By Ananya Mukherjee
Singapore
 Aaditya Singh Chauhan had not been keeping too well,
of late. He was touching seventy-five this March and these years of struggle of
trying to keep the kitchen fire burning against all odds, material and
spiritual, had drained him completely. I had always known him to be a strong
man in the past, but I saw him withering slowly with each passing day, his weak
bones giving in to the realities of age and unable to cope from the harshness
of nature, Aadi, the fighter with the Rajput bloodline was unwillingly yet eventually
succumbing to acceptance and withdrawal.
Aaditya Singh Chauhan had not been keeping too well,
of late. He was touching seventy-five this March and these years of struggle of
trying to keep the kitchen fire burning against all odds, material and
spiritual, had drained him completely. I had always known him to be a strong
man in the past, but I saw him withering slowly with each passing day, his weak
bones giving in to the realities of age and unable to cope from the harshness
of nature, Aadi, the fighter with the Rajput bloodline was unwillingly yet eventually
succumbing to acceptance and withdrawal.
  
During such a visit last Easter, Joyee, our first born, an established designer in this part of the world now, raised her eyebrows to the blue mural in the middle of a family lunch in the garden. The exact words she used were “Such a shame!” as her eyes inspected the mural that once defined the identity of the home we had built together. And that pointed criticism was directed at no one else but her own father. Unlike his feudal background, Aaditya was an esteemed artist who specialised in murals, one of the best of his times and his work of art could be seen all across England and other parts of Europe and Asia. For a man whose creations were celebrated over the continents, having a worn out mural on his own county home was perceived discreditable in the eyes of his own children.
Joyee was harsh, but she was right. The mural had peeled off in places, the colours had weathered too many storms and in its present state, the once brilliant piece of art looked like a sad caricature of its lost glory. Aadi had taken the criticism a bit too strongly and started working on restoring the mural with a speed and vengeance I dreaded. He toiled through the afternoon suns, without food or sleep for days, recharging the dead wall with an energy that seemed to take every breath out of his own old lungs. My protests fell on deaf ears. He was not ready to listen.  
" I need to finish before the rains come back and
wash away my first strokes,” he was determined. 
And just when the last corner of the top right was ready for the first stroke of paint, Aadi slipped, fell from a shaft and broke his back. That moment in our lives left the mural unfinished yet finished the man forever.  Aadi got back on his feet after few months in bed
and long painful hours of physiotherapy, but the strength in his body was gone.
He could move slowly and after much effort, the exercise of a mere physical
movement would tire him so much that he chose to sit quietly by the window
doodling on a scribble pad or listening to Bach, his favourite since he was in
school. 
Then one night, when the wind was whistling through the backyard trees, and the temperature had suddenly gone down a few degrees, just as I was cleaning up after dinner, a car pulled up into our driveway. On any other night, I would not have opened the door to any visitor at that hour but the tempest brewing at my doorstep led me to do the unthinkable. I opened my home to a stranger.  
  I stood at the door with suspicion written all over
my face. Aadi was hardly in a physical shape to protect me, and I was an old
woman anyway. What if this strange man with the second most sparkling pair of
blue eyes I had even seen turned out to be an imposter?   He perhaps analysed the expression of doubt on my
face and flashed out an Identity card. “Look, I am not here for burglary if
that is what you are scared of. I am an architect and I have a site to view in
another location, hence I am stuck in this county. I have no interest to rob
you of anything.  The moment the storm stops, I will leave. If you believe
in me, you could let me in, or I will find another shelter….” “Wait,” I stopped him in the middle of his sentence
gaping at his identity card.  “What did you say your name was?”  
  
  
  
  
  
He smiled and thanked me for my kindness. I looked away. Those two blue eyes and the name were too much of a coincidence to happen all at the same time.  
“My husband and I have been living here for 40 years. He is not keeping too well but we can manage fine,” I replied. “Would you care for some tea?”  
  
" I did not know we had visitors so late in the
night,” Aadi was leaning against the living room door.  
  
