My story series 17
Title:
Smoke
Odia
Title: Dhuan
Author: Sarojini Sahoo
Oria
to English Translation: Ipsita Sarangi
English
Editing: Paul J. McKenna
Words:
about 5,900
This story originally
written in Odia in 2001.This story
explains something about our Judicial system.
It seemed as if the whole city
had become mad, obsessed with cannabis. No one ate rice anymore, only cannabis.
Anyone coming to this new city carried
in their suitcase cannabis instead of clothes and papers. The person going out of this city also
secretly kept some cannabis in his/her suitcase along with his/her basic
toiletries and other things.
And that was not all. Instead of growing cabbage, peas, spinach, or
flower plants like rose or dahlia in the garden, people grew cannabis instead. College-going guys took pen and pipe together
to college. While going to the market
with vegetables, rice, egg, bread or milk in the morning, vendors would drop by
at the Hanuman temple to seek blessings. A bearded old man distributed prasad of
sugar candy from a plate and then from under it, cannabis.
Maybe women and children had been spared from the impact of cannabis as no
woman had ever been arrested...yet. But
a few had been accused of secreting it under their burqas
While investigating a theft, the police would discover the reason; not
money or riches, but cannabis. If there
was a murder in the city, the police would claim to the media the cause behind
the murder was cannabis and they always were going to crack the racket
soon.
Once, sensational news spread from the marketplace to the nooks and
crannies of every house. Some politician
or a reporter falsely spread a rumour that a cannabis plant the height of an
average man was in the bungalow of the collector himself. The police kept calling the bungalow to know
the truth. Reporters of dailies and weeklies and television stations, vigilance
officers, some tout politicians, and a few NGOs rushed to the spot to verify
the incident as well, but all they were able to find was a cement platform
instead of cannabis plant.
The matter did not end there. A
rustic reporter came panting on his cycle and reported hemp plant saplings had
sprouted on the highway for about two kilometers where there previously had
been absolutely nothing but grass.
All this was a matter for police records and newspapers. Going through the police records or media
reports would never create a good impression of the city. But a variety of news items about the city
were previously published in the newspapers. For example, police did not only record theft,
criminal or looting cases. They
sometimes nabbed an absconding lover and would make him marry the lover from
whom he had absconded right on the premises of the police station itself. The papers also published items like a woman
giving birth to three girls at a time or the demand of the farmers before the
Chief Minister for the declaration of ‘drought affected areas.’ But no one really knew when and how cannabis
had stealthily made its way into this city; it hadn’t been reported.
Life seemed utterly insecure in the city. There was ever-present fear -- fear if one had
to go to the station to catch a mid-night train, if the patrolling police
stopped someone on suspicion, it would be impossible to catch the train; fear
to stop by a betel shop for an hour to read newspaper, the police might become
suspicious; fear of going to second show cinema; fear of spending more time than
normal at a friend’s house. Fear had
made life of the city dwellers intolerable.
Let us suppose there was no other such city in the world and this one was
only a fictitious city. Let us further
suppose in the court of the Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate (SDJM) of this
fictitious city, a trial in the matter of a hawker was taking place. Since the entire city was hazy with the smoke
of cannabis, why would the case involve anything else other than
cannabis?
The case could have been settled much earlier if it had not been for a
headstrong, obstinate, idealistic, and self-oblivious man by the name of Anurag
Kumar. He was of the village of Hakimpur
from the district of Munger in the state of Bihar. By profession he was a doctor. His obsession was reading newspapers from their
first to last page. His dislike was a conjugal
household. His belief was good
times would someday come. His sorrow was
no one understood him. And his dreams?
Perhaps he never had any. Our story is about this Anurag Kumar and how
he single-handedly stopped the cogs of justice from proceeding.
#####################
As Anurag reached the court, the government lawyer took him into a
corner and questioned him, “Do you remember, doctor, what you have to say in court
when you testify? You will say that the
hawker was already intoxicated with cannabis when he was brought to the
hospital. Then you can speak all that
you know about the injury.”
