have never seen him shouting at anyone, scolding anyone. Have you?”

“No. Never. Not even earlier.”

“And for last few days, he is getting on everyone’s nerves. Including mine and other staff. Scolding them for even slightest of what he considers oversight. He blasted me over a small spelling mistake in a letter right now. My ‘there’ and ‘their’ got mixed up.”

“Oh! That’s odd…”

“I am irritated right now. But if you ask me, I worry more for him. Something is terribly wrong with him. Anyway. Why am I boring you with all this? Just another day at work. You were waiting for me?”

“Uh… Yeah,” Rupali had difficulty remembering what she had come for, because her mind was busy trying to make sense of what Meher had told her about Paritosh just now. Why was he so disturbed? “These are some reimbursement claims,” she handed the papers to Meher, “Will you take care of them?”

“Sure.”

Rupali quickly signed the forms Meher asked her to and rushed to Paritosh’ office. The sight of him disconcerted her. He hadn’t shaven for at least two to three days. His usually impeccable clothes were crumpled. His eyes were red.

“Rupali?”

There was one thing about him, which would be obvious to anyone who met him then, but which Meher had not told her. He was drunk. And not one serving of a cocktail that wouldn’t have any effect on him. He was really drunk.

A stupefied, angry and perplexed Rupali did not stay there to ask for and receive any explanations. She turned back and ran away from there.

“Rupa. Is everything all right?” Mouli enquired with concern when Rupali came home. She had stayed in her office long enough to get a hold on her emotions. Even though it meant risking leaving her mother alone. The nurse had left at her usual time. She didn’t think her countenance gave anything away about her inner turmoil. Why was her mother so concerned then?

“Yes Ma. What happened? Why did you ask that?”

“Nothing. I… just…I think I sometimes worry too much these days.”

“Don’t do that Ma. And Ma. Now you can walk a little right? I will introduce you to the wives of some faculty members here. You can visit them, or invite them when I am not here. Staying alone with the nurse can’t be too good for you.”

“Paritosh spends some time with me every day.”

“That’s great.”

Mouli noticed a subtle change in her daughter when she mentioned Paritosh. Something was indeed wrong.

“Actually Rupa…”

“What is it, Ma?”

“Paritosh was acting strange today. He asked me so many times how you were doing and whether there was any reason to worry about you. If anything, I had noticed that you were very happy for last few days. So, I didn’t understand him. But he looked so glum and asked so many times without offering any explanation for his concern that I got worried.”

“What?” Now Rupali was positively angry at Paritosh. Had he come like that to her mother? Drunk, unshaven, asking questions that worried her? What was he thinking? “That’s unacceptable, Ma. He shouldn’t have worried you like that. I will ask him to stop seeing you.”

“Don’t do anything like that. He is a complete gentleman. I think he needs help. Something is matter with him.”

“Possibly Ma. But I can’t have you getting worried. It is not good for your health.”

“I won’t worry from now on, I promise. Don’t fret now. He is your boss. Don’t fight with him.”

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 9)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

Rupali wiped her tears and suppressed her moans as she turned in the bed again. If it hadn’t been for the bet disaster, he’d still have shooed her away. Because it was wrong in his books. Was that any consolation though? Were her choices always to be restricted between two painful options?

“Paritosh had come today,” Mouli informed Rupali when she came back from her office.

“Dr. Khanna? Why?”

“Just to give me company.”

“Did you get your afternoon nap?”

“Yes,” she smiled, “He had already asked me my routine the other day and had come before the time for my nap. He will come again tomorrow.”

“Okay…” Rupali was confused. Why would he do that? Why wouldn’t he tell her if he was planning to meet her mother?

“He is a nice man.”

Yes. That he was. And it was his nicety that was her undoing. He had a led lonely, unfulfilled life. Many professors in those circumstances were known to take their frustrations out on students. They’d fail half the class at their whim. Not Paritosh. He was aloof, he was professional, he appeared strict to everyone other than Rupali. But he was not harsh, he was not bitter. He had been nice to his unreasonable mother. He was nice to his mentally disturbed wife. He was nice to the security guard of the department. Rupali could figure out that the jacket and watch he wore once belonged to Paritosh. He had never shouted at an administrative staff. He was nice, heart-wrenchingly nice, to her. Now he was being nice to her mother. As a young faculty member, she was often saddled with a lot of non-academic, administrative work. So, getting away during office hours and working from home was often not possible for her. Paritosh had more freedom, despite his administrative duties as the HOD. And he had done the perfect favour to her. She worried about her mother when she couldn’t be with her. He had decided to give her company. She could be at peace. On her mother’s count at least.

But on his count? There could be no peace for her there. She couldn’t move on. And she couldn’t tell him. He thought it was wrong. If he had been a frustrated teacher, who was unfairly harsh to his students, if he had been mistreated his wife instead of caring for her, if he had been unscrupulous and had tried to take advantage of her – an emotionally vulnerable, young student, if he had begrudged her an old misunderstanding and had created problems for her as her boss, which he very easily could, if he had done any of this, if he hadn’t been this nice man he was, if he hadn’t helped her in her most tumultuous times despite thinking that she had played him for a bet, she would have been able to move on. She might never have fallen for him in the first place.

But that was not the case. He was a nice man. And she had fallen so hard for this sad, lonely, but nice man there was no getting up for her.

She remembered the time from her student life, when there was a tussle between administration and students about the rules guiding student’s behaviour on the campus. Several biggies in the administration felt that the students were given too much of freedom. They wanted to curb the hours in which they go out of the hostels or campus. Students were vehemently against such rules.

Rupali was surprised when in one of her meetings he had brought up the issue. “So, who is winning? Students or the administration?” He had asked somewhat playfully.

“Why? Are you acting as a spy?” she had also replied in jest.

“Spy? For whom?”

“For the administration, who else?”

“Ah! You presume that I side with them.”

“Don’t you?” As someone who had obeyed his parents all his life, whether it was in the decisions related to his career, or his marriage, she didn’t think he would have very liberal views about how youngsters should be treated.

“The problem with our administrators is that they start seeing themselves as parents, instead of teachers. And Indian parents are obsessive about controlling the lives of their kids. Their intentions are usually honourable, but not necessarily right.”

