“Death leaves a heartache no one can
heal, love leaves a memory no one can steal.”
“That quote is from an Irish headstone,”
Vivek said. “To tell you the truth, I think I have said that because every
other speaker here today must have had an apt quotation.”
There were indulgent chuckles from the
audience.
Vivek continued, “Maybe it has nothing
to do with the topic: ‘What I have to
tell the young ones’.” He paused. “Maybe not…” There was a longer pause. It
seemed as if he was lost in thought. He stared intently at someone at the back
of the auditorium.
...
Those who were there in that school
auditorium that day so long ago still remember him. It was the main day of the
school’s annual cultural festival. The extempore competition was in the
morning. As usual it was a tedious affair with kids parroting more or less the
same stuff, ten minutes per speaker, twenty in all, for three and a half hours
with a single break in between. Kids from primary six to the senior-most in the
twelfth-standard competed together—that was supposed to be the competition’s
redeeming feature. Vivek was given the unenviable last slot at twenty past
twelve because he was the previous year’s champion.
The judges were seated at a table in
front and behind them the students of seven classes. The staff had seats by the
side, some stood around leaning against the wall, others in the hallway, an eye
on their wards, like cowboys protecting their herd or preventing any escape.
The twenty speakers were secured in a classroom out of earshot of the
proceedings, each one given the topic fifteen minutes before one’s slot.
There were some over-enthusiastic parents
and reluctant visitors too. They were seated in the balcony of the hall.
At quarter past twelve, Vivek was given
the go-ahead to proceed to the auditorium. He strolled casually. He nearly
bumped into a person at a corner.
“Sorry,” both mumbled.
She was a visitor, in her early
twenties.
“Are you escaping the torture?” Vivek
asked.
She grabbed her throat, gasped for
breath, tongue protruded out and her head lolled sideways.
He laughed. “I am next,” he said. “And, I
have something to say to you.”
She stared at him. Even he looked
surprised with what he had said.
“You better hurry along then,” she said.
She moved towards him, adjusted his tie and then stepped back. He nodded at her
before running to the auditorium. She retraced her steps to the hallway. She
stood next to Vivek’s Math teacher, Mrs Varghese, her mother.
…
Vivek had a peculiar style of delivering
a speech. Where one expected him to raise his voice and force an issue into the
crowd’s collective consciousness, he moved away from the mike and spoke softly,
so softly that people leaned forward even though his voice still reached the
furthest corners of the auditorium. He moved closer to the mike, within a
hand-span’s distance, and spoke louder whenever he shifted between sub-topics,
fitting in a sentence to summarize or to lighten the load with wit. It worked
well. The audience not only woke up, he had their full attention.
The other nineteen speakers had already
covered all the fine points one could think of with regard to that dry topic: ‘What I have to tell the young ones’. The
young ones in the audience, and the old too, had had enough of what was
expected of them to correct the course of their lives and the world in general.
The speakers had followed the unwritten rules of the competition and of the
school, and kept away from dangerous issues that could hurt sentiments.
Vivek was not exactly an enfant terrible
in that school but he had a knack for violating unwritten rules. In one of the many
staff meetings where he was the prime concern, Mrs Varghese defended her best
Math student, “Let him be. Vivek is not the role model you would like but he is
a good one.”
For the first seven minutes, Vivek spoke
about three issues that troubled not just his school, issues everyone seemed to
know but never discussed. He gave details and people flinched. The Principal
exchanged furtive looks with his senior staff, also kept an eye on the external
judges. Vivek was harsh and at the same time understanding. He did not claim to
have any solution. He begged the young ones to “stay away from the path of many
deaths, away from destroyed lives and loves”. While the adults there grew
increasingly restless, the kids sat up with a fierce look of belief and
determination as if they had been handed not just a voice and hope but a
life-saver. Vivek told them not to be scared to report any type of harassment
or abuse sexual or not, not to be lured into prostitution for easy money and
not to fall prey to drugs for whatever reason. “Only we can save ourselves. There
should be a constant vigil for the victims and against the predators. No one is
alone.”