Anurag remained silent for a while. He was thinking about the white
shirt and the black overcoat the man had put on, like a cover on a book. He thought the man who had selected such a
uniform for the judiciary must have done so with noblest of intentions. Black symbolized all evils like rape, murder,
theft, abduction, cheating, injustice; white symbolized the dazzling truth that
had to be elicited from all this. But
this government lawyer perhaps didn’t know anything about this. He had taken it for granted he would look like
a lawyer in a white shirt and black coat and had unhesitatingly been making
Anurag’s mouth do his dirty work, much like a ventriloquist.
Anurag protested, “No. As far as I remember, the man was never
intoxicated. Why should I tell a lie?”
“What did you have for lunch yesterday,” questioned the advocate
meaningfully.
“Whatever the cook of the Guest House had served.”
“Yes, of course, but what did you eat?”
“But what relation does that have with this case?” Anurag countered with an obvious annoyance in
his voice. “I don’t remember.”
“That’s it!” The advocate beamed as if he had found the key to his
problem. “I want to say the same thing. You cannot remember what you had taken for
lunch yesterday so how can you remember an incident of a year ago, that you say
so emphatically that the man had not taken cannabis? Whether he took it or not is not the matter
if you speak so where is the problem?”
The two fell into an argument regarding the proposed testimony. And then, the irritated lawyer said, “Okay,
speak whatever you like.”
When Anurag knew a few days earlier that the hearing date was
approaching, he had once again looked through the file of this medico-legal
case:
Roadside injury patient; Name: Purna Chandra Mallick; Father’s Name: Maheswar
Mallick; Matia Sahi, Adarsh Nagar; Dist: Panagarh; Injury: below the left ear,
left-side temple, right-hand wrist; Weapon: Blunt Weapon, came with the
police at 1840.
Anurag would be happy whenever there was a hearing at the court because
it meant he wouldn’t have to sit in the outpatient clinic that day and was free
from his routine life. As it was, there
was such a heavy rush of patients in the outpatient in the rainy season, one
hardly found time even to go for a cup of tea.
One had to bear the pallid complexion of the patients, their howls in
pain, their apprehension of some incurable disease, and strange and hyperbolic
description of the symptoms of their disease. Sometimes Anurag felt amused when patients
could not feel or tell where the pain was; whether it was in the feet, or in
the knees, or in the belly, or in the chest.
Some female patients came so heavily dressed up Anurag would wonder
whether they had come to a hospital or a cinema hall. From bangles to
nail polish, everything would be matching; they would present themselves with
deep-coloured lipstick, shampooed hair, and eye makeup. They spread such a smile as if they were some
old acquaintance. Anurag suspected,
though, freedom for these poor ladies was only to this extent! The hospital was
such a place, nobody would forbid them from visiting it, and they could enjoy
their freedom to the core of their heart...at someone else’s expense.
Miss Kuisku, the schizophrenic lady doctor sitting by Anurag mostly
dozed off in the chair under the influence of sleeping pills (or possibly
cannabis) leaving Anurag to face these beautiful women by himself. When asked about their problem, one would say
sweet pain in the bosom; another would complain of lack of sound sleep at
night.
Pain, after all, was pain but what was this sweet pain about which they
spoke? No such pain is known in medical
terminology! Mostly Anurag would refer such patients to his colleague Dr.
Purhohit. But when in the right mood, he would joke with them and then
prescribe some Gelusil antacid tablets.
Each day was the same: jugglery with names of the same medicines like
playing with coins on a carom board. You had to move through Sinarest,
Paracetamol, Dysmen, Digene, or Chloroquin.
It appeared Dr. Butia, a quack, was happier than Anurag. At least,
he could provide some solace to people in exchange for their money.
People say his was a very good hand as he could cure all diseases from TB to
Cancer. Some people even went away from Anurag to the quack, Dr.