“What are the honourable, but wrong intentions?” she had been intrigued.

“They are terrified about the outcomes of uninformed actions. What if they make a mistake, they keep asking. Our parents and our administrators. Point is, how else would one grow, if not by experimenting? This shielding, this care becomes stifling very soon.”

“Wow! None of us were thinking so logically about it. If we did, we’d have a better chance in succeeding against the administration.”

“Then do so.”

“Yes. Of course. But I must say, you would make one cool father, Dr. Khanna.”

The smile on his face had been sad and for a moment, his eyes had looked lost. Was he thinking about the baby they had lost? He only talked about the incident from Amrit’s point of view, what it did to her. But what about him?

There was only one thing he was not nice towards. Feelings. Hers, and his own! Knowingly, or unknowingly, he tortured them, punished them. Ruthlessly.

There was a small open space in front of her house. The boundary around it was a low one and anyone walking on the road could have seen her or jumped in. But the campus was a secure place. There was nothing to be afraid of even late at night. She paced up and down in front of her house. A few minutes later, she saw someone walking down the road. While it wouldn’t have been surprising near student hostels, it was a rare sight in the faculty quarters for someone to be out so late at night. Who was it? And whosoever it was, given the direction he was coming from, he wasn’t returning from outside or from an office in the campus. He was coming out of his or someone else’s house. For a moment she wondered if she’d discover some scandalous story of an extra-marital affair. But as the distant figure came closer, she realized that nothing like that was going to happen. Most certainly, it was Dr. Khanna. Should she stay there and risk getting noticed by him? Or should she go inside the house? But why the hell was he out on the road at this hour? Her curiosity got the better of her, and she decided to stay. She, in fact, waited for him near the gate of her house. His strides were long and it didn’t take him much time to reach there. He stopped in his tracks when he saw someone standing at the gate of her house. He feared an intruder initially, but was soon able to make out that it was Rupali herself. She was looking at him. He thought for a moment. Then instead of going further down the road, he came to her.

“Rupali. What are you doing here?”

She chuckled slightly, “You are forgetting that you are standing at the gate of my house. I should be the one asking this.”

“Still. It is quite late. Past midnight. Why aren’t you sleeping?”

“Same to you.”

He sighed, “Mrs. Banerjee is fine?”

“You have met her yourself today.”

“Of course. But I got worried when I saw you awake. I wondered if something went wrong since then…”

“No. She is fine. I was unable to sleep and was tired of tossing and turning in the bed. So, decided to come out and get some fresh air.”

He smiled, “And I was tired of even getting the fresh air near my house. So, I decided to take a walk down the road.”

“Why don’t you come in?” She started opening the gate.

“At this hour?” he was hesitant.

“Well!” What harm could it do?

“Okay,” he acquiesced.

“Let’s not go inside. We can sit here and continue getting some fresh air,” he said when she made to open the door of the house.

“Okay.”

They sat down on the steps leading to the open verandah. It was a surreal experience. It was a cool and dark night. The moon hadn’t risen yet. The only source of light was street lamps. They were not in the direct sight. So, only the silhouettes of the things around them could be made out.

“There is a beautiful, peaceful world we see here, Rupali,” he spoke after a while, “But it would be impossible to recreate it in the morning. It would be difficult to even imagine, then, that the world could be like this. This world can only exist at night, in darkness, in dreams…  It slips away when the sun rises and the real world wakes up. And we can do nothing about it.”

“We can’t?” she asked, her voice sounding dreamy.

“No. Because it is that world, which feeds us, which supports us and with which we live and grow. We can do without this world, but not that. What we have to aspire for is finding peace and happiness in that world.”

“And when that is not possible, can’t we just steal some time away from the night and live in this world? Even if in the morning, we have to return to the world that feeds us?”

“If we did that, we’d lose sleep and be tired in the morning,” a hint of amusement had slipped into his voice.

“We can compensate with an afternoon nap,” she also replied in the same vein.

He let out a small laugh; then asked, “You don’t have a class tomorrow, right?”

“No. And you?”

“Me neither.”

“Great.”

They fell silent again. Paritosh leaned against the wall after a while for support.

“Rupali. Get up,” the next thing she remembered was Paritosh waking her up. She had fallen asleep on his knees. But he wasn’t acting panicked or scandalized. She also got up calmly as if it was the most natural thing for her to do. Sleeping on his knees! “It’s almost three in the morning. I will leave. Close the gate behind me, then go inside and sleep in your bed. Okay?”

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 8)

Posted 4 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“It’s so nice to meet you finally, Dr. Khanna,” Mouli welcomed him warmly, “I have been hearing about you since Rupa was a student.”

“Really?” he was genuinely surprised.

“Yes. I was expecting to meet you during her convocation. But you had left by then. Looks like I had to come at death’s door to finally meet you.”

She was weak physically, but her mental faculty were all alert. Her sense of humour had not disappeared either. But Paritosh looked at Rupali’s pale face at the mention of the death and he could not enjoy the dark humour.

“Please don’t talk like that Mrs. Banerjee. It worries Rupali.”

She looked at her daughter sadly and then nodded.

“I’ll get some tea,” Rupali said feeling strangely uncomfortable and went out of the room.

“Dr. Khanna…”

“Please call me Paritosh.”

Mouli smiled, “All right. Paritosh. You were with her through all this. Only you can tell me. Was she too worried?”

Worried was too mild a word for Rupali’s condition through the ordeal. But it would do no good to reveal that to her sick mother.

“Of course, she was worried Mrs. Banerjee. But she is strong.” Did he sound convincing enough?

Apparently no. Because Mouli smiled patronizingly at that reply, “You don’t want to worry me, it seems. Noble intentions. I wish she hadn’t come back from US. I hate to see her going through this. I didn’t want her to see me so weak.”

“And that would have been very unfair to her. Do you realize what kind of guilt she would have lived with?”

Mouli frowned as if trying to think hard over what he said. “Never thought of it that way. I guess you are right.”

“I am,” Paritosh smiled genially, “And now you should stop worrying. That would be of no help to your health or Rupali’s mental peace.”

“I am glad she has a friend in you,” Mouli said sincerely.

