This is all
SEGAD’s doing! This is her Write OS Challenge. I accept!
Section 1
“Chotey, I
think your Jiju is having an affair,” Anjali said, her eyes brimming with tears
threatening to fall in to the pooja thali in her hands.
“What the!”
exclaimed Arnav, looking up from his open briefcase. He was packing to go to
Agra for a two-day meeting.
Anjali
nodded. A tear fell on the heap of flowers in the thali.
“I...”
Arnav shook his head in acute doubt. “Di, I seriously think you are mistaken. Jiju would never...”
“No,
Chotey. It is history repeating itself. Shyamji...like Papa....” Anjali choked
to a halt.
Arnav
stared at her in horror.
“Phone
calls at odd hours....He does not let me answer his phone. He is always at the
office...says he is busy...always working late...Chotey...” Anjali wept.
Arnav
abandoned his files and walked up to Anjali. He took the thali from her and set
it aside. Then he caught hold of her shoulders and tried to talk some sense in
to her. “Di, Jiju is a good lawyer and a busy one. He might be working. The
calls might be official...”
Anjali
shook her head tearfully.
“Did you
ask him about your suspicions, Di?” he asked.
She shook
her head. “I am scared, Chotey,” she whispered.
Arnav
stared at her, helpless. "Who? I mean, who is the girl?"
“The calls...Most of them are from a Khushi,”
she revealed.
“Khushi?” Arnav
frowned. He had never heard the name before.
“She is a
new employee at Shyamji’s office. I think...I think Shyamji and Khushi...,”
Anjali croaked.
“Di,” Arnav
looked at her devastation, not knowing how to make everything right for his Di
as he had been doing all his adult life.
“Chotey,
get rid of her. She must be luring my Shyamji, enticing him in to her web with
her eyes on our money. Chotey, please make everything alright, as it was before
Khushi came in to our lives,” Anjali demanded of her brother, tears wetting her
cheeks.
“Di, tum
chinta mat karo. I will take care of you,” he tried to calm her down.
“Chotey, I
am scared,” she whispered, throwing herself in to her Chotey’s arms and
weeping.
“Di, please
don’t cry. Di, please. I will see to this,” he promised rashly.
“I knew it.
I knew my papad ka tukda would not abandon me in my moment of need,” Anjali
dried her cheeks.
Section 2
Arnav
looked at Shyam with his sharp eyes.
Jiju was
eating his dinner in a disinterested manner, a frown on his face. Every once in
a while his eyes strayed to the phone by his plate on the dining table.
The phone
rang.
Shyam fell
on the phone with an eagerness he did not hide.
Arnav’s
lips tightened in annoyance.
“Yes,
Khushi?” Shyam whispered as he hurriedly left the table excusing himself.
Arnav
imitated him and followed him to the hall.
“I will get
there in ten minutes, Khushi. No, no, don’t leave. I will meet you in ten
minutes,” Shyam whispered urgently in to the phone.
Arnav
frowned. Was his Di right? Was Jiju having an affair with this Khushi? Must be
some middle-class girl out to make her fortune by trapping a married man, he
thought bitterly, his lips twisted in contempt.
He would
have to deal with this Khushi, protect his Di and her marriage from her.
Section 3
Arnav
walked in to Shyam’s office when he knew for certain that Shyam was at the
court.
Sharmaji,
Shyam’s main clerk saw him and approached him, smiling. “Raizadaji, did you come to meet Shyamji? He is at court.”
“Yes,”
Arnav said softly. “When will he be back?”
“It will
take at least one more hour,” the elderly man said apologetically. “Is it
anything urgent? Can I pass on a message to him?”
“I need to
see him,” Arnav said. “I will wait here.”
Sharmaji
smiled. “Very good, Raizadaji. Please come with me.”
The man led him to a posh
waiting room with plush seating. “I will arrange for sugarless tea and biscuits
for you.”
Arnav
nodded his thanks. He placed his bag on the table. “The office looks busy,
thriving. How many people work here now?” he asked casually.
“Five
clerks,” Sharmaji smiled. “Twenty junior lawyers and Khushi for answering the
phone and keeping the office organised.”
