One Rotten Apple
The screeching of the van’s brakes brought me to the window. I pulled the
curtains apart and the sudden burst of sunlight made me blink. A truck
stood parked outside our apartment building. “We have got neighbors,” I said, a note of enthusiasm creeping into my voice.
There
was no reaction from Mum and Dad. Their heads bent, they were pouring
over the scrabble board. “A seven letter word, and that too on a triple
word score,” said mother rubbing her hands in delight as she quickly
made BISCUIT. Dad looked a little put out. She had won again. She
usually did.
Ravish
came into the drawing room at that time. “Mom, I want breakfast,” he
muttered. He voice sounded crabby. He had not slept the whole night.
The Law School Exams were around the corner. “SYNTAX,” she said
swooping upon the word TAX dad had made. “SYNTAX on the triple word
score yet again,” she let out a cry of delight. “Mom,” Ravish’s voice
sounded unnaturally loud, “I want breakfast.” “It’s on the table,” she
said, her head still bent, “the cornflakes, apple, milk, sugar and
orange juice.” “I want scrambled eggs,” he insisted, his voice peevish.
“Stop crouching around the house like a panther in the wilds Mita,” ordered Ma, while putting another word on the board. Playing Scrabble was her way of relaxing, and Dad, recently retired from the Army, was pathetically grateful for her company during the weekends. I scowled and went back to the window.
The
luggage was still being unloaded outside our apartment building. A
large Fridge, probably GE, two LG air conditioners, double beds, a
dressing table a piano and kitchen ware. I stood a little behind the
curtain. I did not want to seem to be prying.
A
Honda City stopped by the van. A man stepped out of the car. With dark
glasses covering his face, he appeared to be of an indeterminate age.
An overgrown beard covered half his face. He was lithe, strong and
muscular. I could imagine him jogging around the Lodi gardens, in
shorts and tee shirt, his muscles rippling. I wondered if his wife
would step out after him. No one did. “Bachelor,” I did not realize I
had said the word aloud. “What?” asked Ma. “Don’t worry, Ma, it is not a
seven lettered word.” I muttered. “Don’t be silly,” Ma shot me a
warning look. The look spoke volumes. I saw warning in her eyes. I
thrust out my chin. Ma was warning me to keep away from the new
neighbor. She had not forgotten or forgiven me about Nishant. She had
not forgotten the time she had walked into the house and found Nishant
coming out of my bedroom. Out of a feeling of pique I had not told her
that I had called Nishant simply to change the bulb in my bedroom. I was
happy to let her think the worst and simmer in anger.
“Don’t
worry di,” said Ravish, winking at me, “Our new neighbour will
probably come to borrow a cup of sugar, or milk, sooner or later.”
Ravish was wrong, he did not come to see us under any pretext. I did
meet him, two days later when we were coming up the lift. He stood in
the corner, his head down, as if he was warding us off. I looked at him
with curiosity, my eyes roaming across his face, or whatever little of
it was visible, his shirt and his faded jeans. Ma seemed annoyed at me
for my open display of curiosity. But there was little she could do
about it. Just as the door opened he left without even a backward
glance. His message to us was loud and clear. “Stay away.” “There was
an air of mystery about him,” I muttered, secretly wishing that we
stayed on the eighth floor and not the third so that we could have been
together in the lift for longer. “Probably he is a small time crook,”
Ma hazarded, making her dislike of him very evident. “Small time crooks
do not live in our kinds of apartments,” I argued. Dad had never
stopped boasting that our four bedroom luxury apartment had cost us one
crore rupees.
For
days I kept a watch on the neighboring apartment. But I never saw any
visitors coming to see him. He was clearly a recluse. I had all the
time in the world to do it. I was preparing for my CAT exam. Ma
wanted me to do an MBA. “What else is there to do?” Ma’s eyes spoke
volumes. “Not everyone is brilliant like you,” I said, thrusting out my
chin, “some of us are average, people like me.” But Ma, a Senior
Vice-President in Hindustan Unilever, would never be able to
understand how a girl could be satisfied with being just a homemaker.
Luckily she was a realist and realized that the chances of my cracking
the CAT were almost negligible. But it made a good conversational
gambit. Ma’s statement, “Mita is taking the CAT exam,” explained to
her friends why I was lounging around the house for months instead of
doing something useful with myself.
