Showing posts with label Naval Langa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Naval Langa. Show all posts

The Valentine Knock : A Short Story by Naval Langa

THE OLD PARENTS, especially having a son or a daughter of marriageable age, whenever they see an eligible candidate, start knitting an idea: the age-old idea of marrying their offspring. My mother was not an exception. On seeing Sarita coming early in the morning on my birthday, Mama had begun the knitting, using the needle and thread of her imagination. I knew that Sarita and I were living on two different sets of Earth. There was no connecting thread. There were needles and needles.

The job, you see, was twenty-five kilometres distant from the city's embrace, a daily commute that stole the weekdays. Sarita and I, once fellow travellers in the realm of chemistry, found our rendezvous reduced to weekends. Weekends became our sanctuary. The ritual was simple, almost a reflex: the escape from the city's clamour, the lakeside promenade, the sweet puncture of a coconut's husk, and the occasional, frugal restaurant. These were the coordinates of our shared time.

Sarita had entered the world of industrial alchemy. Her days were spent amidst the metallic entrails of machines, their purpose solely the transmutation of base elements into gold. She, unlike me, was not a solitary worker in this enterprise. She was enmeshed in the family business, a world of overseeing, of directives issued to engineers, of the relentless pursuit of "better output."

"These workers," she would declare, even within the neutral territory of a restaurant, "they are born with a certain...sluggishness."

"Perhaps," I'd counter, "it's the mindset that requires adjustment, not the workers themselves." My defence was, of course, self-serving. By her definition, I, too, was destined to be categorised as one of the slow-moving, the habitually late, the less-than-bright. I was, after all, also a worker, though in a different factory, under different masters.

The nature of our continued connection, post-graduation, remained a kind of enigma. We had followed divergent paths, hers leading to the helm of her family's enterprise, mine to the factory floor. Yet, Sarita's Sunday visitations to my small apartment became a recurring motif, a new chapter unfolding, page by unhurried page.

"You won't believe what your mother told me today," she announced one evening.

"Let me guess," I replied, "She thinks that I'm taking too long to find a homely wife."

"Close," Sarita said, a hint of something unreadable in her eyes. "She has found her. It's me." I treated this as another instalment in our ongoing exchange of gentle ironies. My capacity for self-deception, I believed, was limited. I was grounded, perhaps too much so, in the reality of my pay slip, my position. I was the snail to Sarita's celestial being, her trajectory that of a spacecraft, effortlessly traversing vast distances. My mother, in her brief encounters with Sarita, had seen only her radiant presence, her easy laughter on my birthday. She remained unaware of the hierarchy, the thirty souls like me who answered to Sarita's directives. She was, after all, the daughter of an industrialist, a fact that hung in the air between us, unspoken yet palpable.

"If that's the case," I ventured, "why these weekly pilgrimages to my humble abode?"

"We're friends, Mama," I would say, attempting to deflect her hopeful gaze. "Nothing more, nothing less." My words, however, were insufficient to dismantle the edifice of her expectations. That structure, that dream, would endure until her final, silent breath.

The week concluded, as they invariably do, with Sunday. For some, the day commences with the ritual of tea, a gentle awakening. For others, it's a more protracted affair, a slow peeling back of the layers of sleep. My own Sunday began with the force of a sudden squall, a tempest unleashed within the confines of my single room.

"Where have you been?" Sarita's voice, sharp and insistent, filled the small space. "Two weeks. I haven't seen you for a fortnight. What explanation could possibly suffice?"

"I... I was..." The words faltered on my tongue.

"Don't bother," she retorted, the edge of her anger honed to a fine point. "It's clear I'm the only one who cares."

"Sarita, please," I tried again, "I was at my village. There were... rites. My mother..."

But she was already in motion, a whirlwind of hurt and accusation. "Fine," she snapped. "Whatever. I'm not the one who's desperate for your company." Then, the abrupt shift, the change of course. "You're coming to my parents' house. Seven o'clock. This evening. Be punctual."