“Khushi?”
Arnav frowned.
“Ji, Khushi
Kumari Gupta. She joined us a month back,” Sharmaji smiled. “She is a blessing.”
Arnav clenched
his jaw but managed to nod.
Sharmaji
left him alone to think. Maybe Di was wrong. Maybe he had misunderstood Jiju’s
conversation with the girl. Maybe Di was paranoid... He leaned back in the
chair, exhausted with work and worry. Maybe Khushi had nothing to do with all this. Maybe they were barking up
the wrong tree...the Khushi tree...the tree of happiness...
The door
opened slowly.
A tray with
tea came in to his vision. Then two arms and part of a colourful blue suit. Two
colourful jootis with coloured stones stuck on them.
His brows hit
his hair line.
He looked
up. A full figure...a tight blue suit...a neck that tempted him to throw
caution to the winds and bite his teeth in to its succulent flesh there...and a
face that blew his breath away.
He stood up
slowly.
Khushi
looked at him with wide eyes.
Sharmaji had said that Shyamji’s saalesaheb was
in the waiting room and that she had to serve him sugarless tea and biscoot, but had forgotten to mention
how good-looking he was.
Khushi drew in a deep breath of appreciation of his
manliness, her nostrils picking up the musky smell of his aftershave.
“You are
Shyamji’s saalesaheb?” she asked, smiling, placing the tray before him on the
low table.
His eyes
burned as they lingered on the lines of her figure as she bent.
“Yes,” he
murmured.
His voice
made her heart flutter. So husky, so intimate...as though he were whispering
scandalous things in her ear.
She gulped.
His eyes
followed the movement of her throat.
Before he
had seen her, he had doubted that Khushi was involved with his Jiju. But once
he had seen her, he was sure that they were in a relationship.
For how
could any man resist Khushi?
He walked
out, brushing past her, his eyes blazing, his heart on fire, his soul aflame.
Khushi
looked at him striding away, her mouth open in an Awww. Why was he running
away? she wondered. She hadn’t sung any besura gaana, nor told any bakwaas
jokes. He hadn’t even tasted her tea.
Khushi
frowned. Was her sight alone enough to drive away men?
In his car,
he called Aman.
“Get me
everything you can on Khushi Kumari Gupta. She is working for my Jiju, Shyam
Manohar Jha,” he bit out.
“Yes, Sir,”
Aman said. If he was bewildered, he did not convey it to his boss. He sat down in his chair with a sigh after cutting the call. Now he would
have to loiter around Jha’s law office and flirt with kaamwaali baais to get
info on some girl!
Aman hit his head with his hand. He should have taken a job with the sewerage department than with AR Designs!
Section 4
He looked
down at the meagre details Aman had collected about the femme fatale.
Age 21.
Staying in Laxmi Nagar with an aunt. Has an elder sister.
Laxmi
Nagar? His lips twisted. Typical middle class locality.
No parents
to keep track of her. Her aunt must be in the game, he thought, prostituting
Khushi to get a bigger house in a better locality and a comfortable life.
And she has
an elder sister? Must be 22-23 years old and apparently not married yet. A cold
light lit his eyes. So she was out to make her family’s fortune through his
Di’s husband?
His fingers crushed the harmless paper and pushed it in to his
pocket.
ASR waited
outside Shyam’s office in a rented car.
Khushi
walked out, her cloth bag swinging against her waist, a smile on her face as
she watched swallows fly across the sky.
His jaw
clenched so tight that his bones were in danger of cracking.
As she
reached near the car, he pushed open the door.
Khushi
stopped short at the sudden movement. She looked up in to Arnav’s molten eyes.
“Aap?” she
stammered, her heart thudding in shock.
He
swallowed hard, his eyes on her lips.
“I..I left
suddenly today. You must have thought...” Arnav stopped.
Khushi
smiled. “Ji, I wondered...Aap ki tabiyat tho theek he na?”
“Yes,” he
said. “Err...Khushi, I need to talk to you,” he said.
She
frowned. “Talk to me?"
