Distress
By Pritpal Singh Bindra [bindra@rogers.com]
[www.bindra.net]
(Please do refer to the special offer by the
author at the end)
Distress
The peon opened
the door, and let Bhupinder Singh enter the
office. He saw
her sitting behind the large desk. The tables of
the office superintendents'
were normally cluttered with files; Bhupinder had
seen at various places,
but, unusually, her desk was devoid of any
unnecessary papers. His would-be
boss must be very proficient, he thought. He
looked around but there was no
one else there.
"Please, May I see the Superintendent?"
he asked.
"Well?"
"I want to report myself on duty to HIM. I
have been selected for the post
of Deputy Superintendent by the Services
Selection Board."
She smiled. It
was hard for a male chauvinist to digest that a
female could
run an office too. Even her rise to that position
had not been all smooth
sailing. She had just passed her examination for
the degree of Bachelor of
Science, when she faced the calamity of her
parents death; they were
involved in a road accident. Her father was a
Forest Officer. He was on a
tour of duty round the hills to mark the trees.
As the tour was going to
last for a fortnight, he had taken his wife with
him. The driver of the
Jeep, in trying to save a collision with an on
coming bus, swerved towards
the valley. Within a second the Jeep was a
thousand feet down in the gorge.
The driver and her mother died instantly.
Her father was
barely breathing when he was brought to P.G.I.
Hospital in
Chandigarh. He could only manage to survive till
he took two solemn promises
from his daughter. Her younger sister was only
eleven, and he made her to
swear that she would look after the kid sister
just like parents, and would
not deprive her of education or any other needs.
On compassionate grounds
she was offered a job of a clerk in the Forest
Office at Chandigarh. She
could not refuse; she had to run the household
now. She was brilliant. She
cleared the departmental examination, and within
one year she was Upper
Division Clerk. Her next promotion, as one of the
Deputy Superintendents,
was not difficult either. She was on the top of
the Seniority List when the
Superintendent was nearing his retirement. The
male dominated office clique
manipulated the whole set up, and she was
flabbergasted to learn that there
was no chance of her getting the job. She wrote
numerous letters to the
higher authorities, but to no avail. But luck was
in her favour. The
Ministry changed, and the new Minister appointed
to take over the Forest
Department was a woman. Daring as she was, she,
straight way, barged into
the Minister's residence, and narrated her story.
Not only did she get the
job, she became a very close friend of the
Minister. The retiring
Superintendent had refused to vacate the three
bedroom Government bungalow
on the basis that his sons were studying in the
University there. One call
from the Ministry, and he was gone.
The woman
behind the desk asked, "So you think that a
woman cannot be a...."
He was quick to
realize his mistake. "I am sorry Madam...
I... I... No body
told me.... The name plate on the door said
`R.K.Singh'," and he advanced
his hand to give over an envelope containing the
letter of appointment.
"I am R.K.Singh, Roopinder Kaur Singh. My
husband, emphatically, prohibited
the use of Caste as surname, and pressed me to
use Singh after my name;
Singh, the lion, as you know, designated to all
male Sikhs as their
surname."
She pushed back
the envelope, took out a file from the tray, and
said,
"Don't worry, I already have a copy here.
Have a seat."
He obeyed.
She had read
through his file in the morning. He was a
brilliant man.
Immediately after getting his B.A. in Commerce he
had entered the
competition, and landed himself a job as Upper
Division Clerk. Within six
months he cleared two other departmental
examinations, and, here, he was
reporting as Deputy Superintendent.
She glanved at
the framed photograph of her family placed at the
edge of the
table. `That little girl in the picture, Rani, my
kid sister,' she thought,
`was not less intelligent either; she had first
class first in her B.Sc.
Silly girl, I wanted her to continue in the
University, may be up to Ph.D.
but she did not want to be a burden on her older
sister for too long....
Whatever she may say I am going to find a man for
her as soon as she
completes her teacher's training.'
Rani was
studying for her B.Ed. in Sidhwan Teachers'
Training College.
Normally parents had to `donate' thousands of
Rupees to get their children
into professional institutions the Minister of
Forests' one telephone call
had secured a seat for Roop's sister without any
payment.
She again
prowled through a couple of pages. `Five foot
eleven, not a bad
height,' she again rolled into the mental
soliloquy, `but my sister is not
short either, she is not under five foot eight.
