Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Mrs. Pinto's house


Mrs. Pinto's house

Dear old Mrs. Pinto would sit in the garden of her ancient three storied bungalow and watch for hours as people passed by. Occasionally, she would ring the bell to summon her trusted man servant Lalji. She would sit endlessly on the rusty garden chair, that at some point of time was painted white as was the fad, and watch as a procession of vehicles pass her gate.

 She loved watching it- the magic of mobility. People of different shapes and sizes would make her beloved Mumbai come alive. Of course, what helped keep the love for this life outside was how, invariably, every one of these passers by in their many avatars would look at this bungalow, in the middle of a residential area full of multi storied buildings, and wonder how it had survived.

Mrs. Pinto loved to tell anybody, who bothered asking, how the bungalow came to be hers and why she could never sell it. How could anybody help listening to this frail old woman in her flowery cotton nightie tell her story? You could fall asleep over the tea and cucumber sandwiches she would serve you, but you woul wake up having listened to every word of her story.

“I was maybe fifteen when I married that Mr. Pinto. Of course, in my time, that was very late to be married. You see the problem was not with me; In those days I was so beautiful everybody wanted to marry me, but this Papa... You know everyone always said, “What a wonderful man this Mr. D’Souza is but oh he loves his daughter too much”. You know, he would bring me sweets everyday and he made sure mama braided my hair in the most beautiful satin ribbons. Oh, I wore only lace in those days. It was the thing to do. Not even all these things that you call lace these days, what I had was just beautiful, it was hand made, needle lace.

“Wait... But that’s not what I was telling you about. Ah yes! So my darling father, oh he just couldn’t let go of me. You see, I had three brothers and I was the youngest, the only girl, His own little moon papa called me No, my father couldn’t let go of me. He said that this is India, only. He said, “Anybody can come but this is India. Once a girl goes, she goes forever and never comes back, so how can I let go of my little moon.”

So Mama and Papa would fight everyday. Then one day, Papa didn’t buy me new lace when I tore my dress. Mama told Uncle Chacha’s wife, Auntie Chachi, to stitch it up for me. You see these big gardens? Uncle Chacha tended to them all alone. Oh it was so beautiful then. We grew apples and oranges and lemons and don’t even let me start about the flowers that we grew.

“Oh my old age I did it again. Where was I? Yes I was saying, so one day Papa agreed that my torn lace must be mended and if I lost my ribbons nobody should buy me any more. We didn’t eat apple pies anymore of drink orange juice anytime we wanted. Even Tommy, Lesley and Bob, my brothers who were studying in England, had to come back.  You see I was just a child then and I was happy to have my brothers back. Of course I missed my ribbons and my dresses and limitless supply of everything I wanted but you see, the way I saw it, it was a fair bargain- give up all the fancies to be treated like a queen by your three big brothers whom I loved dearly and missed desperately.

“But one day I heard mama and papa shouting at each other. I can’t say that wasn’t common but, you see, they were in the attic and I was in the garden and to hear them shouting so far away was quite uncommon. What was worse was Mama breaking all her China. So dear it, was to her. You know, it had these delicate blue flowers on them what is that word? Chintz? Something like that, anyway, it was the pride and joy of her life. No don’t misunderstand me, she loved all her children and the dogs and cats and cows we had, but nothing could make her smile quite like her beautiful crockery on her beautiful lace table cover. It had been a while since we had thrown a party to put all that on the table. You see we all ate from steel plates. Mother didn’t trust us with her plates. I mean, a bunch of hooligans like us, of course she would worry about us breaking and chipping everything, so the special plates were for special people.

“So you understand why I was worried when I heard them from where I was standing in the garden. The next thing I remember is Mama running onto the road in her tattered green gown. Why I remember that moment is because I had never seen my mother run out onto the road. I had never seen her run, which was shocking enough, but onto the road? That was something I hadn’t ever thought of as possible. Something about etiquette she would say. “Women shouldn’t run, women should comb their hair, women must keep their hands and nails neat.” You know, my mother was very pretty. Lots of people say I looked just like her and it made me glow. She had beautiful hair. Auntie Chachi would brush it for her every night; “hundred strokes”, she said “to have the hair of Rupunzel.” Sometimes she even let me comb it for her. Mama was always so delicate. The slightest knot and she would whimper. You see, she didn’t approve of screaming no? So to set an example she would never scream in my presence.