“Yes. It is
urgent. Shall I drop you home? We can talk on the way,” he said softly, trying
hard to look harmless.
She
hesitated.
He was Shyamji’s saalesaheb and so must be trustworthy. And it was
something urgent. He couldn’t be a bad man, she told herself.
She nodded
slowly.
Arnav
released the breath he had been holding. He hadn’t really been looking forward to
kidnapping her, which was his only option if she refused to accompany him
willingly. This was easier.
“Chalo,” he said, holding the door open
for her.
She got in.
He took his seat and locked all the doors.
“Wear your
seat belt,” he said, his voice soft.
She obeyed
him, her ears cocked to enjoy his heart-thrilling voice.
He drove
away.
Section 5
“I live in
Laxmi Nagar,” Khushi informed him.
He nodded
and took the turning away from the city.
“This is
not the way to my house,” Khushi told him. “You have to turn left here.” There
was a small hint of panic in her voice.
He soothed
her. “I thought we could talk in peace for a few moments in a secluded place. I
will drop you off at your home after we finish our discussion,” he said. He smiled
at her with a lot of effort. “I am afraid it is important. Otherwise I would
not have troubled you.”
What could
she say in the face of such politeness?
Khushi
nodded and curled her nervous fingers around the ends of her dupatta.
It began
drizzling.
Arnav
stopped the car at the site of his new guest house. The old building was being
demolished in stages and there was no one at the site.
He pushed
open his door, walked around the car in the drizzling rain and pulled her door open.
He held out
his hand.
Khushi
looked down. The ground was uneven and had puddles of dirty, brown water.
Slowly she placed her hand in his.
His fingers
closed around hers like the leaf of a Venus flytrap closing around an insect,
trapping it in its sweetly-scented death chamber.
She
trembled slightly as she alighted with his help.
He helped
her out and without letting go of her hand, led her in to the building.
She looked
around at the dilapidated building with wide eyes. “What is this place?” she
asked, a tinge of fear in her voice.
“A guest
house,” he replied softly. He led her by hand to a room and shut the door after
him.
Khushi
turned around at the sound of the door closing.
Arnav and
Khushi stood facing each other.
As she
watched, Arnav vanished and ASR took over. His eyes became cold, cynical. His
lips twisted in a smirk. His face became hard. His body language changed in to
that of an aggressor.
Khushi
jumped. What was happening here? Was she still asleep?
“Who do you
think you are?” ASR bit out.
She stared
at him for a moment in confusion. Had he forgotten her?
“Khushi
K..Kumari Gupta,” she replied, her voice trembling at the edges. “We..we met in
the morning...at the office..” she tried to remind him. Why had no one told her
that Shyamji’s saalesaheb was mad?
ASR snorted
like an angry bull. “Who gave you the right to destroy families, break hearts?” he asked in a scary sibilant whisper.
Khushi
frowned. What fault was it of hers that her parents were dead? “I didn’t
destroy our family,” she tried to explain. “My parents died in an accident.”
ASR
narrowed his eyes. “They are dead? That is good,” he hissed.
Khushi
frowned. “Why? Why is it good that they are dead?” she asked curiously.
“They would
have died of shame to see what their daughter has grown up to become,” ASR said
cuttingly.
Khushi’s
face fell. “Yes, you are right,” she sighed.
His eyes
zoomed on to her sad, penitent eyes.
“They
wanted me to become a doctor, but I am a receptionist at a law firm,” she
mourned.
His eyes
widened. “What the!” he exclaimed.
She looked
at him with all the fascinated curiosity and latent fear of a visitor to a zoo
looking at a caged lion.
“Are you
mad?” he asked, foaming at the mouth.
She giggled
slightly. “Thoda sa. Lekin not as much as you,” she replied.
ASR looked
at her in astonishment. What had his Jiju gotten in to?
“Do you
have any idea how much pain your thoughtless actions are causing?” he asked,
his eyes blazing.
Her face
fell. “I know now. I didn’t know before. I realised only when Rameshji started screaming in
pain.” She heaved a long sigh of sorrow. “I promised him that I would never
trip on a rug and hurt his toe again.”
