Pilot (or The incident)
Prajwal
Devika, Prajwal’s 12 year old daughter
Devesh
Champa – Devesh’s mother
Lakhan – tea shop owner
Sukhinder
Giridhar – Prajwal’s brother, victim.
Titu – Giridhar’s 10 year old son
Rains don’t come to these villages any more. Sweltering heat
descends in the afternoon on the few tea lovers who flock the only tea shop in
the middle of the village which serves savories (jalebis and samosas) as well.
Padded fields on the other side of the road and a broken cycle wheel hangs from
a distraught hook outside the tea shop; a reminder to the few old timers that
this was a cycle repair shop. But there were no cycles here anymore after the
rich flee to the cities. The wheel remained an item of utmost curiosity to the
little child Titu born after the great fire. A rotund imagery devoid of poetry
and prose synonymous with the very dark that engulfs the eight people who live
in the village - four from the same family. A complicated hegemony of relations
lying exposed as they choose to bid farewell to Sukhinder who leaves for the
city today. Seven more to go – he thinks and waves at the bus as it comes to a
screeching halt next to the aforementioned tea shop, creating a mirage of dust
and smoke which settles snugly on the samosas.
Sukhinder lives alone in the hut adjoining Devesh’s behind
the tea shop. Three houses in the village – each a landmark for the other and
the tea shop. Ah! The tea shop – a giant fuck you to the huge coffee houses in
the city with posh lighting and swanky floors. This is a hell hole of ever
sweltering heat, drowsy flies resting calmly on the jalebis as Lakhan wipes the
tea pot every afternoon at 2 pm in patient anticipation of the 6 people who
drink tea everyday. His customer bucket decreases to five from today. He weeps
no tear as death is a worse agonizer. There is hope still for Sukhinder to
return. No one has returned yet in the past 15 years though. ‘Hope’, he thought
is a treacherous emotion, wiping a bead of sweat from his forehead. It mixes
with the pan as he cleanses it in the brown hued water from the borewell in the
backyard.
The borewell was planted seven years ago when the village
had enough people to warrant a political seat. Some call it government
attention but the definitions are long lost. In the first year, the water was
really clean and crisp but such was no longer the case. During the fourth year,
after Devesh had lost to Prajwal during an arm wrestling game for the first
time in two years, the water erupted a pale yellow. The borewell was scratching
earth’s surface they felt – and the earth was too eager to stay quietly in the summer
heat and every now and then found a way out through the water the borewell
bore. A silent act of rebellion. Devesh’s father had planted the borewell in
the village seven years ago when he was still alive. He was not any more. He
died of haija outside the village
borders which was no more than 3 kilometers. Devesh had gone himself to ensure
he stays out and dies peacefully. Wrapped in five layers of clothing he carried
his father and waited for life to flicker from his eyes under the starry night.
It was a good night to die. He thanked the stars when he was completely gone
and buried him in the ground he had excavated in the afternoon. He felt alive
albeit guilty. Late in the night he stumbled into Lakhan near the tea shop. He
woke not to console him but to scratch his big belly and ask in the most innocuous
of tones “Dafnaaye aaye bhaiya? Chai
banau?”
Prajwal was twenty seven but looked thirty five in the lungi
and baniyan he wore all day. Unlike
others who had hairy faces for wont of a barber in the village, Prajwal had a
cleaner countenance (cleaner of course of the hair) and donned a dirty browning
moustache alone. He wiped his face clean with a knife he cut onions with. He
felt Champa liked her men cleaner. Champa was Devesh’s mother and a widow. And
she was fifty three. But she was the second female in the village. The first
was Prajwal’s twelve year daughter, Devika, from his now dead wife. Champa had
grown intuitively fond of Devika as she grew older. She sat on the floor in the
open hut as she blew air into the choolha
making chapatis for Devika and
Devesh. He chided her affection sometimes but loved the chubby kid to hangout
in the garden every evening as she played with Giridhar’s son Titu. He was
growing fast but the heat made it easier to not afford new clothes. Giridhar
was an old ragged man devoid of hair on his head and emotion in his heart. His
wife some said never died of natural causes unless beating her every night was
natural in the village. She died shortly after Titu’s birth. Giridhar was only
more irritable after the incident and spent his time swatting flies outside
Lakhan’s tea shop. Occasionally he spoke with his brother Prajwal about his
work. They grew rice and wheat in January every month and ate it through the
year.
Giridhar breathed his
last a night ago when someone strangled him to death in his sleep. It was the
first murder in this quiet village of nine people. It would not be two days
after today that Prajwal would find his brother dead who he assumed would be
asleep otherwise under the influence of hashish the grew abundantly in his
backyard.
But today was a different day. Everyone except the dead
Giridhar were at the bus top wishing Sukhinder farewell as he boarded the dusty
bus. He sighed as the bus leapt into the oblivion the villagers called the
city. Prajwal started walking towards Giridhar’s hut complaining of his sadistic
pleasures only to be repulsed by a stench of the dead. For the first time
someone had died in the last three years. For the first time the cause was
unnatural. Prajwal stood shocked at the door as Titu played with his dead
father’s beard.
(To be continued)
2 comments:
Change in genre is an interesting and vice decision
Change in genre is an interesting and vice decision
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