Although
I did not meet my mysterious neighbor again, I got regular updates on
him from our Bai. His Bai and ours were friends which was not
surprising. All the Bais who worked in the apartments were known to
each other. “All he does is drink,” she disclosed, screwing up her nose
in disgust, as though she could smell liquor around her, “He sits in
the evening, eating chicken tikka and drinking. He stares at
the walls all the time. He does nothing. At times he sketches
furiously, at other times he writes furiously. He does not leave the
house. He is like a prisoner. He remains locked up in the house.”
“A
graphic designer or an architect,” I surmised, “that would explain the
sketching and the writing.” “Or a writer-cum- illustrator,” I added as
an afterthought. “Perhaps he has been a prisoner,” Ma murmured,
“Perhaps he is not used to freedom.” “True,” Dad’s voice was mild, he
seldom disagreed with Ma, “What do you think he is?” “A small time
crook?” Ma could not hide the contempt from her voice.
“Perhaps
he has a disease. Perhaps he is dying of cancer,” Ravish’s
interruption surprised me. He took an apple, polished it with the edge
of his tee shirt and crunched it loudly between his teeth. “Can’t be
true,” interjected Ma, “he looks healthy, disgustingly so.” Ravish gave
Ma a telling look. He hadn’t finished as yet. “Or AIDS,” he concluded.
Ma’s eyes began to glint. “That,” she said with relish, “is a distinct
possibility.”
Perhaps
it was this conversation which stoked my curiosity further, so when I
found the neighbour’s door slightly open I gave it a knock and walked
in. He was sitting on a rocking chair, rocking himself slowly like an
old man, his back to the wall. He was impervious to my presence. I
walked in and stood before him, till he was forced to look at me. “I
wanted to borrow…… some sugar,” I almost said, but stopped myself at
the right time. I was carrying no sugar bowl. “The newspaper,” I
substituted, “we get the Indian Express at home.” I had already espied
The Times of India lying on the sofa. He handed me the newspaper, the
gesture signified dismissal. It robbed me of an excuse to stay on in
his house.
I
went out and stared at his back. I realized that I would need to
borrow the newspaper every day. It seemed a good excuse as any for
seeing him. The next day I knocked at his door boldly after I had seen
the bai leave. “I wanted to borrow the newspaper,” I
requested, “I am preparing for the CAT exams.” He continued to look
unseeingly at the wall, as if he could see a unique mosaic on it,
invisible to other eyes. He did not even turn when I said, “thank you,”
and closed the door behind me.
The third day there was a knock on our door around 11 a.m. and I saw with dismay his Bai
standing with a copy of The Times of India. His message was loud and
clear, “Do not intrude.” But I chose to be obtuse. After going through
the Delhi Times quite avidly I trotted off to his apartment. I found the
door ajar once again. I was sure he had not heard his Bai
leave. I knocked perfunctorily and then walked in. He seemed surprised
to see me. “I had sent you the newspaper,” he said. “I came to return
it,” I retorted. “Just push it under the door, will you?” he asked
sarcastically, “If it is not too much of a botheration.” This was the
longest sentence he had spoken to me. I would have called it progress,
had he not robbed me of any excuse to see him.
A fortnight later as I was passing by his door I found him rasping loudly. The door was ajar. The pizza delivery boy had just left and I was sure that our neighbor had no time to close the door. I stopped outside and listened. When he coughed once again I barged in. His face was completely flushed. His eyes seemed dilated. I put my hand on his forehead. It was burning with fever. “Where do you keep the thermometer?” I asked briskly. This time he did not argue. “In the bathroom,” he said weakly. “And paracetamol?” I asked. He gestured at the dining table. I took his temperature and was shocked to see that it was 104 F. I made him swallow two paracetamols and then asked him if I could ring his doctor. “Will you?” he asked humbly, “Dr. Shroff’s number is in my diary.” He propped himself on his elbow and took out his diary. I could not see a telephone instrument anywhere but I saw his cell phone on the table. I picked it up and dialled the doctor’s number. The phone kept ringing but no one picked it up. “Probably a wrong number,” I surmised and dialled again. This time I got the doctor’s clinic. I handed over the phone to the neighbour and the doctor, obviously a friend of his, decided to drop by. I was with him when Dr. Shroff appeared and if he was surprised to see me he did not show it. “Chest infection,” he diagnosed, “Aloo, I am leaving you some antibiotics.” “Aloo?” I giggled to myself. The neighbor glared at me. Dr. Shroff chuckled and said sorry although he displayed no sorrow whatsoever. “Aloo,” I thought exultantly. I now knew his nickname. I had still to learn his name and surname. His house had no name plate on it. He seemed almost paranoid about keeping his identity a secret. I realized I would not able to learn my neighbor’s identity from Dr. Shroff. “If he can get some good home cooked food and medicines he shall be fine,” Dr. Shroff told me, possibly misreading our relationship.