His mouth
fell open.
“What did I
know that even a toe can have a fracture?” Khushi thought aloud.
“What the
hell are you talking about?” ASR asked, his fists clenched.
“Woh...hamare
office mein...Rameshji is the senior clerk just junior to Sharmaji,” she
explained. “I was coming out of Shyamji’s office with a few files in my hand.
Then Meetaji’s phone rang. Meetaji is junior to Rameshji. Her ring tone is
Jumme ki raat he, my favourite song. I turned my head to listen better and then
I tripped on the rug on the floor. The
files fell down. I tried to save myself by holding on to the table nearby. My
hand hit a heavy glass flower vase on Seemaji’s table and it fell on Rameshji’s
foot...” her voice trailed away.
ASR looked
in to big eyes filled with remorse, furious at her duplicity.
“I am
talking of Anjali Shyam Manohar Jha, my sister, Shyam’s wife, dammit!” ASR
shouted.
Khushi
frowned. “Anjali Shyam Manohar Jha? I haven’t met her. Aap yakeen keejiye, I
have never met her. I have never hurt her toe,” she said, “...or any other
part,” she added nervously as ASR began to stride towards her in fury.
Section 6
He caught
her by her arms and pushed her against the wall.
“Then what do you call
stealing her husband?” he asked, his face mere inches from hers, his eyes on
her trembling lips.
Khushi
stared at him open-mouthed.
“Stealing
her husband? Shyamji? How can anyone steal Shyamji? Is he a necklace to be
stolen? He is a man. He was in the office today morning. I saw him. Woh gayab
ho gaya? When? What?” she asked in wonder.
He shook
her till her teeth rattled, angry with himself for his fascination for the
other woman in his sister’s life.
“Aap...hamein..chodiye....”
she tried to say in between the shakes. “Hamein...ulti...aa...jaayegi
to...aapki.... khair... nahi...”
He stopped
shaking her and pushed her against the wall, his body tensed, the muscles of
his arms corded. He brought his face close to hers and threatened in a whisper,
“Don’t think you can fool me with your body and your smiles and your eyes and
your voice and your pretended innocence.”
Khushi
frowned in to his face.
“Shyam is a
fool, but I am not,” he stated, trying to remind himself of his iron
self-control where women was concerned and the seriousness of the task at hand.
Khushi
bristled. “Shyamji is not a fool. Would people wait for hours outside his
office door to see him if he were a fool? Don’t say such bad things about him.
After all, he is your Jiju!”
ASR saw
red. Violent as a bull, he pressed himself in to her softness. “So I can’t
badmouth Shyam to you? Kya lagta he woh tumhara?”
“He is my
employer,” Khushi panted. “My annadatta. Move away from me, saalesaheb. You are
standing on my foot.”
“Your
annadatta? Does he give you only anna? What about money? Jewels? Holidays?” ASR
tightened his hold on her shoulders and moved closer, pushing his limbs in to
the cradle of hers.
Khushi
tried to push him away. “Move away, you saalesaheb! How strong you are! What do
you eat? Iron?” Her fragile arms could not make him budge an inch. “Of course he gives
me money. I work for my salary. Jewels? Why should he give me jewellery? Am I
his daughter for him to give me jewellery? Holidays? Of course he gives the
whole office a holiday on Sundays,” Khushi explained.
“You work
for your salary?” ASR’s eyes glowed with hatred and arousal. “What kind of ‘work’
do you do for him, Khushi Kumari Gupta?”
“I answer
the phone...” her voice trailed away as his hands moved down her arms. “I..I
arrange the files in order...” she gasped as his fingers took over her waist
and burned her skin through her suit.
“That is
not your real work, is it? Your real vocation is to make him comfortable, isn’t
it?” he jeered, his fingers squeezing the supple skin of her deliciously curved
waist.
“What?”
Khushi frowned. “Suniye, I can’t understand you. I want to go home. Buaji and
Jiji will be waiting for me. They will be worried.”
“Call them.
