Wednesday, June 16, 2021

The Ageless Ghost



Does that ever happen to you that you see the same person again and again in different places and on different occasions?

Do you see similar faces, whom you don't know directly, but you see them here and there? You see those different faces here and there, near your office or in your college. But you ignore them until those faces become names and those names become relations. 

This story is about one of those faces.

I was still in school when someone pushed me from my school bus. I was quite habitual by then to get bullied at various circumstances, where they find me vulnerable enough to perform their mischievous activities. Being locked in the restrooms or being slapped from behind was quite regular. And yes, being pushed from the school bus when I was about to de-board was something new.

 I couldn't see the face of the kid who pushed me, but he must be very strong as I fell at quite a distance from that age-old, yellow coloured monstrous bus. When I understood what actually happened to me, I saw a white colour Omni van skidding towards me, trying hard to save my life. My limbs, I couldn't move them. They felt heavy. I was numb and everything went into darkness after that.

When I opened my eyes, I saw a group of people around me. They were chattering indistinctively. Someone was asking about my well-being. Some were offering me water. Some were asking me about my residence. But there was this one guy who was staring at me from a couple of shoulders behind. That was the first time I was consciously seeing that face. Hair, neatly combed. Wearing an off-white bush shirt. His eyes were quite sunken in its sockets. But that was not the first time I was actually seeing. I had seen him before. Where? I actually don't know. 

His eyes met mine for a couple of seconds. He was seeing my face without any noticeable expression. And, in a blink of an eye, I had lost him. I couldn't see him anywhere.

He literally disappeared - not like some djinn or some hill station ghost. One can easily disappear in the crowd, especially in a place like Delhi.

Where have I seen that face before? Was I imagining or I really saw that face?

I ward off the dust from my school bag from my palms, hung my water bottle back around my neck, and went straight away to my home. 

When I reached home, my Dada Ji (Grandfather) was preparing lunch. My father had a transferable job and my Mother used to accompany him from one city to the other. Dada Ji was my family as well as closest acquaintance.

My Dada Ji always encourages me to read more and more books. He was a retired librarian from Delhi University. He had this huge collection of books and magazines, of course, to read and to make sure he didn't miss his job even after retirement. So I was presented with various books to read and mould up my thought process from time to time. 

Unlike other voracious readers, I never expressed myself through writing. Instead of that, I started sketching at a very young age.

I went to my little room to change my school uniform. But before that, I took out my sketchbook and drew that face in it. It was not that accurate, but yes, it was giving me more of an idea of his facial features. Though, whenever I was closing my eyes, I could see his face quite accurately. 

I didn't say anything to my Dada Ji - Not about that little accident and not about that face with sunken eyes. 

..............................................................................................................................................................

Years passed and I enrolled myself in a fine arts course while pursuing my graduation in history. It was a hazy morning and I got up around eight. I got ready at a lightning speed as I was running late for my morning class. I didn't wipe my motorbike clean and rode at a speed which we can easily categorise under 'fast'. I just reached the other side of the road when I realised that I had left my paintbrush set on my desk. I cursed myself and took a 'U' turn when a black colour SUV car hit the rear mudguard of my bike. Though the car was not at a very high speed it was enough to make my motorbike imbalanced. I was again numb and everything went black.

I realised out of the blue that my numbness is nothing but a kind of surrender. It's a position when a person accepts his fate without retaliating much. 

When I opened my eyes, I saw a little ray of light. It took me some time to realize that I was under that car and the rear wheel of that giant vehicle is at a good eight inches distance from my neck. I moved a bit and slowly came out. I saw two people were holding the collar of the car's driver. They were asking whether I was fine or not. I asked them to leave that guy. The driver came to me and asked that whether I wish to go to the hospital. I denied it and told him to go. Some blood was oozing from my right elbow and forehead. My right ankle was paining and I was facing difficulty in walking. A few people were staring at me with that usual sorry feeling. And then, I saw him again.

Hair was neatly combed. He was wearing a semi-printed, olive green bush-shirt. His height was a little shorter than mine. Lean frame. Eyes Sunken. I started walking towards him but my ankle was not allowing me to do that.  He was staring at me directly. Expressionless again. 

