There
are days which bring one joy, and those somber days when nothing seem to cheer
one up. Even the piercing sunlight bouncing off a rose petal looks like blood oozing
out of wounded plant. With advancing age the cheerful days seem to appear too
few and far in between. Kuchalambal could not put any reason to it, but kept
her in tenterhooks all the same. Like drops of dark venom dripping down on a glass
of clear water, morbid thoughts would ink her heart violet on days such as
these. Doctors would call it depression; poets may have a different description
for it, but for the soul, sifting through moods of grey and black, its feels
like riding upon waves beyond control on a moonless night.
The
week after Holi had always had this effect on her. She had lost Pattabi in the
weeks following Holi. The events in their daughters life, had left an abscess
in Pattabi’s heart, and festered there unnoticed for too long, to finally claim
his life, a bit prematurely at an age of sixty two.
Memories
now had started playing tricks on her, some hitting her unexpectedly making her
pause in agony, and some making her smile and lose herself into its realm. Tomorrow will be Lalita’s death anniversary
too. Kuchalambal was in a delirium now. She saw her child crawling towards her
with arms outstretched, wanting to hold on to her forever, she gasped, with perspiration
lining her wrinkled eyebrows, her hands reaching out to hold on to her baby crying
out for her mother, with pain and confusion lining her eyes. She drifted back
again into time.
Lalita their bundle of joy, those little eyes
shining like emeralds in the dark, the tiny palms, bald head with few whiffs of
hair, nose just like Pattabi’s, all seven pounds of her, was blessed to them after
two years of their shifting to Delhi. An
inverted placenta and few other complications ensured that the child birth
could not customarily happen in Madras. ‘Conveyor Belt Caesarians’ were yet
rare in those days, hence Kuchalambal managed to deliver normally after twelve hours
of labor.
From
birth, Lalita took after her father. The gait, the features, the confidence,
and the smile so charming that would put a snake charmer out of business. If she
managed to inherit something from her mother, it was the poise, the beauty and
the tolerance of the young Kuchalambal.
She
blossomed, like a lotus upon a lake serene. She assimilated and radiated beauty
around her, and made even the drabbest settings shine like a royal portrait. The
back ground seemed to diminish on its own, as her radiance took up the frame.
Her soft voice would ease into the audience, hardly intruding into the harmony
of the settings, a lullaby for the deprived soul. When people described here as
a ‘Mahalakshmi’ it hardly sounded clichéd. She embodied the multiple virtues of
knowledge, wisdom, fortune, generosity & courage. Her grandmother started
calling her ‘Maha’ in love and reverence to this beauty. As a baby she would
have won any ‘Baby Show’ hands down, had she participated. ‘Dhristi’ the fear
of the evil omen, was a big deterrent to such participation, in those days.
Right
from her ‘Hammock’ (Tooli, a snug hammock strung from the roof so as to
encompass the infant in a tight & warm embrace) days she was the princess
of the household. If her parents treated her like one, the neighbors were not
far behind. She used to traverse the neighborhood in the arms of various
admirers. People found her so cute that she was the star attraction at each
home, endearing each one of them with her smiles & child full banter, during
her early days of speech, even the automobile trader living in the far end of
the street, managed to teach her few Punjabi words. She had an unparalleled
love for food the varieties of food that she had consumed as a child in the
various households where she managed to spend the afternoon, did perhaps help. If
the morning started with the customary pieces of ‘IDDLY’ shared from her father’s
plate, dotingly fed by Pattabi, the next few courses of her intake would vary from
a Parantha at the Sukvinder’s place to Khichdi at the Arora’s, Custard at the
Rao’s to finally culminate with her tantrums at home during lunch. ‘Pakki’ (Oh
the hungry one) used to scream Kuchalambal, why do u have to go out and eat so
much! She would exclaim; frustrated by the baby’s resistance to food during
lunch.
