Astha was brought up properly, as befits a woman, with large supplements of fear. She was her parents' only child. Her education, her character, her health, her marriage, these were their burdens. She was their future, their hope, and though she didn't want them to guard their precious treasure so carefully, they did.
Her mother often declared, 'When you are married, our responsibilities will be over. Do you know the shastras say if parents die without getting their daughter married, they will be condemned to perpetual rebirth?'
'I don't believe in all that stuff,' said Astha, 'and I think, as an educated person, neither should you.'
Her mother sighed with heavy soul-killing sigh. 'Who can escape their duty?' she asked, as she put in a steel almirah another spoon, sheet, sari, a piece of jewellery towards the girl's future.
Every day in her temple corner in the kitchen, she prayed for a good husband for her daughter.
'You pray too,' she insisted as they stood before the shrine on the shelf, ordinarily hidden by curtains made from an old silk sari border.
Astha obediently closed her eyes to delicious images of a romantic, somewhat shadowy young man holding her in his strong manly embrace.
'Are you praying?' asked the mother suspiciously.
'Of course I'm praying,' replied the daughter indignantly, 'you never trust me.'
She fingered the rope of tiny pearls around his image. On either side were miniature vases with fresh jasmine buds. There was also a picture of Astha's dead grandparents, a little silver bell and thali, two small silver lamps which were lit every evening, while a minuscule silver incense holder wobbled next to it. Whatever meal Astha's mother cooked was first offered to the gods before the family ate. She believed in the old ways.
While her father believed in the new. His daughter's future lay in her own hands, and these hands were to be strengthened by the number of books that passed through them. At least once a day he said to her, 'Why aren't you studying?'
How much studying could Astha do to satisfy the man? Through her school years she never found out.
'Where is the maths work I asked you to do?' he would continue.
'I haven't finished it yet.'
'Show me whatever you have completed.'
Sums indifferently done were produced. The father tightened his lips. The girl felt afraid, but refused to show it. She looked down.
'You worthless, ungrateful child. Do you know how much money I spend on your education?'
'Don't then, don't spend anything,' she muttered, her own lips as tight as his.
Driven by her insolence, carelessness and stupidity, he slapped her. Tears surfaced, but she wouldn't sorry, would rather die than show how unloved and misunderstood she felt.
Her mother looked on and said nothing. Later, 'Why don't you do the work he tells you to? You can't be drawing and painting all the time.'
'So he hits me?' She didn't want her mother's intervention; she hated her as well as him.
'It's his way of showing concern.'
Astha looked away.
The mother sighed. The girl was good, only she got into these moods sometimes. And how much she fiddled with brush and pencil, no wonder her father got anxious, there was no future in art. If she did well in her exams, she could perhaps sit for the IAS, and find a good husband there. You met all kinds of people in the administrative services, and the girl was not bad looking. She must tell her to frown less. Frowns mislead people about one's inner nature.
The girl's body was nurtured by walks that started every morning at five.
'Get up, get up. Enough laziness.'
'You will thank us later when you realise the value of exercise and fresh air.'
'How can you waste the best part of the day?'
So Astha dragged her feet behind her parents' straight backs as they strode towards the dew and space of the India Gate lawns. Her parents arranged their walk so that they would be facing the East as the sun rose, showing their respect for the source of all life, while Astha, lagging behind, refused to participate in their daily satisfaction over the lightening sky.
When they came home they all did Pranayam together. Inhale through one nostril, pinch it, exhale through the other, pinch that, right left, left right, thirty times over, till the air in the lungs was purified and the spirit uplifted.
At other times Astha's father took her for a stroll through the colony in the evenings. Away from her studies he was more amiable. He didn't want his daughter to be like himself, dissatisfied and wasted. You have so much potential, you draw, you paint, you read, you have a way with words, you do well academically, the maths is a little weak, but never mind, you must sit for the competitive exams. With a good job comes independence. When I was young, I had no one to guide me, I did not know the value of times, did not do well in my exams, had to take this job, thinking later I can do something else, but once you are stuck you are stuck.'