Tell them that you are making Arnav Singh Raizada ‘comfortable’. I am sure they
will let you stay out with me once they know that I am a millionaire many times
over, far, far richer than your Shyamji,” he murmured, his lips close to hers.
“Aap kya
bak rahe ho?” Khushi asked, seriously worried and confused. “Are you taking
medicines? Have you missed a check-up recently? And let go of my waist,” she
said, squirming.
ASR shouted
quietly, “You can sleep with Shyam Manohar Jha, a married man but you won’t let
me, a bachelor touch your waist?”
Khushi’s
mouth fell open.
“I can give
you more of whatever Shyam has been giving you,” he whispered his promise. “More
money, more gold, more...fun...”
Khushi’s
wide eyes resembled saucers and her mouth remained open like a gasping fish.
He ran a
finger down her cheek, savouring the creamy silk.
“What is your going price,
Khushi Kumari Gupta?” he asked. There was no anger in his voice, only a mild
curiosity.
Section 7
Khushi
swallowed her tears. “More than you can afford, Mr. Arnav Singh Raizada,” she
whispered, her breath touching his stubbled cheek.
His eyebrow
went way up in the air. “Really?” he murmured, his eyes devouring her beautiful
face and form.
“Really,”
she murmured back. “Because you are not saalesaheb. You are saala, pukka saala. A ghatiya man.”
ASR threw
back his head and laughed.
“If I am saala, ghatiya for proposing an affair
with you, then what would you call Shyam for indulging in it? You will have to
invent words to describe your Buaji and your sister who encourage you and
support you in this trade,” he drawled sardonically.
She stood
shell-shocked for a moment.
“You
think...” she tried to swallow. “You think Shyamji and I are...are...involved
in an illicit relationship?”
“Yes,” he
affirmed.
“And that
my family is...is selling me to him for money?” she choked, her direct eyes on
his.
“Yes...” he
said after a moment.
“Why? Why
do you think that there is something between Shyamji and me?” she asked, her
eyes directly on his molten ones.
“Frequent
phone calls at odd hours from you. Shyam staying away from home on the pretext
of working late at his office. Di noticed his distraction and all the signs of
his straying...in your direction,” he said, his voice cold.
Khushi
looked at him for one long moment in silence.
“What do
you do, Mr. Arnav Singh Raizada?” she asked.
“I am a
businessman,” he said.
“Do you
employ ladies?’ she asked.
“Yes,” he
said, frowning.
“Do they
call you to talk about work?” Her voice was quietly dangerous.
He frowned.
“Sometimes,” he admitted.
“Then why
can’t you give your Jiju and me the benefit of the doubt?” she asked.
ASR stared
at her, silent.
“He is my
employer. And he is a busy lawyer with clients from various parts of the
country. Why should you doubt your own Jiju for being a good professional?” she
asked.
He said, “There
is definitely something going on between you two. I heard him talking to you. Don't try to fool me.”
Khushi
sighed. “I don't have to fool you, Mr. Arnav Singh Raizada. You are a fool all by yourself. So you and your sister imagine there is something between Shyamji and me?" Khushi frowned. "If your sister felt there was
something wrong, she must have confronted her husband with her suspicions. What did Shyamji say?”
Khushi asked quietly.
“No,” he
had to admit. “She didn't ask him. She wanted me to find out...”
Khushi
smiled bitterly. “So this is your way of ‘finding’ out? Kidnapping me and
accusing me of...”
He swallowed
hard.
“I called
Shyamji on an official matter. It was urgent, a serious problem that lasted a
month. Shyamji did have to be at the office late on many nights to co-ordinate
things. There is nothing between him and me,” she said softly.
ASR stared
at her.
“But you
need proof, don’t you?” she asked, her eyes cold.
He stood
still, silent.
Khushi
pulled the phone out of her bag and dialled a number.
“Shyamji, I
am sorry to disturb you at this time of the evening, but I need to see you
urgently,” she said.
ASR could
not hear Shyam.
“I am
afraid it is a matter of life and death. Where are you, Shyamji?” she asked.
ASR stood
watching her.
“At home?
Then I am coming to meet you there. I need just one minute of your time,”
Khushi cut the call.
