(A SHORT STORY)
(DISCLAIMER: This is pure fiction. The persons and incidents featured have no connection with real persons living or dead, or real life occurrences)
My embargo on transactions of all kinds with Amar lasted
exactly three months. Diplomatic relations were restored—despite my strenuous
efforts to the contrary—after he caught me napping by calling a direct number
in my division of the bank. I answered the call as there was no one else around
at the time. He was calling me from Vijayawada where he had been posted. He
told me that he was coming to Hyderabad on long leave for health reasons.
“Please come home next weekend. I would love to catch up with you,” he said. He
just would not take no for an answer. He decided to play the sympathy card, and
told me his wife had left him taking their son with her; and for once, he was
speaking the truth. I don’t think they ever got back together again. “I have
stopped drinking,” he continued, not so truthfully, as I was to discover soon
afterwards.”Doctor’s orders. I will call you when I am back in Hyderabad.
Please, please do come home.” He was pleading, begging by now. I wasn’t
impressed and told him in no uncertain terms that his emotional blackmail
tactics were not working with me.
On Saturday morning, he came to my office, looking
reasonably healthy. He said he had quit both drinking and smoking; and it was,
indeed, showing. He had lost some weight, and his eyes were clear, and cheeks
less puffy than usual. His conversation too was kind of sober, pun intended,
and he spent an hour chatting with me and my colleagues without offending
anyone even once. He insisted before he left that I join him at home that
evening for dinner. His sister, a neighbour, sent him meals every day, and he
would ask her to cook enough to feed me as well. I grunted non-committally, but
I was determined not to fall for his theatrics.
My wife was away in Bombay, now in the last trimester of
her pregnancy. Those were pre-TV days, and I was enjoying a quiet cigarette in
the evening book in hand, and Vivid Bharati on in my radio, when someone rang
the doorbell. Standing there was a young Garhwali lad, the domestic help I had
seen at Amar’s house during my last visit.
“Saab wants you to come home,” he
said. “I have brought an autorickshaw to take you home.” I was annoyed, but
reluctantly got ready and went down with Bahadur. The auto rickshaw ride was
quiet and uneventful despite crazier than usual traffic all the way. Amar’s
house was not too far, and we reached there in ten minutes.
Bahadur left Amar’s house as soon as we reached there. It
was his weekend off. I should have fled
then and there, as being closeted alone with Amar wasn’t exactly the weekend
entertainment I needed. I sat down waiting for Amar to emerge from his shower.
He come out beaming, and gave me a warm welcome, strong handshake and all.
“Sober as a judge,” he declared as untruthfully as only he could be. I could
clearly see he had already been drinking.
Soon came out a rum bottle with about three quarters of it left. I sat
there like a man possessed. Kundan Lal Saigal was playing out on his tape
recorder. I earlier mentioned Amar’s pretence of hating classical music. It was
a reaction to what he considered snobbery and affectation on the part of his
large extended family. He liked old Hindi songs. He adored Saigal’s voice so
much that he heard him every evening (and no other music), partly because his
voice had that poignant quality that created a convivial atmosphere for someone
brooding in self pity over drinks. The evening was long and wearying as my host
decided to educate me on a wide variety of subjects including my off spin bowling,
which he thought I needed to improve considerably, banking, at which I was
useless, and music, in which I was a toddler. I had heard Girija Devi in a
recent concert and told Amar how much I had enjoyed her jhoola song, her tappa
and her Babul mora at the tailend of
the concert. “Nonsense!” Amar thundered.
“Nobody can sing that song like Saigal!” His face was red, eyes were bloodshot
and nostrils flaring. He went on to play Saigal’s Babul mora some five times in succession.
Amar then asked me to fetch a book from the bookshelf next
to me. Even as I leaned over to pick it up, he exclaimed, “Don’t touch that envelope
next to it.” As I turned to listen to him, I accidentally knocked the envelope
down to the floor, spilling its contents. By now, Amar was supremely inebriated
and his speech more and more slurred. I thought I heard him wrong when he said,
“Don’t touch them, they are letters from Anjali Roy, the film star.” I laughed
out loud, because this was surely the biggest fib I had yet heard from him. “Go
ahead, read a few of them. You will know.”
He was for once speaking the truth. They were all letters from Anjali
Roy, written in a schoolgirlish hand, on proper letterpads, pages torn from
school note books, post cards, on one-side paper saved by her journalist
mother, and so on. In them she declared her profound love for this superman
Amar, and beseeching him to reciprocate, apparently to no avail. It was all so
private and I felt like an awful peeping Tom, but it was all so riveting.
