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Monday, March 26, 2018

MISSING






MISSING




“Sometimes, people can go missing right before our very eyes.  Sometimes, we lose sight of ourselves when we're not paying enough attention.” 
 Cecelia Ahern







“Would you like the new Asterix?”

When I received no reply, I turned to my side, and my daughter was not there!

Controlling the momentary panic, swelling inside me, like a mushroom cloud, choking my windpipe, I surveyed the shop quickly, cursing how the simple bookshop of yesteryears had transformed into a vast toys-gadgets-headphones-i-pods-smartphones-perfume-birthday decorations-cds-power banks-and books all under one roof spreading over three floors.

What was she wearing? It was a simple floral design frock of a shade of color somewhere between purple and blue. I am certain my daughter knows the exact name of that color.

She is a bookworm, having taken after me, and it is not possible that she would have wandered to any other corner of this vast shop.

But, wasn’t she talking about the forthcoming birthday party that she needs to attend?

I briskly walked to the birthday decorations and gifts section. I say “I walked briskly”, but the fact was I was almost running.

The section was populated with kids half her age and the parents were making more noises than the children.

The degree of discomfort was slowly raising. I thought of calling my wife. But what would I tell her?

I went around the shop looking all over and at the same time not registering anything. The current trend of keeping the shops interactive meant that I had more kiosks and help-desks with a monitor and a keyboard to punch in my queries and not a human being around other than the ones at the cash till.

So, it was to the cash till that I went. The attendant was trained to spot that I was approaching the counter carrying no purchases. Her countenance, trained to conceal irritation, still faltered a little.

I did not know how to phrase my question.

“Have you seen my daughter?” would sound stupid.

“My daughter is apparently lost, could you help me?” sounded bordering on the insane.

As short sentences were certain to create more confusion than clarity, I had no options but to explain elaborately.

“I came here with my daughter to buy a few books. But she appears to have wandered off, something not usual. I do not know how to start looking for her. Is it possible for you to have an announcement over your PA system? Can you request Alexia to approach the billing counter?”

Contrary to my fears, the attendant was helpful and immediately went about making the announcement. I started to look around waiting to spot my daughter running from some corner of the shop towards the cash counter, with relief and joy etched on her face.

Nobody turned up.

The attendant repeated the announcement a few more times, and each passing minute slowly shifted my discomfort to fear to panic.

The attendant, to my complete surprise, offered to quickly the scan the close circuit camera recordings to see if we could spot the moment that my daughter drifted away from me.

The management of the shop even sent a woman from their ranks to visit and search the toilets. Maybe my daughter needed to use the loo and fell unconscious there!

We went to the manager’s office and started going through the recordings of the past 30 minutes, on various cameras located in the shop. In none of the frames I could be seen in an uncrowded place, and there were always people around me, eliminating any clear view of me and my daughter together.

The last frame had me walking towards the billing counter alone. The other cameras on the other floors did not show any sign of my daughter.

It must have been the only time where the unclothed parted legs of my wife did not send me deliriously rapturous. She was bathed in sweat, straining with the last ounce of her strength to follow the simple instruction that the nurse and the doctor kept repeating to her

“Push”

The non-appearance of the crown had nothing to do with lack of efforts from my wife and should have been attributed to my daughter who seemed to have perfected the art of keeping people waiting, from the womb itself. When the medical staff were ready to give up and were on the verge of concluding that my wife was seconds away from exhaustion and unconsciousness my daughter relented.

The hairy, wet crown started to emerge bringing me close to fainting. Years ago I had gaped in wonder at the screen of a film called wonderful people, where a snake had swallowed an egg three times the size of its head. This was exactly the reverse. The flexibility of human body held me in awe and wonder and mere scientific amazement took a back seat when the tender, unbelievably soft and small human form was handed over to me minutes later.

The baby was slimy, slippery and did not appear even remotely resembling a human form.

She was the most beautiful person I had seen in my life till that moment.

I silently pledged my life to her promising her the best in her life. She would never feel the absence of anything in her life.

Never.

And that girl is missing now, in just less than 7 years.

Some promise!