They might make a striking
couple.'
Bhupinder had
his eyes on the floor; probably he was repenting
on his
misjudgment. She observed his face minutely, `His
complexion is a bit dark,
well, never mind, Rani is not as fair as I am
anyway.'
Bhupinder
looked up. He felt embarrassed by her constant
stare. He assumed
that she might have asked him something, and
said, "Yes Madam?"
"Oh, no,
nothing. I am sorry, my mind has flown far
away." She was
desperately looking for a match for her sister.
She wanted to arrange her
marriage, or at least betrothal as soon as she
was out of training college.
Whenever she came across a worthy young man, she
would start reflecting on
the possibility of a life companion for her
sister.
She hit the
bell to call the peon, "I am going to
introduce you to the
senior clerk. He will acquaint you with the
office routine, lead you to your
office, and hand over your working files."
The peon appeared. She asked him
to go and call Ram Lal, the senior clerk, and
again said to Bhupinder,
"Remember, don't be subdued by this man. He
is an old hand and may try to
over power you. Mind you, you are his
superior." She read through another
page and added, "Don't hesitate to introduce
the new practices and ideas you
have expressed in your resume."
And within four
weeks Bhupinder earned the nickname of Mr.Idea,
from his
superiors, in appreciation, but spoken with a
sarcastic tone from the
subordinates.
Roop had seen
him a few times either going in or coming out of
the Kapil
Hotel. She wondered whether he lived there or was
just fond of hotel food.
One day she asked him where was he staying in
Chandigarh.
"Still in
Kapil Hotel. I can't seem to find any suitable
rooms. All I can
get is a single room and that too without many
amenities," he told his boss.
Her eyes sparkled spontaneously, "I am sorry
to hear this. Perhaps I may be
able to help you. See me before you leave the
office this evening."
The government
bungalow rented to her was quite spacious. Out of
the three
bedrooms only one was occupied by her sister, and
that too was lying unused
right now as she was staying in the Hostel at
Sidhwan. Since the parting of
her husband Roop had installed a bed and a
dresser for herself in the vast
rec room along with the sofa set, a T.V., and one
small office table. As it
was next to the kitchen, she felt this
arrangement most convenient.
"You can
take the master bedroom if you like," she
said after taking him
around to the house in the evening.
"I am
flattered," reluctance was visible on his
face, "but I cannot accept
charity." He knew she could not sublet.
"How can I
charge you rent? Under government regulations I
cannot let any
part of the property. But who lives here, is none
of the authorities'
business," she told him.
She
contemplated for a few minutes, "Well fair
enough, you can pay half the
bills, and half the maid's and washer-woman's
wages too." The maid attended
to the cooking and cleaning from Monday to
Saturday, whereas the
washer-woman came on Sundays only.
His excuse
would not work. He had no choice except to
express his real
apprehension, "But Madam...."
She cut in,
"I am not in the office. Please, no
`Madam'," she nearly
shouted.
"O.K. then
Di...."
"No Didi either. I am the big sister of only
one person in the world, that
is Rani. You just call me Roop."
"Roop Ji...."
"Well I don't mind `Ji'."
"Roop Ji,
I am scared. Two persons of the opposite sex,
with no relation and
not far apart in ages, living under one roof-
your neighbours, people will
talk."
"I have
had enough of people talking. Had I listened to
the gossips I would
have been on the road by now, and, my sister, she
would have been rotting in
some unscrupulous in-law's house."
That same
evening Bhupinder Singh was settling down in his
bedroom in Roop
Ji's bungalow. For working more than two hours,
cleaning and settling the
room, he felt very warm. He took his shirt off,
threw himself on the bed and
dozed off.
The bell rang,
and Roop went to open the door; the maid had come
back after
getting the chapattis made at a tandoor, the clay
oven. The master bedroom's
door was ajar. Roop, unintentionally, peeped in.
He was lying spread eagle
on the bed in his underwear. She felt
embarrassed, and jumped into her own
room after letting the maid in. She had never
seen her own husband even in
such a state.
