I flipped through the calendar again. It was still 12th of the month. All my money was gone. My wallet had just a coin and my savings account stated I had only five hundred rupees.
Last night, he asked me for money. His said that a friend needed help and as always I believed it. I know he doesn’t need that money for a friend, he will go buy alcohol. But he is my younger brother, when he asks for anything I cannot say no. He is the only family I have.
I try to push the thoughts away and get up to arrange things and tidy my house. I often become nostalgic when I do this; I turn old things up and down. Go through the letters that my father sent us during his army days. I often end up spending hours staring at them and leave my chores in middle.
Those days were so perfect. I was nine or ten and my brother still a toddler. My mother was most beautiful and loving woman I remember. She took up the responsibility of the house perfectly while dad was away. We loved changing cities, packing and unpacking when my father was posted to a new location. This time my father was posted near the border and therefore we had to remain in the city and my father made it a point to write letters to us each week. He would write separate letters to mom and me. These were my treasures. For last two weeks, there were no letters, so we eagerly waited for the postman. Postal services often delayed the arrival of the letters. It was late in the afternoon when the postman arrived. This time the handwriting on the postcard looked different. There were no letters for me, just one addressed to my mother. It explained that my father was missing for fifteen days and army believed he was dead. His belongings would be sent to us soon. It rained heavily all night that day.
The weather today was wild too. It seemed to rain in memory of that night. A silent prayer escaped my mouth. I promised myself to talk to him to give up drinking and put him to the rehabilitation.
The doorbell rang. It must be him. Determined to talk to him I got up and opened the door. It wasn’t him. It was an older version of my brother instead. It was my father. After being in prison under false case and false identity for over fifteen years, he had now returned home. A moment later a police jeep stopped. They wanted me to identify a body of a drunken person who died in a road accident just around the corner.
Sugandha - Sorry about the mix up - the contest is open until midnight today. Please add your link. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks Corinne...
DeleteIntense and Sad indeed...
ReplyDeleteIts a mix situation
DeleteIntense. It's sad but so well-written and you made tragedy sounds beautiful:)
ReplyDelete:) thanks
DeleteSaw your comment on one of my blog posts and wanted to convey my thanks to you. But couldn't find your contact details there. So I thought reading a post you made and commenting on it would make it up for it. But the post I chose seems to be of a really deep and emotional one. I'm pretty carried away, and I don't know what to say.
ReplyDeleteAll I can do is do what I came here for. Thank you...
Very nice post and a tragic story...
ReplyDeleteThanks :)
DeleteGripping and sad.. like your narration...
ReplyDeleteThanks..
DeleteThat was a very well written take Sugandha! I especially liked the way u ended it.
ReplyDeleteThanks :)
ReplyDeletethis was well woven and very intense. Drunken driving is a menace which affects many all over...
ReplyDeleteRicha
Thanks....I agree, I hate the idea of drunken driving...
DeleteIntense and saddening.. U wouldnt know what to feel..mixed emotions indeed.
ReplyDeleteSomehow I believe that every situation has mixed emotions...you are never truely happy or truely sad...
Deletei was taken a back with the way things changed.loved the twists in the tale .. and all engrossed !! very very nice Sugandha
ReplyDeleteThanks...you are very kind and generous with comments :)
Delete