“The Roys were my neighbours in Defence Colony, where I was
staying in a PG accommodation during my newspaper days,” Amar explained
suddenly shocked out of his drunken stupor. “My family knew them, and the Roys
welcomed me with open arms when they knew I was Lalaji’s son. And this girl
took a shine to me because I must have reminded her of some star. She was crazy
about acting and did plenty of it at school plays. I think she went to NSD,
later becoming a star in Bombay’s Hindi film industry after her debut film
became a huge box office success.”
“How come you didn’t encourage her?” I asked, incredulous
that Amar could have resisted the overtures of a beautiful, talented young
girl.
“She was too young, still in her pigtails. Moreover, I was
going steady with a Punjabi girl then.”
“What happened to that
immortal love affair?”
“It came to an abrupt end, even forcing me to leave Delhi
in a hurry.”
By now, Amar was almost sober and I was all agog.
“Her father was a tough Sardar who came after me with a
loaded shotgun when I was in her bedroom, thinking her parents were out of
town. I panicked and leapt out through a French window, forgetting we were on
the first floor. I managed to limp to my scooter and escaped in the nick of
time even as Mr Singh was taking aim. Hanging around in Delhi wasn’t safe, and as
soon as the cast came off my fractured leg, I came here and joined Osmania
University to do my MA.”
It was time for me to leave, and I got up to go. “You must
eat,” Amar said, and opened a small tiffin box, in which there was some rice
with dal and curd. “This is your dinner,” I protested. “I have some food at
home. I’ll be fine.”
‘No way, Ram.” Amar was by now almost belligerent. He
insisted on my finishing the food his sister had sent him; he had obviously
forgotten to inform her about my joining him for dinner. “As soon as you finish
eating we’ll go to Garden Restaurant. I want to eat tandoori chicken,” he said,
dropping a new bombshell, for I had known him to be a strict vegetarian who did
not eat onion and garlic even. So off we went to Garden Restaurant—or so, I
thought. We actually made a pit stop at Moti Bar next to the restaurant, where
Amar ordered more drinks, having polished off the bottle of rum he had opened
at home. He became quite unmanageable soon, even puking all over a waiter. I
was all along a mute spectator, my strongest drink a stiff mango juice. After
getting abused and very nearly kicked out, I found a taxi—Amar was too far gone
for me to manage his giant frame in an autorickshaw—dropped him at his bungalow,
and went home in the same taxi, with not enough money to pay the fare, having
spent all my money at Moti Bar. It was close to 2 am, but I had no option but
to wake up my neighbour, luckily my batchmate at the bank and a close friend,
and borrow from him at that unearthly hour. End of saga, no more Amar Sharma in
my life.
Was I wrong, and how! For quite a while it seemed Amar was
well and truly out of my life. I completely lost touch with him, but two years
later, he turned up again at my doorstep like a bad coin. It was past midnight.
He was accompanied by an auto driver intent on ensuring that he was not exiting
through some backdoor without paying him. I asked the driver to wait downstairs
as I knew we might not get another vehicle at that hour.
Did I mention Amar’s perfect manners with women? He was
genuinely chivalrous, full of old world courtesies, getting up to greet women,
opening car doors for them, exuding charm when sober, not at all the truculent
bastard he could be with men. He was profusely apologetic to my wife for having
disturbed us at such a late hour, but he was going away to Bombay on transfer
the next day, and he could not forgive himself if he didn’t see our daughter,
for it could be a long time before he returned. I had not been in touch with him,
and he must have known about our daughter through our bank colleagues. He then
insisted on going into the bedroom to see the baby. He stood there looking at
her adoringly, though he was tottering. Was he capable of such love? Did I see
tears welling up in his eyes?
Amar then bent and patted my daughter’s cheeks, put his
hand in his pocket, took out a sheaf of currency notes, and tried to thrust
them into my sleeping daughter’s hands. “Bye, darling. God bless you, “ he
said, and tottered out. I escorted him downstairs, put him in the auto, and
gave the driver directions and enough money to cover the fare home.
That was the last
time I saw Amar Sharma. In the years that followed, I heard rumours floating around
that he was leading a life of sheer debauchery. He was said to have been forced
to leave the bank job as a consequence of some misdemeanour, and also lose the
house he had inherited from his late parents to repay gambling debts. It was a
horror story.
I completely lost touch with him, and none of my friends
seemed to know his whereabouts. Two years later, I learnt of his death through
a brief news item in a daily. He had been found dead in a train compartment,
like Devdas in the movie. They found on him a pocket diary with his name and
address and the phone numbers of some friends. Next to him was a small cassette
recorder with a Saigal album. Amar was 33.
An excellent short story,Ram. The bio-fictional narrative makes the character of Amar throbbing with life.
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