Her husband had
fixed one Saturday of the month for `temporal
cohabitation'
with his wife, as he used to call sex. Even on
that day he never took his
Kurta, the loose shirt, off. One winter, during
the early days of her
married life, the night was very cold. Although,
it was not the scheduled
day, she jumped into her husband's bed and
snuggled under his quilt. He was
half asleep, probably having had a very tiring
day. Unusually, he did not
repel her. She slipped her figure through his
beard. He hoo-hooned but no
reaction. Very gently she opened the buttons of
his Kurta, and combed
through his thick chest hair.
"Roop,
please no," he just moaned.
After a few
minutes' wait, she slid her fingers very slowly
downward, passed
over the belly-button, and tried to push her hand
under the tight string
holding his breeches. He jumped out of the bed as
if a scorpion had bitten
him.
"Restrain
yourself, Roop. Four weeks are not over
yet," he shouted, and
started to deliver his standard discourse on
chastity; man suffered pain
with excessive revelries, he entailed diseases
with sexual pleasures, and
the pain which pleasure caused could never be
obliterated.
She felt remorse and moved over to her own bed.
The maid's call
roused her, "Bibi Ji, dinner is on the
table."
Roop would not
dare to go near the master bedroom's door, so, at
the top of
her voice, called, "Bhupinder Singh, please
come to the table. Dinner is
ready."
Sunday morning
she was still in her bed when the washer-woman
barged in her
room. She was laughing her head off.
Roop grabbed
her from her shoulders, jerked her violently, and
asked, "Come
on, tell me, what's so funny?"
"That
man...." She bent down holding her stomach;
excessive laughing was
giving her cramps, "That man, he... he is
under the shower in the bath
room."
"But why
are you laughing?"
"He... he is all naked."
"So what. Why did you go in there? Go and
finish the job in the court-yard
first."
She was right,
Roop thought, it was indeed unusual. Roop herself
had never
seen her husband taking a bath. He rigorously
adhered to the letter and
spirit of the tenets of his religious baptism;
after the baths he would wrap
`round a big towel, take one leg out of the wet
breeches, slip one side of
the dry breeches on that leg first, and then
repeat with the other leg. He
used to assert that it was irreligious to be,
entirely, out of breeches.
That whole
night, and all the nights during next couple of
months, she could
not help ruminating on what had been transpiring;
the thought of him
sleeping next door almost naked, and then having
a shower in the morning
with nothing on. Sometimes she enjoyed and amused
herself, and sometimes she
felt exasperation. During the day, in the office
too, when he came to see
her, she could not help her eyes penetrating his
clothes.
New Year's Eve
was the next Saturday. She had invited a few of
his
colleagues to lunch, along with their wives. She
had been following this
routine as set by her predecessor. The
predecessor had started this with a
view of cashing in the gifts but Roop had
positively banned such practice.
If an official brought any gift, she would turn
him out to go home to leave
it there.
Although her
sister used to organise the party, Roop did not
miss her
presence this year; Bhupinder had taken full
responsibility. Rather he had
done the job much more lavishly; chicken tikkas,
mutton, fish and lentil
curries, two vegetables, Nans, and at the end two
desserts followed by
ice-cream and cappuccino. Roop, herself, was
overwhelmed. She would not
accept his `no' for an answer, and he had to
accept reimbursement for every
penny he had spent.
The maid left
at six as she was to go to the Church for Mass
with her
family; she was a Christian. Roop and Bhupinder
had to clear the table, and
clean all the dishes. It was nearly eight in the
evening when everything was
normal in the house and the kitchen. Bhupinder
relaxed for about half an
hour, then, he got up, and dressed himself.
"Going
somewhere?" Roop asked when she saw him
dressed up nicely.
"I feel like going out this evening."
"I suppose you have got someone to go to in
Chandigarh now?"
"No, not really. I'll just go and relax in
the Kapil's Restaurant. I... I...
feel like...." He hesitated.
"Feel like, what?"
"Roop Ji, I hope you won't mind. I am
neither an alcoholic nor a drunkard. I
just feel like having a drink, just one or two
beers."
She laughed
loudly, "Why should I mind? My father used
to drink. Our house
was always full of various types of drinks;
father's clients were very
generous in offering him presents to get his
consent to cut a tree or two.
He confined himself to one or two drinks in the
evening but used to
distribute bottles among his staff and near
relatives. You go ahead. I
couldn't care less.... I don't mind if you bring
it home."
"Really?