Here he grew silent and walked on moodily, while Astha linked her arm through his, feeling slightly sorry for him.
After her father died and experience had drilled some sense of the world into her, Astha realised how emancipated he had been. At the time she felt flattered by his attention, but bored by his words.
The family counted their pennies carefully. Their late marriage, their daughter still to be settled, their lack of any security to fall back on, meant that their pleasures were planned with thrift firmly in the forefront.
Once a month on a Sunday they went as a treat to the Bengali Market chaat shop. They gazed at the owner sitting on a narrow platform, cross-legged before his cash box, a small brass grille all round him. His dhoti kurta was spotless white, his cash box rested on a cloth equally spotless.
'This man came from Pakistan, a refugee,' said the father.
'Look at him now,' echoed the mother.
And the shop grew glitzier every time they came, with marble floors added, mirrors expanding across the walls, extensions built at the back and sides. The tikkis and the papri did not remain the same either, but grew more and more expensive. What was in the tikki that made him charge one rupee per plate?
'The potatoes he must be buying in bulk, so that is only one anna worth of potato, the stuffing is mostly dal, hardly any peas, a miserable half cashew, fried in vanaspati, not even good oil, let alone ghee; the chutney has no raisins, besides being watery, and what with the wages of the waiter and the cook, the whole thing must be costing him not more than… than…'
Father, mathematician, closes his eyes to concentrate better on the price of the potato tikki.
'Not more than eight annas, maximum.'
'Hundred per cent profit,' said the mother gloomily. 'How much does he sell in a day? Five hundred? I could make better tikkis at home,' offered the mother.
'Do you want anything else, beti?' asked the parents after they had eaten every crumb from their little steel plates.
'No.'
'Let's go home then.'
'That was a nice outing, wasn't it? They said to each other as they headed back to their flat on Pandara road.
Over these smaller worries, loomed the larger one, their un-built house, the place they would go to when they retired, the shelter that lay between them and nothingness. It was towards this end that they counted every paisa, weighed the pros and cons of every purchase with heavy anxiety. From time to time they drove to the outer parts of South Deli with dealers to look at plots. Somehow, the places they wanted to live in were always outside their budget, the places they could afford seemed wild and uninhabitable.
'There was a time when Defence Colony too was on the outskirts of Delhi,' pointed out the mother. 'Let us at least buy wherever we can.'
'No, Sita,' said the father irritably. 'How Astha was brought up properly, as befits a woman, with large supplements of fear. She was her parents' only child. Her education, her character, her health, her marriage, these were their burdens. She was their future, their hope, and though she didn't want them to guard their precious treasure so carefully, they did.
Her mother often declared, 'When you are married, our responsibilities will be over. Do you know the shastras say if parents die without getting their daughter married, they will be condemned to perpetual rebirth?'
'I don't believe in all that stuff,' said Astha, 'and I think, as an educated person, neither should you.'
Her mother sighed with heavy soul-killing sigh. 'Who can escape their duty?' she asked, as she put in a steel almirah another spoon, sheet, sari, a piece of jewellery towards the girl's future.
Every day in her temple corner in the kitchen, she prayed for a good husband for her daughter.
'You pray too,' she insisted as they stood before the shrine on the shelf, ordinarily hidden by curtains made from an old silk sari border.
Astha obediently closed her eyes to delicious images of a romantic, somewhat shadowy young man holding her in his strong manly embrace.
'Are you praying?' asked the mother suspiciously.
'Of course I'm praying,' replied the daughter indignantly, 'you never trust me.'
She fingered the rope of tiny pearls around his image. On either side were miniature vases with fresh jasmine buds. There was also a picture of Astha's dead grandparents, a little silver bell and thali, two small silver lamps which were lit every evening, while a minuscule silver incense holder wobbled next to it. Whatever meal Astha's mother cooked was first offered to the gods before the family ate. She believed in the old ways.
