Showing posts with label Second Coming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Second Coming. Show all posts

Monday, November 16, 2009

Second Coming: Chapter 2

Chapter 2

He walked on. From street to street, colony to colony, Vishwa knew his area like the back of his palm. He was not the type that woke up at 6 in the morning, pulled on track suits and shoes and went on a walk to burn away the calories. He didn’t have track suits, he didn’t have shoes and he certainly didn’t have any extra calories to burn. He just walked. He liked observing people and he could see a variety of personae in every man and woman on the street in the mornings. They went about their lives with no concern for anyone else. Through the windows, he could see men still asleep at 8. Women shouting at the top of their voices and running behind their kids, getting them ready for school; old men, having seen enough of the World, slumped on easy chairs and hidden behind newspapers; The fresh aroma of sambar floating out of kitchen ventilators; young men polishing their bikes as if a small scratch could stop the bike from running; young women standing bent down n drying their hair; Daddies listening to morning news shows and adding to the noise. Vishwa walked past this tower of Babel every morning. He lived below this stratum of society, and he intended to jump well above them in his relentless pursuit of excellence.


Vishwa wasn’t rich by any stretch of imagination except his. A student of history in the Govt. College of Arts & Science, he lived with his thoughts and his books. For a person from his background, he was an enigma to his people. Though he had never studied English in school or college, he could read, write and talk good English. He had taught himself the language of their long gone colonists in the city’s central library for over 10 years now. Every librarian there knew him. He was a man on a mission and he was driven to achieve. And that, in his mind, made him richer than even Shantaram Narayanan, the most famous man in his area and owner of the biggest gears and gear boxes manufacturing company in the country. Shantaram, according to Vishwa, was a fool. He didn’t have the balls to launch a hostile takeover of his rival though doing so would’ve taken him past the 50% mark in the industry.


His little gang of friends were all from his locality. When he didn’t have classes, he hung out with them. Though his gang were all wastrels who did nothing at home, college or work, he found them fascinating in a way. It was the basest level of complacency he saw in people, and he observed them. He didn’t mind people casting him ugly looks when he was with his gang. They were hated where ever they went. While his friends took that as a sign of people’s fear for them, Vishwa took it as a sign for him to move on to greater things soon.


This day he found them where he found them regularly. Just at the entrance to a huge vehicle parking lot. There was nothing for them to do there. They just sat there heckling the people passing by. Time flew past them as they had the time of their lives. For Vishwa, it was like sitting in a classroom and observing the heckling and the reactions. Though he was tarred with the same brush as the rest of them, he never paid heed to it. His calling was on a much higher level, and he took the ugly looks in his stride.


It was well past 6 in the evening, time for him to go home. His friends usually stayed in their favourite spot well past 10 but Vishwa usually left early. He saw a man walk in, get on his scoter and leave. He was almost at the ramp leading up and out of the parking lot when his scooter broke down. The man seemed scared of being alone in the parking lot with Vishwa and his gang. Vishwa could sense his fear; the poor man was shaking and wondering how to get out of there safely. He knew his friends would give the poor man the fright of his life in a few minutes so to avoid a scene, Vishwa got up and walked to the man. Just as he had expected, the man tensed with every step that Vishwa took towards him. Thoroughly amused by the man’s actions, Vishwa waited a few seconds before saying anything. He could see the man feeling every second like it was a year. The sweat on the back of his neck was all too easy to see and Vishwa felt the poor bugger was going to wet his pants very soon. Suppressing a smirk, he touched the man on his shoulder...


Saturday, October 31, 2009

Second Coming: Chapter 1

Chapter 1

It was just another day. Sunlight on his bed was where it should be at 8 in the morning. The usual sounds, a cacophony of morning news shows, devotional songs and cooker whistles. The usual people, mothers running behind their children and getting them ready for school, the retired school teacher hidden behind The Hindu in the portico of the house opposite his, men and women returning home from their morning walk or a game of badminton. The same Bru filter coffee with sugar just a bit less than what would make it sweet. His companions: well pressed formals and his brief case. Dosa and sambar for breakfast as it was on 5 days every week. His Honda Activa from home to work as on all but one day a week. Same faceless strangers on the way and the traffic signal. It was just another day.

Senthil Kumar was a good man. He worked as an accountant in a good company, earned well, took care of his family and was a model citizen where ever he went. People liked him and respected him. He had his principles and had lived by them thru his none too flashy but content life. He paid his taxes and voted regularly though he refrained from all sorts of politics even in his neighbourhood. He was the kind of person who would be revered when present and forgotten the moment he left.

For Senthil, it was just another day as he eased his Activa into the parking lot and stopped at his usual parking spot. This was one daily activity that always gave him the jitters. In spite of complaining time and again, his company had not built a parking area for employees. They had to use the public parking lot two blocks away. Like any public place in this part of the city, one could see local vetti pasanga (as all ‘decent’ people called the young men who did nothing all day) hanging around with their gangs. Senthil hated these wastrels religiously. According to him, the World would be a much better – and cleaner – place if people like them didn’t exist. Every time he saw them, he felt his personal little World threatened just by their existence. This opinion of his wasn’t helped by the fact that he had to walk past them twice a day to get to his vehicle. He would hold his breath and onto his brief case, look straight ahead and walk past them as if they didn’t exist.

* * *

The engine coughed, jerked twice and then gave in, dead. Senthil was not a man given to swearing, he simply called on God’s name whenever he faced a situation that would make others swear their guts out. This was one such situation. It was 6:45 PM, the Sun had gone down and the last rays of light were vanishing by the minute and it was time for him to go home to his wife and kids. And just as he reached the entrance of the parking lot, the engine coughed, jerked twice and then gave in, dead. Right in front of the vetti pasanga gang. Senthil froze. For a few seconds, he couldn’t get his hands off the handle bar. It was the kind of situation he had prayed to avoid and now he was right in the middle of one. He could sense half a dozen pairs of eyes on him and felt a cold shiver in the small of his back. He felt like a goat trapped in a den of wolves.

He tried the auto-start button a couple times, nothing. Wondering why Shiva would put this obscene obstacle in His devotee’s way, Senthil got off his Activa and tried the kicker. Nothing. He could sense the walls of the parking lot closing in around him. The middle-aged man that he was, Senthil knew he would never be able to push his scooter up the ramp and on to the street. All he could do was stand there, hoping for a divine intervention to get his scooter started.

Senthil felt rather than see the young man behind him. He braced himself for a knife slitting through his kidney. Or a kick to his knee that would make him fall down and make his Activa go hurtling down the ramp. The eventual mugging, kicking and bloodshed played out as a horror movie in Senthil’s eyes. Dear God! Please let it not be the case! I can’t pay the hospital bills if they hurt me and take my money. I can’t stay away from work for more than a week without getting fired. Please Shiva! Save me! Don’t throw me on a hospital bed! I have to take my son to tuitions every morning! I can’t get hurt now at any cost! Senthil was not a man given to violence, so letting go of his vehicle, turning around and sinking his left fist into the rough neck’s face never occurred to him. He braced himself and waited for the worst to strike...