It was a premature morning. The sun
was rising behind the hills. The cock was awoke and prepared itself cry out its
alarm. The birds chirped about the sky, the women waddled about the house and
the milkman serviced about the streets. Kalu, son of baniya who ran a grocery store, came out from his house and hurried
off in the direction of maidaan to play cricket. All through his way, he
practiced cricket while throwing imaginary balls in the air.
‘Are
you going to the central library?’ said Julee, pulling my hem of the shirt.
‘Yes!
Don’t you want me to go?’ I asked bending a little towards her.
Julee
brushed her nose with the black tie she wore over a blue school uniform. She
was a bespectacled, little, fat girl and lived in an old house behind the
maidaan with her family. Her school was about two kilometers apart from her house,
near the central library, next to orphanage. As she was stout, she hated
covering the distance by walk. Whenever she saw any familiar face lingering by
maidaan she asked him to drop her to school. She wished she too had a bicycle
like her friends, Tina and Alisha. Once, she asked for a bicycle on her
birthday, but the poor parents refused to gift her. Julee cried for two whole
days and then her daily-routine went on.
‘You
can go but after dropping me to school.’
‘All
right!’ I said and put her bag on the back of the bicycle. She jumped on the front
stick of the bicycle and crossed her legs. I paddled and took a straight path
towards her school.
‘Where
is your motorcycle?’ she asked while looking at Kalu who was running behind the
bowl over the maidaan. As Kalu came near a large peepal tree, he made a
powerful dive on to the ground and caught the ball. Bowler and fielders cheered
up. The wah-wah of Kalu spread across the field.
‘It is with
father,’ I said. ‘He’s gone to office. Don’t you like my bicycle? I know how difficult
it is to sit upon the stick, but the ride on bicycle has its own fun.’
No response. She gazed
the boys playing in the maidaan till we passed by a large building and the
little lads disappeared behind. She took her tie and swept her nose once again.
‘Kalu is your
classmate, right?’
‘Yes! He is an awaraa chokra. He seldom comes to
school.’ she coughed as we came by Ramesh’s stall who was busy frying hot
chilies.
‘How could you say
him a loafer?’
‘My mother says
so. Kalu doesn’t need to go school. His father owns a shop, so he could sit on
it.’ Julee said. ‘My father is a milkman and girls don’t sell milk. So I don’t
have any choice rather than going school.’
She stopped to
retrieve her breath, ‘Moreover, I can’t ride father’s bicycle because I am a bachhi. And I think father would never
buy a small bicycle for me.’
Julee grumped
under her breaths and felt sad. She took her tie and began rolling and
unrolling it. Sinking in her cycle-world, she looked straight. She too wanted
to go to school on bicycle like her classmates, Tina and Alisha.
‘Bicycle is not so
good. In fact, it is worthless,’ I said. ‘In summer, it is difficult to ride
under the blazing sun. And in winters, you can’t think how hard it is to paddle
in mist. Walking is better than cycling. While cycling, you can’t ride it
without your hands supporting the handles. But, while walking, you can shelter
your head with your hands from sunrays in summers, and in winters you can rub
it together to keep your body warm. I am going to sell this bicycle. I don’t
like it anymore.’
‘Arey Janaab! Where
are you going?’ shouted the old tailor, Master Ali, standing at the brink of
his small shop. He was the oldest being in the village and knew almost everyone.
He called everyone Janaab, even to
the women. A round cap on the head and an unruffled plain white beard resembled
him molwi sahaab of the masjid. The
son of Master Ali had left him behind in the village and moved to the city, and
never returned to see him. Master Ali was suffering from night blindness. He
would open the shop early morning and towards early evening it would be close.
No one knew what he would do after the dusk would fall.
I halted my
bicycle at his shop. The old Ali held the Julee’s chin and asked ‘Janaab! What
happened? Janaab, why are you so gloomy?’
Julee didn’t reply
and gently fell her head down.
‘Janaab, don’t you
want to go school? Janaab, if you don’t like going school, you could come to my
shop. I would teach you tailoring without any cost,’ said Master Ali. ‘Good
children become better and then migrate to cities, leaving their parents
behind, Janaab.
‘Master, it is not
like what you are thinking. She loves going school. She is sad because she
wants a new bicycle,’ I intervened.
‘Oh! Janaab in
that case you must go to school and learn something to earn some money. Janaab,
good children become better and could buy a bicycle too,’ Master Ali passed a
smile. Julee played with her tie and kept quite. ‘Janaab, Don’t worry. I’ve
something for you. Wait a moment, Janaab!’
Julee lifted her
head for the first time. Skeptically, she waited. Master Ali called out for
Shanu and asked him to bring Puchu. Shanu, the washerman’s son, was a ten years
old boy and worked for Master Ali.
The sweet, little
boy came out from a small room with a parrot perching on his head. Suddenly, a
smile came across Julle’s face. The smile was not for the parrot but for Shanu
instead, for she remembered Shanu offering his bicycle to her every Sunday. As
Shanu came by us, Puchu cried out gazing at Julee, ‘Janaab… Janaab… Why are you
so happy?’
Everyone laughed
and the stout girl was happy again.
‘Do you like
parrots?’ asked the little Shanu draped in dirty clothes.
‘Yes,
I like…’
Before
Julee continued, Master Ali said, ‘Janaab, you could play with Puchu whenever
you come here. Puchu is very shararti.
He is nalayak and would never leave
me and fly away, Janaab.’
‘All
right Master!’ said Julee with a smile stuck to her lips.
‘Master
Ali! Now, we shall leave. Otherwise, she will get late for her school.’ I said.
‘Okay
Janaab!’ said Ali. ‘But don’t forget to visit Puchu again.’ Master Ali kissed
the Puchu like a grandfather loving his grandson.
Shanu
and Julee passed a soft smile to each other. I paddled and didn’t stop until we
reached her school. Julee was happy, and all through our way from Master Ali’s shop
to school, she played with her fingers and tie, and sang the Christmas song.
‘Now
go to your classroom and study well,’ said I.
She jumped off the
bicycle and shouldered her bag. ‘All right. But you don’t sell your bicycle,’
she beamed. ‘Till I grow as tall as you and buy it from you.’
Julee
turned around and merrily ran towards the ground where students were assembled
to sing out their morning prayers.
I
gazed her till she disappeared in the swarm of students. I paddled once again
and moved in the direction of library.
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nakul.grover1
Email: grovernakul142@gmail.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nakul.grover1
Email: grovernakul142@gmail.com
Sweetest story☺☺
ReplyDeleteThank you Sir/Ma'am :)
ReplyDeleteSir, great story
ReplyDeleteyaar feeling aa jati hai pa=hadne ke baad
ReplyDeleteA nice story, weaved around fantasy of a school going kid.
ReplyDeleteAwww.. such a cute story. Made me remember my schooldays. I like stories with a village backdrop.
ReplyDelete