If
the child was a doll during infancy, she was a little princes at school. Her
talents made sure that she was one. Not one competition went by without her
participation, or any activity that she was not member of. Singing, classical
dance, dramatics, talent searches, debates, leading the morning prayers at
school, presenting the bouquet to the chief guest at school functions, her
popularity in the ‘DTEA’, her school soared. The Principal came to recognize the couple as lalita’s
parents as did numerous families around the area.
She
was two when the family shifted to R.K.Puram from Karol Bagh, they would spend
more than 25 years in that two bedroom government housing apartment. Years
which would mould their future in more ways than they could comprehend. Perhaps
the seeds of their destiny were already sown when the couple first moved to
Delhi.
The
day they moved in they found their neighbor lined up in the landing during a
silent assessment of the new arrivals. Sukhvinder Singh a ‘Sikh’ lived with his
family in the ‘house’ opposite. They shared a staircase and a landing with
their neighbor, so any movement in the area would be open for scrutiny to both
families. Sukvinder’s wife Preeto holding their four year old son in her lap
watched the incoming inventory as the luggage moved in. Gurmeet the four year old
whose long tresses, were knotted up on top of his head, covered with a small
cloth, watching the movements with curiosity.
R.K.Puram,
a quaint little housing locality, occupied by bureaucrats, some higher up in
the rungs of the government machinery and some lower down. But to each of them,
the remunerations of office sufficient just to sustain the day to day costs of
living. One could, without visiting any house list out the goods which could be
found within. Old cane woven sofas, adorned with cushions and hand knitted
laces, and in some houses bare sofas too. Cots made of bamboo frames called
charpoys, with coir ropes knitted between the frames as a base, these needed
you to put on a cotton mattress before one actually sat on them or risk the posterior
being riddled with pressure marks of the
rope. Short little stools made of coir again, for parking oneself in the fore yard
or the back yard, Cotton stuffed quilts to protect against the cold winter nights,
the number of charpoys and quilts restricted to the numbers in the family, spare
ones for guests were a luxury. Large trunks to store those quilts during the
summer months, a sewing machine for the lady of the house to mend the clothes
in, (the more versatile of them would stitch their own clothes in them, thereby
saving precious tailoring costs).
Television
sets, refrigerators & telephones made their appearances only in the
seventies and having these luxuries put such households’ way up there in the
pecking order. Moreover these fortunate people really needed to have philanthropic
side to them, for letting their neighbors
pop in for a phone call at odd hours, or having to summon someone from three
houses down the line to attend to a incoming call, for lending ice cubes to the
lady next door, and provide cold water from the fridge, for the infinite time,
to the kid standing at the door, of having the benevolence of sharing the
evening TV program with eighteen other people from the neighborhood, the count,
of course, could swell in case one of the neighbors had taken to liberty to bring
along his own guests too, to watch the Sunday movie. Of having to wait till the
viewers shuffle out, before having their dinner, and sometimes few guest would
hang on with sadistic pleasure, wanting to watch even the drabbest of programs like
the daily news till the end.
To
sum up life was bare, community living with things shared, cups of sugar &
oil being exchanged between neighbors, women assembled in the courtyards, knitting
away to glory, sharing the latest patterns of knitting learnt from the sister-in-law,
extracting peas from its pods, and some grating carrots. A stray vendor of blankets or lingerie, finding
a ready market, among the assembled women folk. Children playing street
cricket, men away at work, turning up for lunch and a quick siesta, before
ambling back to work.
Such
were the charms of the place that the couple moved in to. The Sukvinders would
have a long standing relation with the Pattabi’s. Fate would have more than its
share of surprises for both the families. When the world dissolves in a melting
pot, distances are forgotten, cultures intermingle, and values need to be redefined.
The Pattabi’s were at that threshold of time when such rewriting had to be
done, no doubt there were some costs to be borne, some real some illusionary. Time extracts its price from one and all, and
it did from the Pattabi’s too. Who gained; who lost, is a moot question, for
there cannot be questions asked of ‘Fate’.
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