FUGITIVE
Sugandha
Mallik
_______________________________________
I
poured out the freshly brewed coffee into a mug, blew into the rising
steam and took a tentative sip as I turned on my laptop. As the
system purred into life I gazed out of the bedroom window. It was
seven in the morning. The sun was hidden among the clouds shedding a
bleak light all around, as if still deciding whether to wake up or go
back to sleep into the snug folds of the clouds. Summer was gone, but
monsoon had not arrived yet. The weather was cool but laden heavy
with grit and grunge, waiting to be washed clean by the absconding
rains.
My
email server popped up. Five new emails. One marked red; High
Importance. I clicked on the one email, my eyes skimming across the
letters. Ignoring the other four emails, I punched the laptop back to
sleep mode.
"Yes
Ma, it is a big deal... no ... No, you need to trust me. This
promotion means much more than that...but why? ... Of course... let
me atleast give it a shot...stop it Ma, everything doesn't have to be
about you. I have to do this. No Ma, I don't want to come home..."
It's
been five years since I moved away from my family, settling in a new
city, living alone, struggling to be independent, and working hard at
a job as a data analyst for a multinational financial company.
Numbers scare me. But as fate would have it, I punch in digits day in
and day out now. Given the promotion I just received, I seem to be
have become quite good at what started out as a part time job; a job
to support a dream to pen my own book.
Unlike
numbers, alphabets are a friendly lot. The letters hover around me
all day; they buzz over my head like mosquitoes buzzing in the ear at
night. I want to grasp them, squash them and splatter them against a
paper. Create stories with their splayed bodies. But they elude me.
The numbers drive them away.
That's
why I had to quit my job. I couldn't accept the promotion. It would
mean I betrayed my alphabets, chose the scandalous numbers over them.
But
Ma didn't understand.
*****
I
never realized how many things I had accumulated in my tiny rented
flat over the past few years. As a temporary arrangement I had
started out with just the basic household things required for an
existence. Over time, as the numbers slowly crept in and took over,
so did many of these useless bric-brac. I had them all packed and
sent over to my friend's apartment.
"Are
you sure you've thought this over well?" her concern was
genuine.
"Yes.
I want to travel. See things for myself. Create my own experiences.
And that's how I will write my masterpiece."
"How
long...?"
"I
don't know. Three months to maybe two years! I assume that's how long
before my savings run out." I put in my bravest laughter. "Keep
a look out for my book." I chirped in.
"But
where are you headed?"
She
sensed my hesitation over the phone line.
"Yaar,
I need to know."
I
told her. "Please. Please... don't tell Ma."
*****
I
stared at the white fluttering piece of cloth held barely taut by the
bamboo wedges sticking out from the sand. The tarpaulin cloth seemed
to be dancing to the swaying beat of the wind, sometimes shivering at
a sudden gust. The sea was inching towards it with each crashing
wave, threatening to drag it into the cold waters and into the
dimness of the setting sun.
A
woman walked out the tent and strolled towards the water. Bare-feet,
she hitched up her flowing skirt above her ankles and let the waves
crash over her feet. Watching her from behind, I imagined her eyes
closed as she devoured the sensation of the water frolicking around
her ankles, as she herself stood completely motionless.
With
a sudden burst of energy she turned around and ran to her tent,
dismantling it by tugging at the pegs. She gathered the tarp in her
arms and grabbed her rug and other belongings just in time, as the
salt water flooded the place. I was sitting higher up on the beach at
some distance. I couldn't hear her, but somehow I imagined her to be
giggling.
I
watched her walk away. Slowly. Sometimes turning back to look at the
sea behind her, as if to bade goodbye one more time. She had her arms
full or else I suppose she would have actually waved out to the
waves.
I
stood up and started at a jog after her.
*****
She
must have sensed me approaching as she stopped and turned in my
direction. There was a remnant of a smile on her face as she watched
me jog up to her.
It
wasn't much of a distance, but I was panting slightly having run with
the weight of my backpack weighing me down. She waited patiently to
let me catch my breath.
"I
was wondering if you could tell me where I could get a tent like
yours." I pointed at the bundle of cloth in her arms.
She
looked much older up-close than I had supposed. If I could hazard a
guess at her age, I would put it down to late forties to early
fifties. Her hair bounced in the wind about her face in loose strands
and I could make out streaks of grey peeping just out of sight. Her
face was handsome, her skin slightly pale. But it was her eyes which
sparkled unusually, like a child's who is up to some mischief.