Butia. But he never felt sorry or humiliated. His sorrow was
somewhere else. Who cares for MBBS these days? He wanted to soar
higher and higher and therefore read The Times of India in great
detail. He would even underline some of
the vital points. Sometimes he applied to go away to some very distant
place. But in these seven years he had not been able to rise beyond
those Chloroquin and Paracetamols. At least a court hearing gave him his
much sought-after freedom from this killing monotony and disgust which he
perceived as his job.
Anurag had already decided on his way back from court, he would stop at
the L’Oreal Bar. It had been a long time since he visited there; the last
time was when Paritosh Majumdar had left for Kolkata. Normally, he always
returned straight home from hospital. And laying on the bed of his bare
room, he again read the stale newspapers. Switching over to different
channels on TV, he heard the same news from different anchors. Sometimes
when he visited his neighbours, he either got bored or in turn, he bored them
because the concept of happiness and misery for those family people was
different. The routine of their lives was altogether different than Anurag’s.
After all, who had the leisure to sit in the drawing room for hours on end and
bear such a fellow like Anurag?
Anurag had also, at some time, tried to set up his household. He bought utensils, rice, dal, turmeric, and ghee
and shelved them in the kitchen. Of course, he used to take his meals in
the guest house, but he had to cook something for the boy. The boy was poor lad
who Anarug had taken in to help him with the domestic chores and ease his
loneliness. Anurag really didn’t know
how to cook so he would boil rice, dal, and vegetables all together and then
pouring some ghee over the mixture, he would keep it for the boy, cautioning
him to go to school on time. Anurag had
to go to hospital at eight in the morning and the boy had to be in school by
ten. The only work the boy had to do was
sweep the house twice daily but he would often wash clothes for Anurag and buy
him betel from a particular shop sometimes twice a day.
But the boy couldn’t do even this much properly. At first, Anurag freed him from washing
clothes. He did not know whether the boy
swept the house or not and was not bothered about it either. He only wanted the
boy to read, at least sit with the books. But in a few months, the boy had tired of his
duties to Anurag and vanished.
Anurag had searched for the boy for some time but was not able to find
him. Once a police officer came to the
hospital regarding a medico-legal case. In
the course of conversation Anurag brought up the subject of the boy. The police officer was quite an experienced
man and questioned Anurag, “Where had you brought the boy from?”
“Where would I? Dying of hunger
the boy had run away from the Ganjam area to a relative uncle of his. His
uncle couldn’t provide him a square meal. The cook of the guest house had brought the
boy to me. But there is no work to be
done in my house and as such, the boy didn’t know anything. I got him admitted in the sixth class in a
school.”
The police officer then smiled at Anurag and asked, “But didn’t the boy
steal anything from you?”
“No. Everything is Okay. Besides, what is there in my house worth
stealing?”
“At least, the boy could get something to eat. What problem was there that he ran away? Did you beat him?”
Yes, I had slapped him. I was
furious with him one day. I had come home early, canceling all other programmes
to teach him English. I found him listening to his iPod. When I asked how
he was able to get an iPod, I discovered he had been cheating me. You see, I
always buy costly betel from Shiva’s shop but he buys me cheaper betel from
another shop and keep the rest of money for himself. And from this money,
he was able to buy the iPod. So
instead of reading like I had asked him to, he would listen to his iPod instead.
And he had also cheated me. I became
furious and boxed the boy’s ears heavily but I didn’t know the boy would run
away because of this.”
The police officer gave out a laugh at his words and said, “Don’t
worry. He wouldn’t have committed suicide. Such
children do not commit suicide. That scoundrel would have reached
somebody else’s house by now and be playing the same games. If you lodge
an F.I.R. complaint, you’ll be trapped in a child labour case for a long time
to come. Leave it. Forget all about that.”
That police officer had left a long time ago; now there was someone new
and Anurag was not that much acquainted with this new police person. The
incident regarding the hawker had happened during the watch of this new
officer. Anurag had completely forgotten the face of the hawker whom he
had treated a year ago until he saw him in court; now he was able to recollect
more details as to the appearance of the hawker.