Rupali came back with tea and snacks just then. Her hands trembled for a second as he offered tea to Paritosh. The tea didn’t spill, but Mouli noticed the trembling and looked thoughtful.

“I know I am sounding like an old mother,” she told Rupali later that evening after Paritosh had left, “But I really worry about you, Rupa. You’d be alone after me.”

“Don’t talk about ‘after you’ Ma. Your surgery has been successful.”

“I have gotten a fresh lease of life, no doubt. But it isn’t a long lease sweetie. You know that I don’t like prodding you for information. But let’s say that I am getting desperate. Do you have no one in your life?”

“No Ma. No one. Now stop talking, have your food and medicines and go to bed.”

“You could meet some people. Your Kaku has been…”

“No Ma. Don’t let Kaku get to you, or me, please. I am not interested in meeting anyone. Let me get your food.”

Mouli thought of a trembling hand from that evening. And that trembling voice on the day of her convocation. “You can’t meet Dr. Khanna, Ma. He has apparently left the institute and gone to someplace in Delhi.”

Rupali also thought of the past, but of a day about a month before the convocation. She had given the final presentation for her project and it had gone well as expected. “Well done, Rupali,” he had smiled when a beaming Rupali had gone to his office that evening. “I would be surprised, if you didn’t get the best project award.”

“Thank you, Sir.”

“So all set for the next phase of your life? End semester exams would hardly be a worry for you. How many admits and scholarship offers do you have in hand? Four?”

“Five,” she had blushed.

“Where are you going finally?”

“Stanford, as you had suggested.”

“That’s great. There isn’t a better place to be in for a Computer Scientist. All the great work is happening in Bay area these days. You would do very well.”

“Thank you, Sir. And a special thanks for your recommendations. It wouldn’t have happened without that.”

“A well-deserved one. I think today is the day to celebrate. Are you free in the evening?”

“Yes. Why?”

“Let’s go for a dinner. Any place you want.”

She had been pleasantly surprised. Awe was the word. Oh yes! Of course. A dinner with him. A memory she’d cherish for life.

“That’s awesome!” Her eyes had shone.

Rupali in a salwaar-kameez was a rare sight, and Paritosh could recall every detail of her appearance even today. It was simple, cream dress with red borders and dupatta. But it made her look so feminine, and grown up that Paritosh’ heart had skipped a beat. He had stolen a few extra glances at her during the drive to the restaurant. He had offered to take her to a restaurant in a five-star hotel and had dressed up in a black suit to look right for the venue. He was driving a BMW. He was unaware of the extra glances that Rupali had stolen too.

“We have some good cocktails, Sir,” the waiter had encouraged him to order some alcohol.

“No. Thanks. Not today,” he had politely refused.

“Why not? I am not a minor,” she had objected.

He had chuckled at her logic, “So, do you drink?” He didn’t associate drinking with this geeky, upright girl.

“No. But so what! You do drink, right?”

“I am omnivorous, I had told you. I drink. But I am not an addict or anything. I am not going to drink with you, Rupali. And anyway, I have to drive.”

“I can drive you back.”

“You know how to drive?”

“Of course. I often drive my uncle’s car.”

“That’s great. But no drinking.”

“No. You must order something. I insist. It is on me.”

He was extremely amused, “Why are you so insistent?”

“I… don’t know,” she had spoken awkwardly. It made no sense. Probably she just wanted to feel some power over him.

She had looked dejected and Paritosh had decided to indulge her. “Fine then,” he had called the waiter and ordered a Mojito.

“I will miss this place, Dr. Khanna. And people. And friends,” she had said emotionally during their meal.

“We all do. But life moves on. All of it will soon become a distant memory.”

“I will come back after Ph. D.”

“Will you? We’ll see,” he had smiled patronizingly.

“You don’t believe me?”

“I don’t believe the time. It can do strange things to people. It can change them completely.”

“Hmm…” she had looked thoughtful.

“Not necessarily in a bad way,” he had philosophized further, “It makes you more mature, stronger, wiser. It can give you scars. But it can also make you a better person.”

She had smiled.

“I am boring you,” Paritosh had been slightly embarrassed.

“Not at all. What makes you think so?”

“You are unusually quiet.”

“I’m sure I will grow mature, stronger and wiser someday and then all this will be a distant memory. But today I am just sad and nostalgic.”

“How do we cheer you up?”

She had chuckled in embarrassment, “Now I am spoiling your evening. I think we should just enjoy this great food. The chicken is particularly tasty.”

“I thoughts Bengalis were more into fish.”

“Ah! Fish is like… potatoes. You have it at home everyday. Chicken is the real stuff,” she had grinned drawing an indulgent smile from him. “Can I ask you something personal, Dr. Khanna?” She had asked suddenly after a pause.

He had frowned for a moment, but had agreed, “Shoot.”

“You had told me that you have taken care of financial needs of your wife by investing her dowry suitably.”

“Right. So?”

“Why did you never get married again? There could be nothing objectionable about it.”

His face coloured slightly.  He looked away for a moment before looking at her again. She bit her lips. Had she overstepped her limits?

“I don’t know,” he finally said.

She nodded and did not counter-question him. They were towards the end of their meal and finished it in silence. He insisted that she ordered a dessert as well and she complied. But there was a knot in her stomach by then. She could hardly enjoy the dessert, although it was quite delicious.

Both of them made a couple of attempts at resuming conversation during the drive back. But those attempts fell flat. Rupali chided herself for asking that question. What was she thinking?

“Where should I drop you? Hostel or department?” he asked as they entered the institute’s gate.

“Department. My bag is in the lab.”

She walked around to go to him after he had parked the car and they both had gotten out of it. “Thanks for the wonderful treat,” she smiled.

“Thanks for the wonderful company,” he had replied in a tone that was not formal. Rather… What was it? Emotional. Extremely emotional. “And Rupali. I am going to miss all of this too. A lot.” She had shivered as he had come closer to her, quite unconsciously. He had cupped her face with trembling hands and leaned in. She had closed her eyes and prepared herself for the kiss, when they heard some noise in the otherwise empty parking lot. He had immediately stepped back to her utter disappointment and mumbled, “What was I doing? Go Rupali.”