It wasn't a request. It was a summons from a legal court. I knew, with a certainty that settled like a stone in my stomach, the purpose of this meeting. A formalisation. A proposal.

"Sarita, I..."

"Silence," she commanded.

If my heart had ever belonged to any woman other than my mother, that woman was Sarita. This woman, who held the position of deputy director in one of the city's major industrial conglomerates. And yet, despite the undeniable truth that no woman of her standing would visit a man like me, in his meagre dwelling, every Sunday evening, remaining until the late hours, unless driven by something beyond mere friendship, I had never allowed myself the luxury of imagining a future with her. I was acutely aware of the boundaries, the unbridgeable chasm that separated our worlds.

Now, however, I was compelled to attend. Her insistence left no room for evasion. Her parents, of course, knew of my existence. Her father had once extended an offer of employment, a position within his factory. Sarita, however, had intervened, vetoing the idea of my subordination to her. And so, I had found my place elsewhere.

"You must understand, Vishal," her father, the industrialist, said, his tone measured, pragmatic, "my daughter is, in some ways, still...unformed. Immature, perhaps, is a kinder word. She is determined to marry you. But she is accustomed to a life, a level of comfort, that your circumstances...well, they simply cannot provide. You grasp my meaning, I trust." I did. The familiar arguments, the well-worn tropes: her extravagant expenditures on cosmetics, a sum equivalent to my monthly earnings; her ignorance of the simplest domestic tasks, like brewing tea; her reliance on expensive automobiles, driven by others.

As if this were not enough, he added the final, decisive clause. "I would be most grateful, Vishal, if you would speak with her. Persuade her to consider the proposal she has received from a highly successful industrialist, currently residing abroad. I believe you are the only one who can make her see reason. You will help us, won't you?"

"Yes, Uncle," I replied, the word a hollow echo in the opulent room. "I will."

And so, I found myself navigating the labyrinthine corridors of Sarita's home, following the silent directives of the portraits on the walls. I harboured no resentment towards her father. He had merely adhered to the established protocol, the logic of his world. He was, as I had always known, a shrewd and calculating businessman. He was even attempting to transmute a potential disruption, a "virus" in his system of established comforts, into a kind of inoculation, a defence against future uncertainties. I, it seemed, was the virus in question.

The days that followed stretched into weeks, the weeks coalescing into a pair of months. I attempted to erase her image from my mind: the way her hair fell across her face, the unfathomable depths of her eyes, the eloquence of her questioning brows, the silent language of her lips. I even tried to forget the particular way I admired the delicate structure of her knuckles.

The February sun, usually a source of solace, remained elusive, obscured behind a veil of persistent clouds. It was the cusp of dawn, perhaps. And then, the sound. A sound I knew as intimately as my heartbeat. A knock. A summons that could rouse me from the deepest slumber. I pulled the woollen shawl tighter around me, my eyes struggling to focus. And there she was. The very personification of the image that had been seared into my consciousness.

In a rush, light flooded my small apartment, banishing the lingering shadows of the night. The cold that had clung to the air vanished as if it had never been. Her hair, meticulously arranged, no longer a cascade but a composed statement; a simple, traditional dress, devoid of ornamentation, and a modest suitcase at her feet. These details, in any other context, would have been unremarkable, quotidian. But in this setting, in the presence of this woman, they spoke volumes.

She moved with a purpose that belied the early hour, heading directly for the cramped kitchen. My kitchen, a space that, if one overlooked the general disarray characteristic of a bachelor's existence, was fundamentally uncomplicated.

"Let me make tea," she announced, her voice calm, resolute.

The deputy director of a company, a woman of considerable authority and influence, had adopted the guise of an ordinary woman. I, meanwhile, had managed to extract myself from the bed and now stood, observing her movements, maintaining a respectful distance, the very embodiment of hesitant chivalry. I nodded, my head moving in silent counterpoint to the movements of her hands as she reached for the tea, the sugar, the milk, the familiar articles on the shelf.

