As the train chugged into Dum Dum junction, the crowd which
had been thickening for quite some time now got ready for the daily ritual. Men
grabbed onto other men and yet somehow managed to extend a few fingers towards
the handle on the door of the incoming train. By utilizing the full potential
of every finger, by pushing every sinew to the edge and by squeezing and
twisting their flabby bodies into every available inch of space, modern men
prepared for war. As the train shuddered to a slow halt, men rapidly placed
feet on anything they could find. There were feet on feet, on metal, on
leather, on cloth and barely any space to sustain more feet but still men found
space not only to squeeze in more feet but entire bodies with heavy luggage.
The heads inside the compartments let out sighs of exultation and those on the
platform sighs of exasperation.
Amidst all the sweaty foreheads and flailing hands,
Dinesh’s eyes, ever so ready to spot windows, literal or those of
opportunities, spotted Mr. Bhowmick. The short and portly man had managed to
secure a seat and his blue and purple checked half-shirt, laden with sweat and
toil, hung loosely over his tired body. His fingers danced on his cheap leather
bag which adorned his lap beneath which invisible to Dinesh was a pair of grey
trousers torn in two places. His feet were dressed in a pair of sandals which
he had worn ceaselessly for the last sixteen years.
“Bhowmick”, called out Dinesh over the sound of the engine
which had hummed back to life. The portly man seemed not to hear as he stared
absent-mindedly at the window. Dinesh was about to call out again when the old
man standing in front of him, whom Dinesh knew only by face and not by name, interjected,”
Leave him alone. He’s worried about losing his job.”
“Why?” asked Dinesh tentatively.
“Change in government is imminent”, murmured the old man.
Dinesh nodded knowingly and turned away.
As the train strolled into Sodepur station, Mr. Bhowmick
got up and twisted and turned himself towards the gate and as the train
stopped, the swarm of people pushed out Mr. Bhowmick depositing him onto the
platform. Mr. Bhowmick started to amble towards the exit stairs as the train
chugged out of the station. Dinesh looked out of the window hoping for an
opportunity to wave goodbye but Mr. Bhowmick did not turn around. He simply
looked up and sighed, peeked into his Sonata watch and sighed again. He knew
exactly what he was walking home to, just like every other day.
After the routine 15 minute walk, as he turned left Mr.
Bhowmick was not greeted by the usual dark, empty lane and the house at the end
of it but a lane filled with people and smoke emanating from the house at the
end of the lane. The house could hardly be seen by Mr. Bhowmick , partly
because of the smoke which clouded his vision but mostly because all of Sodepur
seemed to have gathered inside that tiny lane to watch a spectacle. As the bag
slipped off his shoulders and his body went limp, someone placed a hand on his shoulder,
someone else made him sit down on the road and some third person poured water
into his open mouth. Someone else recognized the owner of the house and a sudden
hush descended upon the crowd mocking the rising smoke. The crowd parted on its
own to let the owner into his burnt possession. Mr. Bhowmick shuffled towards
his house but before he could reach the front door his eyes encountered what
they were searching for.
Mr. Bhowmick grasped his chest and withdrew a small bottle
from his chest pocket .Hands shaking, fingers trembling, he struggled with the
cap before finally opening it and poured the contents into his open mouth. The
bottle, now empty, was disposed of into the gutter. He then knelt down beside
the corpse covered by a white cloth and let his teardrops wet the cloth. He
felt a cold hand on his shoulder and turned around to identify the face
associated with the hand.
Through his spectacles, now foggy with smoke and
tears he recognized him to be a firefighter.
“Your wife, right?”, he inquired.
Mr. Bhowmick nodded and removed the cloth to look into the
charred remains of what was his wife. As
he removed more of the cloth, his searching eyes failed to find what they were
looking for.
He looked back up towards the firefighter and asked, “My
son?”
“Sir before we answer that question , we are required to
tell you that your wife had left the gas on , filling up the kitchen with
inflammable hydrocarbons and striking the lighter one time too many had
resulted in a blast which had charred her beyond recovery.”
Mr. Bhowmick nodded at the ground and thought back to that
morning when he had walked into the kitchen and walked out sighing deeply. His
wife had looked at him and smiled, a smile which remained unreturned. He had
then walked over to the bed where his son was sleeping and smiled. His sleeping
son had not smiled back.
“So where is he?”, asked Mr. Bhowmick again.
“Sir luckily your son had gone to school and hence was not
here when disaster struck. He’s sitting in the truck right now”, assured the
firefighter.
As the contents of the bottle spread through every artery
of his body rapidly, Mr. Bhowmick looked up in despair- his sloth-like
movements contradicting the rapid biochemical reactions disintegrating his
body. It took some time for the ramifications of the firefighter’s words to register,
for them to seep deep into the nooks and recesses of his mind and when they did,
his blood was beyond recovery. His shaking hands betrayed the coolness with which
he had executed his plan but his trembling heart knew that something had gone
horribly wrong. He tried to get up , using his last remaining quantum of
strength but couldn’t and fell back onto the street .
As his skin turned rapidly from the light brown, that it
had been for the past forty-one years, to red and quickly to purple and finally
assumed a bluish hue reminiscent of many Hindu Gods, all Mr.Bhowmick could
discern were the sounds of panic around him, the sounds of whizzing brains not knowing
what had happened and the silence of stunned hands not knowing what to do. All
he could think of as his mouth filled up with froth and foam was that his last
plan had failed, failed as horribly as he had in life. There were only two dead
bodies where there should have been three.
In the fire- truck, 7-year old Anurag Bhowmick
waited for his father to return and his mother to wake up.
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