The government lawyer examined Anurag in front of the judge as to when
he had seen this lanky, moderately tall, dark-skinned young man. Anurag
answered he was on emergency duty that day. After the OPD (outpatient clinic)
had been closed, the police brought this young man in the evening.
Q What was the exact time the
defendant was brought into the clinic?
A I don’t remember; maybe about
6:45 p.m.
Q What did you see?
A The young man had injuries
below his left ear and on the left temple, and his right hand wrist had some
scratches. Someone might have hit him with a stick, not with a knife. The
cut was not so deep, after all.
Q Did the young man appear
intoxicated when he came to the hospital?
A No, not at all.
Q But the police record says
that he had allegedly taken cannabis.
A No. To the best of my
recollection he was not intoxicated at all.
Q How do you know that?
A I am a doctor. Can’t I know
if a man is intoxicated or not?
Anurag was a little irritated. He then resumed
A His behavior was perfectly
normal. There was no smell of cannabis either from his mouth or on his hands.
Besides, his eyes were also quite normal.
Q How can you speak that with
so much confidence? Do you have any record about it?
A Yes, it may be there in the
hospital register. I don’t have one with me right now.
The lawyer appeared agitated. He already had apprehensions all his
persuasion might be in vain! Perhaps he
did not want to drag the case any further. Perhaps the hawker would have
been proven guilty with Anurag’s statement and his punishment would have been
pronounced the same day or within a few days. But that never happened for the judge
adjourned the trial until a later date and ordered Anurag to bring the register
at the next hearing.
While Anurag was looking for a rickshaw outside the court, a middle-aged
man came up to him and bowed. Anurag
learnt he was the elder brother of the hawker who was on trial. He told Anurag he had brought his unemployed,
graduate brother from the village to this city to enable him eke out a
living. The older brother even arranged
ten thousand rupees for the younger brother to invest in a business. The hawker purchased a stock of attractive
stationary items in Raipur and the younger brother would sell them from door to
door. He could mesmerize the ladies with
his pleasing manners and was beginning to earn handsomely. He said he even had plans to open his own shop
in a year or two.
After narrating everything in detail, the elder brother pleaded quite
helplessly with Anurag for mercy. “Please,
save my brother, sir. You can save him
if you please. I am a poor man. How much do I earn from working in the shop of
Mani Seth that I can provide for my family and retain a lawyer as well?”
“Don’t worry. I’ll see to it,”
Anurag consoled him, got into the rickshaw, and sped off. He had been feeling an acute headache for
quite some time now. The L’oreal Bar
passed before his eyes but he didn’t feel a desire to pause there today. ‘When will that Paritosh Majumdar return from
Kolkata anyway?’ he wondered. He had thought of spending the day in
luxury, but in fact, nothing of that sort happened; he returned home
quietly.
And a tussle had started in his ignorance since that day. The police had not taken the case as lightly
as Anurag had expected. An elderly man
told Anurag this was nothing. The police
had filed the case capriciously only to meet their target numbers for the
month; they had to give explanations to their authority if they could not reach
their target goals.
The police officer sent for Anurag in the evening. Anurag planned to go for a drink but when the
officer contacted him, he put the bottle aside and went to the police station
instead.
The officer smiled at him, welcoming him, “Please come in, doctor. You look too exhausted,” and ordered the peon
to bring tea which came almost immediately, as if it had already been prepared.
Then the officer continued, “Please
don’t think that I have sent for you in connection with any official matter,
doctor. Mmm. You cannot imagine how complicated the times
are now. I wish to leave this job and go away but cannot because my living
depends on it. Whether day or night, you
have always to be alert. God has given me
only two eyes but you have to work with ten. Yet no one understands our problems.
Just look at our locality. People
say the place was quite peaceful at one time but I have observed many things that
go on here secretively, although everything seems placid on the surface. You will be surprised to know that the whole
city has become a haven for cannabis. It’s
not easy to discern one’s motive. Remember
that report in the newspapers a few days ago about the murder of a U.P. school
teacher in a cashew plantation? Do you
know the reason? He was a master
marijuana supplier. I’m telling you about
the report of a week ago. You haven’t
seen it perhaps?”