She
told me that there was a hardware store in the town centre where I
could get all sorts of tents and accessories. Then she looked out at
the sun as if deliberating and added as an afterthought that all the
stores would probably be closed by now.
"The
townsfolk here aren't very business-minded you see", she added
with a smile.
"Oh,
that's... oh", I put down my bag on the beach. "Thanks for
the information anyways." It was almost dark now, the red tinged
tip of the sun fast disappearing below the horizon.
She
continued to look at me, the faded smile still on her face, as if
expecting me to continue. So I told her.
The
lodge where I had made my bookings over the phone had given away my
bed to someone who had arrived earlier and paid the full rent
upfront.
"Miss...,"
the manager of the only lodge in the town had explained, "we can
hardly trust reservations over the phone. You see, we don't get many
tourists in this town and we can't take chances letting a bed get
wasted. It's just your luck miss, we never get all booked up in this
season."
I
had wandered about the town looking for any kind of boarding houses,
but this tiny sea-side village seemed quite suspicious of strangers.
Walking along the beach, looking at her tent had given me the idea to
camp on the beach for the night and look for a better option the next
day. But it seemed like I was really out of luck. Could I perhaps
borrow her tent for the night, I enquired of her.
The
beach isn't very safe at night, she said. Also, the high tide drives
the sea quite high up on to the beach. It would be very risky. She
suggested that I try the train-station instead. They have a waiting
lounge where I could spend the night.
Looking
at her kind face, I ventured my last attempt at securing a safe roof
over my head.
"If
you don't mind me asking, do you live nearby?" With the sun
having set by now and the moon still not up, there wasn't enough
light to see her face very clearly.
"Yes..."
"Oh.
Could I ask you if you would be so kind as to put me up...?"
"I
don't think that would be a very good idea", she cut me off
mid-sentence. "I don't have a very big place, there's not enough
room. I'm sorry."
"I
will hardly take up any space I assure you", desperation and
helplessness mingled in my urgent pleads. "I have never
travelled alone, and I have absolutely no idea what to do in a
situation like this. I'm really in a tight-spot, if only you could
help me out. I am absolutely harmless if that's what you are afraid
of. Here, you can check my passport," digging into my travel
pouch I fished out my passport, PAN card and other papers I had and
held them out to her. "I may be stupid, leaving my house, my
job, and setting out on this silly journey, but you see I want to be
a writer and I thought that this would be a good idea, but how was I
to know? I can pay you. Here..." I yanked out some money from the
pouch. "See, I will pay for the stay... double the rent at the
lodge.., I..." Perhaps my eyes had become accustomed to the dim
light of the stars by then because I suddenly realized that the smile
on her face had been replaced by a full toothed grin, a silent laugh,
like she was giggling without a sound.
*****
Perhaps
it was the animated silliness of my face or perhaps the desperate
plea for help, I'm not quite sure which finally convinced her to risk
letting me under her roof, but I found myself washed clean and
snuggled in between warm sheets that night.
It
wasn't a very big house, but not as tiny as the lady had suggested,
and as it turned out, she lived alone. It was a two-storied house,
with the ground floor accommodating a tiny kitchen with an attached
dining area and another adjoining room with a couch and a TV. Up the
stairs, there were two bedrooms and a small balcony facing the open
sea at a distance.
The
next morning when I woke up, the sun was already high up in the sky.
I bounced out of the bed, straightened the room and freshened up.
Collecting my bags I tiptoed down the stairs.
She
was tinkering about in the kitchen, and on hearing my steps she
turned and smiled at me.
"I
had meant to head out earlier, but I overslept."
"You
must have been tired, tottering all about the town yesterday."
I
smiled sheepishly as a deliciously warm aroma wafted through the
kitchen. She was cooking breakfast. I decided to leave before my
stomach began its offensive rumbling. I already had my purse in hand
and I tried not to look at the bubbling pan on the stove as I
stretched out my hands to give her money.
"It's
not much, but I can't thank you enough for your kindness. Never
before had I realized the importance of having a roof over my head as
I did last night. I quit the one I had so easily that it is almost
ironic."
She
waved away my hand and when I insisted she gestured that I didn't
have to pay her anything.
"What
do you intend to do now?"
"Well,
honestly I'm not sure." The silly animated expressions were
creeping back to my face. I hadn't truly thought out this whole idea
of adventure. Standing there in her kitchen the idea did begin to
look extremely loopy. "I had imagined myself settled in this
town by now and dishing out pages after page of wonderful stories,
but the twists in the stories have cropped up earlier than I
expected. Now I'm this homeless, clueless, out of luck,
miserable...", her eyebrows were rising up slowly as I was
ranting on, so I checked myself and added in quickly, "I should
of course let you get back to your work and not bother you further."