Then, he switched gears. He stepped closer
to the mike, scanned the audience, smiled at them.
“And, finally, I want to talk to the
young ones about something I should not talk about…love.”
The audience smiled. They seemed
relieved to escape from horror to fantasy. He stepped back and spoke softly,
with short pauses punctuating each strand of thought, as if to remind everyone
there to breathe.
“Very soon, nearly all of you will fall
prey to love. You will be addicted to it. It will take control over you
mentally, physically, sexually and spiritually. You will feel lost.”
“Resist it.”
“For the sake of the one you love.”
“If I had spoken to you earlier this
morning, my stand would have been different.”
“Then…”
“I realized I love her. I am in love
with her.”
“I could not breathe.”
“But…”
“That was nothing compared to the pain
that came next, the pain of responsibility.”
“Man is made to be selfish. Man is made
for love too. That results in conflict, loss and pain.”
“For her sake, I have to resist love.
Till the day she is safe with me.”
“Think about it, my young friends. Think
about love. Think more about the responsibility that comes with any love.”
“This should be my last speech as a
student of this school and I would like to leave hearing not your applause but
the silence of your thought. I thank you.”
It was eerie. He walked away from the
stage. The silence lasted minutes.
…
Vivek walked along the hallway to the
back of the auditorium. He smiled at Mrs Vaghese. The young lady next to her seemed
to be absorbed in a conversation with another teacher. Mrs Varghese scowled at Vivek.
“I am sure there will be a staff meeting
about this,” she said.
He laughed.
“Aaraada
kutty?” she asked. (“Who is the kid?”)
“Kutty
teacher aagaamallo,” he replied. (“The kid could be a teacher.”)
She caught hold of his ear and gave it a
twist. “PoDa,” she said. (“Get
lost.”)
…
The Drama competition was in the
afternoon, twenty-minute plays by the four Student Houses.
Vivek’s House put up a play about
society’s double-standards or two-faced nature. It was a satire dressed up as a
comedy of errors. Mrs Varghese was the teacher-in-charge of his House. Any
other teacher would not have allowed the play or at the least would have
censored most of the play.
Vivek’s was a ‘bit role’ as a
patriarchal figure with multiple personality disorder. To the outside world, the
man was gruff and authoritative. At home with his wife, it was a role-reversal.
There was this memorable scene in which the stage was split into two halves by
a wall with a door in the middle. He was at the door, half in half out, dealing
with his colleagues outside, and inside coping with his wife’s demands. His
voice was a rough baritone to one side and a husky seductive to his better half,
even within sentences, a breathless or breath-taking effort. One side saw his
macho side with curled up moustache, hiked up mundu (dhoti) and a hairy leg. The other side saw a sweet person
with lowered mundu and a hint of a
shaved leg. He left the audience speechless once again, though happily in
splits this time.
…
At the end of the day, Vivek came across
Mrs Varghese once again. She introduced him to her daughter Sonia. They
exchanged very formal Hellos as if they were meeting for the first time. Sonia
complimented him for his performances.
“I think the kids will be more influenced
by your acting than your speech,” she said.
“All I know is that the Principal and
most of the staff will be out for your neck,” her mother said.
He laughed.
“As long as you two are with me, I can
face whatever the world throws at me,” he said.
“Oh, get lost, cheeky fellow. Don’t
corrupt my little girl,” the older lady said.
He smiled at them, thanked them and took
leave. It was quite evident he did not give a damn about the authorities. The
smile was however tinged with a touch of sadness.
…
The school authorities wisely decided
not to rock the boat and they reaped the fruits of that action. Vivek brought
academic glory to the school in the Board exams and the entrance exams to elite
institutes. In fact it was a wake-up call not just for that school but for the
students of that small sleepy city. No more could they be diffident about their
potential. No more could they claim to be disadvantaged. Vivek set the bar high
and it encouraged his school and others in the city to improve and better his
record.
