Wednesday 20 June 2018

HITCHHIKE



The other day I was late to class. My jaw dropped in relief on realising that the professor had not turned up. In the centre, few girls folded the chairs and shifted the desks. We all then sat in a circle. Three boys pretended to doodle but I thought they were doing only that; pretending to doodle; while all the time, their ears sharp, heads angled at one side, they tried making eye contact with the pretty twins sitting next to each other. 

One of the girls, a tall lissom lass named Lucy with a dragon tattoo inked on the base of her neck, had the audience in rapture.
She ended up using her hands a lot. Her nails were perfectly done and were painted a deep red. Immediately, I looked down at my own hands, which had spidery blue lines running all over making them look like the hands of a forty year old. My nails, I always kept them chipped short but now the outer ridges carried blackish marks. For the rest of the time, I kept my hands hidden under a book. 


Coming back to Lucy, she started narrating an incident on how she and her girlfriend had managed to hitchhike a ride late one night. This was when a male friend who was supposed to accompany them backed out last minute as he had to visit an ailing grandmother. Lucy, stated with a smirk that she thought her friend had cooked up a white lie. 

Continuing with her story, she mentioned as to how in the middle of the night she and her friend in short leather skirts and stilettos made a bold picture on the empty roads. Soon, a police van patrolling the night streets, halted in front of them. A burly old officer got out and admonished them to get into the van. Throughout the journey, he lectured them and kept hollering on how it was unsafe for two young ladies to hitchhike a ride in the dead of the night.  A fellow officer seated next to him had the most charming manners and almost tipped his head after dropping them home. Lucy said she was blown by his proper English manners and had winked right back at him. His face changed colour at once and he quickly turned around. Both Lucy and her friend kept controlled expressions throughout but burst out laughing once the officers left. Lucy ended by saying, how she wouldn’t mind trying to hitchhike a ride again, just for the thrill.

Somehow the word thrill stayed with me all day long. I realised I too wanted some thrill in my otherwise boring life which included helping my mother with mundane chores. Every day, after going back home the pattern was the same. Clothes were hung out to dry, the lentils were boiled and after adding a few spices, the curry was prepared by me. 

My mother was an ordinary woman and there was something that I hated and loved about her ordinariness at the same time. On days, when I heard a friend telling me on how her mother smoked pot the whole day and sat in front of the television in her faded nightgown watching mindless shit, I was glad to have a mother like my own. One who kept the house clean and on occasional Sundays, when my grandmother called up, somehow her mood would spark up. She then ended up baking a mean chocolate cake with mini florets of vanilla-cream icing. 
And on days, when I used to overhear in the bus about mothers who took their teenage daughters out for shopping, my heart would drop a beat. One time, a girl whom I chatted with a lot in the eighth grade had allowed the hem of her dress to slip a little so she could show her flimsy bra strap that had pale pink flowers running all the way up. She whispered in my ears, that she along with her mother had gone shopping together the previous Sunday and had picked up similar bras ofcos in different sizes.

On hearing this, I remembered staring outside the bus window for long, looking at the idyllic fields and how the sky was soon about to change its colour. My own mother and even her mother had maintained a tradition of always buying plain, ugly looking white bras with thick elastic straps. After I turned thirteen she had taken me to the local retail store in the neighbourhood that managed to stock every household item under the same roof. Specially on Saturdays, they had everything under the discounted tag and that’s when we bought the mops, the dusters, the green detergent liquid, a housecoat and of cos the bras, that were discounted too. I remember my mother picking up three of them which had to last the whole year. They were obnoxious to look at and I always felt too shy to hang it to dry in the clothesline outside. Invariably, I used to cover it with another piece of garment, to keep it hidden from the neighbour’s view.  

My mother and I have real short conversations. And it is mostly about the informal stuff. Like she would ask, Do you think it’s going to rain today? Would you like to step out and check on the clothes and get them in? There was never an opportunity to say No and I would reluctantly go out and bring in the clothes.

**

The morning before, I had left early from college.
Patiently, I waited for the bus to arrive but when it didn't I decided to walk all the way home, which was roughly a distance of seven kms. The muddy path was slippery from last night’s rain. At some point, it curved naturally and festooned into a lazy string of weeds growing above the radiant red earth.

Finally, at a clearing ahead the road simply swept into a loop with corn fields on either side. 
In a flash, I recollected Lucy’s tale of hitchhiking a ride. Tiny thoughts stitched together and started forming a giant plan in my head. 
I stood at an intersection waiting to hitchhike my first ride ever.

My fingers felt clammy, as I raised my trembling thumb upwards for a ride. A tram, a truck and a Mercedes S class passed by without stopping. 
What was prompting me to do this? Just an exhilaration. A thrill of doing something before I turned seventeen this summer. 

Minutes went by and I could feel, tiny droplets of sweat gathering in the inner pockets of my armpits. The absurdity of revealing myself in front of a complete stranger and engaging into a conversation was now slowly dawning. And, what if he turned out to be a thug? What if he tied my hands, gagged my mouth and in the end dropped me in some bushes?

Automatically, my arm dropped and I started moving ahead.

Just then, a large van stopped by. The driver a friendly looking fellow, with a fine smile crinkling at the corners of his mouth got out. The lady next to him, heavily pregnant wore a plain yellow dress with tiny flowers embroidered around the collar. Her hair was in a short crop and she had the perfect set of teeth that revealed a flash of dimples. 