"You know, Vishal," she said, without turning, "I've stopped wearing makeup. It seemed... unnecessary. And I've also... I've learned to cook. A little, at least. And I think," she paused, her gaze finally meeting mine, a tentative smile playing on her lips, "I think this house is quite... ample. For us. Don't you?"

"Sarita," I began, my voice thick with emotion, "my dear, please... don't say any more."

"Oh..." she breathed, and then, there was no more need for words. There was only the embrace, the joining, the promise of a lifetime of shared mornings and quiet evenings.

It was, as it happened, Valentine's Day.

And the most precious of gifts, a gift beyond any earthly measure, stood before me, under my humble roof.

THE END

[Image courtesy Valentine Cameron Prinsep, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons]

THE PRIMAL SWORD

THE DENSE CLOUDS lowered their stocks washing out the surface of the earth. Midnight. Rain. The darkness went into every drop of the water. Hopp spurred his horses to run high. The chariot was not good to run at its best. It was un-oiled since the ages. But it was valuable for him, made by the great grand farther of his great grandfather.

Right-side wheel of the chariot tumbled on a stone. He saw his body flying in the air. Dhaddada… dhaddam… dhad, and he was thrashed again on his seat. Reigns still in his hands, but limbs trembled on seeing the death so near. On a crack, he shifted his gaze on the back seat of the chariot. Shudders took hold of his body and mind. Soul, too, shaken.

He saw a woman, sitting in the back seat.

Hopp was a pundit, an owner of a temple, only temple in the kingdom. King visited the temple on occasions. People revered Hopp. They looked at his chariot with devotion. They believed his words as the translation of God’s will.

“Who… who are you?”

“Carry on. I am not your enemy.” The woman spread her lips wide and showed her teeth. The teeth were bigger than a wolf’s teeth and sharper than a lion’s. Design of her face made his navel pulsating with horror. He was a man of courage and the holder of faith in God. But the flood of darkness, his flying in the air just before a moment, and the sharp-teethed the woman squeezed out every drop of his courage.

No words were exchanged until the temple gate became visible. He gathered remnants of his courage. Fearing though, he turned his eyes on the woman.

“Where do you live?”

“I am homeless.” Again, her teeth sparkled. It made the darkness darker. He came down the chariot, his legs still unsteady on the ground.

“Go into that hut. And leave before dawn.”

“No. Find out a home for me. A permanent home.” The teeth. She gazed at his face. The gaze was sharper than a deadly sword.

“What’s your name?”

“Feara. Feara, the bloodsucker.”

Every hair on his body straightened. The woman disappeared in the hut. Hopp heard the clinking of teeth. No, it was not her teeth, he realized. It was from his own mouth. His teeth clinked again. He walked up to the temple steps. Sat there. No one was awake in his house, in a far corner of the temple yard. A cat mewed and it shook the whole universe. Again, the deadly silence took hold of the whole surround.

* * *

HOPP WAS THE owner of high respect among people. They respected him for his sacred lineage, for his ownership of the temple, and for the kindness he showed by distributing food on festival days.

People were happy with him. But he was not happy with himself, with what he had. The cause of is unhappiness was a two-legged man with one eye on his face. Goldie was his name. He traded in things and had erected a three-storey house. King’s palace was the only building taller than the Goldie’s. Hopp envied him. He envied his horses and the stable and the score of chariots he possessed.

Hopp was a man of mind. Before daylight replaced the stormy night, he found out a strange utility in Feara. Feara, the Bloodsucker. He desired her presence. He gave ample food and drink to the hungry and thirsty Feara. He promised her a permanent shelter, too.

“Keep your teeth covered until I say to open.”

“My master, I will obey your words.” She agreed to be his prisoner.

* * *

THE PRESENCE OF FEARA ran like the fire in the forest. People talked that Hopp had enslaved a demon incarnated into a woman’s body. It was his magical power that saved them all from the wrath of Feara. Otherwise, she would have engulfed all who went for work in the dark; she would have killed every woman sleeping with a man, and she would have eaten all the children who were ill. It was because of the divine power he possessed, the Pundit of the temple had saved all from the deadly claws of Feara. Hopp was a man of mind. 