As a matter of fact I won't feel relaxed in the
restaurant, all
cooped up in one chair in the corner all by
myself."
"Well, as I told you, I have no objection.
You may buy some, and come back
home if you like."
He looked at
his watch. He reckoned that the beer store would
still be open,
and he walked out.
Later, she heard the sound of a scooter. Quietly,
he opened the door, picked
up a glass from the kitchen table, and tiptoed
towards his room.
"Bhupinder,"
she said aloud turning her head towards the
passage, "why don't
you come, watch T.V. with me. Nice programmes are
broadcast today."
"But...."
"I told you, I don't mind. You can bring
your beer and glass here."
He settled down
on the office chair in the lounge with his glass
and beer
bottle on the table. They had been watching T.V.
for about half hour. In the
mean time he had gone to his bedroom, and fetched
remaining two litre
bottles of beer as well.
She broke the
ice, "Really beer does not smell so bad. In
spite of a number
of good whisky bottles at home, my father liked
to have the Roorie Brand,
the home distilled. He relished it but it smelled
awful, just like
methylated spirit."
"The smell
of alcohol is just like garlic or onions. If
every body has
eaten, no one feels it. But if only one person
has enjoyed, the others feel
revolted."
"You mean
if I have beer I won't smell you."
With a cunning smile he said, "Well, you can
experiment."
"I'll get drunk. I may start behaving funny,
may become rude as my father
used to."
"No, not
with beer, at least. Alcohol does not make one
drunk. It only
brings out one's hidden feelings, and sometimes
evil thoughts." Amused and
sarcastic, he againasked, "Do you want to
try some?"
She considered
this as a challenge, picked up the empty glass
from her
bedside table and handed it over to him,
"Well, I'll see what it does to
me."
He filled the
glass more than three-quarters, asked, "Are
you sure?" and
handed it over to her.
After taking a
couple of sips, she said, "Not a bad
taste." She put the
glass again to her lips, and started to gulp.
"Not so
quick," by the time he finished the sentence
she had emptied the
glass.
"Anything a man can do, a woman can; I have
been proving this throughout my
life."
He had no comment.
She saw him moving his body left and right, and
scratching his back with the
chair.
"What's the matter, Bhupinder? Anything
wrong with your back? The other day
I saw you taking your coat off, and scratching
your back with the corner of
the wall."
He felt
embarrassed, "During my stay in the college
hostel, for more than
four years, we, all the student who were good in
athletics, used to go for
Indian style wrestling on Sunday mornings. The
wrestlers besmear their
bodies lavishly with mustard oil. We rubbed each
others' backs. At my
previous place, at Bhakhra, our peon did render
me this service a few
times."
"You need some help now?" she said, and
got up.
"No, please no," but she started
scratching his back over the shirt. He did
not mind. Rather, he liked it.
"I have
dry skin and if I do not oil it, it starts
itching. That's why I use
baby oil very regularly but unfortunately I
cannot reach my back."
Without letting
him know, she picked up the bottle of baby oil
from the
dresser behind her, and poured it on to her palm.
She pulled out his shirt
from the trousers abruptly, and began to massage
his back, using the palms
of her hands.
"What are
you doing?" he turned his head to look.
"Didn't you want some baby oil on your
skin?"
"Please Roop Ji, you shouldn't be doing
this."
"Why? Because I am your boss in the office?
Just forget it, and stay still."
During her
childhood, she had seen her mother acting the
same way with her
father; she, often, went into the bathroom, and
rubbed and soaped his back.
A few times she noticed her mother's hands
slipping under father's armpits,
grabbing his breast nipples, and squeezing them.
Father seemed to have
enjoyed it.
Once Roop
wanted to try this herself with her husband. A
few days after her
marriage, she sneaked into the bathroom behind
him, but she was brutally
rebuffed.
Inadvertently
Roop's hands slipped in a similar manner, now,
and went over
Bhupinder's breasts. He jerked, "Roop...
Roop... Roop Ji, please stop."
"Oh, I'm sorry. My hands just slipped."
Her hands
slithered on his back from the top to the bottom.
Gliding over the
sensual zones, they were producing an almost
hypnotic mood. He felt
tantalized. His eyes were closed. He held the
edges of chair-arms very
tightly, and clutched his lower lip firmly in his
teeth.