While her father believed in the new. His daughter's future lay in her own hands, and these hands were to be strengthened by the number of books that passed through them. At least once a day he said to her, 'Why aren't you studying?'
How much studying could Astha do to satisfy the man? Through her school years she never found out.
'Where is the maths work I asked you to do?' he would continue.
'I haven't finished it yet.'
'Show me whatever you have completed.'
Sums indifferently done were produced. The father tightened his lips. The girl felt afraid, but refused to show it. She looked down.
'You worthless, ungrateful child. Do you know how much money I spend on your education?'
'Don't then, don't spend anything,' she muttered, her own lips as tight as his.
Driven by her insolence, carelessness and stupidity, he slapped her. Tears surfaced, but she wouldn't sorry, would rather die than show how unloved and misunderstood she felt.
Her mother looked on and said nothing. Later, 'Why don't you do the work he tells you to? You can't be drawing and painting all the time.'
'So he hits me?' She didn't want her mother's intervention; she hated her as well as him.
'It's his way of showing concern.'
Astha looked away.
The mother sighed. The girl was good, only she got into these moods sometimes. And how much she fiddled with brush and pencil, no wonder her father got anxious, there was no future in art. If she did well in her exams, she could perhaps sit for the IAS, and find a good husband there. You met all kinds of people in the administrative services, and the girl was not bad looking. She must tell her to frown less. Frowns mislead people about one's inner nature.
The girl's body was nurtured by walks that started every morning at five.
'Get up, get up. Enough laziness.'
'You will thank us later when you realise the value of exercise and fresh air.'
'How can you waste the best part of the day?'
So Astha dragged her feet behind her parents' straight backs as they strode towards the dew and space of the India Gate lawns. Her parents arranged their walk so that they would be facing the East as the sun rose, showing their respect for the source of all life, while Astha, lagging behind, refused to participate in their daily satisfaction over the lightening sky.
When they came home they all did Pranayam together. Inhale through one nostril, pinch it, exhale through the other, pinch that, right left, left right, thirty times over, till the air in the lungs was purified and the spirit uplifted.
At other times Astha's father took her for a stroll through the colony in the evenings. Away from her studies he was more amiable. He didn't want his daughter to be like himself, dissatisfied and wasted. You have so much potential, you draw, you paint, you read, you have a way with words, you do well academically, the maths is a little weak, but never mind, you must sit for the competitive exams. With a good job comes independence. When I was young, I had no one to guide me, I did not know the value of times, did not do well in my exams, had to take this job, thinking later I can do something else, but once you are stuck you are stuck.'
Here he grew silent and walked on moodily, while Astha linked her arm through his, feeling slightly sorry for him.
After her father died and experience had drilled some sense of the world into her, Astha realised how emancipated he had been. At the time she felt flattered by his attention, but bored by his words.
The family counted their pennies carefully. Their late marriage, their daughter still to be settled, their lack of any security to fall back on, meant that their pleasures were planned with thrift firmly in the forefront.
Once a month on a Sunday they went as a treat to the Bengali Market chaat shop. They gazed at the owner sitting on a narrow platform, cross-legged before his cash box, a small brass grille all round him. His dhoti kurta was spotless white, his cash box rested on a cloth equally spotless.
'This man came from Pakistan, a refugee,' said the father.
'Look at him now,' echoed the mother.
And the shop grew glitzier every time they came, with marble floors added, mirrors expanding across the walls, extensions built at the back and sides. The tikkis and the papri did not remain the same either, but grew more and more expensive. What was in the tikki that made him charge one rupee per plate?
'The potatoes he must be buying in bulk, so that is only one anna worth of potato, the stuffing is mostly dal, hardly any peas, a miserable half cashew, fried in vanaspati, not even good oil, let alone ghee; the chutney has no raisins, besides being watery, and what with the wages of the waiter and the cook, the whole thing must be costing him not more than… than…'
Father, mathematician, closes his eyes to concentrate better on the price of the potato tikki.
