Theme : Melancholy.
Heart-breaking
tales may be hard to write, without sounding melodramatic. Sad events cannot be
used only for the sake of making the story tragic.
I
personally find it easier write stories that are drawn from situations that have happened to people I know or heard about, in real life around me. It is not
uncommon to find such situations that leave us with feelings of frustration or helplessness and give
us a taste of grief.
This story is an attempt of mine to showcase a
scenario that is all too common in the current fabric of our society. I hope it
touches a chord with the readers to unlock the intended melancholy.
***
A full circle
‘Ma,
I’m busy. I’ll call you back.’
Okay,
she began to say, when she realized that he had already hung up.
Seema
sighed. Navin never had time for her anymore. When had he ever had time for her
anyways? She couldn’t recall the last time he’d spoken to her at leisure. It
had been this way ever since he had moved to his own apartment at the other end
of town.
What
had he told her when he had bought the place? That it was a mere investment;
he’d no intention to staying there at all. He practically cleaned out their
life savings and the gratuity that Rishab had received during his golden
handshake, a few years ago. But then, he’d been transferred to Jalahalli by his
company, it was a promotion, no less. He couldn’t have refused such an offer.
And then, it only made sense that he would move to the apartment which was only
a stone’s throw away from his office.
Seema
picked up her glasses and wiped them carefully in the pallu of her soft cotton
sari. Her mind flew to his childhood years when Navin couldn’t go a day without
his beloved mother.
Rishab
coughed raucously from his perch on the sofa. His cough was getting worse. He’d
refused the antibiotics that the young doctor had prescribed for him. Rishab
held a deep mistrust for doctors, especially the young things that inhabited
the nursing homes these days.
‘What
do they know about our ailments?’ Rishab would grumble. He’d lost almost 11
kilos in the last three months, but refused to follow the advice of any the
doctors they visited. He’d never got over the demise of their longtime friend
and family physician, Dr. Batra, who’d passed away from a sudden heart attack a
year ago.
Seema
knew that Rishab would never admit the real reason for his endless ailments.
She knew that his ego would never accept the fact that their only son had
abandoned them to their own devices and moved on to greener pastures that
didn’t include caring for aged parents, although their son had had no qualms
about soliciting their assistance to achieve it.
A
twinge of guilt made its presence felt in Seema’s heart. Rishab had refused to
part with his gratuity fund, especially since Navin had already lost all the
money they had given him after selling their only house. It was Seema who’d
insisted that they had to support their offspring in all his endeavors, however
far-fetched or foolish they may be.
Thirty
three years had passed since Seema had entered Rishab’s sprawling bungalow as a
shy bride from a small town of Arasikere taluk in rural Karnataka. It took her
almost two years to adjust to the hustle and bustle of Bangalore. She’d been
awed and charmed by the handsome young man, who was a successful architect with
inherent ancestral wealth.
How
easy, oh, how easy it had been for the girl from a family of limited means, to
settle into the affluence of the lifestyle wealth could offer. They would never
have dreamt during those days that they would end up with no roof to call their
own in only two and half decades from then.
Navin
insisted that they sell their bungalow to fund his penchant to study medicine
abroad.
‘I’ll
earn it back within a year after I graduate, dad,’ he insisted to his father.
‘I’ll buy you a new bungalow, a much nicer one; this house is so old anyways…’
Rishab
finally relented to his only son’s compulsion and for the first time in their
married lives, Seema and Rishab had begun to live in a much smaller rented
home.
Seema
was jolted out of her reminiscence by the sharp barking of a dog on the street.
This house was so small that they could hear the honking traffic on the busy
ring road nearby. They had to keep the windows constantly shut to avoid the
dust and pollution that made its way into their living room.
It
hadn’t been easy. They’d gotten rid of most of the heavy furniture for stuff
that was more compact. The housekeeping staff had to be relieved one by one and
Seema understood how much she’d relied on the fleet of maids to keep her home
functional.
The
second blow was when Navin quit his studies during the final year of medicine.