She had stood frozen for a moment and he had hissed again, “Go.” She had obeyed him and while walking out had seen someone parking a two-wheeler in the parking lot. It was someone she knew. He had greeted her. But she hadn’t bothered to even see who it was. She had greeted him back mechanically and walked into the lab in a daze. Happy and confused at the same time. Happy that he reciprocated his feelings. Confused at his reaction. She was wondering how to resolve it. Should she go to his office right away? And then do what? Proclaim her love? Too cheesy? Ask him about what happened, or just did not happen in the parking lot? Too audacious? She was still struggling with all the possibilities, when Padma had walked up to her, “Congrats Rupali. You won the bet.”

“What bet?” she had been surprised.

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 7)

Posted Leave a commentPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

The stubborn, stupid, foolish hope! You keep telling yourself that you are not hoping. But it creeps up on you, silently. It finds a cozy, comfortable home in your heart. Your mind doesn’t notice. Or decides not to notice. It is arrogant. It thinks that it can ignore the powers of hope. That it can keep it at bay. That even if some hope sneaks into your heart, it would know how to evict it. And the hope stays there. Hidden from the arrogant mind; at least not acknowledged by it. Then one day the hope, whose existence you never acknowledged, gets crushed. And it doesn’t suffer alone. With it gets crushed a part of your heart. And your mind cannot cut off the signals of pain. It can repent ignoring it all this while. But it is too late. You must suffer the pain.

Rupali suffered it that entire night. She thought she didn’t expect anything from Paritosh. That if he forgave her, that’d be more than what she wanted. How wrong was she! The hope had crept up. With his every little act of kindness, every small help, every smile and laughter, with every easy conversation…  The hope had made a small home in her heart. And it was now crushed. Crushing her heart with itself. She was in pain. He thought it was all wrong. But that wrong thing had been her lifeline.

And amidst all this, she didn’t even have her mother’s shoulders to lean on. She didn’t always discuss her problems with her mother. But she always found courage, support and peace in her presence. There was a silent understanding between them. Her mother understood it when she was in pain. She didn’t prod to know what it was, unless she was herself willing to share. But she managed to pass on a part of her quiet strength to her. The strength with which she had brought up her daughter alone. The strength with which she had kept working even after being diagnosed with critical heart problems. The strength with which she had not minded sending her only daughter away from home, and then from the country, because it was best for her career and life. “Don’t worry about me,” she had kept saying even when her illness had become really bad, “You live your life to the fullest sweetie. Your happiness is what I had promised your father on his death-bed.”

It was a wretched day. It seemed like the only way to take her mind off from one painful thought was to entertain another painful one. Ma and Dr. Khanna. Two people who were the source of all her hopes, and hopelessness. She couldn’t demand anything from Dr. Khanna. But Ma! She should come back for her.

She wasn’t back in the morning. Paritosh saw the notice announcing cancellation of her class that day. It was put up by Meher. What had happened? But he himself had to take a class at that time. So, he could talk to Meher only after an hour.

“Why was Dr. Banerjee’s class cancelled, Meher?”

“Her mother is ill and she had to be operated upon.”

“Operated?” They had said they’d keep her under observation for forty-eight hours. Did something go wrong?

“Yeah. She called this morning. She was very disturbed, obviously. I am thinking of going in the evening.”

“Meher. Can you please coordinate with director’s office and cancel my meeting with him today. Tell them that something urgent came up.”

“Sure Dr. Khanna.”

Rupali was sitting on a bench in the lobby. Sitting was hardly the right word. She was barely supporting herself with the edge of the seat. Her hands were pressed between her thighs as if they were cold and needed some warmth. As he went neared he realized that she probably did need some warmth. She was shivering. It wasn’t that cold! He remembered a jacked he usually kept in his car. He went back, got it and gently wrapped it around her shoulders. She was startled. His heart sank when she looked up at him. Her face… How terrible did she look! Her lips were dry, her cheeks hollow, her hair dishevelled and her eyes puffed from crying.

“Oh my God!” he could not help exclaiming, “What have you done to yourself? Your mother is stable. I just spoke to the doctor. But at this rate, you will fall ill yourself.”

She stayed silent and stared at the floor.

“Go and wash your face. You will feel better. You haven’t slept at all, have you? Go.” He prodded her.

She got up unwillingly. But hardly had she a taken a step that she stumbled. She was weak from all the crying. He got up hurriedly and held her to stop her from falling. Then he made her sit down.

“I will get something for you. You are so weak,” he told her gently and rushed to the small utility shop in the hospital. He picked up some juice, glucose and paper cups from there. Then he noticed a packet of wet tissue at the checkout counter and picked that up too. She obeyed him silently as he made her drink a glass each of juice and glucose water. He, then, handed her a wet tissue. “Wipe your face. You will feel better.” She looked surprised at his thoughtfulness. After a moment of hesitation, she took the tissue and wiped her face.

“What happened? Why the surgery all of a sudden?”

“Her condition was deteriorating. The blockage was severe and they were unable to do anything about it. She had only fifty percent chances of survival with surgery. But without it, she wouldn’t have survived today. I had to sign the consent form.” She looked at her hands as if she was reproaching them for putting those signatures.

“You did the right thing. And she is stable now.”

“She is breathing. But until she wakes up, there is no guarantee that she ever would. Coma, memory loss, mental disorientation are only some of the potential side effects.”

And depression for the daughter, Paritosh thought to himself. “And she would need someone to take care of her,” he told Rupali, “You don’t seem prepared for that at all.”

His reproach surprised her, but it also had the desired effect. “You are right,” she acknowledged in a small voice, “I am just drowning in self-pity. I shouldn’t.”

“Then come with me. I have spoken to the doctor. She won’t be conscious before evening. Let’s go to your home. You must take a shower and then take rest. And yes – have breakfast. We’ll get something packed on the way.”

She was thankful that he had come. But why was he doing this? Why was he making her dependent on him, fuelling the fire that was wrong according to him?

He got out of the car after pulling it over in front of her house in the campus. “Thank you,” she said with genuine gratitude, “For everything.”

In an unexpected gesture, he held her hands and pressed them, “Take care of yourself Rupali. It won’t do for you to break down.”