Before the stranger could speak, I stepped in, “Aadi…his name is Aakash. He was caught in the storm and is here till the storm withers away.”
“Oh, I see. And were you so caught in a time warp to be taken by a name, my dear, that you allow a stranger to come in at the middle of the night?” Aadi looked at me straight in the eyes. I felt injured just where only he knew the scar was and left the room.
The night that I had buried along with the blue mittens, the toys, the bottles, the tiny pairs of overalls, towels and memories in the backyard several winters came back in a flash....
  “Mrs Chauhan, you have a baby boy. His eyes are as
blue as the sky. He looks like a prince,” the nurse had said beaming. The
Woodlands Hospital down the road had registered his name as Aakash Singh
Chauhan.  
On that fateful night, a fire broke out in the Woodlands Hospital nursery charring all new borns and young children to death, marking it as the saddest day in the history of this peaceful country. For several of us, like me, it scorched their souls beyond repair.
“Can we have some more tea?” Aadi had begun a conversation with the stranger in our house who had the same name as my dead son.
“Which part of India are you from?”  
“Ok. Where you born in England?”
“Oh yes. Here…actually…er..somewhere around here. You know some place called Woodlands Hospital?”
“Ah…all our children were born there too till it caught that miserable fire. So did your parents live here?”
“Well..ah..I am not sure.”
“You seem very young. You could not have been born too many years ago. What’s your birth year?”
“Look…are you not getting too personal?”
“No, why can’t you tell me when were you born?”
“Of course I can tell you when I was born. 80…. Erh.. 8 August 1980.” He stammered.  
  
