Wednesday 16 December 2015

MY STORY IN PRINT EDITION OF "WRITER'S EZINE"


A short story of mine has been carried in a special print edition of "Writer's Ezine" released in mid-December 2015.   The Rs.200-priced glossy issue has many poems, essays, short stories, interview-based articles and photos by contributors from all over the world.  Here is my story:





Chasing a Dream Husband






Samyukta was a rebellious girl.  A student of Standard XII in a co-educational school known for its strict discipline, she was unhappy that her school insisted on a monotonous uniform for its students.  If she had her way, she would wear hot shorts and trendy tops.  She felt she was a misfit there, but could not help it. 

Fair, slim and attractive, she would go to a beauty parlour every month for facials and eye-brow trimming.   She spent her evenings chatting with friends on her mobile and browsing the Facebook.  She loved taking selfies and sharing them online.  “This is how I keep myself in touch with my new-age feminist friends,” she would say.  She decried age-old practices and scorned at conservative people.  She detested putting on bangles.  Her reason: “I am casting off all traditional symbols of women’s enslavement.”

After her final examinations, she managed to get a seat in B.A. (Corporate Communications) in a college known for its liberal ways.  She liked the institution and its atmosphere.  Every day she drove to the college on a purple-coloured motor bike.  The ultramod dress she sported was the talk of the campus every day. 

She contested student elections and became the secretary of the cultural association of the college.   She promised her fellow students that she would revolutionize its activities.

Samyukta organized an inter-collegiate symposium on “Marriage and the Modern-day Youngsters.”  A boy and a girl from every college in the city came to participate.  Newspaper reporters and television channel crews were present in large numbers.  She led the discussion.  With bravado, she declared, “My life partner should not be taller than me, nor more charming and more qualified.  He should not object to my holding a job.   At home we should both work like equal partners.   He should not toss harsh words at me, even if I am wrong.  In such a case, I would use harsher words and silence him.”    

Everyone heard her in rapt attention.  She went on, “The parents of my would-be husband should live away from us.” She added, “Don’t think these are my platitudes for today’s debate.  I swear they are my real-life guidelines as well.”

These brash expressions upset the faculty and the principal.  They signalled that she should moderate her words.  However, she paid no heed to them.  “I would not go for wedding right away.  First it would have to be a live-in relationship for at least two years.” 

A lad from the audience shouted, “No doubt, you will remain a spinster forever – an evergreen spinster!”  Thunderous laughter reverberated in the hall.   Samyukta refused to be cowed down.  “Come to the dais, my dear friend.  Let us debate it over here,” she retorted.  There was total silence.  

The symposium went on with other participants advocating the traditional practices or suggesting the western ways.  Some went to the extent of totally rejecting the idea of marriage and permanently continuing with the live-in system.    The moderator, a retired family court judge, concluded the programme remarking that over the ages the concept of marriage had undergone changes and this process was bound to continue.  At any rate, our youngsters should remember that whatever they did should be in tune with the laws of the land.

After her B.A. she did M.A. in the same subject and secured a job in an MNC as its Public Relations Officer.  Her job involved interacting with clients, advertising agencies, media units and government departments.   She had opportunities to meet people of different outlooks, attitudes and temperaments.

A year passed and Samyukta felt it was time for her to look for her life-partner.  She recalled what all she had advocated during her college days.  She cast her net wide.  In the course of nine months she dated three guys but none of them came up to her expectations.

In the block next to her office there was a branch of a major bank.  One day, its new Customer Relations Officer Himalesh came to her office to make a courtesy call on her General Manager.   She had a short conversation with him before conducting him to the office of her boss.  In this brief time, she took a liking for him.  

She made discreet enquiries about him independently.  He was single, staying in a studio type apartment near the bank.  He cooked his food himself.  He belonged to Udaipur, Rajasthan.  Though, nothing was known about his parents, he appeared to satisfy her conditions.  Was he made for her?

She had an account in the bank and every month her salary was credited into that account.  Whenever she went there to withdraw cash, she made it a point to say ‘hi’ to him.  This developed into close friendship and appeared to blossom into love. 

One evening she invited Himalesh to dinner in a five-star hotel.   He readily responded.  There she expressed her views on relationships, marriage and family life.  He listened to her carefully.  He remained silent for a while.  Then he replied, “It is really astonishing that I too have similar views.  I am open to trying out new ideas.”  When the bill came, she did not allow him to pay it.  Though a hefty one, she settled it using her platinum plus credit card.   This enabled her to prove that she stood by her views on equality of genders.  They moved one more step closer to each other.   
       
Soon Samyukta and Himalesh decided to enter into a live-in relationship.  They took on rent a posh apartment close to their offices.  Interestingly, she wore a traditional Mangalsutra round her neck so that there would be no room for anybody to look at them with suspicion. 