After a few
minutes her hands again slid through, and went
right down his
belly-button.
He shot up.
They grabbed each other, and fell on the bed.
They became
erratic, tearing off their clothes, and bodies
too.
He slept late
but she was up early. `Oh, God, what a mess,' she
thought
looking at the state of the room and the empty
beer bottles, `Good thing the
Dhoban was not coming today.' The washer-woman
normally came very early on
Sunday mornings, but, being the New Year, she had
taken the day off. Roop
got up, and, deeply absorbed in last night's
episode, cleared the room. By
the time her work was finished she had fully
resolved the situation in her
mind.
When she heard
movement in Bhupinder's room, she prepared tea.
Holding two
cups in her hands, and standing in the hallway,
she announced, "Bhupinder, I
have got some tea for us. Do you want it
there?"
"No, no,
please no. I am coming out. Please leave mine on
the table."
She smiled at
his response riddled with nervousness, and put
the tea on the
dining table.
He could not
look at her face. With eyes dug on the cup he sat
down in the
chair. "I... I am very sorry for the last
night. It's my fault.... I should
have not...."
"What
should you have not? What happened last
night?"
"Please, please Roop Ji don't pretend,"
he looked into her eyes, "as if you
don't know anything?"
"I know
but I don't care. When two young hearts come so
close under one
roof, it does happen. What ever happened has
happened.... Don't you remember
what day today is?" She got up, leapt behind
the kitchen door, picked up a
small gift pack, said, "Happy New
Year," and handed it over to him.
Visibly strained, he took the packet and
stuttered, "But... but.... Sorry,
Happy New Year," he forced the words out. He
got up and went into his own
room. Roop was still confused when he came back
holding a small gift-wrap.
"Happy New Year to you, too," and gave
her the packet.
She quickly
tore off the paper. It was a colourful silk
scarf. She unfolded
and placed it round her neck, "Thank you
very much.... Aren't you going to
open that?"
"Oh, I am
sorry," he tore off the wrapper, "What
a beautiful tie. Thank you,
thank you very much."
"Would you like more tea?"
"Yes, I don't mind.... Roop Ji...."
"Please cut out this `Ji'. It is too
formal."
"What's the matter Roop. You are behaving as
if nothing happened last night.
We are miles apart. We should not have."
"Yes, I know what you mean, miles apart, I
am nine years older than you. I
am practically a divorcee and you, still a
bachelor. There can be no
compromise, I fully realize that."
"I... I didn't mean...."
"It was a
spontaneous reaction, just physical. Both your
body and soul,
belong to someone else. I could never imagine
entrapping you in any long
term or life long involvement.... Last night,
first time in my life, I
realized, I have been nothing more than a virgin,
maybe not physically.
First time I saw that boy, Sukhi, I liked him. My
parents had taken us to
Delhi to meet his family. I had just completed my
Matriculation, and he was
in the final year of his B.Com. He was tall,
slim, and handsomely dressed
up. He had his beard very elegantly tucked up and
Fixered neatly. With a
nicely tied turban he looked like a prince. When
my parents asked me about
my engagement with him, I blushed, and nodded my
head affirmatively. Our
parents were very close friends since their teen
days. As soon as I
graduated from the university, my father fixed
the marriage date. It was my
father's dying wish that I must adhere to that
mahoorat, the auspicious day.
We decided to have a very simple marriage
ceremony in the temple. When he
came to Chandigarh with his parents for this
purpose, he looked like a
fundamentalist militant; his unfastened beard
flared all over his chest, a
yellow turban rounded high up above his head, and
he wore a kurta, and a
pair of tight pyjamas spiralling below his knees.
I wouldn't mind his
political affiliation, there have been a few
political, economical, and
cultural lapses in Punjab, the Federal
Government's neglects were
unpardonable, but fundamentalism and militancy
were no answer to those.
I wanted to run away but could not; my father's
dying words kept resounding
in my ears. Sukhi was thrown out of his job at
Delhi. He took some odd jobs
here in Chandigarh but was never settled. He
tried to dictate his orthodox
etiquette to my sister and me; we could not wear
certain clothes, and most
social activities were banned. I had three years
of hell with him. The
Government quarter we used to live in, was
allotted to me. I had enough of
him, and one day I told him to get out of my
house, and our life. He just
abandoned his job and vanished into thin air;
last I heard, he was somewhere
in America. You came along, you intruded into the
chastity of my bedroom,
and you encroached on the virginity of my
bathroom...."