He disappeared again in no time. I tried to look for him but he was nowhere. 

This time, I was more afraid than curious. Somehow I reached home without changing much of my Bike's gear. I tried to walk normally but Dada Ji noticed my limping. He didn't ask many questions until he saw my kerchief all red with blood. I explained everything as we both walked towards my room, without telling him about that mysterious person. Though I wanted to tell him about that face with sunken eyes, something stopped me. His face with crisscrossed wrinkles was looking worried for me when he was cleaning the wound from my forehead. 

When he went outside, I took out my sketchbook from my bag and started drawing that face. This time I took care of all the details I could remember. I made those sunken eyes. I made that clean-shaven face with bushy brows and neatly combed hair. I used different colour graphic pens to exaggerate its features and tried to make it as accurate as I could. 

I closed the sketchbook as well as my eyes. I took few deep breaths. And something got stuck in my mind. I opened my eyes and started walking towards my old cupboard with some pain in my ankle.  I opened it and took out some loose sheets as well as my old sketchbooks. I found the sketch I had made around nine years back in a dismantled file, whose cover was missing. I walked to my bed and compared those two sketches.

I skipped a beat when I realised that the face hasn't aged even a single day. He was in his early twenties when I saw him for the first time. He still looks the same. And that was humanly impossible. I had that creepy feeling which is hard to express.

'Am I imagining this guy or he actually exists?'

'Is he a ghost?'

'Is he trying to kill me or trying to harm me?'

'Is he an alien?'

'Do I have a past life connection with him?'

After applying all permutations and combinations my mind became extremely tired. I slept for a while. When I woke up, my body was burning with a high fever.

.........................................................................................................................................................

I didn't see him for a while. I secured a job in a news agency as a core designer. The designation was great to show off, but all I had to do was creating basic cartoon sketches for various political leaders and famous personalities, which are further converted into animated videos, using VFX and other stuff. The job was tedious yet challenging. And most importantly, the salary was good enough.

One night, while coming home from the office, I got a bit late. Electricity cuts were not very common in those days in the cities. But a sudden spark on an electricity pole made that happen.

It was completely dark in our residential complex. I switched on the flashlight of my cellular phone to reach safely at home. I really don't know that from where that partially covered, dry sewer came into my way and my left leg got stuck into it. Now, my left leg was into the sewer up to the knee and my right leg was still steady on the ground. My phone was still in my right hand. I placed the hand near that sewer and tried to enlarge the opening of the sewer with my bare hands. 

It took me a minute or two to come out of that unattended sewer. I was quite fine and unhurt. I tried to cover the sewer as much as I could with my hands. I was shaking the flashlight to see the maximum area. I was not in a mood to stuck again in any sewer or potholes. 

While quickly placing the flashlight up and down, I again see that face.

I couldn't notice his clothes or his neatly combed hair this time. Still, I'm quite sure that he was looking not even a day older since I last saw him. I was literally shivering now. When I again placed my flashlight in that direction, he was nowhere to be seen. All I could see was mist and early winter fog. 

I sprinted towards my home without thinking much about uncovered sewers or potholes. I saw Dada Ji at the main gate. He noticed my shortness of breath and asked me about what happened. I took the emergency light from his hand and asked him to come with me. 

We both went into my room. He comfortably sat on the chair and I was busy making the sketch in my file. It took me around fifteen minutes to complete the sketch with a well-sharpened pencil. I took out the other two sketches from my old cupboard and placed all three in front of my Grandfather. 

For the next five minutes, I narrated the whole story. I described the whole incident when I got pushed from the bus and how I saw him that day. I describe that motorbike accident to him. And then, I told him about that incident. I told him that he still looks the same every time I see him. I also told him that I have a strong belief that he wants to kill me or harm me.

When I said this, Dada Ji picked up the sketch which I made after the bike crash, watched it closely, and pressed it against his chest. I was not able to grasp what was happening. The next moment I heard his wrinkled face all wet with the continuous flowing of tears. His shoulders were moving up and down in a rhythm when he was crying.