I nodded my head. That evening I returned to the neighbor’s apartment with a bowl of homemade soup and some khichri and left it on his table. I would have loved to feed it to him, spoon by spoon, but I was a realist and did not push my luck. His illness gave me the opportunity to show off my culinary skills. The next day I brought him sagoodana khichri. He opened the door and asked, “what have you brought for me?” “Sagoodana Khichri ,” I said, entering his house. “Sagoodana,” he blew up, “I hate it.” Tears sprang up in my eyes. I began to rush out of the door. “Wait,” he said, getting hold of my hand and pulling me inside. “Serve me the khichri,” he ordered. “Eat it yourself,” the words were on my lips, thankfully I did not utter them. I spooned the khichri onto a plate and found him eating it with his fingers. “Delicious,” he murmured, “you are a whiz cook, kid.” Kid! Just how old was he? Thirty, thirty-five or forty? I had no clue. But his words filled me with pride. “Since you are bent upon playing nursemaid,” he said, his smile taking the sting out of his words, “let me confess that I hate brinjals, pumpkin and bitter gourd.” I smiled. Those were my least favourite vegetables as well. We had something in common after all. “Tell me what you want to eat tomorrow,” I asked. “Can you make aloo ka paranthas?” he asked. “No,” I vetoed, “You are ill. Aloo ka paranthas are out.” He made a face at me. The next day when I came I said conspiratorially, “I have got you aloo ka paranthas without oil.” He grabbed the plate from my hand, tore a large piece of the parantha and stuffed it into his mouth. He munched it happily and after polishing off a parantha said, “You have magic in your fingers.”
The
next afternoon when I arrived his house carrying pasta in tomato
sauce Dr. Shroff was already present there. “Mita, you are a miracle
worker,” he said appreciatively, “your patient’s fever is down and he
is much better.” My heart sank at the thought that my neighbor would
not need me anymore. I had come to look forward to his dependence on
me. He surprised me by saying, “I still need home cooked food for some
more days, at least till my Bai returns.” “You must be an
excellent cook if he relishes your cooking,” grinned the doctor, “your
patient is a gourmand.” This revelation gave me the incentive to
experiment with the meals I planned to bring him. For once I was glad
Mom was the Vice President of an MNC and returned late from work. I had
all the time to myself and no one questioned me about what was
cooking. On the fifth day I made him some Thai chicken curry and jasmine
rice. “Are you a mind reader?” he asked wonderingly, “I love Thai
food. It’s my favorite.” “It’s my favorite too,” I confessed. On the
sixth day his Bai had returned and I realized that I no longer had any
reason for seeing him.
A week later I heard his
rasping cough and finding his apartment door open I walked in without
knocking. He frowned when he saw me. “Why do you keep coming here
Mita?” he asked. “I don’t know,” I admitted. I did not know myself what
drew me to him repeatedly. Was it sheer curiosity? Was it an unknown
attraction? Was I falling in love with him? “I do,” he challenged, “I
know why you come.” “Why?” My eyes widened. “Because,” he said... A
minute later, I left his room crying. It was unfortunate that Ma came
out of the lift just then and saw me rushing into our house.
“Where
are you coming from, as though the devil himself was at your heels?”
