A year back, I
inherited a plot of land from a grand-aunt. Her kids tried to get her certified
as mad, posthumously though. One of their arguments was that she must have been
crazy to give it to me who had avoided the village (and, all relatives, they emphasized)
the last twenty years. The judge used that to decide I had not influenced my
grand-aunt, and I could not be denied what was due to me (however crazy
everyone seems to be, the judge added in a verbal note).
The gift came along
with a dilapidated hut and a cranky old caretaker. The small plot does not give
enough to keep a full-time caretaker and the Rent Act makes it tricky to lease
out the place. I relied on Uncle Jose (called Hosappan) to evict the caretaker.
Both sides tried charm, then threats. He demanded a part of the land, as per
the law; we promised him space in jail. Hosappan and I had gone through the
accounts, and it was clear the caretaker, and not just her kids, had fleeced my
grand-aunt of her money in her last years of physically infirm existence.
Hosappan also helps
me with the other headaches of landownership: paying land-tax and other dues in
poky little village offices; luring lazy workers, with cash and liquor, to
clear grass, tap rubber, pluck coconut, plant plantain and vegetables. I knew
where my place was, in the city, enclosed within four walls an arm’s reach
away.
He might not be the
closest relative I have in the village, by way of genes, but Hosappan is my
only contact. He used to be a doctor with a successful practice in London. He
returned to the village about thirty years back, some say in a straightjacket,
he must have been in his late-forties. I got to know him about ten years after
his return, when my parents and sisters died. It was he who took care of me
during those troubled times and advised me to leave those shores. Whenever he comes
to the city, he stays with me, for a night of single malt and old English
movies.
I got my rural
calling one unexceptional dreary city morn, couple of weeks back. I made a phone-call
to Hosappan. My decision to shift to the village received a dismissive “Bah!”
The second call, a day later, got thoughtful silence and an abrupt click. I
kept the third for the day before the shift.
“Are you sure you
want to live in the village?” Hosappan asked. “Haven’t you seen ‘Straw Dogs’?”
“What a comparison!”
I retorted. I do not have a partner to incite the bucolic worst, definitely not
a Susan George, nor am I a geeky Dustin Hoffman with violence repressed within.
The first day was
like any shifting day. Trade-union guys landed at my door and surrounded the
moving van. They had to get their dues, they said. I bribed them to watch and let
me load my own stuff. The next headache came from the moving van’s driver. He stopped
midway and negotiated a revised deal. At the destination, the hut had not
turned into a manor and, after cleaning and some repair, continued to look like
a manor’s privy. Hosappan’s cleaning crew complained about the fish curry
served for lunch. They were not satisfied with the hour-long siesta either. The
gods too tested my perseverance–it rained when the bedding and baggage were
being transferred within.
Around dusk, the
place was ready for me. Hosappan suggested I stay at his place that night and
start afresh the next day. I politely declined his offer. There’s no night like
first night, I told him. He shrugged.
Some relatives, neighbours
and strangers dropped in, with a great deal of backslapping, good cheer and
best wishes. They came with advice about land and farming, some to register
their names with me, in case I decided to sell and vamoose. They lingered for a
while, inspected the place and poked at corners. Their exit was sullen and
hasty. None of them invited me to their place.
“What did I do?” I
asked Hosappan.
“You didn’t give them
what they want,” Hosappan replied. After checking whether the coast was clear,
he took out a bottle of whiskey and a tiffin-carrier from his large cloth-bag.
“But, I am the new
guy here. Aren’t they supposed to give me?”
“Is that how it works
in the city?” he asked.
“Sure, it’s always
give and take.”
“Do you get any
visitors in the city?” he asked.
“No, but the
principle holds,” I argued.
He opened the bottle
and I brought out my cutlery: steel plates, glasses and spoons, two of each. We
sat on a floor mat and ate with our hands. He informed me he had arranged for a
maid who would cook and clean. I felt like a lord in a castle, with maid, land,
house and all. I nearly missed his caution, “Don’t trouble her.” He left around
eight.
I was tired and
sleepy. I stood outside and lit a cigarette. This is how life should be, I
thought. A few lines of poetry about nature, one’s own space and peace crept in.
That darted out when I felt the ground beneath slithering and the trees around
tremble with unseen life. I moved inside and bolted the door. I lay down. It
turned out to be a long night. A cloudburst revealed a leak. Something kept on
burrowing till dawn, along with squeals to its pack to join in in the fun. The
acoustics of the place made that seem as if it was from within and that too beneath
my bed. There was activity on top too. The aluminium roof sounded like a war
zone. Each crash and vicious battle cry coincided with those moments my eyes
tried to surrender to sweet slumber. Of all the huts in all the villages in the
world, all the rodents, reptiles, palm civets, bats and birds had to be in
mine. Then, there was the urge to pee. I did not venture out, to the toilet
outside or to the bushes. I had visions of maids emptying chamber-pots.