“No, I haven’t. I don’t speak Oriya,” replied Anurag.
“Oh yes, I had forgotten that. But
don’t take that hawker so lightly. You
may be feeling pity at his innocent appearance. You are too young and therefore have an
abundance of emotionality. Besides
young blood, it must be fun to argue with the lawyer.”
Anurag could not understand whether the police officer was trying to
persuade him or was ridiculing him or both. Too young? He was now almost thirty-five, already halfway
through his life on this earth.
“Oh, your tea is getting cold, doctor. You should drink it,” the police officer told
him in a gentle manner.
“Sorry, I don’t take tea.”
At that point, both men said nothing more; they both sat silently.
After some time had passed, Anurag got up to leave. He asked the officer if he had anything more
about which to talk.
“No, nothing,” the officer replied. “Perhaps the next hearing date is the day
after. If you come here, we’ll go
together. What do you say?”
“I’ll try,” Anurag said noncommittally as he exited the room. He went straight to the Guest House instead of
his quarters. It had been a long time
since Paritosh Majumdar went to Kolkata. When would he return?
When Anurag was busy with some patients the next day, his supervisor called
him into his chamber. “The GM has sent
for you. I know not for what. Perhaps
his driver has come with the jeep or else you can take an ambulance.”
Anurag thought for a moment; was it an order or a request? An unpleasant situation involving him had
already happened earlier. It had become
a subject of discussion among his staff. The incident had happened only a month ago.
When he was absorbed among patients one day, the driver of the GM had
come and asked him to come along.
“Where?” Anurag questioned.
“Memsaab is ill. Just see her.”
Without caring for the driver, he continued to examine patient after
patient. The driver became impatient and said, “Please
come along now.”
“I cannot leave the OPD now. Go
and tell your Memsaab that if she is ill, she may come here,” Anurag stated.
God knows how much colour the driver had added when he reported this to
the GM that he immediately threatened the higher officer. And the higher officer’s threat to Anurag
proved futile. A stubbornness took over
Anurag. He wanted to rage before his
authority and imagined saying, ‘You need promotion, posting in favourable
places, need money from training and purchase - so you may fawn him but I need
none of these. I am prepared to go
anywhere I am sent. Am I in luxury here that I may lose elsewhere? You may not sanction my leave, if you don’t
want to.’
But instead, he only wondered why the GM had sent for him again now? Hadn’t he forgotten the incident? With such an attitude, Anurag left the crowd
of patients. The patients stared at each
other seeing the doctor go away.
When he came out of the GM’s office, Anurag was frowning. The GM was an aged man. His hair had
turned white with experience. He tried
to persuade Anurag to change is approach towards the hawker incident and
questioned Anurag, “That hawker is no relation of yours. It should matter nothing to you whether he is
punished or not. Why do you
unnecessarily get into this imbroglio? Think
of your career. What will you get from
such childishness?”
Anurag felt annoyed at this suggestion but tried to control his emotions
as he began to speak. “Everything can’t
be assessed in terms of gain or loss, sir. Besides, that hawker is not an
industry that his life should be looked upon with a concern for gain or loss. Will it be all right if all of us turn
traders?”
“That’s not the point.” The tone
of the GM was getting harsh. But what
was it in the attitude of Anurag which made GM soften in his tone when his eyes
met Anurag’s?
“Look, it isn’t not wise to upset a crocodile while residing in the same
water. We always have to deal with the
police. There are several problems in
the company at different times. If we do
not cooperate with the police today, they will not help us in our times of need.
The SP (Superintendent of Police) has telephoned today.
I have almost assured him…” Then
the GM gave a few instances from his experience to show that one gets crushed
to pieces like glass unless one adopts himself to changing circumstances.