“Oh why don’t you tell me when I forget about the story? All you young people, such strange notions of what is proper. So anyway, I had never seen her go outside our gate so when I saw her run out like that I was quite shocked. I was tempted to follow her, it might have been quite a game, but then I remembered the noises upstairs and froze where I was. Then Papa ran out and said to me,
“That’s it! You must get married. I will miss you my dear girl”, then he gave me a tight hug and ran out too.

“I don’t remember too much of the rest of the day. I was quite excited you know. I had seen my cousins get married. I knew I would get new clothes and ribbons for that. After all, I was going to be a bride, you know.

“I don’t know how they found Mr. Pinto and how everything was fixed up. I think the first time I saw him was through the veil on my wedding dress. What a strapping man that Mr. Pinto was. Some twenty-three I was told he was. You know, he had this moustache and he certainly looked like a charmer in his wedding suit. I couldn’t wait to begin the rest of my life with that handsome man.

“I was told later that I had met him before, but you know it wasn’t till I turned 40 that my memory started improving so what to do, I didn’t remember seeing him at all. So, two days after the wedding I was whisked off to some tea garden in Assam where his whole family grew tea. It was a British thing to do but somehow they managed to get a hill for themselves.

“Then two months later I was taken home out of the blue. They said say, “Say goodbye, this is not yours anymore” and pointed at my beautiful house.

“Now, before I tell you the next part, you must remember that I was only fifteen and all this happened suddenly. You don’t take a fifteen year old girl, married or otherwise to her parents house thinking she is going to meet her family, anxious to tell them about all her wonderful new adventures and spring a foul surprise like that on her!

 My god! I must have embarrassed my mother that day because I was wailing like a little child, kicking and screaming. I mean I was a married woman, no? Married women are expected to be grown up however young (or old) they might be and I here I was clinging to that post, you see there, refusing to let go. Mr. Pinto went into a fit and said he would leave without me if I didn’t let go and behave like a grown up. I told him he could go, that I could live without everything but this house. I told him, between my sobs, this was my house and nothing could change that and that it would always be mine.

“Poor Mama and Papa, they just stood there watching helplessly while I was being dragged off the pillar by my new husband. I was like a beast hanging on to its prized catch. How that man pulled me. Oh, bless his soul and may he rest in peace, Mr. Pinto was such a gentleman. That was the only time he treated me like that. I probably deserved it too, but, you see, it was my garden and my pillar and house and my… Well I could do this forever. I just couldn’t part with any of it.

“Mr. Pinto had decided it would be a one month holiday where I could spend a long time saying goodbye to the house I grew up in. Clearly, he didn’t anticipate the tantrum I threw. So after all that travelling, I was only allowed to stay home from the time I walked in through the gates to the time I was roughly pulled off the pillar.

“That was the last I saw of my parents before they died together. You know, nobody told me what happened to them. No, not the part about their train being derailed during what was considered part of the freedom struggle but about what happened to them after the house was sold. My brothers also refused to tell me. Then they all died and it remained a mystery. I would still like to know but there is nobody left to ask.

“See I’ve take off again and you didn’t tell me. Where was I? Ah yes, so once Mr. Pinto yanked me off the pillar I was sent back to Assam where I made countless devious plans to get back my beloved house. You see, I was happy only in that tea garden, knowing that my house missed me but then to suddenly be told that I could never come back to the house just broke my heart. But then things were what they were and for 26 years I didn’t see my house. My husband and son kept me busy for all that time. Left to myself, I know I would have acted on one of those plans.

“Then one by one the whole Pinto family died. First, it was the parents then the son and I don’t know about the rest of the family but I didn’t wait to hear from them when Mr. Pinto died. You know I missed the family. They were so patient with me. Mr. Pinto’s mother was as nice to me as Mama and Mr. Pinto’s father doted on me. They never had any daughters, you see. There was genuine affection among us. Oh and Mr. Pinto, I still blush to think of all the things he taught me. Dear man, I still miss him.

“So once Mr. Pinto passed, I grieved my husband’s death for a month. It was too much really. Even after all that time I had not really grown up. I was always treated like a spoilt child, no. So when my whole family died I decided enough of this I will go back to the place that made me happiest.

I quickly packed my bags before the rest of the family turned up at the doorstep, found a lawyer and some other people and all and sold the bloody hill. I packed exactly what I needed and reached Bombay.

That’s when I really grew up. I tell you, a single woman in Bombay has much to learn. Especially one who decides to move into a temporary house and adamantly decides to have a particular house.