Samyukta informed her parents living in a city down south over phone about the arrangement.  They turned furious.  “You have been a rebel.  You have refused to marry the boy we suggested.  You have thrown to winds our family traditions.  We have long ago given you up.  Don’t get in touch with us anymore for anything,” her father banged the phone.   

Two years passed.  Samyukta and Himalesh got along very well.  They maintained excellent rapport with their neighbours, who looked at the two as a truly ideal pair. 

One day Samyukta raised with Himalesh the subject of their formal wedding.  He was clear in his mind. “All the people around us are under the impression that we are already married.  You also wear a Mangalsutra.  How can we bring up the subject of wedding now? Is a formal marriage necessary at all?   Let us continue as at present.”

This was a bolt from the blue for her.  She remained silent.  But she was determined that there should be a formal marriage.  Legal recognition was necessary. 

Samyukta kept nagging him on this.  Finally the two decided to get married in a temple on traditional lines.  The wedding went off well, attended by a small group of their friends.  There were no relatives.  On the same day they got their marriage registered.  Samyukta was happy that she was able to realize her dreams one by one.  “I did it,” she wrote in her diary.

After a few months she became pregnant.  Himalesh took good care of her.  He accompanied her to the doctor on monthly check-ups.  As the tentative delivery date approached, strange fears started engulfing her.  “Will it be easy?  Whom can she go to for support, if necessary, in the last minute?” she wondered.  Her husband assured her, “Don’t worry, you can rely on me for everything.”

The nursing home, where she was to deliver, ran on modern lines.  The husband and wife were briefed on the process of child birth.  It permitted one person to be with her at the time of delivery.  As her mother could not be expected, Himalesh agreed to be there.   She liked the idea.   He was a bit nervous.

The delivery went off without any hitch in the presence of her husband.  He was witness to the culmination of a profound process of creation.   He saw with his own eyes the marvel of life emerging out into the world.  He was thrilled.   He and Samyukta were now the proud parents of a cute baby girl.  Their joy knew no bounds.

Time passed fast.  The baby completed six months, enjoying the warmth and affection of the parents.  “I have done it again,” she wrote in her diary.

But an unexpected development rocked her.   One fine morning, when she got up from bed, she found Himalesh missing.  She saw a card pinned to the door, on which he had written in bold letters “Bye, bye.”  She could not make head or tail of it.  An inexplicable fear gripped her.  Tears swelled in her eyes.  She enquired with his office and the response she got was more intriguing -- “He has left our service.”  She had no one to look to in that hour of crisis and share her agony.  Police complaint would be detrimental to her career.  She felt miserable and helpless.

She kept going to her office.   It was necessary for her to make a living.  She felt very sorry that she had to leave the tender child in the care of a maid at a crèche.  A thought crossed her mind -- “If only I had a senior relative at home to look after the baby…”  No, no, this was against her policy.  She erased the idea immediately from her mind.

Three more months rolled by.  She found it extremely difficult to manage all affairs single-handedly.  She badly needed her husband.  There had been no quarrel between them whatsoever.  Why did he leave her?  Where was he now?     

In a desperate move, she inserted an advertisement in a national daily, which he normally read.  It said:  “Dear Himalesh, I am on the brink of a disaster.  Return home immediately.  Samyukta.”

A day later, she received an SMS on her mobile.  It was from Himalesh.  “Expect me there on upcoming Sunday morning.  I will tell you everything in person.  I am very busy now.”  Tears ran down her cheeks.  

Samyukta reviewed her life since school days.  She had traversed a long way.  She had been too rigid in her attitude towards marriage and family matters.  There was no point in being so any more.  The problems she faced in the last nine months were terrific.  It was time to make amends and relent.  She should have elders with her.  “I am chastened,” she wrote in her diary.

On Sunday at about 10:00 a.m. the calling bell rang.  She opened the door and there he was – HER DEAR HUSBAND.  Behind him there was an elderly couple.  She surged forward and hugged Himalesh emotionally.  The two seniors had a strange grin.

Wonder of wonders, Samyukta was wearing a tilak on her forehead, jasmine flowers in her hair and diamond-encrusted golden bangles on her wrists.  She appeared obviously mellowed down.   Himalesh remarked in a tone brimming with awe and admiration, “You look gorgeous.  Meet my parents.”   She greeted them with a smile and invited them inside. 

The two oldies carried the baby in turns and cajoled it.  The little one also appeared to enjoy their company.

That night Himalesh narrated to her what all happened in the recent past.  “I knew you are a nice girl but the problem with you was that you wanted to pursue funny and impractical ideas.  I accepted you despite these eccentricities.  I had to play a trick on you to make you come round.  Resignation of my job was stage-managed.”

As he went on, the little one in the crib gave out a shrill wail.   Samyukta jumped out of the bed, lifted the baby, handed it to her hubby and directed him, “Change the diaper.  The child has already messed up the poop!”  

(Ends)