Anurag could not understand why so many people were so much worried
about such trivial a matter, as if the hawker was an Abhimanyu1
besieged by a hostile army and had no way to escape!
Anurag attended court for the next the hearing. He had borne these past days in much pain. He could not sleep; could not reach the Guest
House in time for his meals.
The most surprising thing was he didn’t betray any emotion at the sight
of Nikita. He showed no signs there had
never been anything between them and to Anurag, there hadn’t been. No sorrow, no regret; neither hatred nor love.
Nothing. Nikita spoke of happiness now. She had come with her husband. As she caught sight of Anurag, she bowed. Does a beloved bow to her lover? Did he love her? The girl used to visit his house with a
variety of food items for him; they were neighbors. People thought there was something going on
between the two. But Nikita was a Brahmin
and he was a Harijan. He himself did not
know if he had any love for the girl. Paritosh
Majumdar had once smiled very mysteriously and asked, “How is it going?” People would make up foul stories about them
and gossip. At one point, Anurag noticed
a big lock hanging on her door. It
remained locked for almost fifteen days. And when the house opened, he learnt the girl
had already married a computer engineer working in the Middle East. Then, he had felt an empty space in his bosom.
Sometimes it grew and then diminished. And one day, he felt it no more. Was this empty space he felt love?
Many thought Anurag lived a haphazard life only because he had been
jilted in love. He considered everything
in an eccentric manner; never practical. And perhaps he did not marry because of this. Waiting for him, his younger brother got
married in the end.
And this Nikita, who people believe had inflicted an insufferably deep
wound on Anurag, now asked him, “I heard, you have been trapped in some
complication? Papa was mentioning
it to Joshi Uncle.”
Anurag only smiled in reply. He
had, then, become such a marked personality in the meantime. Then he thought, ‘why didn’t anyone think
about that man who had borrowed money for the business of his brother? And that young man’s dream of rising to become
an industrialist from a hawker?’
The Government lawyer looked beaming in the court as if he had traced
out a service error in the register. The
proper document having been produced, the exam continued.
Q Please tell me one thing
doctor. How come that the name, address, age and sex of this particular person
has been recorded in the register when no such details about any other patient
is mentioned?
A Normally, detailed
information about patients coming to OPD is not mentioned in the register. But since this is a medico–legal case, the information
had to be recorded.
Q But there are two different
handwritings in the register? The names
of all other patients are in one handwriting but the particulars of this man,
it is clear, have been written by another, isn’t that true?
A I’ve said from the beginning
that the case was brought after OPD had closed for the day. So someone else might have written it at that
time.
Q But is there any proof that
you haven’t written it?
A What a strange thing! Would
I be benefited by doing so?
Anurag was quite irritated at this point.
Q That you only would know. But there are two different handwritings in
the register. You cannot refute that, is
that correct?
A There are two clerks who
handle OPD records. They would be in a
better position to testify about that.
The case remained unresolved that day. Anurag was in a quandary as to what to do. Life now seemed embarrassing to Anurag. He had never been to a court earlier in
matters relating to his paternal property, or any youthful hassle, or for any
personal reason. But he had now been so
entrapped in a maze out of which he could not find his way. He was very tired and thought of returning
home and sleeping the whole night undisturbed. But when he arrived, he saw the motorcycle of
Paritosh Majumdar in front of his house. A surge of delight ran through his spine. Had Paritosh actually returned from Kolkata? Paritosh did not ask him anything about
Anurag’s day. Instead, he just kick-started
the motorcycle, Anurag hopped on, and they vanished.
By the time of the next court hearing, Anurag had learnt the rest of the
story from the OPD clerks. The clerk who
had mentioned the particulars about the hawker in the register had become so
entangled in the interrogation by the lawyer that he had no other way than to
succumb to defeat.
An excerpt of the exam went like this:
Q Is this different handwriting yours?”
A Yes.
Q Then you had not left the OPD even after it was closed?
A No. I just reached there at that time.
Q Where were you the whole
day? Why isn’t the name of any other patient of that day written in your
handwriting?