“After one year of battling with the world I finally got my beautiful house back. Of course I was cheated. Think about it no, who trades a hill for a three storied bungalow? But then again any seller could see that this crazy woman wasn’t counting the Rupees. I was on a mission to get my beloved house back and so I did. My poor son also, Jeff, stuck in London that time couldn’t do a thing. I was a grieving widow and orphan on a mission and no man in his right mind would choose to get in her way.

“Ah! So that is how I came to get my beautiful house back. I’m never letting it go. No. All those builders come and say some rubbish but who’ll give them this beauty to tear down into something that is lots of ugly boxes stacked one over the other? I’ve told that Jeff also that he is not getting the house. What will he do with it anyway in that London? So I’ve written to the Government, some heritage site something, some reporter was telling me. I told you no, anything to protect my house, so I wrote to some people. They’ll come sometime and help me. Hopefully I won’t die before that.

“Ah yes some endless families from everywhere came demanding a piece of my house. I told them off. You, dear child, see a frail woman, but if you threaten my house and my child you’ll see the other side of me. I’m at peace now. I have everything I want. If I die in this house I’ll be the happiest woman there ever was.”

The story never changed. Not the deviances, not the admonitions in the middle- nothing. Mrs. Pinto breathed her last in her beautiful house and the pack of wolves for builders clamoured to buy the house again but Mrs. Pinto had thought of everything before the end.

You can still see the house in the middle of what she called little boxes stacked on top of each other. It is a heritage site now, untouched by change, held in a time wrap. 

Incognito

This is a short story from school that was refined in college. I've read it so many times by now that I can't bring myself to look at it anymore. I'm still surprised this idea even struck me.
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Incognito

Rand building, 9th main road, Tripathi lane, New Delhi.

The address plate said exactly what the note in my hand did. The one time I wanted my driver to take me to the wrong place turned out to be the one time I was sent a driver who knew where he was meant to go As luck would have it, we did not meet with an accident or land up at a place so far that I would have to cancel the appointment that was made for me. Today wasn’t my lottery-of-luck day.

I take a deep breath and walk into the steel elevator to be confronted by the shadow of who I used to be. Reflected in the metal of the door, I see the image of a washed up 35-year-old with nervous eyes and an unshaved face. For a person usually particular about his looks, I barely recognize the man in the crumpled grey suit as myself. I willed the lift to break down but obviously that didn’t happen either. I manage to humor myself thinking mera number kub ayega but there is very little that is actually funny about that.

I had reached the 13th floor in the thirty seconds it took me to think of all that and with a calm I did not feel, walked towards the receptionist and said, “Good afternoon. I have an appointment with Mira Namboodri, my name is Rajdeep Singh.” (Before I go on I find it necessary to tell you how beige wall to wall carpeting and a young receptionist behind a mahogany desk are not relaxing, despite popular belief). She shuffled through her books with a frown and suddenly said, “Oh of course. Mr. Singh. You are an hour early. I’m sure she will see you soon. In the meanwhile, you can wait in the waiting room.” There were two things that irritated me about the pretty receptionist: one, the expressions on her face when she realized who I was and two, her insistence on telling me to wait in the waiting room. I’ve always thought it ridiculous to say something as hackneyed as that, particularly, in a space like this.

In any case now was a bad time to be irritated by a receptionist so I followed her into a room that led off to the right. The beige carpeting continued in this room but the look was far from that of the bland reception. The big fish tank that made up one wall transformed the room into a wealthy man’s drawing room. Rooms that screamed of prosperity in times like these always made me nervous.

I sat on a leather couch opposite the fish tank and barely noticed the woman leave breaking out in cold sweat despite the air conditioning.
Mr. Singh, that’s what she called me…Mr. Singh…. I wanted to scream and tell the world that I am Detective Singh not ‘Mr.’ I AM detective Rajdeep Singh, an inspector in the Special Crime Branch Unit.”
But of course, nobody could know that. Soon enough I would lose my identity as Rajdeep Singh and be a smuggler or gangster or whatever else was required of me. Again.