She caught hold of ASR’s hand. “Let’s go to
your house and meet my so-called lover, Shyamji. I will give you enough proof
to bury you under.”
Section 8
Nani, Mami,
Anjali and Shyam looked up as the door opened and Arnav and Khushi walked in.
Mami
whispered in Nani’s ear, “Saasumma, lagat he hamre Arnav bitwaa hajj phinally
phound the girlwaa to marry.”
“Chup raho,
Manorama,” Nani said, her eyes seeing the fire and steel in Khushi’s eyes.
Anjali
looked at Khushi and Arnav, her eyes wide.
“Khushi?
What is wrong? Why do you want to see me at this hour? Do you need any help?”
Shyam asked. “And what is Arnav doing with you?”
Anjali
gasped. “Khushi?” she asked softly.
“I came to
inform you that I am resigning from my job, Shyamji,” Khushi said softly.
“Resign?
Why, Khushi? I thought you were happy there?” Shyam’s face was a picture of
confusion. “Did someone scold you? Did Ramesh get angry with you? I will talk
to him...”
Khushi
shook her head, feeling tears sprout in her eyes at his paternal concern for
her.
“You don’t
need to talk to anyone about my job. But I do need a favour from you, Shyamji,”
she said.
“Anything,
Khushi,” Shyam said. “You know I am indebted to you. Do you need money? Or a
better-paying job? Or shall I fund your education as I offered to do?”
“No, thank
you. Please inform your family why you had to spend many evenings in your office
this month and why I had to phone you often. My honour is in question here,” she said.
Shyam’s
mouth fell open.
“Your wife
thinks you are having an affair with me,” Khushi said bluntly.
All gasped.
Shyam turned to look at Anjali with startled eyes.
“She
deputed her brother to deal with me,” Khushi explained, sparing a glance at the
cold-faced animal standing in attention by her side.
Nani sat
down. Mami closed her mouth with her hand. They knew their Arnav bitwaa and his
ham-handed ways. A bulldozer could take lessons from him.
Shyam
heaved a long sigh.
“Last month
I sent a vicious criminal, Lallan to jail. While he was being taken away by the
police, he threatened that his brothers would take revenge for his arrest,”
Shyam said.
All gasped.
“Shyamji,
you never said...you were in danger...” Anjali whispered.
"Damadji!" Nani exclaimed.
“Khushi
noticed strange men loitering around the office. She notified me. I informed
the police. The CI wanted to catch them red-handed as he believed that they
were Lallan’s brothers who were wanted by the police for other crimes but were
absconding. So he made me the bait. I needed Sharmaji’s and Khushi’s help to
see this though without alarming the other employees. CI Chandramohan Sinha,
Khushi, Sharmaji and I worked in tandem to lure the men in to the open. The plan succeeded. They were
arrested a couple of days back,” Shyam explained shortly.
“Why didn’t
you tell us, Jiju?” Arnav’s face was pale. He had made an error in judgement
and now everyone was going to pay for it.
“This is
nothing new, Arnav. There are always cases during which lawyers receive
threatening calls and direct warnings. The police had the matter well in hand. And
I had no intention of bringing the danger home,” Shyam explained. He turned to
Anjali, “Why didn’t you ask me, Anjali? Why did you have to involve Arnav and
Khushi?” His voice was quiet but it carried disappointment and disillusionment.
“Woh...woh..I
wanted Arnav to investigate...” Anjali stammered, her big eyes filling with
tears.
But this
time her tears had no effect.
“Are you
married to me or to Arnav?” Shyam asked, his face closed.
The
Raizadas held their breath, scared that Anjali’s immaturity would finally
destroy her life.
“Shyamji,”
Anjali tried to soften him.
“Damadji,
Anjali bitiyya loves you very much,” Nani tried.
“This is
not love, Naniji,” Shyam sighed. “This is fear and insecurity. Your Anjali bitiyya is scared
that I am another Arvind Mallik.”
There was
perfect silence in the room.
Then Shyam
said softly, “My father is Deendayal Kanhaiyalal Jha. He was an honourable man,
a good father and a loving and faithful husband. I cannot be anything less than
that.”
