Reunion (Part 6)
“So, just another week here, Mukundo?” Mukundo was having tea with Mr. Banerjee.
He nodded.
“Sumedha?”
“I am dropping her to the boarding the day after.”
“Nothing better?”
“Not at least until I finish Ph. D. A year, at least.”
“And then?”
“Then?”
“What after Ph. D.? What will you do?”
“I’ll see.”
“Mukundo!”
“What?”
“Mukundo. There is a reason Sumedha’s life is so scattered. The reason is that your own life is like that. You need to settle down. You need to get married.”
Mukundo leaned back and let out a sigh. “Get married!” he mumbled.
“Mukundo. It wasn’t your fault that Aporna died.”
He straightened, startled, “When did I say it was?”
“I am glad to hear you say that. Because you have behaved like it was.”
“Who shall I ask to marry me, Banerjee Babu? It’s too late and I am too broken and burdened.”
“Don’t be an idiot. You have your entire life before you. If you think there aren’t any eligible women, you would be in for a surprise. So many parents have asked me…”
“Would you allow Piyali to marry me?”
Mr. Banerjee’s eyes narrowed after a moment of expressionlessness. In the silence that followed, Mukundo cursed himself for letting that question slip out.
Mr. Banerjee broke the silence and spoke slowly, “Is that a hypothetical question, or a real one?”
Mukundo closed his eyes and replied as slowly, “If it offends you, it was hypothetical.” As he opened his eyes, he saw something flutter near the curtain separating the hall from dining room. But Mr. Banerjee’s voice claimed his attention back.
“I am just surprised, Mukundo. Not offended. If that was a real question, she has to answer it. I do have a concern. But…”
“What is your concern?”
“Your father?”
“In the worst case, I’d have to make do with my salary.”
The old man chuckled, “Yes. Yes. But that is not my worry, Mukundo. She has not grown up with much money. My concern is… Family. To become a part of the family without father’s consent… It won’t be the most pleasant situation. But all that only if… Oh! Have you already spoken to her?”
“No! No! Upon my honor, no! I haven’t spoken a word to anyone, not her, not anyone else. I had to ask you, Banerjee Babu! The rest is up to you.”
“You are so old fashioned, son,” Mr. Banerjee smiled patronizingly at him, “That won’t do. It is not up to me. It is up to the two of you. Pihu–” he called his grand-daughter.
Even without as much as throwing a glance towards the curtains, he could imagine the feet slowly retreating from there, until they reached all the way back to kitchen, from where she replied in her best casual voice, “Yes Dadu?”
“Come here, Shona.”
She came, her footsteps a bit too deliberate, slow.
“Yes Dadu?” Did her voice quiver? Or was it a product of his imagination? Like that flutter, or the retreating feet… He wasn’t looking at her.
“Not me. Pihu. Mukundo here has something to say to you.” And without any glance of encouragement, without any glance at him at all, Mr. Banerjee stepped out. Mukundo turned towards Piyali only after the sound of her grand-father’s footsteps died out. One look at her, and he knew he hadn’t imagined anything.
“You heard.” He said abruptly. And he took in the sight she presented. Young, beautiful, intelligent, mischievous, lively. How could he ever hope? What would she do with him? “You heard, Piyali. Say no. Say no — and we’d all forget this ever happened.” He stopped as abruptly as he had started. She was staring at him wide-eyed.
“Say something,” he pleaded.
She gulped hard and had to clear her throat before speaking. But when she spoke, her voice did not shake, “You want me to answer the question you never asked? And you are telling me what I should answer too?”
It brought a smile to his face. His doubts vanished and he came closer to her. “I want you to say yes. But you should say what you want to.”
“I haven’t been asked.”
“You heard.”
“I haven’t been asked.”
“Marry me, Piyali. Will you?”
To his surprise, tears started flowing down her cheeks. She couldn’t speak at all and he had to contend himself with her nod.
—
Piyali turned yet again. It would anyway be difficult for her to sleep that night. Besides it was too early to sleep. But she had pretended to have finished dinner and had locked herself in her room. It was surreal. It was impossible to believe. As restless as his slightest attention made her, she hadn’t expected him to… God! Was it really possible? Was he in love with her? So much that he had literally blurted out his wish against his judgment?
She hadn’t waited even for her mother, who had been at the neighborhood temple in the evening. She just wasn’t in the mood for her prosaic enquiries after that poetic evening of his proposal. Besides there was a sore spot, which she didn’t want to talk over with anyone else.
On seeing her break down and nod helplessly his eyes had grown moist.
“Thank you,” he had said in a gruff, heavy voice, “I did not know I had it in me to be as happy as I am right now. If I can give you even half of this happiness, I’d be proud of myself.” He had held her hands as he had said this. But after that instead of kissing her senseless as she had been expecting, or even giving her a bone-crushing hug, he had let go of her hands.
“We… we need to tell… Banerjee Babu,” he had stuttered, completely unlike himself, “Would you call him, please?” Still formal!
She had sent her grand-father out and had stayed back. He hadn’t asked to see her before leaving.
She had expected more passion, more urgency from him. Why had he been so cold after her acceptance? ‘Okay’, she corrected herself, ‘Not so cold, but still not as mad in love as she had always dreamt her lover to be.”
—
To be continued