I looked around the room to distract myself and noticed a framed name plate that read Dr. Mira Namboodri; I knew that already. I also knew that she was the best criminal psychiatrist in the country and the Government paid big money to keep her working on our side.
What I didn’t understand however, was why I was here. This wasn’t where I belonged; this was where high profile criminals or cops who had “gone bad” were brought. What had I done? I sit staring at the fish swimming and lose myself to the nagging memories…

A boy of 21 as patriotic as any average city-bred Punjabi; I saw my family home go up in smoke on1st December 1971. I had heard all the talk of a war but didn’t imagine seeing my family burned alive. I can still recall walking back from college seeing my house on fire with no trace of my family even after the flames were put out. The whole of Punjab turned, overnight, was into a state of hysteria since we were close to the border. The war started 2 days later and I was among the first people to sign up in the Emergency Recruitment Programme. It was probably the need for revenge, more than any special patriotism, which gave me the adrenaline rush I needed to sign those papers.

Thinking back I have no regrets. I was fighting for my country, something every person owed his country. I didn’t have a family to worry about or a family to worry about me and I didn’t particularly have too many friends. I was asked to leave to Delhi the same day. The man at the desk said almost apologetically that they needed all the help they could get.

I went through a series of tests and a physically, emotionally and mentally exhausting week of training. My transformation in that one week will never cease to amaze me. I entered, an uncouth lad of 21 with no idea what so ever of how a gun works or how to eat with anything but my bare hands and left a “gentleman”. I was a proud serviceman. I learnt everything from social niceties to survival essentials in 1 week flat. There wasn’t an escape at the institute anyway.

I hated it while I was there. Being the only boy in my family I had been as spoilt as every boy was in the India of the 1950s and to suddenly have a sergeant screaming in my ear from dawn to midnight made me angry, depressed and amused at the same time. But all that is almost forgotten: the memory I have is of the man who walked out of those gates.

I was an Acting Sub Lieutenant on the Viabhav, my first ship. The war was over in 14 days and I saw very little action. Our ship was headed to Karachi to bomb, and therefore destroy, their naval force but we didn’t reach before the ceasefire was declared. At this juncture being the patriot that I am, I have to say: we creamed the Pakistani force in 2 week and that made me prouder than ever to be Indian. I had my revenge in the enemy nation's disgrace.

After the war I came back to Delhi and for the next 7 years I was transferred several times to various parts of the country to keep the Indian borders safe. In those 7 years I was married and divorced and took up a vow to never marry again which helped when I retired from the Navy force. It was time to help clean up my nation from the filthiest road upwards, time to join the Crime Branch...

To work in the Special Crime Branch is every man’s dream come true. Working undercover against high profile criminals, with top secret gadgetry, felt nothing short of wonderful- who in their right mind would pass up the chance to be a real life James Bond anyway?

It was a rough life but there was no shortage of adventure.  I later found out that the fact that I didn’t have a family and was in the forces, helped immensely. My job was my life. The only part I found difficult was the identity crisis. It was hard for me to go from detective Rajdeep Singh to gangster Tony for 3 months then back again.

 I had been in the force for 7 years and since then had grown in reputation with the completion of every successful mission, but I was never a “cop”- I did not have an office, my driver and house help were hired by the branch I was working for, as was my secretary whom I never met.
I only knew that I was working for the Government because of the papers I had. I was incognito 24/7, 365 days of the year. I did not socialize; I had very few friends and worked like the slave I was, of the nation I loved.

I was the best, or so my boss said. I would solve cases in as little as two months and that is no simple task given what we had to work with. To work undercover involves the greatest risk. Learning the lingo and befriending the right people being the least of those worries. Keeping your true identity a secret is always the most difficult. That meant only one thing- I stayed incognito always.

I had a number of passports, none with my real name on it. Credit cards, ration cards, licenses- nothing. Nothing with Rajdeep Singh on it. The only time I was called by my real name was in Mr. Khan’s office.

Mr. Khan was a balding man of 50, but behind the lazy, obese appearance there lay a mind sharper than any sword. Mr. Khan was the coordinating head of our department. He was the only person who knew how many people the department employed, who was where and who worked for whom. If you needed a partner to work with you ask nobody but Mr. Khan since he was the only person who knew the skills that the other person possessed, or who the other person was in the first place. It was he who personally ensured that every man who worked on a big case got a long, well deserved vacation before he came back for more work which is why I was surprised when I received a telegram on a holiday in Goa which simply read : ‘Return immediately-K’
That could only mean one of two things 1. The previous case wasn’t finished yet 2. Khan was pulling in everybody he could for a very tough case. Despite my bravado I hoped it wasn’t the second,.I lived for a challenge and my curiosity, more than dedication to work, took me to Delhi on the first flight available. Having said that I must clarify that if summons were received there was no choice about doing hwta you are told.