Mami said,
“Damadji, please forgive Anjali bitiyya this time...”
Shyam said,
“I married her, Mamiji. I have to put up with her whims and fancies. That is my
fate. But this time she involved Khushi and Arnav in it. That is
unforgiveable.”
“Damadji,”
Nani tried.
“Naniji,
aap hamein maaf keejiye. I can’t tolerate this any more. I should have never
let her stay here with you after marriage. That was a mistake, bad
judgement on my part,” Shyam said, his eyes bitter.
“Jiju,”
Arnav said.
Shyam paid
no heed to him. “I am moving in to my new house near my office tonight. The
interiors are yet to be done. It will take one more month. Once it is finished,
I will let Anjali know. If she is interested in starting a new life in her own
house, she can join me. Otherwise, it is her choice. You can start legal
proceedings as you deem fit,” Shyam said emotionlessly.
All gasped.
“Shyamji, nahi!
Please aap mat jaaiye hamein chodkar!” Anjali pleaded.
“Jiju,”
Arnav protested.
He turned
to Arnav. “I always knew that your sister was harebrained. But you too...?”
Arnav had
nothing to say.
“Arnav, you
are not Chotey any more. Did you even stop to think how your accusation would
affect Khushiji’s life if others got to know about it? She is of marriageable
age. She has a sister too. Did it cross your mind what this would do to them if
she were innocent?”
“I am
sorry, Jiju,” Arnav said softly. His eyes moved to Khushi’s exhausted features.
He needed to grovel big-time. “I am sorry, Khushi.”
She turned
her head away from him.
“It is not
enough, Arnav. You put Khushi’s reputation and my professional life on the
line. You and your sister!” Shyam shook his head in disgust.
Anjali
began wailing. Nani and Mami rushed to console her.
Shyam and
Arnav turned to look at the young girl standing still like a statue in the
midst of turmoil.
Shyam
folded his hands before Khushi. “Knowing Anjali, I can imagine what and how she
must have presented this issue to Arnav. And knowing Arnav, I can imagine how
he would have treated you. I am extremely sorry, Khushi. I am ashamed to look
you in the face. You put your life in danger for me and I...”
ASR stood
there feeling like a worm.
“Shyamji,
it is alright. It is not your fault,” she muttered, feeling terrible seeing a
man of Shyamji’s stature and age stand before her with his hands folded.
Arnav drew
in a deep breath of relief.
“Please
don’t resign, Khushi,” Shyam requested. “Everyone in the office thinks highly
of you.”
Khushi
hesitated.
“It is my
heart-felt request,” he begged.
Khushi
could only nod. How could she defeat a man whom fate had already vanquished?
“It is time
I went home,” Khushi said, exhausted.
“Let me
drop you,” Arnav said, his face wan as he watched her. “Please, Khushi.” His
voice was soft, penitent.
Khushi
nodded. There was much she needed to tell him.
After Arnav
& Khushi left, Anjali whispered, “I am sorry, Shyamji.” Tears flowed down her cheeks and her lips
pouted at him.
The pout
was wasted on her husband. Shyam sat down, exhausted. “If it were not a
sanskaari girl like Khushi, this would have been all around town.
Gossip-mongers would have had a field day. I would have been the fraternity’s
butt of ridicule.”
“Shyamji,”
Anjali tried to cajole him.
“Grow up,
Anjali,” Shyam said softly. “I can’t change your past for you. You can’t change
your own past. But you can learn to live with it. Take the help of a therapist
if you need one. Learn to fight your own demons and your own battles, Anjali. And
don’t drag Chotey in to your messes. Let him live. Let him breathe. Or you will
destroy his life along with yours and mine.”
Anjali
stared at him with wide, wet eyes.
Shyam
turned to look at Nani and Mami. “You have mollycoddled her enough, Naniji,
Mamiji. Let her take care of herself and please don’t let her strangle Arnav.
He deserves to live his own life. He is not Anjali’s appendage.”
Shyam got
up and walked up to his room to pack his bag.
Section 9