Hello, I said, holding the backpack closer to my chest.

It’s going to start pouring anytime now, he said pointing to the grey clouds that were fast gathering in a menacing way.

I am sure there is plenty of space in the back of the van. Hop in right away, before the rain gets to us but let me warn that you are in for a surprise, he said with a twinkle in his eye.

By now, I was completely drained and didn’t have the energy to walk any further. My shoes were caked with mud, the collar of my dress was rumpled, stray strands of hair stuck to my back and my skin had turned sallow with sweat and dust.  

Trudging my feet, I thanked him, mumbled my address and headed towards the back of the van.
But I wasn't prepared for the sight that greeted me.
An entire tribe of goats all stood huddled inside. I threw my backpack in first and in a jiffy,  jumped across to the other side of the van.

Unused to a stranger in their midst, they all started bleating at once. I chuckled out loud glancing at the company surrounding me and drew a kid goat closer. At once, he started nuzzling his fawn coloured head against my face. I somehow clung and found strange comfort in the smell of grass and dung that afternoon.

The van had started gaining speed. A beautiful breeze was gently blowing, washing away all my fears and insecurities.
What a day of adventures, I thought to myself. A thrilling ride by all means.
I couldn’t have asked for better company as I cradled another kid goat in my arms.












Thursday 19 April 2018

Zen Grandma

Grandma often misplaced her set of dentures. 
Her afternoon meals consisted of fish soup followed with a thin broth of curry poured over boiled rice. After a large burp she would gargle twice in the little basin that stood adjoining the hallway and keep her dentures aside.

Her nap time was for an hour and half. She always lay on her back with her mouth wide open. Before that, her dentures were stacked away at some place safe, of which she had no memory after waking up. While she slept, her open mouth resembled a tiny cave of sorts. As a child, I often wondered what might happen if I released a fly or a mosquito into the plain hollows of her mouth. Will they find their way out easily and in my little mind I used to think they would, as it was a clean passage without any hurdles.

When she wakes up, she searches for her dentures under her pillow. Not finding them there, she flips the cotton duvet over and over as she waits patiently for them to magically fall on to her lap. 
Nowhere in sight, she then roams around the house looking for them covering her mouth with the soft ends of her cotton saree. She empties drawers, looks into bathroom cabinets, under the stairs and at some point I see her gently opening the fridge door to see if she has left them on the rack where the eggs are perched. 

My brother is lazing in his room where the music is blaring so loud that it causes the wind clock on the wall to shake a little. 

Grandma enters his room looking all disoriented. 
What do you want Grams? 
He shouts out loud over the deafening music.

Now you see, my grandmother suffered from an ear ailment when she was only ten. The local doctors had then inserted a long tube into her right ear to drain out all the pus. But the infection kept worsening and in years to follow she couldn’t hear at all from the affected ear.


Grandpa, when he was alive, always mentioned in jocular tones that how Grandma’s parents had tricked him by hiding this fact at the time of their marriage. However, just a day prior to their wedding, Grandma was cheeky enough to fight all odds and had crossed an overgrown rosebush nettled with thorns to meet Grandpa in secret to inform him about her partial deafness.

But by then Grandpa was completely smitten by Grandma and he somehow found this quality of her coming forth and being honest about her ailment truly endearing.


He only said, "My heart will always be able to convey all that you have to hear. 
You won’t always need your ears for that."

That nailed it for Grandma and the marriage took place in all pomposity. In days to follow, Grandpa often came and stood close to Grandma, gently tucking stray strands of her hair behind her good ear and whispered into it, all the secrets, conspiracies happening in the family and about mundane, everyday conversations.
And on lazy Sunday afternoons, Grandpa would twirl the lock of Grandma’s thick hair round and round around his forefinger until it used to snap and produce an even tighter curl. Those days, there was no unnecessary exchange of words needed to profess love for each other. 

Coming back to her dentures, I finally found her sitting on the window ledge with a faraway look, the ends of her saree still covering her mouth. 

Grams! I said softly making a little jangling sound from the tin box that I was carrying.
Can you guess what’s inside this? 

Her expression was soft and for the first time I noticed that her eyebrows were really dark and bushy whereas it was difficult to trace a single strand of black hair from all the whites that gathered on her head.

She opens the case with trembling hands and there’s a look of sheer excitement as her gaze falls on the lost dentures.

The dentures with years of use had a jaded look and had lost its sparkle. Some teeth were chipped at the edges and an incisor had completely gone missing.

Where did you find them? She said in low tones as she quietly pulled it out from the tin case getting ready to wear them when I slowly intervened and slipped another case into her hands, which was wrapped in a pretty pink packing. 
Unable to contain my own excitement, I tore at the packaging. Once the box was opened, there lay nestled in the softest of velvety cushion a brand new set of dentures.
I held the back of both her hands, forming a cup, her skin feeling all papery and light under my touch.

In the centre, the dentures with their pink overtones, gleamed under the evening light.

Bobo! Is this for me? 
Yes Gramps! I whispered softly into her good ear.

She smiled, her eyes clouded with happiness.

My first pay packet was put to good use.

HITCHHIKE

The other day I was late to class. My jaw dropped in relief on realising that the professor had not turned up. In...