Rupali hated and loved him at that moment. He didn’t realize what he was doing to her, did he? He was just being a caring boss!

Mouli Banerjee was brought home. Rupali’s worst fears had not materialized. She hadn’t slipped into a coma. Although her condition was very fragile, her diet strict and she was weak. Rupali’s uncle had taken a train from Kolkata and had reached the hospital a day after the surgery. Paritosh had withdrawn on realizing that she had help. As much as she wanted him by her side, she had no reason for asking him to be, especially with her uncle present. But her uncle had to leave after a few days. His wife and young children were alone at home. “Will you be able to manage, child?” he had been concerned.

“Don’t worry Kaku. A nurse will be here, when I am not. We’d manage fine.”

“I wish I could send your Kaki here. But the little ones have their exams.”

“I understand Kaku. Don’t worry. I’d have help here if something comes up.”

“Rupali,” Paritosh stopped her as she was leaving for home that evening, “How is your mother doing?”

“Being brave. As usual,” she smiled, albeit a sad smile.

“And you?”

She averted her eyes, “I am fine, Dr. Khanna. Thanks for asking.”

“You look so drained out, Rupali. Do you want to take off for a few days?”

“Exams are at hands. I have to finish the syllabus. Excuse me, Dr. Khanna. I must head home now. My uncle has left. The nurse will leave in fifteen minutes. I need to be there before that.”

“Oh! I’m sorry. I didn’t realize. I must not detain you.”

She smiled and nodded and then made to go.

“Wait Rupali. I’ll come with you.”

She looked at him surprised.

He hesitated, “If that is fine by you.”

“Of course. Ma wants to meet you too,” she diffused the awkwardness with her enthusiastic reply.

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 6)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

“Do you want to grab something from your home before leaving?” he asked after she was seated in his car.

She shook her head, then asked as he started driving out of the institute, “Don’t you have to grab something?”

“No,” he replied plainly.

“Talk Rupali,” he said as they pulled up on the state highway. It was narrow and was not in the best condition, but it was the shortest possible route to her hometown.

“She has heart troubles and is also severely diabetic. Surgery is highly risky. So, doctors have been avoiding it. She had a bad attack today.”

“Someone is there with her?”

“I told her so many times to resign and come to stay with me. At least a good hospital would have been close-by. My aunt is there, but she herself is out of her wits. Uncle is not in town.”

Paritosh remembered that Rupali’s father had died in her childhood. Her mother worked as a lecturer in the women’s college in her town. Although she stayed with Rupali’s uncle and aunt, she had always supported herself and Rupali on her own. The house they stayed in was ancestral property.

“Then you must keep your wits together, Rupali.”

She nodded and tried to keep her tears in check.

“So, you had come back for her?” he tried to keep a conversation going.

She nodded again, “She never let me know the exact extent of her problems. I sometimes think that staying in US and flying her there for treatment might have been better. She’d have gotten better care.”

“People from world over come to Tata Memorial for getting treatment, Rupali. We’ll get her here and she’ll get the best treatment possible.”

“She is so stubborn,” talking was helping her and she continued, “Her health was deteriorating, but she won’t leave her job.”

“She is used to her independence.”

“I know. She has brought me up all by herself. Kaku was also too young when Baba died. He could barely support himself. But I can take care of both of us now. But she just won’t let go. I won’t hear another argument from her any more. If only she survives…”

“Don’t lose hope…”

“How have you lived with so much of hopelessness for so many years, Dr. Khanna? I already feel drained.”

“Don’t lose hope before you have to.”

The conversation went on intermittently until they reached her home. Paritosh noticed her keeping the pen in one of her pockets, as she rushed inside the house. She hadn’t tossed it aside even in her current distraught state of mind. Something inside him melted at that moment.

Rupali’s aunt was indeed out of her wits. It took some effort to get enough information out of her. The attack was bad, but Rupali’s mother was stable for now. However, the blockage was serious. The doctor had advised them to take her to Mumbai immediately and get expert opinion there.

Rupali spoke to the doctor on phone and they decided to take her immediately. “We will take the national highway,” Paritosh said, “It will be a longer drive, but road is good and hence safer.”

Rupali nodded. She was conscious of how much trouble he was taking for her. But she had no options but to accept his favours at that time. She wasn’t in a position to handle it by herself.

Back in Mumbai, the doctors decided to keep her under observation for two days before deciding on the surgery.

“Can I suggest something?” he said when they came out of doctor’s cabin. It was almost midnight by then.

She looked at him questioningly.

“Don’t go on a leave. You will just worry yourself to sickness. Work will keep you occupied. You are not needed here anyway. Your mother is sleeping. And you can always come back after classes. Take leave when they decide to operate.”

Experience speaking, she thought! But before she could make up her mind about his advice, her thoughts went back to the incident from earlier that evening. How abruptly had he withdrawn his hands and left? He hated her, didn’t he? He didn’t want to do anything with her. And yet – here is was. Driving her around, helping her admit her mother, helping her cope with the situation… Shouldn’t she at least try to clarify? He may not believe her. But…

“Dr. Khanna,” she began slowly, “I don’t know how to thank you for everything. It is no secret to me how generous and kind-hearted you are. But by doing so much for me, you have surpassed even yourself. I know how much you hate me. My presence makes you uncomfortable. But you always bear it gracefully. I am… I am so sorry…”

“Rupali,” he stopped her and thought for a moment about how to reply. He had to say the right thing. She shouldn’t feel miserable on his account, “I do not hate you and I have come to terms with my mistakes. There is no need for either of us to be uncomfortable with the other.”

“Mistakes?”

“Yes. Mistakes. And mine, not yours. Bets like those, pranks… They were natural for you. You were young. I should have known better.”

“Natural for me?”

“I won’t lie. I had felt humiliated and I was angry at you. Angry enough that I had decided never to see you again. I had left the institute at the first chance. But now, I realize my mistake. It was all so wrong. And not because of your bet. In fact it was good that it was a prank from your side. If you had been serious, it would have been even more disastrous. And I would never have been able to forgive myself for misleading you. It was a big, horrible mistake from my side. I had gotten carried away. I hope you have moved on from that.”