"What happened Dada Ji?" I asked him, keeping my hand on his back.

He said nothing for a while. He was just looking at the sketch and crying silently. I could smell something eerie. I offered him a glass of water. He was drinking it very slowly, keeping his sight fixed on the sketch.

"He is my elder brother." He said in the softest voice possible. "He died from the cholera epidemic before partition when we were still in Lahore.".

I was shocked. My lips were trembling. I felt a kind of weakness in my knees. I sat near Dada Ji's chair. I held his leg and kept my head on his lap. The silence was soothing. 

Dada Ji started caressing my head when he said " And Bhai Sahab (My Brother) was not trying to harm you, on the contrary, he was trying to protect you from those accidents. He was protecting the whole family when he was alive. He is still doing the same. He is not some ageless ghost, he is your guardian angel, my child. He protects you from the present as well as future dangers.

'Guardian Angel' these words still ring in my mind.

 Does that ever happen to you that you see the same person again and again in different places and on different occasions?

Don't Ignore that face - He or she can be your Guardian Angel.


Thursday, June 10, 2021

Private Delhi by Ashwin Sanghi and James Patterson - Not a Book Review






The City of Delhi was quite freezing when I reached the Indian Habitat Center with a sling bag filled with a couple of books, a pen, and a notebook. I was almost an hour early for the session and for the very first time I saw this gentleman, a little shorter than me, walking with a bunch of kids around him, asking for autographs or photographs. I won't lie to you. I was numb for a moment. My mind couldn't differentiate between reality and my imagination. 
I met Mr. Ashwin Sanghi after his talk at Times Literature Fest back in 2016. I will share that experience in a coming post of mine. For this post, let's talk about his second installment of the Private series, co-authored by James Patterson. It's called Private Delhi.







Story


I received the book in December 2016, but I got the chance to read it in the current lockdown only. 
The book begins with a gruesome murder, committed by this mysterious man, wearing all black. And soon after that, a dozen rotting bodies found in the basement of a shattered house, which is said to be government property. The case didn't get much attention from police or media, but the chief minister of Delhi, Mr. Jaswal hired Private, the well-known investigating agency, whose Indian operations are headed by Santosh Wagh.
The basic motto of Jaswal's interest, in that case, involved dirty politics. He wanted to know the involvement of the lieutenant governor of Delhi, Mr. Ravi Chopra. 
But the case is messier than it seems. With the involvement of various big players, this case is a big challenge for Santosh and his team. Will he able to crack it?

Review

I have noticed that many a time a story deviates if it is written from different characters' points of view. This world has a different definition for each one of us. And to write the same story from different characters' points of view is a task in itself. And Ashwin Sanghi and Mr. Patterson did a commendable job. Every characters' background, detail, and the aim is very well written. Each chapter starts with a different characters' vision and ends on a thrilling note. One gets so much involved in that chapter that one expects a continuation in the next chapter. But the next chapter is somewhat different from the previous one. And the beauty of writing this book in such a way is, it keeps the reader so much involved and on his toes. The thrill element, style, details make this an amazing cocktail, which can be termed as fast-paced fiction - a page-turner. 
Being an ardent reader of Sanghi's work, I picked up this book. And I have no issue in accepting that it's difficult to mark a border between his work and Patterson's work. 

What I liked about the book

I have a special space for fast-paced thrillers in my heart. When I say fast-paced, it should include appropriate detailing, research, and storyline. All these parameters are taken care of while writing the book. 
A lot of intellectuals can give you a hell lot of pointers on how a mystery/thriller should be written. I believe in only one thing - if I can crack the mystery before the author discloses it, it's not a very pleasing thriller.
You won't believe me but I sat with a pencil in my hand to write the details of the characters to crack who is the murderer. After chewing my pencil for two days, I have no problem accepting that I failed miserably.

What I dislike about the Book


If I don't compare this with the books I liked or disliked, I find this book perfect in itself. If you are a reader who reads books for leisure or peace of mind, this book is not for you.


So here's my take on this book. If you wish to buy this book, you can click HERE and grab your copy.

Thank you
HRN



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