"What do
you mean by that?"
"Your sleeping half naked in my erstwhile
bedroom, your having a bath all
naked in my bathroom, and now this scratching of
your back kindled my
sleeping desires. I couldn't help myself."
"Do you
want me to leave?"
"No, no, please no. Can't we live like
normal human beings, serving each
other's needs, without any strings
attached?"
"Morally...."
"Oh, come off it.... Well, forget it
now," she said jerking her hand in the
air, "One thing, I am sorry for the abrupt
finale last night." Even though
she felt anaesthetised, she had not lost the
sense of hazardous
consequences; just when he was reaching the
climax she had pushed him away.
He was nonplussed, "I am going for my
bath," and he got up. After taking the
towel and bag containing his bathing needs, he
entered the bathroom.
She followed him briskly, "You had too much
oil on your back last night. Do
you want me to soap you?" Without waiting
for his reply, she dropped her
gown outside, she had nothing on underneath, and
jumped into the room. They
were there for a long time.
They lived as
normal a life as before New Year's Eve, except,
however,
certain Sunday nights when they watched Hindi
Movies on T.V. either from the
sofa or the bed.
As usual, the
State Republic Day Parade was to be held in the
Cricket Ground
of Chandigarh. The arrangements for the erection
of the rostrum, and the
designation and cordoning of enclaves for various
sections for dignitaries,
were assigned to the Forest Department this year.
A day before the occasion
the Minister herself came to check the
preparations. Roop was there to
supervise the operation. Bhupinder was directing
the work.
"Isn't
that the same man?" Minister asked Roop
pointing towards Bhupinder.
"Same? He is Bhupinder, my new Deputy."
"How is it going? Have you talked to him
yet?"
"Talked! Talked what Bhain Ji?" Whereas
everybody addressed the Minister as
`Madam', on the Minister's own preference, Roop
called her, `My Dear
Sister'.
"What? You don't know?"
"Know what?" Roop was puzzled.
"I think our previous Secretary, Puran
Singh, forgot to talk to you. He was
in a hurry to go to Delhi on his new promotional
appointment."
"Please tell me what it is?"
"You remember when you came to me for the
admission of Rani in the Sidhwan
College, you expressed your apprehension of
finding a suitable match for
her?"
"Yes."
"Puran
Singh was there too. He was well-aware of your
family circumstances.
When the final list of the appointees, for the
job of Deputy Superintendent,
came to my office for my approval, this man,
Bhupinder, impressed Puran
Singh most, and he talked to me. I ordered his
assignment to your office. We
thought perhaps you might like him for your
sister."
Oh God, what
luck, she weighed the situation for a few
minutes, and said,
"That really is surprising. Bhain Ji, it is
really very kind of you. As a
matter of fact he is staying in my house. Single
persons are not normally
considered for government quarters, and he was
facing difficulty in finding
a suitable place in the city."
"Is that
so? That's better. But you didn't know why,
particularly, he was
sent to work with you? This means you have not
talked to him, not even a
hint?"
"I am sorry, no."
"Right, don't mention anything to him now.
He may think that we all have
been plotting deliberately. Let Rani come back
home, give them an
opportunity to meet and know each other."
That is what
Roop had herself envisaged.
The Minister continued, "I'll, then, think
how to proceed. Leave
everything to me. You may feel shy asking
him."
`Shy me, with him, no...' she introspected,
`Well, it would be best if it
comes through the Minister.'
Rani was back
home in April. Roop had written to her about
Bhupinder living
in the house, and had showered him with praises.
On meeting him, Rani, too,
was impressed with his polite eloquence, and
sophisticated behaviour. She
was bored at home; most of her friends either had
married off or left
Chandigarh. She found his company appealing, and
did not mind going out with
him. Steadily Roop had, intentionally, drifted
away from Bhupinder, and was
happy to see their acquaintance growing into an
affectionate friendship.
Nearly a month had passed. Rani's result was
declared. She had attained
distinction both in Theory and in Teaching
Practice. She had not once
mentioned applying for a job, or meeting the
Minister for a recommendation,
whereas previously she had expressed her desire
to take employment
immediately upon her graduation. Not that Roop
needed Rani's financial help,
but she was surprised at her changed attitude.