With every word of his, she felt her world crumbling down once again. He had let go of his grudges and anger at her. But not because he believed her feelings. Not even because he gave into his own feelings for her. He had done so because he thought those feelings were wrong? He was saying that if her feelings had been genuine, it would have been wrong. But those were genuine! It meant that she could have no hopes of her feelings ever being accepted by him. They were wrong in his eyes. Wrong! He hoped that she had moved on. Moved on from the ‘mistakes’. But if moving on was needed for her, it was not from the ‘mistakes’, but from her feelings. And she hadn’t moved on from those. Not because she hadn’t tried. She had tried. But…

That night was fresh in her memory. David, whom she had met through common friends and whom she had been dating for a while, had come to her house. They had gotten into the bed together. They were still making out when her phone had beeped. The sound was irresistible to her. She had created a small application that notified her every time there was a Google alert for his name. Paritosh’ name. It was that application. “I must see this,” she had pushed David away and picked up the phone. It wasn’t about him. It was some other Paritosh Khanna. A small-time TV actor, whose alerts she often got and felt disappointed. The disappointment showed this time too.

“What happened?” A frustrated David had asked impatiently.

“Nothing. I was waiting for something.”

“You can tell me. You look so disappointed.”

“Nothing Dave. I think you should leave. This isn’t a great time.”

Her mysterious behaviour had infuriated him in past too. And they had been together long enough for him to press on and forcibly take her mobile to see what was on it. “Google alert? Who is Pa-ri-tosh Khan-na?” He had pronounced the Indian name with some difficulty.

“He was my professor during undergraduation,” she had come clean. There was no point in prolonging the game.

“What the fuck! You have a Google alert set up on him?”

“I just follow his research.”

“You get out of bed to see the alert and send your boyfriend away after that. I am sorry, but that is more than just following the research, Rupali. This is unhealthy obsession to say the least.”

“You are making a mountain out of a molehill,” her protest had been weak.

“Very scholarly expression. But no. I am not making a mountain out of a molehill. I should have known. Your coldness should have been a dead giveaway. I don’t know what I was thinking. If possible get a hold of yourself, and don’t toy with people when you have nothing to give to them. See a psychiatrist. Good bye, Rupali.” David had gotten dressed and was out of the house within a minute. They never talked again. She had spent rest of the night awake, head buried in her hands. Giving up on every hope of moving on!

“Rupali!” Paritosh’ voice brought her out of her thoughts, “Are you okay? I am not angry at you, not any longer. I am telling you the truth. There is nothing to worry about.”

“I am fine,” she lied.

He had said the right thing, hadn’t he? But it didn’t seem to do her any good at all. Then he remembered a two-year old video she had, a pen clutched on to desperately and kept in the purse safely even in her most tumultuous moments, and her jumping towards him and panting with worry about his fingers in the door groove. Had. He. Said. The. Wrong. Thing?

“Dr. Khanna. You should go back home. I will stay here for the night. I will come back in the morning.”

“But…”

“Thank you, Dr. Khanna. For all the help. I am not going on leave. I will be back in the morning. Good night.” She turned and went away without giving him a chance to say anything. He looked on for a while; then turned to leave. She had also looked back. But after she was sure that he would have turned.

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 5)

Posted 6 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

She hadn’t opened her mouth. But could he trust her? Things had changed since that day. After sharing the most personal parts of his life with her, it was not possible for him to stay aloof from her. And she had started paying more attention to him. Or at least he had started noticing her attentions.

“Do you eat fish?” she had bursted in to his office one day.

“Why?”

“Because I have some for you.”

“And where did you get it from?”

“Now that’s not fair. I asked a question first. And you have already asked me two in return without replying to mine.”

He had laughed at that and had realized immediately how rare that was. He didn’t laugh very often. “Sorry! So what was your question?” A smile still played on his lips.

“Do you eat fish?”

“Yes. I do. And to compensate for not answering earlier, let me answer any related questions to be asked in future as well. I am omnivorous. I eat almost everything.”

“Good then. Try this,” she opened a tiffin box and offered it to him. The box had some fried pieces of fish.

“Where did you get these from?”

“One of my neighbours was in town. Ma sent some through him.”

“They are delicious.”

“She is a good cook. But then all kids feel that way about their mothers, I believe.”

He had laughed again and replied, “But your mother really is. It is delicious.”

“Then have some more.”

“They are for you.”

“Far too many. And I can’t keep them for long. There are no refrigerators in the hostel. Have them please.”

Yet another day she came with some sweets.

“What’s the occasion?”

“A very auspicious one. It’s my birthday,” she had replied with a grin.

“Oh! Wow. I had no idea. Happy Birthday, Rupali. I am sorry, I didn’t know. I don’t even have a gift.”

“That’s easy. You can compensate by giving me an ‘A’ in the project.”

He had mocked a frown, “You are bribing me?”

And both of them had broken into laughter. He had started laughing quite often in her presence.

“Wait Rupali,” he had stopped her when she had made to leave, “I know nobody writes these days, except to put signatures on forms once in a while. But still…” He had taken out a pen from his drawer and had offered it to her. “My advisor had given it to me when I had completed my Ph. D. I kept it with me for all these years. Time to pass it on. Happy birthday.”

Rupali had been surprised beyond belief. It was obvious that it meant a lot to him. For him to have kept it in his drawers all the time. When she took the pen from him, there was a moment when they had held it at the same time. Their fingers hadn’t touched, but it had still sent shivers down her spine.

“Thank you,” she had mumbled, “I couldn’t have gotten a better birthday gift.” She did not dare meet his eyes. She was afraid they would give away more than either of them was prepared for.

Rupali stared miserably after Paritosh. She closed the door after he was out of her sight. She was crying. It won’t do to leave the door open. She went back to her chair and sat on it with her head buried in her hands. She remembered the fateful day. It was sometime in the beginning of the last semester at the institute. She was having an enthusiastic discussion with a group of her friends, which sounded so silly to her now.

“Most of us are very easy to manipulate,” she was arguing, “You just need good enough actors.”

“I think most of us can see through what is fake. Only if we have decided to look the other way do we get manipulated. Especially in the matters of heart,” Padma had objected.

“What is a matter of heart?”