I hoisted my backpack on my shoulder and turned towards the door.
"I
really like to cook".
"Oh..."
I replied, slightly taken aback, "is it?"
"Yes.
Mostly I experiment with food. Not the most conventional cooking
methods."
"That's
wonderful...I mean, that sounds interesting." Judging from her
wonderfully scented kitchen the experiments couldn't have been all
failures.
"Would
you like to try some? Have breakfast with me?"
"Really?!"
I couldn't believe my luck.
She
smiled back, her kind smile. "I'd like to make it up to you for
being so uncordial yesterday. I wasn't exactly honest when I said
there wasn't enough room for you here."
"Oh
that's no big deal, you shouldn't worry about that," but I had
already put down my bag and seated myself at the table, lest she
should change her mind. "It's not easy to let a total stranger
into your house."
She
let out a short laugh and went about setting the table for two.
*****
She
explained that a moussaka was a Mediterranean baked dish made of
layers of meat, potato and eggplant topped with generous dollops of
Bhamel sauce.
"My
husband never cared much for eggplant." she added as she served
a generous helping onto my plate. "This isn't really breakfast
food," she shrugged, "but like I said I don't follow rules
much when it comes to food."
The
whiffs rising up from the plate tickled my nose as I tried to
identify on my plate the ingredients she had mentioned. It smelled so
nice that I couldn't wait to plunge my fork in, but I resisted and
waited politely for her to serve her own plate and be seated at her
place.
But
she put down the casserole and urged me, "Now go on, eat it. Tell
me what you think."
So
I dug in. I don't think I spoke anything until I finally put down my
fork and looked up to see her staring at me, that faded smile she had
on the beach now once more on her lips.
"Ah...
I...so hungry...delicious..." I couldn't even frame my sentences
properly.
She
broke out into a broad smile and said, "Some more?"
I
was so embarrassed by my crass table manners that I refused
sheepishly claiming that I was completely full. But she didn't seem
to find me rude. On the contrary she seemed quite pleased that I had
wiped my plate clean within seconds. She didn't seem to expect any
verbal compliments. Instead she served her own portion and pushed the
casserole back towards me with a wink and a slight flick of her head.
I
burst out laughing. "You are an amazing cook", I said, as I
helped myself to some more.
"I
know." She took a mock bow and joined me in the laughter.
And
sitting there in between savouring mouthful of moussaka, I felt a
camaraderie grow in between two strangers. We talked for what seemed
like a very long time.
*****
She
talked about her love for food, literature and music. The living room
had more than just a couch and a TV. She showed me the wall to wall
shelves stacked with books from the floor up to the ceiling. She had
a large collection of old books handed down from her mother, who was
an ardent reader too and she herself had added a lot more to it over
the years. She spoke about her dream to be a musician as a youngster
and she had tried, although in vain, her hand at multitudes of
instruments, until she realized that even though she appreciated
music she wasn't much of a musician. She laughed out so loud when she
shared the story in which out of frustration one day she had loaded
her grand piano, guitar, violin and even her music system on the back
of a truck and taken them to a junk dealer and sold them all at a
bargain. She had cried for days after that, inconsolable. Her husband
seeing her state had tried to retrieve them, not before castigating
her for her impetuous behaviour, but by then they had all been sold
off to other people by the dealer. She had almost given up on music
at that time.
I
couldn't help but ask her about her husband and the rest of her
family, seeing that she lived all alone.
"We
separated some time back", she mentioned.
"I'm
sorry. I didn't mean to pry."
"That's
alright. It was a mutual separation. We were childhood sweethearts
and at that time it seemed only probable that we get married to each
other. Our parents on both sides knew each other well and they
approved gladly. But it's only when you live with someone that you
get to really know the person, the nitty-gritty of the persona."
I
helped her to clear the table and wash and dry the dishes as she
continued.
"In
my case, I was beginning to know myself intricately, and ironically,
it was through my husband's eyes. Every time he disapproved of my
thoughts or contradicted my decisions, or criticized my actions, I
got to analyse how different, perhaps unusual my thought process was.
My husband was of a practical lot, there had to be a strong logical
reasoning behind his every action. For me, it was more imprudent,
like the selling of my music to the junk dealer. It seemed the right
thing to do at that time. I needed to vent out my incapacitation. And
I cried thereafter to pour out my grief at the loss of something I
valued immensely. I do not regret both these actions. But he did not
approve of them. To him, these just indicated that I was losing my
mind over silly matters."