'Not more than eight annas, maximum.'
'Hundred per cent profit,' said the mother gloomily. 'How much does he sell in a day? Five hundred? I could make better tikkis at home,' offered the mother.
'Do you want anything else, beti?' asked the parents after they had eaten every crumb from their little steel plates.
'No.'
'Let's go home then.'
'That was a nice outing, wasn't it? They said to each other as they headed back to their flat on Pandara road.
Over these smaller worries, loomed the larger one, their un-built house, the place they would go to when they retired, the shelter that lay between them and nothingness. It was towards this end that they counted every paisa, weighed the pros and cons of every purchase with heavy anxiety. From time to time they drove to the outer parts of South Deli with dealers to look at plots. Somehow, the places they wanted to live in were always outside their budget, the places they could afford seemed wild and uninhabitable.
'There was a time when Defence Colony too was on the outskirts of Delhi,' pointed out the mother. 'Let us at least buy wherever we can.'
'No, Sita,' said the father irritably. 'How can we live so far away from everything?
Meanwhile Delhi grew and grew, and plots they had once rejected as being too far, now became part of posh and expensive colonies, and not as far as they had once thought. Retirement was coming nearer, the pressure to buy was growing, when in the early sixties, ministries started forming co-operative housing societies.
'Thank goodness,' grumbled Astha's mother, 'at least the government will do for us, what we have not been able to do for ourselves.'
'It's one thing to form a co-operative housing society, another thing to get land allotted to it, and still another to build a house,' said the father, born pessimist. 'In what god-forsaken corner will they allocate land to a ministry as unimportant as relief and welfare, that too you have to see.'
'Arre, wherever, whatever, we have to build. Otherwise you plan that after retirement we live in your ancestral palace?'
The husband looked pained at his wife's coarseness.
They continued to worry. When would their housing society have land assigned to it, how many more years for the father to retire, how many more working years for the mother, how long before they had to leave this government house in the centre of Delhi, so convenient?
Once the land was allotted, how much would it cost to build, how much did they have in fixed deposits, in their provident funds, how much could they borrow, how much interest would they have to pay? After discussing all this, they allowed themselves to dream al little.
'I will have a special place for my books,' said the father, 'cupboards with glass to protect them from dust and silverfish.'
'I will have a big kitchen,' said the mother, 'with screen windows to keep flies out, and a stainless steel sink, not like this cement one which always looks filthy. I will have a long counter, so I don't have to unpack the mixi every time I need it. I will have a proper place to do puja, rather than a shelf.'
'We will have a study, maybe an extra bedroom for guests,' mused the father, and then they looked frightened at the money their dreams were going to cost. Maybe not a guest room, their voices trailed off.
By the time Astha was sixteen, she was well trained on a diet of mushy novels and thoughts of marriage. She was prey to inchoate longings, desired almost every boy she saw, then stood long hours before the mirror marvelling at her ugliness. Would she ever be happy? Would true love ever find her?
Then the day dawned, the day Astha saw Bunty. Bunty the beautiful, Bunty whose face never left her, Bunty whose slightest word, look and gesture she spent hours nursing to death.
Bunty's family lived in one of the bigger houses of the Pandara Road Colony, a duplex with a large garden, and a roomy verandah. They were on visiting terms with Astha's parents, the younger sister was in her school. The boy was away in Kharakvasala in the Defence Academy and now home for the holidays.
He came over with his father. Oh, how he stood out. He had glossy black hair which he wore in a small puff over a high wide forehead. His eyes were like soft black velvet, set in pale sockets over the faint blush of his cheek. And just beneath that the bluish black shadow of an incipient beard, framing a red mouth. As she stared, steady, unwavering, he felt her gaze, looked up and smiled. His teeth were small, white and uneven, and as she lost herself in them, he raised his left eyebrow slightly. She shuddered, and weakly smiled back.