That vision nearly
came true at the crack of dawn. I was outside, leaning against a jackfruit
tree, urinating with wild abandon, when I heard a cry of disgust, “Cheee…”
I turned around,
rather recklessly, to find a woman of indeterminate age, appearance and senses
eyeing me suspiciously. Her face darkened with mixed emotions. I remembered
Hosappan’s late warning. I tried a sweet smile. That seemed to work. Later, I
learned from Hosappan that she suffers from extreme mood-swings, flitting from
mania to depression. I stuck to my sweet smile, my facial muscles ached, and I
was rewarded with mild mania. She treated me with non-stop chatter while
cooking and cleaning, mainly village gossip, laced with news from around the
world. In the same breath, without hesitation or punctuation, she talked about
stupid husbands and wives, and idiotic leaders, cheating their spouses and subjects.
I wondered what she would say about me at her next place of work. She is a good
sort, mostly, and bossy. She insisted I have a cold-water bath before breakfast,
to tame the mind, she said.
The only visitor that
morning was a drunk, amazingly so even at that hour. He mistook my place for
his which was two plots away. The maid showed him the way out, rather forcefully
with a broom.
I walked to the
village centre around mid-morning. At a tea-shop, I had a glass of tea and
banana fritter. I bought a newspaper and devoted my attention to it as if my
life depended on it. I need not have bothered. None trespassed into my space. Word
must have gone around about my hospitality. Thousand eyes seemed to be staring
but they wanted me to make the first move.
Kadalil has not
changed much. Even the population is more or less the same, about eight
thousand, with a male to female ratio of ninety one per cent. I used to think there
were only two types of people in the village: crazies who lived and crazies who
died by suicide or murder. Kadalil is
not a unique village in any way. Sure the suicide rates are above the national
average, depression and divorce too, but so is the per capita income, thanks to
decades of migration, remittances from abroad, social reform, a self-sustaining
population and a less-than-welcoming nature to outsiders. Kadalil has selectively taken the fruits of the flat and globalized
world outside and guarded its own space and people. Hypocrites, one might say; or,
simple village life.
From the tea-shop, I
walked to the market and the two temples, around which revolve social life, and
then traced my way back to my place, all the time wondering why I was back. I
had to walk past my parents’ house and land. Twenty years back, after shifting
to the city, the first thing I did was to sell that inheritance. In that house,
my parents and two sisters died together, in a suicide-pact; out of shame,
their note said. The house opposite to my parents’ has changed hands too.
There, in that same dark period, the man of the house had murdered his wife and
three grown-up kids before hanging himself.
Back home, I had a simple
lunch of rice, buttermilk, couple of vegetable dishes and fish curry and enjoyed
a long siesta. After tea, I strolled around my land of a few hectares or so.
Hosappan had warned me of rat snakes and less-benevolent types. I did not see
any, but like their human counterparts in the tea-shop, I felt their eye on me,
probably inspected for future use. My neighbours have similar-size plots, saw a
few, smiled, waved and kept to ourselves. There are muddy tracks on two sides
of my plot. The one in front, with a mid-sized lorry’s width, stretches from the
village centre to the paddy fields further to the north. The other is a
side-road, little more than a footpath, leading to the river flowing past my
land at the back. I was at the river-bank when a cloud-burst caught me unawares,
and got home thoroughly drenched. It was getting dark fast. Without turning on
the light, I stripped, wrapped a towel around my waist, got a glass and poured
a large measure of whiskey.
A knock on the front
door startled me. I turned to find a lady. In her hands was an earthen pot with
a smaller steel vessel balanced on top. She studied my half-naked form from
head to toe, quite clinically. She looked younger than me, not by too many
years though, probably in her late thirties. Of medium height, dusky-complexioned,
with dark unblinking eyes that gleamed in a not-unattractive face, full lips, wet
long hair carelessly pulled back in a loose knot, a sturdy body, breasts of
moderate size, wide-hipped, wearing a brown blouse and a clean but wrinkled
white sari with black trim.
“Tapioca and fish
curry,” she extended the pot.
I received, placed it
on a table, opened and inspected; smelled delicious, perfect accompaniment to
my waiting glass.
I looked up. She was
already on her way out.
“Hey, thanks,” I
called out, “who are you?”