She
handed me a steaming cup of flavoured tea and we moved out from the
kitchen and onto the porch where she had laid out bamboo chairs and a
low table. A slight drizzle had started and the sea had turned a dull
grey in the distance.
We
sat in silence for some time imbibing the rich salted breeze which we
could taste on our lips in contrast to the saccharine laden brew. I
wondered if it sometimes made her sad looking out at the bleak sea
with its crashing waves sitting all alone on this porch. I wondered
if behind the facade of her hesitation to give me shelter here, she
actually craved for my company. Perhaps that was the reason she
offered me to stay on for breakfast which although being long done
over with, it didn't feel like I was overstaying my welcome.
Taking
a sip from my cup, I stole a quick look at her from the corner of my
eyes. There was a faraway look on her face, as if she was reminiscing
some moments fondly. Not wanting to intrude in on her thoughts I
contented myself with watching the rain.
"Back
in the days I hated being in the kitchen." Her sudden words
jarred me out of my own thoughts.
She
looked at me and then back at the sea as she continued. "The
daily routine of cooking the mundane staples; pulses, rice, curries,
tempering them just the way my in-laws had taught me, which if
altered didn't go well with the family." She turned to look at
me, "the moussaka you relished so much, it wouldn't have been
even touched by him, for the sheer reason that I had used eggplant,
which for no reason he detested. He wouldn't even give it a try. My
two kids would perhaps have had it just for the sake of it. As long
as their stomachs were full, they never complained. I could never get
them to appreciate the burst of flavours in all the different kinds
of ingredients, they just gobbled it all at one go and washed it down
with water." She shook her head ruefully, "That wasn't my
idea of cooking, just filling up stomachs."
"Your
children, do they live with your husband?"
"No,
they live on their own. Their houses are within the town, as it is
more convenient and closer to all amenities. My husband takes turn
living with them, sometimes he stays with his sister's family in the
next town, and on occasions they all visit me here."
"Your
family, they live so close by and yet they let you live here alone,
all by yourself?! Isn't that...," I hesitated before blurting
out, "...rude, almost cruel?" I couldn't hold it in. "How
could they be so irresponsible?"
She
smiled at me calming me down by squeezing my arm.
"I...,"
I bit my tongue. A sudden qualmish wave washed over me as I scratched
the floor with my toenail absentmindedly.
Who
was I to judge her children's actions when I was no better than them?
I had abandoned my mother in much the same way. My father had died
when I was just a toddler. Being the sole reason for my mother's
existence thereafter, she had made my upbringing her goal. Every step
I took was carefully gauged and ascertained by her. It was almost
like she was living her life through mine. All through school I led a
very sheltered life, my mother even choosing my friends. Even in
college, she had me enrol for a subject in which I had no interest,
in fact one which I almost abhorred; statistics. She had mastered in
the same subject so she thought it would be right for me too, as she
would be able to guide me through it if I struggled. Struggle I did,
although I made through it alive. I even got a job. But I took it out
on her in my own quiet manner. I chose the city farthest from home.
And I had no plans to move back.
I
had ditched her. And now that I was out of her grasp, I defied her at
every chance I got.
I
craved to become an author, because she drove me away from
literature. I quit my job, because she told me not to. I left my
apartment, because she warned me against being a foolhardy. I even
kept her in the dark about where I was going, just to torment her for
being over-protective.
"Would
you like some more tea?"
"Huh?"
I looked up at the kind face and wondered if she had forgiven her
family and accepted the abandon as inevitable. Mothers do that. They
absorb everything within themselves. Maybe it pained her immensely
but she did not show it. Maybe that's the reason she always kept a
smile on her face. Had she learnt to live with it?
Will
my mother learn to live with it?
"How
do you always smile?" I asked her taking her hand.
She
looked at me questioningly, even then with a crooked smile hanging on
her lips.
"Maybe
because I'm always happy." she replied.
"But
how could you be? Don't you feel angry? Don't you want to question
the way your family treats you even after everything you have done
for them?"
With
her free hand she covered my hand which was holding hers and patted
it affectionately.
"The
rain has stopped, would you like to take a stroll by the beach?"
Without waiting for a reply she dragged me up by the hand started
walking. I followed her without a question.
We
walked some distance without speaking. My own conscience keeping me
preoccupied as it was trying to reason with my behaviour towards my
mother.
She
was the one to break the silence. "What do you want to write
about?"
I
shrugged my shoulders. "I was hoping I would find my inspiration
here."
"Why
don't you start by writing about yourself?"
"Myself?
Huh." I made a face "There is nothing interesting about my
life."