Q Where were you the whole
day?
A I was on leave that
day.
Q You say that you were on
leave. But how did you work when you were on leave?
A As I was ill, I had come in
the evening to take an injection and that case was brought in at that time. Since the other clerk had already left,
someone asked me to write his particulars in the register.
How could the clerk answer anymore? The lawyer convinced the judge the particulars
had been written in later deliberately to save the hawker. He also convinced the judge not only the
hawker but many other people might be involved in this business of
marijuana.
Anurag’s turn came the day after the examination of the clerk. As soon as Anurag reached court, the lawyer
took him to a corner and tried to persuade him. “Why are you so obstinate,
doctor? This is surely not the
only case in your life. Hundreds of
cases have come and hundreds more will come too. Who will you fight for? If the police want the hawker punished, he
should be punished. They have to make
their numbers you know. Do you know you’re a person of interest now too? At any moment, the police may build a case
against you, implicating you in the trading of cannabis because you didn’t help
them out. What will you do then? What will happen to your career and life? You should think about it.”
Anurag thought about this and as he approached the witness box, he felt
that all this was all so meaningless; all the chatter, all the questions, all
the process, all the production. Any
hope of justice had been lost in the rush of dates and his efforts to do right
and good were totally worthless. A book
wrapped in a piece of red cloth was put before him. He did not know whether there was The Gita beneath the piece of
cloth or not. Still he took an oath,
without believing, to speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth. But the oath was now meaningless.
Everything seemed meaningless to him – The Gita, his oath, and the farce of
searching for the truth, whatever that was.
‘Why have we really come here, my lord?’ he wanted to speak aloud but
words would not come out. He continued
his inner testimony only he was the prosecutor asking questions of himself. ‘Why such a farce with life, society and
civilization? We are all in a jungle, my
lord, from the beginning of the Universe till our doom. From the first day of sunrise to the last
sunset, we are all in the darkness of the jungle. Where is the light, My Lord?’
He remained on the stand, deep in his own examination and oblivious to
the world around him. He wanted to speak but could not. Then he cast a look at the accused man sitting
at the defendant’s table. He continued his
inner questioning: ‘Was this the same man the police had arrested a year ago? Whom had the police really brought then? Did anything really happen a year ago?’ Suddenly, he began to mistrust himself. How is his memory getting so weak now? What was happening to him?
It seemed to Anurag the entire place around him had been suffused with
smoke, smoke of sweet fragrance. Suddenly
he recognized the fragrance. He was
remotely familiar with this sweet fragrance. It had once been a part of his earlier life. It all came back now as did the effects. But where did so much smoke come from now not
of incense, but of a different fragrance? “What is the name of this fragrance, My Lord?”
he asked aloud.
A misty figure emerged out of the smoke and asked him humbly: “Your
name? Your father’s name? Your occupation?” But no words came out of Anurag. The smoke suffocated him! He tried to speak but coughed instead and his
throat burned. The examination continued.
Q Do you recognize the man at
defendant’s table? (Smoke was spreading everywhere around. Where was the lawyer? Where was the accused? Where was the judge?
Where was Paritosh? Why wasn’t Paritosh here?)
Words this time emanated from his throat but with much difficulty.
A I can’t recall anything, my
lord. So many people come to the
hospital. Can one really remember what
happened a year ago let alone last week?
The entire room had been suffused with smoke; smoke of a pleasant
fragrance. Emerging out of that smoke
someone patted his back and said, “Bravo! Well said, Anurag. You’ve
done your civic duty!”
At that point, Anurag awoke to find Paritosh standing beside him with
his hand on Anurag’s back. Paritosh was
always beside him, always there for him. “Let’s go to the pub, Paritosh,” Anurag suggested. “I need to clear my head.” And the two of them got on Paritosh’s
motorcycle and sped away.
Note:
1Abhimanyu: Son of
Subhadra and Arjuna, deceitfully killed by Kaurava warriors in the Mahabharat
war.
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