“Your cousin Rajan’s Mrs,”
she replied.
“Ah!”
She disappeared into
the late-dusk-light.
I sat down on my
rosewood reclining chair, sipped my drink, wolfed down the gifted meal, and
thought. I knew a cousin Rajan. Crossed paths in the city a few times, he
visited my apartment once, without invitation. He was a small-time
businessman-cum-politician when I first met him, then a devout follower of some
charlatan or self-proclaimed god-man. He was pesky in that second avatar, rather
sure that I too needed such salvation. I remembered then that my cousin’s transition
from corporeal to spiritual fraud had been brought about by his wife’s death. I
sat up in my chair and poured a larger drink. I tried but could not recall any
other cousin Rajan in my rather large stable of relatives. I suspected Hosappan
was up to his tricks. I decided to confront him the next day, and thank him for
the lovely meal and the ghostly vision. The second night was a lot better. I
managed to sleep from nine till eleven and later, a couple of hours before dawn.
In between, it rained heavily. There were new leaks to attend to. When the rain
stopped, the wild-life came out, had a late-night orgy with a great deal of
fighting and shrieking. They were definitely following god’s will and I was
not, I thought. I had a chaste dream about a lady with dark staring eyes, but when
I woke up I could not be sure if that had been my cousin Rajan’s dead wife.
That morn, after
packing off my garrulous maid, I walked to Hosappan’s house on the other side
of the village centre. He was not in a pleasant mood. Someone had stolen a few
rubber sheets left out to dry and, more importantly, he could not find his
slippers.
When I extended a
cheerful appreciation for the previous evening’s guest and meal, he gave me a
frosty look, “Do you think I am crazy?”
“Well, not exactly,”
I said.
“If I knew such a
woman, do you think I will send her to you?” he asked.
He was definitely
trying to hit below the belt.
“Then, who is she?” I
asked. “Do I have some other cousin Rajan?”
“Screw your cousins,”
he said, “now, get lost or search for my slippers.”
His mood changed for
the better after we found those, close-to-disintegration, items. He invited me
for lunch.
After lunch, sharing
one of his treasured extra-strong cheroots, he quizzed me about the lady-in-white.
His face darkened when I described her.
“Did you have any
problem last night?” he asked, uncharacteristically concerned.
“No, nothing other
than the usual night-sounds,” I replied. “Why?”
“That lady is not
your cousin Rajan’s wife, dead or alive,” he said.
“Who…? She…?”
“She lives close to
your place, further down the road, near the paddy fields,” he continued, “she
lives with her old parents, she is a bit loony.”
“Who…? She…?”
“Stop parroting
who-she,” he was strangely agitated, “they should lock her up.”
“Why? She looked
quite sane, and hardly dangerous,” I defended her.
“A few months back, she
gave a neighbour a similar gift, it was some temple sweet-offering then, she
had laced it with pesticide, fortunately a diluted one,” Hosappan informed.
“Bloody hell,” I felt
a twinge in my belly.
“Are you sure you are
ok?” he asked.
I nodded weakly. I
asked for another cheroot.
I left around three.
Preoccupied with my near-death experience, I ignored the layabouts at the
village centre, and curtly nodded when the tea-shop owner or one of his cronies
asked, “All ok?” I was not helping my popularity rating.
I must have been
walking fast.
“Where are you racing
off to?” a lady of about fifty, standing outside a gate on the way, asked.
An octogenarian with
her cackled, “Forgot your morning shit, huh?”
The younger lady
scolded the other.
It took me a while to
recognize them. The younger one is an aunt, related via marriage and not
genetically, and the other her mother.
“How is Uncle Gopalan?”
I asked, I could not think of anything else to ask.
“Come in and find out.”
I had to go in. I
found my uncle seated in a chair in the living room. When I was a kid, I asked
my mother, “Is he glued to that chair?” I had never seen him any other way,
never outside, not even for the temple-festivals.
I cannot recall her
name, always referred to her as Uncle Gopalan’s wife. She told me to follow her
inside, to the dining room. Her husband did not budge from his seat, and I
could hear the old lady talking on the phone, somewhere in the house. She
served tea along with quite a spread of savouries and sweets.
“Did you make all
this?” I asked.
She smiled. Even at
fifty, her girlish smile and nature seemed well-preserved. She is still the
same: fair, plump, modestly dressed, no-sex-siren-with-plunging-décolletage by
any stretch of the imagination; but, with an allure lesser men like me find
difficult to ignore. When I was just out of my teens, my mother told me, “stay
away from her, she is a loose woman.” My gang observed her from far, with
sighs, groans and the familiar refrain, “Man, what a woman!” At one time, there
was talk of Hosappan being involved with her, which he stoutly denied,
unconvincingly. The people of Kadalil
could be fickle in such matters. The tongue that joked could also be malicious.