“Sorry
mom and dad. Very sorry. I can’t do this anymore.’ His curt email to them read.
They barely got over the shock when he flew back to India and insisted that he
would start his own garment business.
Seema
gave up most of her jewelry and then some, to fund her son’s latest fad. Two
years was all it took for Navin to end up with losses that took a further toll
on their lifestyle.
Navin
finally settled into a regular job as a counselor in a pharmaceutical company.
It seemed like a fresh ray of hope for the weary couple that their son had
finally found his calling and would set them back on the road to the affluence
they had previously enjoyed.
What
a wasteful exercise it had all been. And now, their son had nonchalantly moved
on to his own three bedroom apartment, with no intention of including his
parents in his new-found prosperity.
‘Get
me some water,’ Rishab’s brusque voice broke into her reverie.
Seema
got up slowly, taking care to place her small feet neatly into the hawai
chappals, before she began to walk. The coldness of the bare floor seeped
through the thin soles of the worn-out slippers and stung her feet. Her
arthritis had gotten worse over the weekend and she stopped her daily morning
walk in the park because she was unable to keep up with her walking partner,
Alamelu. Alamelu suggested Seema to visit a bone specialist she knew, but Seema
recalled with a sardonic smile, how she’d dilly dallied after she found out
that the man charged only an arm and a leg for his consultations.
She
had just poured the water from the jug into Rishab’s steel glass, when he was
engulfed by a fresh coughing spree that made Seema wonder if his lungs would
finally burst under the pressure.
‘Hot…hot
water,’ Rishab managed to sputter, before he began to cough again. Seema poured
the water into a pan and lit the stove under it. It was a full two minutes before
she realized that the water had boiled and almost evaporated.
She’d just been
standing there lost in her thoughts staring at the pan, which was almost empty
now. She became aware of her wet cheeks just then and realized that somewhere along
the journey into the past she’d begun to weep softly.
She
poured a fresh glass of water into the pan and wiped her tears away. It was
then that her unseeing eyes focused on the ends of a brochure that she’d
absent-mindedly tucked behind the tin of sugar last week.
She
reached for the brochure and frowned in concentration, as she read it
thoughtfully.
‘Beautiful
surroundings nestled in the heart of nature…hospital a stone’s throw
away…doctor on call…safe and secure…like-minded company…’ The keywords jumped
out at her.
A
host of pleasant images played upon her thoughts. A ray of hope, reluctant but
persistent, began to wheedle itself into the dark contours of her mind.
‘Seemaaa,
how long will you take to get me a glass of water?’ Rishab’s voice roared from
the living room.
‘Coming,’
she called. She poured the water meticulously into his cup and placed it on a
tray. Holding the folded brochure under the tray, she balanced it with care and
made her way slowly across the tiny kitchen.
Rishab
sipped the water noisily and smacked his lips in appreciation. How easy it is
to make him happy, Seema thought, as she gazed at her husband’s wrinkled face
with affection.
She
waited until he had emptied the water, retrieved the cup from his hands and
placed it on the stained glass tea table with a little clunk. She then sat down
on the sofa next to him, handed him his reading glasses and placed the brochure
in his hands.
‘What’s
this?’ He put on the glasses and peered at the cheap paper, trying to decipher
the words on it.
Seema
said nothing, but watched him intently.
A
host of emotions played across Rishab’s face: Enquiry, confusion,
comprehension, anger, and then slow resignation.
‘Is
this what we have been reduced to now?’ He asked after a very long time. The
pain in his eyes tore at her heartstrings.
‘It
is the best thing for us to do now, Rishab. At least we can be independent and
happy…besides we will be very comfortable and well taken care of…’ Her voice began
to break before she could complete the sentence.
Three
weeks later, an aged couple got out of an OLA cab and made their way haltingly on
the dirt path, towards the slightly dilapidated building, with a faded board
that read ‘Sai Baba Ashram for the aged’, on the outskirts of Hosur.
*****
Picture credits : Google images