"Why
is that? You don't think this moment, us taking a walk together,
talking, sharing stories, is interesting?"
"Yeah...,"
I fumbled, "it is...actually it is quite interesting."
"It
is the little things that add up to a great story," she looked
into my eyes as she spoke "tiny morsels of interesting flavours
which add up to create a great gastronomic fare."
I
couldn't help laughing, "You somehow manage to relate everything
to food!"
"Well,"
she shrugged, "food is my storyboard. I express myself through
my recipes. Did you know that I have an ingredient for each feeling?
Before I step into the kitchen I sit down for a while figuring out my
feelings and then picking out each corresponding ingredient I chalk
out a recipe. And then I set about cooking. So you see, you have to
come to terms with your emotions to deliver your masterpiece."
Standing
there looking at her ecstatic face talking about her passion, I was
reminded of my mother, the look on her face when I had walked in
through the front door of our home and told her that I had been
selected for the job. It was as if she had achieved her most prized
possession. In her happiness she had hugged me so tight that I had to
remind her that I couldn't breathe. I am my mother's passion. And she
was smothering me.
"...try
the spinach gnocchi, I have a very interesting variation of the
original recipe..."
Her
words flowed on even as I was lost in my own thoughts, sometimes her
face being replaced by my mother's, and her words changing into my
mother incessantly praising my every quality to the next door
neighbours. I pushed the thoughts away and focussed back. I realized
that she had stopped talking and was looking at me with her head
tilted.
On
a sudden thought I asked her, "What would you think if I were to
stay with you while I work on my book? Or even better, we could
travel places together. I would gather material for my story and you
could get ideas for new recipes! What do you say?" I was almost
holding my breath waiting for her answer.
"Why
me?"
"Why?
Because you live all alone, with nobody to take care of you. Because
I'm running away from my life in search of some meaning. We could
become companions. Help each other in realizing our dreams. It would
be perfect."
"And
what are you running away from, my dear?" she looked at me with
concern.
"My
mother." I couldn't look into her eyes when I said this. I
didn't want her to judge me wrongly, so I told her, why I had to run,
why I couldn't let my mother's dream overtake my own.
"You
pity me, don't you?" she asked, when I had finished. "When you
look at me you see a wretched lonely woman abandoned by her family."
Her eyes had narrowed. "Just like you pity your mother. You
worry about letting her down in her high expectations from you. You
want to detach yourself from her. You are not running away from her,
you are just trying to push her away. Rebelling against her, so that
she gives up on you. But deep down you know that she never will."
I
was so stunned by her words that I had no reply.
She
continued walking. I gravitated towards her. When she spoke again her
voice was softer.
"I
don't live alone because my family left me. I am alone because I
moved away. That is how I could choose to be Me. And I am happy."
I
looked at her quizzically, unable to grasp at what she was saying.
She
said, "You asked me how I always smile. I smile because of the
happiness I feel in my own space. where I live my dreams, where I
sing aloud my favourite songs and have no one judge me, read surreal
books all day long if I want, pitch a tent on the beach and watch the
sun set, cook meals without worrying about who would like it, where I
do not have to pretend to be anyone else, nor live up to anybody's
expectations. Here, although away from my family, I'm actually at
home - with Me."
She
looked at me, "You can't run forever dear. If you want a story,
write one about the real you. The 'You' you would like your mother to
see, the 'You' you would like her to accept as her daughter. Give her
passion back to her, not like the mirage she has imagined, but like
the reality that you are. Let her see who you are, and you wouldn't
have to run anywhere. Because then you both too would be home to each
other."
I
felt myself sinking into the depth of her words. We sat on the beach
looking at the fishing boats in the distance, bobbing up and down on
the waves. The sun had climbed up to mid sky and was beating down
upon us. The pinching heat of the sun felt good on my skin, the
tingling waking me up from a deep slumber and revealing things
clearer in its glare.
I
felt a sharp poke to my side. "How does some spinach gnocchi for
lunch sound to you?" she was grinning.
*****
The
white fluttering piece of cloth was held barely taut by the bamboo
wedges sticking out from the sand. The tarpaulin cloth seemed to be
dancing to the swaying beat of the wind, sometimes shivering at a
sudden gust.
The
young girl inside listened to the rat-a-tap of the rain drops on the
tarp and turned her attention back to the letter she was writing.
"Dear Ma, it's time I came back..."
The
day before she had received a package at her hotel's address. It
contained a preprint draft, a collection of all the letters she had
written to her mother on her journey over the past year. Her mother
had given her, her Masterpiece.
*****
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