The small reverie did nothing to subdue my discomfort. If any, it aggravated it. She is not yet conditioned by this world to be cynical or suspicious and, as is expected from most 7-year olds, genuinely naïve. Unspeakable thoughts occupied my mind. The depravity of a human, when a human decides to plumb its depth, is bottomless. News articles, scenes from films (Gone Baby Gone) and child abuse stories all flashed across my mind and I had no control over them. The more I tried to suppress those vile thoughts, convincing myself that those things only happened to other people, the stronger they took possession of my mind.

I left the book shop, after giving my telephone number to the shop manager, in case my daughter appeared from wherever she was spending her time.

The mall was spread across three floors with all the usual shops. Clothes, gadgets, electronics, home needs, farm products and a food court on the third floor.

Entering and searching each shop was lunacy, but I did it nevertheless and landed in the food court hoping to find her there. I first hit the ice cream shop followed by the pizza counter, the two eternal favorites among any children.

Nope!

The Chinese food joint was the next logical choice.

Zilch!

A sudden thought occurred to me; maybe she lost me and not knowing what to do and not finding me, did the most logical thing; she must have gone back to the car in the parking area. She was always fond of remembering our parking slot, “Dad, now we go to G-7 or UG-12”. Children do this as they have the thrill of being able to identify the alphabets and numbers, and most importantly at their capability to store in memory the combination of alphabets and letters.

I took the elevator and the darn elevator stopped at all levels before reaching UG, the basement parking level, where I had parked my car barely an hour ago. Walking briskly out of the elevator, the first thing I saw when I started to approach my parking space, was a small girl standing next to my car, and my heart swelled with relief and the emotions welled my eyes with tears. I broke into a small run when I realized that the girl was not wearing a skirt, but a pair of jeans and loose cotton blouse. The girl and her parents were just getting into their car, and the mother was reversing her car as I reached my car, bereft of any humans around it.

It is absolutely hopeless to think rationally. It is also next to impossible to squint your eyes and hope to spot your daughter among the milling multitude. I had to decide between whether to approach the police first or reach home and approach the police along with my wife. I decided to go home first.
As I was getting ready to enter my car, my phone vibrated in my trouser pocket and rang. It had to be the book shop manager! I fumbled and nearly dropped the phone as I extracted it out of my trousers. The number on the screen was a new number, none of my regular contacts. I answered and hollered an expectant “Hello”.

“Good morning Sir! We are calling from HSBC bank, and we would like to offer you ….” I looked at the phone with incredulity and needlessly shouted at the call center employee, who is just paid to do this customer pitch, and hung up.

“Does your daughter converse freely?” asked the principal when we were seated in front of her, for the “interview” of my daughter’s admission to the prestigious school in town. Nothing but the best for my daughter!

The first “interview” that I had given was when I was in my final year of graduation when firms visited our campus scouting talents. And here was my daughter doing the same to start schooling!

Before either my wife or I would phrase a respectable answer, my daughter jumped in with a “Of course I do. Please ask me what you would like to know madam”

The principal was as unprepared as we were, but she hid it well. She wore a patronizing look, the ones that we all wear when we address children, and started to have a conversation with our daughter.

We were surprised that my daughter could understand questions, string together full sentences, that she knew it was an alligator on being presented a toy to identify, that she knew the capital of few countries, and a few nursery rhymes.

The principal could not have refused her a seat. “My daughter is a prodigy” I thought with pride beaming, unaware that most children of my daughter’s age were this proficient.

Why my mind, a master of its own by now, drifted to this particular episode was not clear to me. Maybe, subconsciously I must have been wondering, how she was communicating with anyone who managed to find her. Could she tell the address clearly? Did she know the official name of her father? Would she remember the telephone number by heart?

The phone rang again!

This time it was my wife. I did not want to talk to her over phone. I wanted to explore the options available to us in person. Disconnecting would not help, as persistence was her hallmark. I answered, keeping the panic out of my voice. She wanted me to pick up a loaf of bread on the way home and few eggs and few cartons of milk.

Naturally I did not stop on the way to pick up those grocery items. I do not even remember the drive on the way home. I must have driven almost at a subconscious level and on reflex as the conscious mind was occupied with just my daughter and what horrible fate waited her.

After parking my car and as I was walking home, few of the kids who were playing football in the garden paused the game and one of them approached me and requested me to send Alexia down as they were one player short. I mumbled something and shuffled along.