“What could be a matter for heart? Relationships, romance…”

“Oh! Those are some of the most manipulated things in the world.”

“You sound very confident?”

“I’m very confident.”

“You can manipulate people into loving you.”

“You didn’t talk about love. You talked about relationships, romance, dates…”

“I didn’t talk about dates. But let’s say date. You think you can get anyone to agree to a date.”

“Define a date.”

“Umm… A coffee invitation from somebody who is not a buddy, let’s say.”

“Coffee?”

“No. That is easy to manipulate. A meal.”

“Outside the campus,” someone else had decided to add an extra condition.

“Dinner, not lunch,” came another addition.

“In a five-star hotel,” chimed in someone else.

“Come on,” Rupali had objected to this one, “Not a lot of people can afford that one. Manipulation has to be within reason.”

“All right. At least to a nice, fancy restaurant.”

“Assuming we are talking about people in the campus, and not rickshaw wallah, or daily-wage workers or grade four staff, that is reasonable,” Rupali had agreed.

“Okay then. Shall we bet?”

“Who do I have to get a date with?”

The names of some of the boys in the institute had popped up at first. From complete dudes to complete nerds. Detailed discussion had followed on what kind would be more difficult to manipulate. And then Padma had come up with the golden answer. By then Rupali was already regretting her bravado. She could have backed out. But when we are young, we tend to see an issue of prestige in trivial things.

“Not a student. A professor.”

“What? No!” Rupali had tried to protest.

“Why not? We are not talking about a rickshaw wallah, or daily-wage workers or grade four staff.”

“Some of them might even be able to afford a five-star hotel.”

Rupali had decided that she’d put up the facade of confidence for the time being and hoped that people would forget about it later on.

“Okay. Who?”

“Dr. Khanna. Paritosh Khanna,” Padma had suggested. The reason was not difficult to guess. If trying to get a date with a professor wouldn’t already be awkward enough, Dr. Khanna was known to be one of the most aloof professors. Not many people had seen him smile. He had never been seen scolding anybody, and doing anything frustrated professors usually did, but everyone was still scared of him.

What they didn’t know, however, that he was relatively relaxed with Rupali. She had smiled inwardly on hearing the name. He was writing recommendations for her Ph. D. application. If she got an admit, she could definitely demand a treat from him for ‘doing well’. If nothing else, after she made the final presentation for her project, she could declare it as an occasion for celebration. A dinner outside the campus in a nice restaurant; that was all their definition of date was, right?

Little did she know that she’d forget all about the bet, she’d have a dinner four months down the line that would become a real date, and then this bet would come back to destroy her, turning it into a lifetime of misery.

She opened her drawer to take out the pen and clutched it close to her heart. Just then her mobile rang.

Paritosh was annoyed with the banging on the door. What could be so urgent that someone wouldn’t respect a closed office door, which was a rarity in the institute? And even if something was that urgent, couldn’t one try knocking before banging like that. He was frozen to his spot when on opening the door he found Rupali there. In a completely dishevelled state.

“I need a leave. For at least a week.” She was practically begging.

“What is wrong?” He asked, partly concerned about her state, and partly distracted from noticing the familiar pen in her clutches. She still had the pen? And why was she running around carrying it with her? In such disturbed state?

“My mother. She has grown unwell suddenly. I need to go home and get her to the hospital here. My Kaku, I mean my uncle, is not in town to help her. I must leave right away.” Given her state, he was surprised that she was so intelligible.

“Okay. Go then. I will take care of the formalities.”

She nodded and almost ran away. It was after she was out of sight that he wondered how she would go. He knew that her hometown was at two-hour’s drive from the institute. But she didn’t have a car yet. It was too late to take a bus. He ran after her and managed to catch her right outside the department’s building.

“How will you go?”

“I… Bus… No. I will call a taxi.” The pen was still clutched in one of her hands. With the other hand she fished out her phone from her jeans pocket and tried to make a call. But her hands were shaking badly. His heart sank on seeing her in that condition. He pressed her shaking hand stopping her from further futile attempts at using the phone. “Let me take you,” he said.

“But…”

“Just listen to me, okay? You are in no position to go by yourself. Taxi or otherwise. Wait for a minute. My car is in the parking lot.”

To be continued

Hopeless Hope (Part 4)

Posted 2 CommentsPosted in English, Original, Rupali-Paritosh

The final year project spanned two semesters for undergraduate students. Rupali was doing hers with Paritosh and she had worked hard in the first semester. When she had requested him for recommendations for her Ph. D. admission applications, he had written glowing recommendations and unknown to her had even spoken to a few of his acquaintances at some of the universities she was applying to. He hadn’t regretted the decision. She was working even harder in the second semester meeting him almost every day with her progress report or with her questions.

They talked about things beyond her project. Nothing particularly personal, but it was still more than he usually talked to any student, or even any colleague. Their conversations would be about other academic stuff, her other courses, his research interests, institute’s policies, her asking for advice about how to plan a career in academics and research and so on. He sometimes wondered why he talked so much to her. Probably because she was mature for her age and he could speak to her like an equal. At the same time he didn’t feel threatened because she was much younger. She wouldn’t judge him, his choices or his life. It was a comfortable camaraderie he enjoyed in his otherwise lonely life.

It would have stayed at that if that call from hospital hadn’t come at a time when she was in his office discussing where she was stuck with her project. The call had disturbed him, as those calls always did! “I think… I need to go out right now… Let’s continue this discussion later, Rupali,” he had told her.

“That is fine. But where are you going? Is there a problem?”

“Nothing to worry about. I have to go to the hospital,” he had replied and then seeing that she was worried even more on hearing the word ‘hospital’, he had told her the name as a way of explanation, “JJD.”

That was a mental hospital. So, there wasn’t an accident or anything. But why a mental hospital? She hadn’t asked him then, but he had to tell her later.

“It’s my wife,” he had informed her. She was in the hospital for last seven years or so. “She got those attacks since her childhood. Doctors here identified them as severe anxiety attacks. But she never got any treatment at her parents’ home. They were more interested in hushing down any stories about the attacks she had and wanted to get her married early so that the prospects of her other siblings did not get marred.”

“What does that even mean?”