Vivek should have left for the best
universities abroad but due to his modest means he had to try his luck with the
premier institutions in the country. There were highs and lows. At times when
hard work and inspired efforts went waste, he slipped into long periods of
despondency. He survived and continued to impress. But it was clear, especially
to him, that the system had done its damage and that he had lost the
opportunity to be among the best.
In those years, he had remained in touch
with his former teacher. They exchanged long letters once or twice a year. One
summer break, she invited him home for lunch. Sonia was there too, on a short
leave. She was a manager in a foreign investment bank in its country
headquarters at Bangalore. They too started writing letters to each other, once
a month or so. It is pointless to wonder if that trajectory was a result of his
conditions. Who knows if and when life is chaotic but determinate or just a
haphazard mess?
The letters turned into e-mail exchange
around the time he took a research position in Bangalore. They met once for a
quick lunch. She took him to her office and introduced him to her colleagues.
In couple of her e-mails, she had told Vivek about a senior manager who harassed
ladies in the office. She introduced Vivek to that senior manager too.
“Ah yes, she has told me about you,”
Vivek told the creep. Vivek’s words, grim smile and strong handshake seemed to
perturb the man.
“What will I do without my macho knight
in shining armour?” Sonia later told Vivek.
“Now I know why you had lunch with me,”
he said.
Their busy work schedule did not leave
much time for socializing. They did not party together or mix friends. They met
at a Jethro Tull concert in the city but the two groups did not mingle. On
phone or in e-mails, they talked about life without getting into the specifics
of relationships.
They got together when Mrs Varghese came
to stay with her for a week. They took him with them for shopping at Commercial
Street. He treated the ladies to a fine Chinese lunch at Silver Wok on Richmond
Road. For the first time, they talked about personal matters. Mrs Varghese told
him that her Syrian Catholic family had kicked her out when she had a baby with
a Hindu Nair. They were married briefly.
“He was young and before he got old he
realized that it was simpler for him to return to his roots and marry
properly,” Mrs Varghese explained in her usual matter-of-fact way. “I guess I
would have done the same if I didn’t have her.”
“I was unwanted then and now,” Sonia
said, feigning sorrow.
“True, I should not have spoiled you so
much,” her mother retorted.
“I second that,” Vivek said.
“Judas,” Sonia snarled at him.
They laughed.
“What about you, Vivek?” Mrs Varghese
asked.
“Ah, poor unwanted moi,” it was Vivek’s
turn.
“Come on, tell all,” Sonia prodded.
“Well, I tried a relationship for a
while. It did not work out. She left me,” he said.
“What did you do to her?” the two ladies
said almost together.
“Now who is Judas?”
“Seriously…you must have done something,”
Sonia reaffirmed her doubts.
“She died,” he said.
They remained silent for a while.
“You rascal, you cooked up that one,
didn’t you?” Mrs Varghese said.
He grinned.
Sonia punched his arm.
“Did you fib about that?” she asked
sounding quite appalled.
“Us story-tellers never tell,” he said.
“Oh, I will never trust another word you
say,” Sonia said.
…
Then, there were the Berlin years.
Sonia’s creep of a senior manager was
not deterred by Vivek’s show. She reported him to HR. As expected, she lost her
job. She had already been thinking of a change of scene and decided that this
was the signal to get on with it. She enrolled for a Masters course in
Economics in a London university, followed that in quick time with a PhD. She
fell in love with a German and they shifted base to Berlin.
Vivek was already in Berlin by then. He
too had decided not to get stuck in a rut. He got a grant to work in German
academia and that was later converted to a long-term tenure at a prestigious
institute near Berlin. Berlin suited him in many ways.
Vivek had kept in touch with the ladies,
though less frequently. Life was already a bit too full for Sonia. She and her
mother were not on the best of terms for a while when Sonia was pregnant with
her first kid. But that chill thawed quickly when the baby was born. Mrs
Varghese came to take care of her child and grandchild. She stayed with Sonia
and her partner Susanna.