Ma asked me sharply. “Nowhere,” I muttered mutinously. But Ma had seen
that our neighbor’s door was ajar. She figured that I had returned from
there. She barged into his house without even a perfunctory knock at
the door and said in a loud voice, “Let me warn you once and for all,
just keep away from my daughter.” My face burnt with humiliation as I
imagined him retorting, “It is your daughter who cannot keep away from
me.” But he said nothing. He continued to look through her, as though she didn’t exist and Ma confessed that even she was intimidated by his cold stare.
Three
days later he left his apartment. I did not know when he had left but I
saw a van taking away his furniture. No one knew where he had
disappeared. The next day the maid came with a sheaf of newspapers.
“Saheb said you may find then useful,” she murmured. Ma looked at me
meaningfully, while I muttered something about needing TOI for my CAT
exams. “You could have subscribed to the newspaper yourself,” she
admonished as she picked up the newspaper on the top of the pile and
began reading it.
The
newspaper was opened onto a page where our neighbor had doodled a
lot. He had drawn a long line against the margin of the story. Ma gave
but a cursory glance to the main story of a woman who had drowned her
two children in the bathtub. She had been considered mentally unstable
and committed to an institution for life. After all, who was interested
in a woman?
I did not pay any attention to what she was saying. I remembered him saying, “I know what you want,” and his pinning me against the wall, looking at me with tortured eyes and saying, “You don’t know anything about me Mita, you do not know you are playing with fire.” I had closed my eyes, parted my lips and felt his lips cracked and salty, on mine, felt his beard graze my face, the bristles hurting me. I could feel him raise his head suddenly, as if to clear it, and his whispering, “Get out, get out of here, will you?” I felt my bruised lips with my fingers and was shaken, both by his touch and the emotions he invoked within me. I rushed from his house, as though the devil himself was at my heels. Now I realized what he meant when he had said, “You do not know anything about me.” Alok. Aloo. It all fitted in. We had not heard of the case, because we had been away for a family holiday to Singapore and had missed the TV news and the newspaper reports. All I felt now was loathing for him, for what he had done and contempt for myself, for falling for a criminal like him.
I
would never have known the truth about him but for a sheer chance. One
Sunday Ma was channel surfing during a two minute break while watching
a serial, when she suddenly switched to a show, where they showed the
woman I had read about in The Times of India, the Mumbai resident who
had drowned her two children in the bathtub. She had been declared
legally insane and committed to an institution. She sat on hospital bed,
her eyes unseeing, staring at a large family photograph on the wall.
The cameras zoomed on the photograph and there was no mistaking it.
Sitting with her and her two sons was her husband. It was our mystery
neighbor. “Mannan Aluwalia,” the announcer disclosed.
Aloo.
Aluwalia. Once again everything fell into place. His inability to live
in his old house, his need to escape from the old friends and
acquaintances and the old memories, his coming from Mumbai to Delhi and
shifting to our Apartment Building almost incognito, his staring into
space for long intervals, his abrupt sentences, his long silences, his
glazed eyes, the bottles of whisky and his need to be loved.
For
days afterwards I went to the Delhi Public Library and read about the
murder in the old newspapers. I read about his wife, a schizophrenic
who took her two boys for a bath and then drowned them in the bathtub.
Mannan returned from work to find his wife sitting beside her two
dead children asking him, “why don’t they laugh anymore Mannan, and why
don’t they cry?” Suddenly he had lost everything he had held dear, his
wife and his two sons. I recalled that there was so much sadness in
his eyes and raw passion in his voice when he had said, “Mita, you are
playing with fire.”
I
did not admit it before Ma that I knew how to contact him. That day
when he had been down with raging fever, on the pretext of ringing up
the doctor, I had first given a blank call to my own cell phone and
then claimed that I had connected with a wrong number. I had got the
doctor on the second ring. I now had Mannan’s number with me. I closed
my eyes and thought about him. I still knew very little about him. He
was years older than me. He had been the victim of a grave tragedy. He
had built a wall around him which no one had been able to penetrate. I
had tried my best to do it but had failed. He was possibly attracted
towards me. Or maybe he was just lonely. He did not even like me very
much and he had made that abundantly clear. But he needed someone to
wipe away the pain of all that had happened, and give life another
chance. It was a chance I was willing to take. He would no doubt rebuff
me but I was willing to risk it. He had warned me that I was playing
with fire but I was prepared to have my fingers burnt. I went to my
room, picked up my mobile and dialled.
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