Thus began her torture.
If only she didn't see him so often, but Bunty was restless during his holidays. Boarding school, boarding college, as a result he knew few people in Delhi. He took to dropping in with his sister. There was the attraction of her devotion.
Day and night the thought of him kept her insides churning; she was unable to eat, sleep, or study. Away from him her eyes felt dry and empty. Her ears only registered the sound of his voice. Her mind refused to take seriously anything that was not his face, his body, his feet, his hands, his clothes. She found temporary relief in sketching him, sketches that were invariably too bad to be mulled over.
Hours were spent in planning accidental meetings, how to bump into him in the colony, how to cross his father on his evening walk, how to fall into enough conversation to be invited over, how to borrow a book to prolong the stay, how to fall into a faint, how to die at his doorstep.
Once in Bunty's house she saw him pet his dog, who promptly put her paws in his lap, wagged her tail and salivated. At the moment she felt a keen shamed kinship with the animal.
She was too overwhelmed by her feelings to actually want to talk to him. To approach the site of all this wonder would be apostasy. To think that he would ever have anything to say to her was past crediting. Finally it was so unbearable, she had to tell someone.
Gayatri, school friend, eventual confidante, decided that this affair needed managing.
'What have you actually done?' she demanded.
'Done?' quavered Astha, immediately feeling worse instead of better. 'Nothing.'
'You are such a ninny,' scolded Gayatri, 'invite him to a movie.'
'How can I?'
'How can you?' Gayatri stared at her. 'There is a Charlie Chaplin film at the National Stadium next Sunday morning.
Ask him if he has seen it. Go on. Give him a chance.'
Each day was now an exam, in which she failed daily. Gayatri was insistent. There had to be movement to the whole thing, otherwise she might as well not be in love. Astha was forced to admit the logic of this.
The day came when she stood tongue-tied before him, stammering out he request that the god come to a film with her and her friend.
'Of course he'll go, won't you, Bunty beta?' boomed his father.
'Th-Thank-you, uncle,' stammered Astha, not looking at Bunty.
Bunty seemed stiff and bored through the film. Gayatri chattered gaily in the interval, while Astha gritted her teeth and waited for the nightmare to end. Words rushed around in her head, words that would show how clever and interesting she was, but when she actually looked at him she could not speak. She wanted to never see Bunty again. She hated him. She wished his holidays would quickly end.
They did, and Astha grew desperate. The point of getting up every morning had been the hope that she would be able to look at him, feed on a glance, a word, a smile. Now her rich inner world would become stale with nothing new to add to the store.
'Suggest writing. You know, like pen pals,' said Gayatri.
'No.' Suppose he laughed? Looked contemptuous?
'What do you have to lose?'
'Why should he write to me?'
'Why not? He does drop by, and you also visit him.'
Astha hesitated. 'That means very little,' she pronounced finally, thinking of those visits, the long pauses, she pulverised with emotion and Bunty shifting about in his seat, saying from time to time, 'so what's new?'
Gayatri pressed home her point.
'He does talk to you, and objectively speaking, you're not bad looking. You have no figure, but your features are sharp, you have clear skin, and high cheekbones. If your hair was styled instead of pulled back, it would help, but still, it is thick and curly. You are on the short side, but tall men like short girls, that is one thing I have noticed, time and again.' (Gayatri herself was tall.)
'I can't just walk up to him and say give me your address, I want to write to you.'
'It's not anything so great you are asking. Once you write, he will write back.'
'He may not.'
'Then he is no gentleman,' said Gayatri severely.
Eventually Astha blurted out the request, shoving her diary and pen at him.
She wrote, and he did reply, weeks later.
'Who is this from?' asked her mother, holding the letter away from her.
'How do I know?' demanded Astha.
to be continued.........
No comments:
Post a Comment