Vivek visited them with gifts for the
new-born girl and her mothers and her grandmother. He helped Susanna with the
cooking and the washing. In the kitchen, they talked about a shared passion for
crime novels and photography. She was a friendly jovial character who could
turn nasty on feminist issues. Vivek never let go of any opportunity to tease
out that dark self.
“Vivek, don’t you dare trouble my girl,”
Sonia shouted from the living room while breastfeeding the baby.
“Don’t worry,” Susanna said from the
kitchen, “he is great in the kitchen. Hey, do you think we should keep him?”
“A throupie with a Platonic third,”
Sonia hooted with laughter.
“The baby will have too many mother
figures,” Mrs Varghese noted.
Mrs Varghese stayed with the couple for
six months. Vivek went with her on a couple of museum tours. She was passionate
about concerts too but he stayed away from that claiming not to have the proper
costume for such an outing. The ladies once invited Vivek to join them for a
picnic at Grunewald.
Mrs Varghese and Vivek went for a long post-lunch
walk. The couple stayed back with the baby to snooze in the sun.
Vivek offered his arm. After a momentary
hesitation, she held him. They walked silently for a while.
“Why did you have a cold war with
Sonia?” he asked.
“Oh, just being a mother, I guess,” she
replied.
“You were not against it, were you?”
“To be truthful, I was.”
“Hmmm…”
“Go on, ask, how could I be against it
with my background, right?”
“Hmmm…”
“Vivek, breaking one wall does not break
all. That is what I realized. And, I used maternal instincts as my defence. I
told myself that I was just concerned about her future.”
“Took you a while to realize her future
is ok if she is happy, huh?” Vivek said.
“Yes,” she replied.
“I knew you would come around,” he said.
“Did you?”
They slipped into silence once again.
“Do you know that I blamed you in one of
those fits of anger?” she said.
“Me? What did I do?”
“Remember that old play of yours? I was
quite sure that affected her…”
They laughed.
“But it was your speech that was
supposed to affect her, right?” she asked.
“Ma’am!” he protested.
“Vivek, my dear boy, don’t think I am a
fool.”
They chuckled and walked. They returned
to the couple.
Later, Vivek was left alone with Sonia
and the baby when Susanna and Mrs Varghese went to freshen themselves.
“You two looked like a dear old couple,”
Sonia remarked.
“Ah, the jealous daughter speaks,” he
said.
“Vivek, my old man, don’t think I am a
fool.”
He looked at her amazed.
“What? You think I didn’t realize you
had the hots for your teacher,” she said
He laughed and pretended to box her.
“Are you abusing my girl?” Susanna said
from a distance.
“Oh, just doing what you two should,” he
replied.
They all laughed and prepared to leave.
…
Life continued as usual. That juggernaut
of priorities and opportunities rolled over old dying roots, the old laughs and
companions preserved as fossils in sepia records to be discarded during some
spring-cleaning.
Sonia and Susanna had one more baby.
They kick-started their careers when the kids started going to playschool. Mrs
Varghese took up a teaching position in Dubai. Every vacation she travelled to
new places. En route whenever possible she visited her daughter’s family but
never overstayed. There were minor hiccups like ill-health and job-loss during
the financial crisis. Old acquaintances washed away with a lot of water under
the bridge. Before they realized it, two decades had gone past and even the
babies were ready to leave home.
They got to know about Vivek’s death
through a Facebook post. It was a lovely eulogy by a junior in school and
received a great deal of likes and emojis. None of those passers-by knew him
outside their old school. One comment mentioned that cultural festival so long
ago. Another remembered his quote but reproduced it inaccurately.
“Death leaves no one a heartache to
heal, love leaves no one a memory to steal.”
Maybe Vivek thought so too…maybe not.
Enjoyed the narration. You could definitely enhance the plot into a full length novel.
ReplyDelete