Days passed and Hopp sent a message to Goldie: Meet me at night. No one ignored Hopp’s words. Goldie too did not. His chariot arrived at the temple. Hopp embraced him.

“Feara wants to meet you.” He told Goldie. He knew that Goldie owned everything. He was wealthy next to the king. But he did not own one thing: the courageous heart. On seeing Feara and her face, the land beneath Goldie’s feet slipped. The clink of her teeth made him shiver. Hopp watched his face. The arrow was on the target.

“But why she wanted to see me?”

“I don’t know. She is an evil soul. Look at her nails. She can tear open anybody’s chest, at one stroke. But for the wellbeing of all the people of our kingdom, I hold her as a prisoner. She can go out only at my will. And by her power, she can convert gold into dust. You understand what I mean.”

Goldie understood what he meant.

 Months passed and Hopp employed a crowd of labourers. He wanted a three-storey house behind the temple, the house higher than the Goldie’s. Some articles of gold had walked out of Goldie’s coffers and were parked in the chest of the temple. People offered even free labour to the temple. People knew that they could go out in the dark only because of Hopp’s magical powers. Women knew that their children were alive because Hopp was on their side. Hopp gave food to all the labourers. He was a man of mind. Now he was a man of gold, too.

* * *

THE KINGDOM WAS small. But the king Crowna was a tall man, tall as a tree. He could catch a wolf by running behind it. He had killed a leopard by a single stroke of his fist. His hands were long, long enough to catch anyone living within the borders of his kingdom.

When the king summoned Goldie for a purpose, the trader of the things had become a little bit poorer. He stood in the court with folded hands. His hands and neck still sparkled a golden light, but Crowna saw grim over his face. Goldie sat under the shadow of the king’s sword.

“Pundit Hopp is your good friend.”

“He is everybody’s friend, My Lord.”

“Hmm… Have you seen the Feara?”

“My Lord.”

“How she looks?”

Crowna collected data about Feara and her master, Pundit Hopp. With the Feara under his command, Hopp was a man of limitless power. He could send tremors into the hearts of anyone, merely by talking about the Feara and her powers. Hopp enjoyed influence over the multitude.

“Call him.” The king ordered.

* * *

THE KING CROWNA was used to call a man for two reasons only. One: when a man collected wealth more than the king’s eyes could bear to see he would call him. And the wealthy man would lose his wealth. Two: he would call a man when the man enjoyed influence over people more than the king’s ears could hear without displeasing. That man would lose his wealth first, and then his head.

Hopp was summoned to the court of the king. Hopp was a man of mind. But he consulted Feara, his partner in trade.

With the help of her fingernails, Feara wrote on a wall of the hut, ‘the king had a divine sword. Get it anyway. His strength will devolve upon you.’

“How can I get his sword?”

“You are a man of mind. Think.”

Hopp started thinking. On the way to the king’s palace, he dragged out a design from his mind. But on seeing the king’s court he was baffled. It was full of candles. Candles were on every brick of the walls. And under every brick, there was a human skull. Bricks lighted, skulls highlighted.

“You are a pious man, Pundit Hopp.”

“My Lord, I am a citizen.”

“So be protected by my sword.”

“My Lord is kind to this temple-man.”

“You are a temple-man. This king bows his head before you. But you are not a warrior. So, hand over Feara to your king and be happy.”

The king had a bright face, brighter than Hopp had presumed. And he was the owner of sweat and poisonous tongue, too. Hopp looked at the king’s sword and went on his design.

“My lord, I am also worried. Feara is enemy of all. I seek your sword to kill her with my hand. My Lord may honour me with possession of the divine sword for a day.” Hopp was a man of mind.

The king leaves his throne. Came near to the temple-man. The sword was in his hand. He raised the sword and made it falling on Hopp’s throat. King’s tongue had failed to work on the man of mind. His swards did not. Hopp was beheaded.

The king took possession of the Feara. He became her new master.

SINCE THE DAY, Feara is in the custody of the king. Whenever he needs to fear the people, he releases the power of Feara upon them. It works.

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