(A deviation from my usual humorous posts)
The first time he saw her was sometime in the middle of summer. She was walking down the road, a short woman, with a brown paper bag in her hand. She was smiling into space, her mind so occupied she didn’t notice the stares of the other people. Maybe they found the way she walked or her dreamy smile odd, but she didn’t glance twice at anyone.
He didn’t know what
made him follow her, but he found himself trailing along after her, though
careful to maintain a distance between the two of them. She didn’t turn back
even once, though others looked at him, or rather, looked down upon him. No one
approves of a wastrel, roaming around the streets, no matter that he was too
young to live on the streets alone, with no home to go to. Some people even
screwed up their noses, as if he smelt like garbage.
For once, he didn’t
care as he followed the woman for what seemed like ages, till she stopped
outside a small house. He halted, and watched as she rummaged in her bag for a
key, opened the door, and to his disappointment, went in and shut the door. His
hopes of getting some food were dashed, and he put his head down. He haunted
the narrow alleys, scrounging for leftovers in the dustbin. He ate what he got,
though it was disgusting. As night came, he curled up on a park bench opposite
to the woman’s house and tried to sleep. He shivered in the cold night, but
finally, exhaustion overtook him and he fell asleep. Life on the streets was
not easy.
As he passed the
house, he saw the door open and the woman come out. For the first time, she saw
him, and paused. She came up to him and smiled down at him. She asked him his
name, but he couldn’t reply. She understood that he couldn’t speak, and gave
him another smile. After that, she walked away, leaving him staring at her till
she turned around the corner.
He fell down heavily in
front of the woman’s house, his body racked with pain. It was past sunset, and
he lay there for a long time, with passers-by looking at him in pity, some
shocked by the wounds, and some shaking their heads at him. But none of them
lifted a finger to help him. His eyes closed, and he prayed he would die, if
only to escape the hardship.
His ears suddenly
caught voices and someone lifted him up. He opened one eye, his right one, and
looked up at the woman’s kind face, her brown eyes full of pity as she carried
him inside. Tears ran down his face, even as his wounds hurt. She spoke in a
soothing voice and took him to the kitchen, and laid him on the huge table. She
continued to speak softly as she took out bandages, cloth, and a glass bottle.
She smiled at him and pressed cotton soaked in some liquid on the wound in his
chest. He yelped and flinched but she held him down and wrapped the wound in
bandage. She gave him some food and told him he could sleep on the sofa in the
hall. Her kindness overwhelmed him, and he felt as happy as he had never felt
in his life.
“Someone so young
as you are shouldn’t be out on the streets alone. You might get killed. If you
don’t have a home, you can stay here till you find one,” she told him.
From that day, he
became a part of her life. She treated him like a friend sometimes, and
sometimes like a son, but never made him feel like a stranger. He would walk
with her everyday to the school where she worked and roam in the school’s huge
ground. Some of the children would play with him, but some of them gave him
disapproving looks, plainly knowing he didn’t belong there, while some ran away
at his sight. He avoided the streets where he used to roam; he didn’t want to
go back to that life ever again. Some kids thought it amusing to call him names
as he couldn’t talk back, but every time he made threatening noises and glared
at them, they would hurry away, crying for their mothers, leaving him laughing
at them.
The day came when his
whole world came crashing down. He got up in the morning and was surprised to
see the sun was up already and she hadn’t woken up yet. He went up to her room
and saw her still in bed. He tried to wake her, but she didn’t move. Panic
filled him as her hands fell limp when he tried to move them. He ran out the
back door, which was not locked, to the next house where an old man lived. He
tried to tell him something was wrong, and indicated that he come with him. The
old man understood, and took his walking stick in his hand. Fear had him
running, and the old man panted, trying to keep up with him. He came to a stop
next to her bed, and looked at the old man, hoping he would be able to wake
her. He watched as the old man opened her eyelid with his hand, and felt along
her hand with his fingers, searching for something. He saw the man’s face go
pale and knew something was wrong. The old man shook his head at him, and wiped
away tears. It was then that it struck him. She was gone. Forever.
3 comments:
Hey swat dats a really gud one...keep it up da...
Gr8 ..yaar...Very well described...but I found something missing...don't ask me what becoz I really don't know !
@ falcon
ha ha but thanks for the comment anyway
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