To the lanes of College Street,
Calcutta…
A clicking sound from behind tenses him up. He quickly turns
around to see her walk through the door; a line of shadow diagonally splits his
face. She drops her handbag at the counter and collecting the token, walks into
the dim, narrow aisle guarded by high, iron shelves with books spilling from
the edges.
He stood there lurking in the darkness by the window, following
her head moving along the shelves, as behind him, outside, evening had befallen
the sky and lights flickered at the windows of distant houses. He checks at the
frail looking man at the counter for a moment, turning the pages of a
newspaper, wetting his thumb against a soaked sponge and then, assured that he
is engaged, quickly slips into a dark corner behind a shelf. The man looks up
for once and then, not bothered, goes back to reading.
From that secluded corner he observes her picking books from the
mystery section. She is shifting from one book to another, reading a page or
two from each and then finally stopping at what seems to look, by the cover, an
Agatha Christie work. He lets out a sheepish grin and just when she is totally
engrossed in reading, he takes off his shoes to not make any noise and emerges
out of the dark, tiptoeing along the dusty floor towards her direction from
behind.
She feels a moist thumb at the back of her neck, caressing; and
then suddenly a hard clench of a manly fist. She is about to scream but her
voice fails her. The next she feels is a tongue wetting her lips, an
impenetrable darkness against her eyes and a very faint whisper, like a distant
voice, speaking into her ear – Is our story any less mysterious than
Agatha Christie?
*****
There are always places in our lives, in ourselves, that we become
so familiar with that it cannot be distinguished by anything but the very sense
of familiarity that starts to resonate within us with a sense of purpose, every
time we happen to visit those places. It is like remembering a garden by the
collective smell it sends drifting through the air at night, moistened by dew
that tells us about its existence and never introduces us to the various
species of flowers in it, and it is with that smell that we remain attached to
the garden for the length of time.
Because somewhere our life, I believe, above everything else is an
effort of our soul to get comforted by one such familiarity and never know the
flowers transpiring them.
This was what seemed to draw in and out of his mind as he gazed
outside of the square window, hanging his head out to the bustle of the city
shimmering in dust and darkness. The streets swollen with vehicles narrows out
to all possible directions as the thick evening air intoxicated with smoke
stings his eyes. He dabs at them still pondering why he has to go there, every
single time, to a shabby building covered in cracks with damp, dark walls
housing in its third floor a further shabby bookstore and pulling out a book
from the dirty shelves, stand by the window and watch the city spiral away
through its cluttered self.
The pavements below are crowded with vendors clocking the lever of
a kerosene stove, beneath overlooking street lamps, as the burner comes to
life, shooting a ball of blue flame to the base of greasy kettle set to boil
for another round the already hard boiled tea. Iron sticks stashed with roasted
pieces of chicken in varying shades of red dangle from the frontiers of several
stalls shrouded in the fumes of frying oil, as behind it stands the sweaty
vendor, stirring on the pan the junk, with customers hungrily waiting to get
served. There are exhausted rickshaw pullers idling by the pavement after the
long day of work, almost dozing off on the seat with every drag of beedis held
between their pursed lips. The whir of the tram from a distance,
slowly chugging along through the crowd with tiny sparks of fire, like
glittering stars, light and vanish atop its antennae drawing current from the
overhead wires. And then there is this incessant haranguing of students in
groups at the door steps of hundreds of bookstalls along the road.
The place seem to be completely
out of order for a book store to happen there. It is noisy, chaotic and nothing
close to that of place where one can sit with a book of literature by those
ajar windows and welcoming the bronze evening sky, feel in himself a strange
enlightenment journeying the words of the author or perhaps discover a
completely new perspective to life. It was nowhere close to that. Yet he had to
go to the same bookstore that has nothing substantial to offer perhaps because
it was the very existence of the bookstore that resonated within him with all
its drab, non-exciting features, like that collective smell from the garden
slowly drifting through our lives.
Suddenly his face contracts to a
clicking sound. He turns around, holding the book in his grip, pressing it
close tightly against his index finger held somewhere between the pages to
where he has read, thus cutting the book in two distinct halves.
He noticed her walking between the
rows and swiftly covered himself up behind a stacked shelf. A frail man
reluctantly flipped pages of newspaper at the counter, blissfully unaware of
the world around him. He waited in the darkness as she picks books from the
mystery section. Ensuring that she was engrossed in the book, he took off his
shoes and emerging from the darkness from behind her, started walking in her
direction.
She feels a thumb caress her nape
and slowly slide down her back, beneath her garment. She is then held by her
neck and dwarfing her behind the very book shelf, he touches her lips with his
tongue. She wants to scream but a knot seem to form in her throat. Her voice fails,
her sight blanketed by darkness and a whisper then breaks into her ears. With
every word spoken, her lips are sucked in and out with a wild, uncontrolled and
immature passion, like a chew stick between an infant’s gums. Is. Our.
Story. Any. Less. Mysterious. Than. Agatha. Christie?
The next moment he is gone and as
she gathers herself up and rushes up to the window; a tall man, swaying on his
legs in a hoodie jacket, is seen descending the stairs of the sagging building
and vanish into the lights and noise and cacophony of the city.
She had been groped and kissed in
the darkness of a shabby, dimly lit, old bookstore. A crime had just been
committed. She must go and lodge a complaint with the police. But the instance
she looked at herself in the blankness of her cellphone screen; at her spoiled
hair and smudged lips, the colors from which has stretched, in messy lines, all
the way to her jaws; she just knew that in all her life she had never been
kissed this way and that for the first time ever a crime had been
committed…with love.
I have always said that you are a matured writer .. the theme is completely different from the one you write and you just nailed it.. a break from cliched love stories... rather you have created a free space of dark fantasy to explore... 'dark chocolate '.. this is what that came to my mind .. wonderful... looking forward to read the next part :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. :)
DeleteI really liked the fact that you found it different.
Very Well written. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot, bro. :)
ReplyDelete