I was in Mr. Khan’s office the next afternoon. The small office had nothing other than a metal desk with files strewn all over it. The ‘office’ could hold no more than 2 people inside it besides him. Though I enjoyed the work that poured out of that little room I never liked going there. There was something about the suitcase room that made me feel ill. It was not nervousness, or fear, but a weird sense of insecurity enveloped me in the room and the brown curtains did nothing to help. But that after noon changed things for me. Mr. Khan looked worried when he silently handed me a thick file. Inside were details of Yadav.

It took me almost an hour to read Yadav’s file and after working on the case for almost 16 months I still don’t know what to call him. What could you possibly call a murderer, drug dealer, rapist, extortionist, smuggler and any dispenser of injustice all rolled into one? Yadav had his finger in every rotten pie.

The problem was tracking Yadav down and proving him guilty of his crimes. Yadav Chopra (his name only on paper) was a criminal mastermind who would drive any legal organization crazy. He had a brilliant mind and fabulous contacts with a team that made sure they left no trace of their involvement.

It was a tough job, so I trained for what seemed an eternity but was really only a month, before I finally tried to join his team in the capital of crime-Mumbai as Om Sachdev. It was tough work. Yadav wasn’t as easy as the rest of the criminals including those I had read about. He was neither a politician nor a business man and nobody had even heard about him,but he heard about me. That was the first time something like this had ever happened. For a man I was tracking to track me down before I found was a whole new experience and I have no shame in admitting that I was terrified.

I was still trying to find him when my doorbell rang one evening. I opened the door to a college boy in jeans and t-shirt. He cocked his head to one side and gave me a sly smile. There was nothing teenage about that smile. It was the smile of a psychotic murder. I was just about to pull my gun out when he said in perfect English,
“Relax Om bhai. Yadav Bhai’s looking for you. Word on the street is you're looking for him. Consider this a red carpet invitation. Follow me in your vehicle. I assure your safety.”
I was dazed but this was a chance I couldn’t miss. Against better judgment I hurried into my shoes and got my bike with false number plates out sooner than I ever had, and followed the beaten up Maruti van.

It was a long ride and I was grateful for the time it gave me to sort out where I had gone wrong, but after an hour through the dusty streets of Mumbai and all this time I still don’t have an answer. I felt like a lamb on its way to a slaughter house blindly following his master. This thought sent another wave of panic through me. I hadn’t contacted Mr. Khan before leaving so if anything happened nobody would even suspect for atleast a few weeks.

With every passing kilometer I grew more worried than the previous. I’d read somewhere that fear is good for the soul, certainly not for me, I thought. I had to keep telling myself that I was a trained professional; born to do this. When somebody catches you unawares, gives you time to balance and you still can’t collect your thoughts- that’s when you know you have found your match. It is strange how experience teaches you lessons you should have learnt before.

The car stopped suddenly, jerking me out of my mental organization, and the boy in it walked into an unfinished building rising over a pile of filth. This was obviously an abandoned building that was never finished. The cemented frame and wild filth gave the place a haunted look. The fact that I was nervous scared me more than the nervousness itself.

With a deep breath I steadied my nerves and walked up the flight of stairs. On the last stair I heard a voice,
Om Sachdev. Suspended indefinitely for the murder of Shroff.”
Well at least he bought my story. I was much better suddenly and took the last step up to see a handsome man of around 40 reading from a piece of paper. He paused when I’d reached the landing, looked up at me and before continuing
 “I’m am theYadav you're looking for and I’m sure you are not Om Sachdev. I knew you would find me eventually but I was running out of patience with your lack of speed. Why were you looking for me?”

This wasn’t going like I had wanted it to; it was most unusual to meet the boss the first time or to be asked these questions so nonchalantly. I could hear myself speaking but I couldn’t make out what I was saying till it was too late, a result of too many shocks too soon I gather.

I’m told a good lie is rooted in the truth. It had always worked before and given the circumstances I needed the best plans at hand so I told Yadav my version of the truth. I managed to convince him that I was suspended for the murder of Shroff but that didn’t change the fact that I had insiders’ information into almost all police information. I was unprepared and the only thing that helped me keep my outward appearance of cool was the knowledge that I had done this a number of times before.

Yadav was a smart man. There was no questioning that. Nobody gets to where Yadav was, at that point, in the world of crime being stupid. He knew I had access to much needed information but he wasn’t sure about trusting me, smartly so.

