“You know, home to me is memories of songs and familiar streets.
Of tall trees and square ones. Of the fun of riding my cycle downhill from the
9th street of Newton all the way down to Marconi, feet spread on either side. Of
the gradient of each road. Of coming home to find George Biswas singing
"With a high hope" on the 33 rpm vinyl. Of the first footsie under
Dhar Sir's bed that transported me to another land. It could have been Atasi or
Sonali, but I have no way of finding out. Home to me is the fear of Mathematics
and of rushing to Atanu's house for help. And of him making me smoke his dad's half
cigarettes.
When I speak with you, I have a tremendous urge to go home, only there's no
home, just memories on YouTube, in forgotten songs that make my eyes well up.”
“Can you promise not to go to anybody else?” she suddenly asked.
"But, wait, didn't you say you aren't possessive just about
half an hour back?"
"Oh, that was then. Now I think I love you."
"Err...what kind of love?"
"Oh, the possessive kind, I suppose? Like deep enough to
say, don't go to that other woman.
Write to me about your memories."
Write to me about your memories."
"But, what did you say about love? Do you really mean
it?"
She paused. I waited. I could see she was typing.
"Oh, that I can't tell. It is like Heisenberg's Uncertainty
Principle, you can say. I can't determine my feelings very exactly."
And she logged out soon after. Schrodinger's cat was trapped in
her closed chat window, strangely three-dimensional. But we will never know. And
I lost my sleep that night, and many nights thereafter. This was love I hadn't
known erstwhile. Of someone being able to defend her unpredictability with
quantum mechanics. Usually, I was the one being mysterious. Now was my time to
be hunted. Strangely, it wasn't fear. It was the euphoria of being tranquilized
by an excess of lotus leaves.
A strain of a Julia Stone song wafted into the room:
"So come on Love, draw your sword
Shoot me to the ground"
So I started writing to her, and it made no particular sense. I
didn’t know if I was cautioning her or pacifying myself. My heart just seemed
to beat faster.
“Each
new love comes with a strange humming sound. Like a buzz. Like a disclaimer, a
fine print of sorts. Perhaps of the same old mothballed caution? Of
thunderstorms and telephones that never ring? Yes, you know what I mean. It is
repeated, this time in a careworn, raspy voice, drooping to almost the floor
with the weight of collected wisdom, just about holding its own against gravity
by virtue of its need to be heeded just once. An inch, perhaps. Do not fall in love again, it says.
But as
expected, you don't. Heed the good advice, that is.
Mothballed
stuff is never used, you argue, never have been, in a bourgeois household, like
the unworn cashmere gets used to the damp comfort of a loft as babies grow up
and give birth to new babies. And houses moved. Old luggage discarded with
mixed emotions. That's where you leave caution and wisdom to spoon, strange
bedfellows. Out of sight and forgotten. The image of the loft has a familiar
dampness to it. Place it next to a leaky toilet, for good measure. There's
seldom a Toy Story in real life, is there!
You
turn off the radio and holler out to the first mate to flank her into the
storm, full steam ahead. With each lightning strike, with each rising to the
crest and tossing into the sea, the gentle whir of wisdom is drowned just like
you cannot hear her engine anymore. And there's no disembodied voice from down
below loud enough to tell you if the engine is running at all.
With
each new love, remember to turn off the radio.”
And when I turned off the weather forecast and came back to the chat window, I unlocked the cat and let it go. It walked away or it didn’t.
She
was calling out my name.
“I’ve baked you a shepherd’s pie. Come home.” And we logged in to Skype again.
“I’ve baked you a shepherd’s pie. Come home.” And we logged in to Skype again.
1 comment:
That is a lovely piece of writing. Very visual, as ever.
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