He had smiled patronizingly at her, “It probably sounds Greek to you, but for a large part of our population, getting all their kids married is the only and the ultimate goal they have in life.”

“And how can you find that amusing? Don’t you feel angry? Isn’t it unfair that you are saddled with this responsibility?”

He had sighed and leaned back on his chair, “You ask me difficult questions, Rupali. There are things that we just come to terms with.”

“Why? Why wouldn’t you hold her family responsible? Why wouldn’t you send her back to them and ask for a divorce?”

Paritosh had looked thoughtful for a while and then he had spoken. He had spoken quite a lot, quite uncharacteristically. “You asked me if I don’t feel angry. I had felt angry. Extremely angry. And you know what she told me? Or rather begged me to do. She told me that instead of sending her back to her family, I should leave her in Banaras or some place. That is what her family would do as well. But if she were sent back, everyone in the village would know, and it would be a trouble for her younger siblings and cousins, especially her sisters. She gave me another option too. She told me that she would happily write a suicide note, if I could arrange to kill her. She was too scared to commit suicide herself. Otherwise she would have done it long back.”

Rupali had looked like all the blood was drained out of her face.

“I’m sorry,” he had realized that he had said things that were too crass and had added gently. “I got carried away. I am scaring you.”

“No. Obviously you didn’t do either,” she had smiled weakly, “There is nothing to be scared about.”

“How could I? And then…” he had stopped himself. He was getting carried away again. He hadn’t realized that he was so eager to talk to someone about all of this. But how appropriate would it to tell all this to a student, especially when he had kept silent before everyone else all these years.

“Then?”

He had smiled, “Nothing. Let’s…”

“You can’t tell me half the story, Dr. Khanna. That’s not fair.”

“Real life stories are not fairy tales. They don’t have a happy ending. Or even a closure.”

“I know that by now. But I still need to know the rest.”

He had shaken his head at her persistence. Then he had decided that she had heard the worst already, and continued, “I had some questions to answer myself too. Why had I married her? Because my mother wanted a daughter-in-law who would serve her and take care of her in her last days. She wouldn’t leave our hometown and live with me here. So, Amrit, that is my wife, had stayed back with her. She never complained. She took care of her like a professional nurse here won’t have been able to do. All this while fighting through her own illness. Did I owe her nothing? I visited once a month and for a long time I didn’t even know about her problems. I had stayed longer during summer vacation once. It was then that she got one of her attacks and I came to know about it. When that happened, she had cried at my feet asking me to choose one of those two options, but not send her back. In that scheme of things was she a perpetrator or a victim? Sending her back would have been a lifelong punishment for her and not her family, who were the real culprits. My own family had done no better by her. I questioned my mother about not informing me and not getting her treated. Apparently they had been to a doctor in the town. He said everything was fine with her and she was just missing her parents’ home.  Once she settled down in her new home, everything would be fine. You didn’t have to be a doctor to know that the diagnosis was flawed. She was seriously troubled. I tried to convince my mother that both of them should come and live with me. But my mother wouldn’t agree. ‘If you are missing your wife so much, take her. I am not leaving my home,’ she would taunt me. And the idea of serving her in-laws at all costs was so ingrained in Amrit that she wouldn’t think of doing anything against my mother’s wishes.”

He had fallen silent, but Rupali urged him on, “Then?”

“I drove myself crazy thinking about it. Finally I decided to raise my voice against my mother. It didn’t come easy to me. I was not brought up that way. Parents’ wishes had been the final word for me all my life. They had wanted me to come back from US. I did. They had wanted me to marry Amrit. I did. But now I was responsible for Amrit’s wellbeing too. So, I decided to go home to get her here. But I didn’t have to rebel. Just as I was leaving for home, I got a call from Amrit telling me that my mother was breathing her last. She died minutes after I reached there. I brought Amrit here with me, but her problems only increased with time. The doctors told me that it was too late for her to get better. And after…” His voice had drowned again.

“Dr. Khanna?”

“This is crazy. Wrong. Why I am telling you all this?” he had suddenly grown extremely self-conscious.

“Because it doesn’t look like you have shared it with many people. Probably with no one. And we need to share our problems.”

“She wanted a baby,” he needed only a small encouragement to continue, “She was convinced that it would be a cure to her problems. Despite doctors advising against it. But pregnancy only made her condition worse. During one of the attacks she harmed herself and… the baby could not be saved. She had a complete breakdown after that and had to be institutionalized. There was no way she could lead a normal life here. And that is how she has been till now… She had a severe attack yesterday when I got the call. So, I went to see her. Sometimes she recognizes me and it helps her. But most of the times even that doesn’t happen.”

They had stayed silent for a while. Rupali needed time to process everything she had heard. “I’m sorry,” she had finally broken the silence with these words, “For you. But your wife is really lucky.”

Paritosh had shrugged not knowing how to feel about that complement. Then he had tried to change the subject, “Our discussion was interrupted yesterday. Shall we…”

“Not now,” she had stopped him urgently. Paritosh had looked at her for a moment and had realized that she was too affected. He had come to terms with all of it over the years, but he had told her too much in just a few minutes.

“Fine,” he had relented. She didn’t usually shy away from work. So, she must not be in a position to discuss. That’s why she had stopped him. “But don’t be so disturbed. Things happen. Life is not fair. But we don’t stop living.”

She had nodded.

“You want some coffee, or tea?” he had asked seeing that she was still quite shaken up.

The coffee invitation would have been the first step towards winning her bet with her friends, but she had long forgotten about it. Right then, she could really do with some coffee. So, she had nodded and they had walked to the department’s canteen to grab a cup.

They had sipped their coffee in awkward silence. Paritosh had looked around after a while and had spoken after ensuring that the place almost empty, “Rupali. You really shouldn’t have heard all of this. I know it sounds selfish that I should be preaching you after unburdening myself at your expense. But try to forget. It is sad and dark and I would hate it if it affected you.”

“I am fine. Don’t worry about me.”

He had nodded and had spoken again after a pause, “Not many people know about it here. Many think that I am not married or am widowed. Not that I want to deceive anyone. But I don’t want rumours and pity all around me either.”

“I won’t open my mouth, I promise. You can trust me,” she had said earnestly.

To be continued