  I stood frozen watching the two men in my living
room. This man, who I had given shelter in a storm, who had the same blue eyes
and name as my son, was born on the same day, same year in the same hospital as
my Aakash, and was pulling a gun at my husband?
“But my Aakash is dead. He is lying cold and dead buried in that little garden facing the blue mural. He has been dead for almost 30 years. How can you be him??" I wailed letting out a scream….collapsing on the couch.
“Jesus!” he said and dropped his gun. His entire demeanour changed with that word.
He paced a few steps across the living space, and stopped to look at Aadi.
“Look, I am not who I said I am, but I am not an imposter. I am an officer of the Scotland Yard. Here’s my true identity card.” He handed out an identity card from his shirt pocket. There was a photograph of the stranger in police uniform.
Aadi looked away, holding me firm in his arms.
“For security reasons, we often pick up names of the dead, registered names of children such that we can operate incognito. It is not the best idea but it protects our identity for a bigger cause. I am really sorry, I did not know that Aakash was your son. I was given his name because his eyes matched mine. I am really sorry.” With that, he picked up his car keys and left.
The wind was still whispering through the trees, the tempest lashing at our doors, as we held each other staring into the darkness, and catching glimpses of the blueness of the mural as it shone in the occasional lightening, reminding ourselves that the death of a child does not kill the fearless protectiveness of a parent….they continue to be parents, in life and after…
Singapore
 Aaditya Singh Chauhan had not been keeping too well,
of late. He was touching seventy-five this March and these years of struggle of
trying to keep the kitchen fire burning against all odds, material and
spiritual, had drained him completely. I had always known him to be a strong
man in the past, but I saw him withering slowly with each passing day, his weak
bones giving in to the realities of age and unable to cope from the harshness
of nature, Aadi, the fighter with the Rajput bloodline was unwillingly yet eventually
succumbing to acceptance and withdrawal.
Aaditya Singh Chauhan had not been keeping too well,
of late. He was touching seventy-five this March and these years of struggle of
trying to keep the kitchen fire burning against all odds, material and
spiritual, had drained him completely. I had always known him to be a strong
man in the past, but I saw him withering slowly with each passing day, his weak
bones giving in to the realities of age and unable to cope from the harshness
of nature, Aadi, the fighter with the Rajput bloodline was unwillingly yet eventually
succumbing to acceptance and withdrawal.During such a visit last Easter, Joyee, our first born, an established designer in this part of the world now, raised her eyebrows to the blue mural in the middle of a family lunch in the garden. The exact words she used were “Such a shame!” as her eyes inspected the mural that once defined the identity of the home we had built together. And that pointed criticism was directed at no one else but her own father. Unlike his feudal background, Aaditya was an esteemed artist who specialised in murals, one of the best of his times and his work of art could be seen all across England and other parts of Europe and Asia. For a man whose creations were celebrated over the continents, having a worn out mural on his own county home was perceived discreditable in the eyes of his own children.
Joyee was harsh, but she was right. The mural had peeled off in places, the colours had weathered too many storms and in its present state, the once brilliant piece of art looked like a sad caricature of its lost glory. Aadi had taken the criticism a bit too strongly and started working on restoring the mural with a speed and vengeance I dreaded. He toiled through the afternoon suns, without food or sleep for days, recharging the dead wall with an energy that seemed to take every breath out of his own old lungs. My protests fell on deaf ears. He was not ready to listen.
And just when the last corner of the top right was ready for the first stroke of paint, Aadi slipped, fell from a shaft and broke his back. That moment in our lives left the mural unfinished yet finished the man forever.
Then one night, when the wind was whistling through the backyard trees, and the temperature had suddenly gone down a few degrees, just as I was cleaning up after dinner, a car pulled up into our driveway. On any other night, I would not have opened the door to any visitor at that hour but the tempest brewing at my doorstep led me to do the unthinkable. I opened my home to a stranger.
He smiled and thanked me for my kindness. I looked away. Those two blue eyes and the name were too much of a coincidence to happen all at the same time.
“My husband and I have been living here for 40 years. He is not keeping too well but we can manage fine,” I replied. “Would you care for some tea?”
Before the stranger could speak, I stepped in, “Aadi…his name is Aakash. He was caught in the storm and is here till the storm withers away.”
“Oh, I see. And were you so caught in a time warp to be taken by a name, my dear, that you allow a stranger to come in at the middle of the night?” Aadi looked at me straight in the eyes. I felt injured just where only he knew the scar was and left the room.
The night that I had buried along with the blue mittens, the toys, the bottles, the tiny pairs of overalls, towels and memories in the backyard several winters came back in a flash....
On that fateful night, a fire broke out in the Woodlands Hospital nursery charring all new borns and young children to death, marking it as the saddest day in the history of this peaceful country. For several of us, like me, it scorched their souls beyond repair.
“Can we have some more tea?” Aadi had begun a conversation with the stranger in our house who had the same name as my dead son.
“Which part of India are you from?”
“Ok. Where you born in England?”
“Oh yes. Here…actually…er..somewhere around here. You know some place called Woodlands Hospital?”
“Ah…all our children were born there too till it caught that miserable fire. So did your parents live here?”
“Well..ah..I am not sure.”
“You seem very young. You could not have been born too many years ago. What’s your birth year?”
“Look…are you not getting too personal?”
“No, why can’t you tell me when were you born?”
“Of course I can tell you when I was born. 80…. Erh.. 8 August 1980.” He stammered.
“But my Aakash is dead. He is lying cold and dead buried in that little garden facing the blue mural. He has been dead for almost 30 years. How can you be him??" I wailed letting out a scream….collapsing on the couch.
“Jesus!” he said and dropped his gun. His entire demeanour changed with that word.
He paced a few steps across the living space, and stopped to look at Aadi.
“Look, I am not who I said I am, but I am not an imposter. I am an officer of the Scotland Yard. Here’s my true identity card.” He handed out an identity card from his shirt pocket. There was a photograph of the stranger in police uniform.
Aadi looked away, holding me firm in his arms.
“For security reasons, we often pick up names of the dead, registered names of children such that we can operate incognito. It is not the best idea but it protects our identity for a bigger cause. I am really sorry, I did not know that Aakash was your son. I was given his name because his eyes matched mine. I am really sorry.” With that, he picked up his car keys and left.
The wind was still whispering through the trees, the tempest lashing at our doors, as we held each other staring into the darkness, and catching glimpses of the blueness of the mural as it shone in the occasional lightening, reminding ourselves that the death of a child does not kill the fearless protectiveness of a parent….they continue to be parents, in life and after…
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Amazing and beutifully expressed ! The heart always hopes for the unreal to take a shape and bring back that lost smile. Some incidents stop the time wheel and it seems that everything has come to a still. But the heart still holds the hope that someday miraculously it shall all be undone and we shall be at peace again
ReplyDeleteAnanya, I read the entire story, while holding my breath and at some point of time, I really thought he was their son, having been saved somehow.
ReplyDeleteThe ending is a big surprise, as usual.
Fantastic.
yet another brilliant piece of art ...
ReplyDeleteEmotion runs high and never stops until drops of tears flowing without my knowledge. Wonderful..Mriganka
ReplyDeleteDo you have any idea or logic that men should not cry? I am defying that logic because of this wonderful peace of writing. I knew the entire fact of the Scotland yard but never felt the pain as intense as I am feeling now. Wonderfully crafted. Thank You. Still in the story.. Thank you again Ananya Mukherjee
ReplyDeletethe S tory is brilliant...
ReplyDeleteLeft me very silent Noddy. Hugs
ReplyDeleteCan't express how I'm feeling right now. Left me completely speechless. You always give us surprises at the end of almost every story. This is one of a kind. Happy to see you back in form. Keep the surprises coming. Awaiting eagerly
ReplyDeleteAmazingly beautiful !! U r blessed with words and thoughts !
ReplyDeletebecome a writer now ....wow great....ok i would read your blog....
ReplyDeleteGreat story! Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteQuite good...amazing
ReplyDeleteloved it
ReplyDeleteTears flowing unknowingly.. Keep writing... God Bless u dear..
ReplyDeletekhub bhalo laaglo re pore ..................... the storytelling was fantastic ....
ReplyDeleteyet another brilliant piece of art ..
ReplyDeleteuperb story kiddo...just when I thought it was racing towards a predictable climax(altho' very unlike for the 'storyteller' in you:))...BANG! a twist hit me straight! Bravo!!!
ReplyDeleteloved it dear
ReplyDeleteQuite moving !
ReplyDelete