`Perhaps something is cooking
between her and Bhupinder,' she deliberated a few
times, yet felt relieved.
And something had been cooking. Both were sitting
side by side at the dinner
table holding hands, when Roop walked in.
"Roop Ji,
we want to talk to you," Bhupinder said.
She looked at their hands tied together, "I
hope something pleasant?"
Rani opened her mouth, "We want to
...."
But she was interrupted by Roop, "get
engaged. How desperately I have been
waiting to hear this."
"No," Bhupinder broke in.
"Noooo?" Roop nearly fainted.
"Not engaged, we are getting married."
"You naughty people. You nearly gave me a
heart attack. So you don't want to
waste money on an engagement ceremony?"
"It's not that. We have made an appointment
at the Registrar of Marriages
for next week Monday."
"Registrar? Monday? What is going on? Please
don't confuse me." She put her
hand to her head.
Rani got up and
helped her to a chair, "Didi Ji, please
relax. We will never
hurt your feelings. You will be pleased to hear
what we have to tell you."
"Roop Ji,
my family, parents and my older brother live in
Burma," Bhupinder
started to say.
"Burma! Why didn't you tell us before? There
was nothing in your resume
either."
"I'll explain in a minutes. As I was saying,
my family lives in Burma, and
they are very well off."
"Just well off?" Rani interrupted,
"We had enough of your camouflaging."
Diverting attention to her sister she added,
"Didi, he is one of the Batras
of Burma."
"You mean world famous multi-million Batra
Electronics Conglomerate of
Lashio? Why did you disguise your identity? Why
did you take up this, I
would say paltry, job? Why did you try to cheat
us, even every body in
India?"
"No, Didi, please listen to him first. He
really didn't mean to cheat
anybody." Rani had already heard the whole
story.
Bhupinder
started to explain, "About six years ago my
older brother came to
India to get married to a nice girl here. He
published his intentions in the
matrimonial columns of a few prestigious dailies.
He wanted a quick
marriage, and gave full details of his
background. He had a number of offers
but he was impressed with the beauty and
intelligence of one girl named
Sita. Her parents were in the electronics
business too. It was a quick
marriage, and he was back home with his bride
within four weeks. Within six
months the cat was fully out of the bag. Sita
never loved my brother, and
showed little respect to our parents. On top of
that, her father and
brothers started to visit Burma with the
intention of sharing in our
business ventures. She was creating hell for my
brother. He had no
alternative but to give her a fair amount of
money, and get her out of our
family. I did not want the same story to happen
with me. I wanted a girl who
loved me and my family, not our money. On my
Uncle's suggestion I started to
follow his plans."
Rani intruded,
"Look at his meanness, Didi, for four months
we have been
going out, he has been making me to spend my
money everywhere, in the
restaurants, cinemas, and sometimes even on
petrol for his scooter. He
always maintained that he was very much pressed
by his poor parents in the
village; he had two marriageable sisters. The
more he did that the more I
liked him... you big talker!"
Roop felt
bamboozled, "Now, how can you be sure? We
may be cheating you."
He stared into Roop's eyes, "Could it
be?" Realizing the ambiguity of his
words, he added, "Sometimes one has to rely
on faith."
Roop wanted
further clarification, "After leaving the
university you
attended so many interviews, took a number of
departmental examinations. How
come no body suspected your real
credentials?"
"It was
all the clever handiwork of my uncle. First, he
got me clerical job
at Bhakhra. Realizing that as a clerk I wouldn't
get a qualified girl, he
fixed up a few departmental examinations for me.
The last one was his
cleverest feat. At night he took me to a high
official's house, I did not
get his name even. There he gave me the question
paper and answer sheets. We
sat down together, and completed the test. The
gentleman marked them,
assigned a roll number, and slipped them in the
middle of the pile. All my
paper work--resumes, testimonials, was always my
uncle's brainchild. When I
told him, before he left for Delhi, that I had
found accommodation in your
house, he was overwhelmed. Just four weeks ago,
when he came to Chandigarh
on official business he asked me, how was it
going, had I met the girl, did
I like her, etc. I was getting confused. I asked
him why was he talking in
riddles. He then told me why he had put in an
extra effort to get me to work
under you. He had met you both in the Office of
the Forests Minister; you
had gone there in connection with Rani's
admission. My uncle wanted to
present me to you, indirectly, for your
sister."
