“It
depends”, she says, to nothing and no one in particular. That seems to be an
acceptable answer to the illustrious company drinking its coffee on that smoky
patio. She stares out at the sea, unmindful of the discussion that ploughs
forward, as her thoughts wind back to memories from a distant land.
It
was not a forgettable trip. Well, not quite, for she doesn’t remember the
details of the trip now. She knows they had gone to some beach, after a visit
to some IT organization as part of an industrial training. Such “filler”
visits were common back then, earning the class some credit points, subsidies
and a day off from college.
She
is losing track of the discussion now. Someone is directing a question at her.
“Well, one has to see how it plays out,” she responds. That should suffice for
now.
The
beach was hot, April-hot. Lunch sharing was happening, like it used to in
school. Only this wasn’t school. They couldn’t giggle in peace, all these big
boys making fun and imitating them. It was intimidating, abnormal and
unnatural.
Someone
giggles. Another says, “Aapko kya lagta hai?” She snaps back to reality again
with an appropriate response. “Aise hi random bolte hai yaar log. Kabhi kabhi
samajh mein ni aata hai ki client kaun aur consultant kaun.”
“Enna
romba petera?” was the first question one boy asked her at lunch. She didn’t
understand. “What is peter”, she asked in return, only to be ridiculed further.
Apparently, ‘peter’ referred to anyone who spoke a lot of English. ‘Uff, I hate
them’, she murmured to herself while retreating further into her girls’ gang.
The
tea is getting cold, the wind a little chilly today. Conversation has turned to
the cricket match fiasco. Inane, coffee table conversation. At tea time, near the balustrade.
The
girls’ gang looked unhappy what with she claiming that the boys had been at
their unruly best. Not that she was the best judge of how the average boy
behaved, but her opinion seemed to count there. That is when he came up to her,
the guy who hadn’t ridiculed her, her voice or her language. The guy, she
secretly liked. “Can I have some water?” he asked.
“How
come you make and get food from home? You aren’t married right?”, someone asks
her. “No, I am not”, she says. The distant sea rumbles a little, a storm seems
to be brewing.
5 comments:
What's with the sudden time travel? And its not clear if you're happy or sad or anxious or scared? Why so ambiguous?
And yeah, pass me the water, will you?
Its funny, this calls me "unknown"!
Vijay
well done, Unknown. :-))
Kavity... that seems ambiguous. You are wandering into Kundera territory, sans bowler hat!
Fully connect to the "Peter-a" situation... Look where "they" are now- mostly loafering their way thru life with a chip on the shoulder... Barring the few who have grown up of course!
On the time travel, I am so J! Being compulsively "with it" and involved ALL the time is stressful, tiring and all consuming!
@unknown, Mri: You grace my blog with your presence :)
@Shrutz: Ambiguity makes one enigmatic. No?
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