I stood outside my door, took a deep breath, composed myself, going over in my mind on how to open, and then continue the discussion with my wife. I did not have a coherent version to rely on as every possibility and combination I had rehearsed appeared inadequate.

Further procrastination was not possible and with a sigh that visibly deflated me, I opened the door and entered my home.

“Where are the bread, eggs and milk?” asked my wife when she noticed that I was not carrying anything, raising her voice a little to be heard over and above the din of the TV playing The Good Dinosaur

“Do you have my new Asterix?” shrieked my daughter as she jumped up from her position and ran towards me.

The surge of emotions was difficult to organize and arrange.

Relief was foremost, followed by joy, and more relief, and then came the confusion and finally anger.

“How did you come home? Who brought you here? What happened? Why did not you or mother call me once you reached home?” all this to my daughter and “Could not you have phoned me? You can call me for those blasted eggs and milk and you did not think it relevant to inform me that Alexia is back? Do you know what a wreck I was for the past 2 hours?” was directed at my wife.

Both wife and daughter looked at me as if I had just escaped from an asylum.

“What is wrong with you? Alexia’s been home the whole morning. She was sleeping when you had left and she’s been in front of the TV ever since she woke up, this Good Dinosaur is driving me nuts”

What happened then? Was I hallucinating the whole (non)incident? How do I explain this situation? Who would believe me if I narrated the whole story. In the middle of all this an overwhelming sense of relief washed over me and I gathered Alexia in my arms and showered her with kisses and held her away at arm’s length and looked at her. Grand relief gave way to minor confusion and sheer terror when I looked at what she was wearing.

It was a simple floral design frock of a shade of color somewhere between purple and blue. I am certain my daughter knows the exact name of that color.

Friday, March 16, 2018

People to Avoid.........

You are watching To Sir With Love, the film is about to end, Lulu belts out the heart wrenching eponymous song, the cute little Asian girl walks up and presents a box to Sidney Poitier, with that melt your heart tilt of her head, the person next to you is not crying…

You are on a long ride, the stereo is playing “Matilda” by Harry Belafonte (the live version last song of the double album “Live at Carnegie Hall”), the person sitting next to you is not showing any visible signs of excitement and awe….



You trek for 5 hours, reach the top of the hill, sit down, and drink the view in front of you, soaking in the complete silence that engulfs you, the reason why you walked for 5 hours, and the person accompanying you starts talking….


The unsmart one who brings the smartphone to a restaurant and is lost to the screen ……..


You wonder how is it possible that Roger Federer is bestowed with so much talent, and the person asks Roger who? ……

You just finished reading “The Sympathizer” and give it to this person , and that person says “After I finish the latest Dan Brown” ……


You do not understand art. Still you stand mesmerized in front of “The Guernica”. You try to explain your feelings to another person and that person says “that fellow who draws misshapen horses” ….


You do not understand poetry. Still you are in awe when you come across a Rumi, a Bukowski, “If” by Kipling, or a flippant Ogden Nash and share how impressed you are with the simplicity  and the person laughs at you and recites dirty limericks……



Thursday, March 1, 2018

What are you?


If you can hurt someone

And you don’t

You are admirable.


If you can help someone

And you don’t

You are despicable.


If you want to hate someone

And you don’t

You are matured.



If you want to love someone

And you don’t

You are stupid.


If you want to forget someone

And you can’t

You are loyal.


If you want to forgive someone

And you can’t

You are rigid.


If one shouldn’t be forgiven

And you do

You are naïve.


If one must be forgiven

And you don’t

You are vindictive.


If you should apologize

And you don’t

You are an egoist.


If you need not apologize

And you do

You are sensitive.


If you can teach

And you don’t

You are insecure.


If you can learn

And you don’t

You are an idiot.


If you can’t sing

And you do

You are a romantic.


When it is tempting to talk

And you don’t

You are wise.


When you must speak up

And you don’t

You are a coward.


When you must listen

And you don’t

You are ignorant.


When you shouldn’t listen

And you do

You are a gossip.


When it is easy to criticize

And you do

You are a loser.


When it is tempting to give up

And you don’t

You are a winner.