It was strange though. For some reason I felt compelled to use my own name. It was probably the worst idea on the planet but it was out of my mouth and then too late. Not that it mattered much. I didn’t exist as Rajdeep Singh in the world anymore so there was nothing they could track.

Khan made sure they could trace a story of some sort though and despite the tail that always hung around to make sure I wasn’t working with anybody but Yadav I managed to tip them off on a few things and gained their trust inch by excruciating inch. Of course it was Khan's info of staged raid's for the benefit of Yadav’s trust but it worked and in three months I was promoted to Yadav’s sharp shooter.

There is one thing nobody seems to understand about the underworld- Dons keep their sharp shooters very close. The men who do the coldest work get the most respect in these circles, so being a sharp shooter worked perfectly with me, it wasn't the first time I was shooting somebody dead or wiping somebody else's blood off my face. My promotion in the ranks allowed me information to the company’s every doing. After all the state sponsored training I was the star among Yadav's shooters.

143 kills later I was assigned Yadav’s henchman. Virender had died in an encounter. Nothing I knew about. It was a freak accident. Of all the things Virender was picked up by the police for jaywalking and eventually they found out who he was and decided to get him over with when Virender provided them with no useful information.

Virender was a great guy and the gang was quite upset about his death. So was I but I was cold enough to not care. I had seen enough men die to not care about death. At times I envied the dead. In any case, Virender’s death only got me closer to Yadav and soon enough he was telling me everything I ever needed to know; anything anybody ever needed to know to pin him down.

It had been a year by now since I had started working with Yadav’s men. The more time I spent with them the harder it seemed to be able to get away and contact Khan’s office. There was information that I had and needed to send out that I just couldn’t, there was either no time or somebody with me.

A year is a long time to be with anybody, particularly an illegal operation. Groups like these stay close. Almost every waking hour is spent in each other’s company. Families know each other and enquire after you, festivals are celebrated together, being ill warranted the extended family to drop in and nurse you back to health. I was part of a family again and slowly the ice in me began to thaw.

Genuine affection that can break any barrier and if you feel the slightest touch of it after years you are hooked. I was growing used to children jumping into my arms when I walked into a house. In true Indian style I would be over fed every time I was forced to join a family at a meal. It was exhilarating to share my existence with a group that seemed to genuinely like me as opposed to a mere briefing and debriefing.

I was getting dangerously close to failing my mission and I could sense it. I ignored the feeling for months but eventually it hit me full in the face when I tipped Yadav off on sensitive information Khan had given me about a warehouse raid.

Things were going downhill, and fast. There was no way Khan hadn’t caught wind of what was going on. He probably did even before I realized it. There was a reason Khan held the post he did – he was spectacular at his job and this came from not forgetting the one rule that we are all taught the day we joined the Special Crime Branch-trust nobody.

The warehouse raid was staged. It was clearly some sort of test. I had been part of enough to know for myself. An untrained person wouldn’t know the difference between a raid and a staged raid, a lot of people part of a unit can’t make out the difference because technically there wasn’t one. You send out armed men who check everything in both cases but it feels different. There’s and electricity in the air that’s missing with a set up. I sensed it and knew Khan believed what I feared.

It was time to pull the plug. This was the first mission I had ever failed and the bitter taste of defeat gagged me. Leaving my new family was not easy especially without saying goodbye but I had a single minded purpose- to go under ground. There is no other way to walk out of a failed mission alive.

Khan was my first point of contact as always and he found me a safe house to be at after a through debriefing. There was nothing in Khan’s manner that was any more unusual than before so I enjoyed my holiday and tried to forget everything that I had grown so used to. I had no friends again, no family again, and certainly no nephews and nieces vying for my attention. I now had whole days of loneliness.

It’s been three months now and I have gotten back to my old self. I can shut down anytime I want to and block out memories that I can’t indulge. I am ready for my next mission.

Being told to come here is an outrage. I’m quite amused by the idea of somebody wanting to read my mind like a book but find it no less disrespectful of my many years of dedicated service. There is a lot that I have kept from myself and so if Mira Namboodri is really as good as she is reputed to be I don’t know what I have walked into and clearly the Government doesn't either because she can't possibly have the clearance required to know everything I do.

Uncertainty is man’s most crippling disease. It spreads from your feet that won’t take a step to your sweaty palms that can’t hold a magazine in place, past your racing heart till it reaches your mind, a space best left untouched.

And so, Ms. Namboodri I need to leave and therefore I shall. The wind at this height is phenomenal.