They allowed some affairs. In some cases, their interference was invasive and persistent,
and made families seethe with shame and rage, even self-destruct.
We talked. She wanted
to know all about life in the city. I stuffed myself with her goodies, and
politely inquired about relatives. I left after an hour. Uncle Gopalan
cheerfully waved from his seat.
That evening, it
rained again. I stayed within, with the front door closed. I had a light dinner
of porridge, dried-fish chutney and sautéed beans. Lying on my reclining chair,
I read Houellebecq’s ‘Platform’, a
glass of whiskey next to me. It was bliss.
Around eleven, there
was a knock on the door. I ignored it till it became persistent. I got up, with
a long tirade ready for the loony-or-not woman-in-white.
I opened the door.
There was no one there. It was dark outside. I stepped out. The first blow came
from a fist to the right side. Another pummelled my back. Someone kicked my
backside and I fell forward. I kept my hands over my head. They aimed their kicks
at my legs and upper body. I peeped to the side. I saw a gleaming blade. I got
on all fours, scurried forward like a rat, turned around and faced them. There
were three thick-set young men, two with machetes.
“What did I do?” I
pleaded, nearly wailing, shedding copious tears.
“This is what you get
when you go after another’s woman,” one assailant said.
At first, only
because she had been the last woman on my mind, I thought they were talking
about the loony one. Then, I shifted focus to my aunt. I was stunned. I had not
expected Uncle Gopalan to be the type to take offense, not that I gave him
reason for that.
“But I did not do
anything but eat,” I told them, “and, she’s my aunt.”
They laughed at my
feeble protest, “Exactly, your aunt.” They came menacingly forward, their
machetes ready for my flesh and blood.
“Now, don’t make a
fuss,” they said. “We won’t cut too deep if you stay still. He wants you to
stay in one piece. What a pity!”
“Please, please…Uncle
Gopalan has misunderstood…come on, he was there…nothing happened,” I reasoned.
“He too was there…Uncle
Gopalan?” a confused voice responded.
My predicament became
clear.
“Who sent you?” I
demanded.
“We can’t tell you
that.”
I glared and with as
much authority I could muster, “Who sent you?”
“Uncle Shashi.”
“Bloody hell…” I
exclaimed. “Didn’t he suffer a stroke recently?”
“She took care of him
then.”
“Look, why don’t you
tell Uncle Shashi that nothing happened?” I went back to pleading.
“Can’t do…goes
against contract…”
“Ok, how much did he
pay you?” I asked.
They mentioned the
sum.
I nearly fell back.
There was no way I could outbid that.
“Do you mind if I
have a drink first?” I asked. I got a curt nod. I went inside. They followed me
within. I finished what was left in my glass in one gulp. They watched
expectantly. “Will you have a drink with me?” I asked. They collapsed to the
floor, synchronized and all. They sat cross-legged, like tiny tots waiting for
a favourite teacher’s first lesson of the day. I went inside, brought two
bottles and the night started properly.
We cracked jokes,
sang dirty songs, I danced, at one stage even took one of their machetes and
pranced around. I saw myself in the shaving mirror. Lips in a snarl, eyes wild
and red, shoulders bunched forward, it was not a pleasant sight. The men must
have seen it too. They relieved me of the machete. They took leave, after
advising me to bandage some parts, “for our contract…”
I did that before going
to sleep. It must have looked convincing enough because, next morning, my maid
went into a fit of hysteria and fled for the day. I stayed in bed till noon.
Took bath, wore dark shades and trudged towards the tea-shop. I downed a few
cups of hot sweet tea, managed to take in a banana fritter. I looked around. Gone
were the suspicious looks and unfriendly sneers. They smiled, one even offered
couple of tablets, “It’s perfect for this, I always carry enough,” he said. It
could have been the bruises and the bandages, or the drunkard’s walk that
triggered the change. Or, they knew why I got bashed up, and that I was not
stingy with my liquor.
From there, I walked
to Hosappan’s house, begged him for a room for a night. I slept, got up, drank
water, pissed, nibbled whatever Hosappan placed in front of me and slept again.
I dreamt of loony women, friendly thugs, throughout heard knocking on doors and
saw a dark snarling face. Not once did I feel that that was a nightmare. Hosappan
told me to stay with him for a few days. I accepted his offer.