"You are
not talking about Puran Singh? Is he the one you
are calling
uncle?" Roop was blunt.
"You are right, Chief Secretary, Forests
Department."
"Why the
hell did he cheat us all?" Roop said. She
felt unduly humiliated.
Bhupinder pleaded, "But, Roop Ji, if you
think rationally, it has been quite
pleasurable. Rani is happy. She accepted me when
I was just an office
worker, only as a decent human being, if she
still thinks so," he looked at
Rani seeking her approval, "Till last week
she did not know who I really
was."
"But still I'll talk to the Minister. Your
uncle had no business to make a
fool of us all." Roop was still sore.
Rani
interceded, "Oh, Didi, don't worry, we have
already seen Minister Bhain
Ji. She was really amused. She has agreed to come
to the Court. Actually, we
had gone to her to request she speak to you. We
were scared of coming
directly to you. She persuaded us to talk to you
ourselves. I am still
shaky."
"Why not
have a proper wedding? What would our friends,
relatives think? You
have not committed any crime, to need to get
married like two runaways."
"No,
that's not the reason. We are going to have a big
wedding later on. My
family will be coming from Burma too. Maybe in
about six months. I need a
Marriage Registration Certificate to apply for
her Visa. The Burmese
Consulate, now, takes about a year to issue a
visa for permanent residence."
"In the meantime...." Roop wanted to
ask something.
But Bhupinder
cut in, "I am sorry Roop Ji, I will have to
leave your office
now. In view of the political uncertainty in
Burma, my father wants to
invest money in India. Who knows, we all may have
to leave that country one
day. I am going to establish an office in Delhi,
but most of the time I will
be staying in Chandigarh; Delhi is too congested
for me."
"But...."
Roop still demanded to know a few more things
from Bhupinder.
Getting up Bhupinder said, "There is nothing
to `but' now Roop Ji. Rest
assured, everything will be O.K." and he
looked deep into her eyes, "Anyway
I will see you, Madam, in your office when I come
there tomorrow to tender
my resignation."
Bhupinder
confirmed from the peon that nobody else was in
the
Superintendent's office. He knocked on the door,
waited for, "Come in",
entered the room, and, with a pretended sly grin
put a sheet of paper on the
table, "Madam, under unavoidable family
circumstances I have to leave my
job. Here is my resignation."
She was
laughing, "What if I say, it cannot be
accepted?"
He replied, "Then, Madam, would you allow me
to carry on with the same job?"
He winked laying stress on the word `same'.
"You...
you the...." But she tightened her lips
suppressing the next word,
he was too nice a man to be a bastard, she
reasoned. She hit the bell. "Take
this to Ram Lal," she handed over the paper
to the peon when he appeared.
"Before I leave I want to...."
"Just a
minute," she hit the bell again. "I
don't want to be disturbed," she
told the peon.
"Roop, you
remember the week in April, when Rani came back.
That Saturday,
in the evening, when you reached home, first you
told the maid that you
wanted to cook yourself in the happiness of your
sister's home coming. You
gave the maid the evening off. But you did not
cook. You went to the lounge,
and lay on the sofa, pretending to have
headache."
"Well,
what then? I just wanted to rest."
"But, you told us that the maid had taken
the evening off, and you were not
in a state to cook. You asked us both to go out
to eat, and to bring food
home for you later. Only then I realised your
intentions, and understood why
you had, previously, told me a few absurd stories
involving Sali and
Jeeja--a man and his wife's sister. What was
that? Sali adhy ghar
wali--wife's sister is the husband's half the
house-wife."
"I
withdraw my judgment on your legitimacy, you
really are a bastard;
snooping on other people's talk and
thoughts."
"But you must appreciate, Madam, I am indeed
a decent and honourable person,
see, I never touched you since that week in
April."
"You...." She picked up a book to hit
him.
Laughing, he got up quickly, "I'll see you
at home this evening," and headed
towards the door, adding, "Your little
sister is waiting for me. I left her
in Sector 17, for shopping."
The End
Any reader who
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[bindra@rogers.com]