I returned to my
house after two days. I kept my head down on the way back. I acknowledged the shouts
of the old familiars near the tea-shop. I did not want to stir any antagonism.
I did not run into any aunt or uncle. My fatalism must have been on fifth gear.
Back home, I tried to rest but could not, waited for a knock on the door.
By evening, I had
calmed down considerably. I speed-walked around the land, a neighbour raised
his eyebrow but did not approach. I went to the river-bank, sat on a rock and
watched the rapids in the fading dusk light.
“Where were you?”
I jumped up. It was
the lady-in-white. I stepped back.
“Watch out,” she
said. I was tottering on the edge of the rock. She moved towards me. “Where
were you?”
There was no way out,
with the killer depths behind me, and the loony before me.
She continued, “I saw
them beat you. I brought a knife from home. But, you all were inside by then.”
I remained silent.
“What was all that
about?” she asked.
“Just a misunderstanding,”
I replied.
“Oh, that happens so
often,” she said, cheerfully. “I knew a guy who got beaten up really badly.”
She lowered her voice, “People thought he was in love with me. I loved him too.
Families did not like it. You know how it is like out here, right? How will you
know, you are a city-boy, aren’t you?” She smiled.
I smiled back, “I am
a village-boy too.” What made me say that? Maybe, because she had talked so
much, I blurted out again, “Hope that ended without too much pain.”
“He died,” she still smiled.
I smiled back
foolishly. I made a move forward, gesturing that I was going back home. She
stepped off the rock and moved aside. Half-way back, I turned, she was still on
the rock, close to where I sat, staring at the dark rapids.
For a week, nearly
every day, we met there. We sat on the rock, threw pebbles at a slant, watched
them bounce, like kids, laughing, staring, we did not talk much. I could have
told her the story of my life. Most probably, she knows all that, like the rest
of the village. One day, we hopped from one rock to the next, till we reached
the steps leading up to a temple. Further ahead, some bathers and sand-miners
on boats watched us with a frown. We ignored them and hopped back to our rock.
The next day, we stood near the edge of the rock, just a step away from sure
crushing death. We laughed and inched forward, fingers barely touching, high on
something, I thought of going down with her, losing grasp, still laughing while
sinking.
Someone on the
opposite shore shouted at us, “You two step back!” A crowd gathered there,
staring at us. “Crazy idiots!” another shouted.
Maybe, that shout triggered it.
She stepped back, laughed at that crowd, at me
too. She took our hopping route to the temple steps. I went after her, more
carefully. I saw her race up the steps to the temple. At the top, beneath the
old hovering banyan tree and in front of the temple, on the cool sandy ground,
she fell, trembled and shook. People watched, me too, unsure what to do. An elderly
lady came to the temple after a while, I later learned that was her mother,
someone must have gone to get her. She slapped the younger lady and then hit her
with a thick stick. The frenzied fit reduced to a whimper.
Later that day, close
to bedtime, Hosappan visited me. He did not come within.
“Stay away from her,”
he snarled and left abruptly.
I followed his order,
but he should have spoken to her too. Three days later, around midnight, she
was at my door. She stepped inside. I closed the door.
We held each other
roughly and kissed harshly, everywhere. When I took out a condom from my
backpack, she asked, “Can’t I have your baby?” I did not reply. “Better not,”
she answered her own question.
We were crazy that
night, the sex was rough and gentle in equal measure, we scratched and bit,
demanded, overpowered, took what we desired. I brought out twenty years of
suppressed passion, hers seemed no less.
I am not sure when
she left.
Around dawn, she must
have gone to the river, not to our rock, but to the ladies’ area close to the temple.
She must have gone to the temple after taking bath. Was she wearing the same
old clothes, torn a little the previous night? People must have seen the
scratches and the other marks on her body. Did she seem tired and heavy on her
feet?
Someone threw stones
at my house around eight in the morning. My maid did not turn up that morning.
I stayed within, this time really shivering with fright. I could hear loud
shouts and curses. Someone called me a bastard and dared me to step out.
Hosappan came in a taxi. My watch said half past eight but it seemed a lot
later.
I opened the door
only when Hosappan ordered me to do so. He stepped in quickly.
Again, he stared at
me angrily, contemptuously. He told me not to bother packing, that he would
take care of it and send it all to me.
He walked me to the
taxi, he sat beside me. The crowd snarled at me, someone tried to open the door
on my side. Hosappan told them that I was leaving for good.
He did not say a word
till we reached my apartment in the city. He did not step out of the car. He
went back in that taxi to the village.
Before leaving, he
too snarled at me, “Why did you have to do that again?”
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