Charlotte Lenox
Philadelphia, PA USA 19104
I.
No roads led in or out of Juneau, sealing off a silent city from a silent world. Traffic never clogged its only highway. Houses were vacant, the cars and boats in their driveways still bright and shiny. Yet, somehow, Brown Bear Groceries was always well-stocked with food that never spoiled. Movies at the cinema played on endless loops. Water dripped from faucets, and electricity raced through power lines heavy with the weight of winter. The seasons turned, and the sun rose and set on a city that was empty, save for one.
Sometimes Jonathan, who lived deep in the city’s suburban valley, wondered why he couldn’t remember seeing another person even though he occasionally felt watched. But despite his suspicions, life moved on. During the week, he woke up to dawn’s powder blue light, ate cereal, and watched reruns after getting ready for work. All of his energy went into filing papers downtown–no one was there to do it for him or tell him to do otherwise. No one was there at all, and his car was always alone in the parking lot. At home, he sank into his chair and read. The day’s work, as always, joined his blurred memories of the past.
On weekends, he slept late and went to the store for groceries. On his way in, he always turned his head away from the connecting hallway of the gutted Mendenhall Mall. Thoughts of its darkness and vacancy made him nauseous, made him want to run home and drown out the shadows he felt reaching for him as he hurried by. On each trip, he quickly took what he wanted-
-there was no one to pay–then left without a backward glance. At home, he would fret about the hallway and its phantoms while taking out the garbage (which would always be gone by morning) even as daylight faded and other shadows stretched their fingers from houses onto streets. After a night of pastel dreams, the hallway would always diminish, then finally disappear. At work, he turned on the breakers for his floor and continued filing.
His life always fell back into a rhythm that adjusted as seasons came and went. When it snowed, he shoveled it off his car. Sometimes the door froze shut, but he was never late for work. When the sky warmed to a softer blue, he slung his coat into the back seat of his car and forgot about it until it rained. The only sounds that filled his day were the shuffling of papers, the creaking of his chair, the whisper of the wind through cottonwoods and spruce boughs, the roar of the Mendenhall River, and occasionally the rumble of snow falling down Thunder Mountain. When had he last heard his own voice?
His life was a series of days passing, of waves hitting the shore one after the other and foaming in the seaweed. But as he aged, he increasingly felt uneasy. Sometimes he wanted to go to the beach. Other times, he caught himself looking down the street, glancing into a window, rushing around a corner, only to find nothing there. What was he looking for? The eyes he sometimes felt trained on him? No, he could sense that this was different, as if something was missing but desperately needed.
One evening, a gallon of milk he had taken home the day before went sour. Perplexed, Jonathan decided to take it back and exchange it for a different one, not knowing what else to do even though there was no customer service desk to accept it.
Entering the store, he paused, suddenly unsure of himself. Was this really what he was supposed to do? It made as little sense as paying a ghost at the register. What then, put it back on the shelf? This had never happened before–there was no routine to follow. The problem so distracted him that before he knew it, before he could turn away, he found himself staring down the mall’s musty hallway and at the barren storefronts, dirty carpets, and motionless mirrors of the ceiling. His stomach churned and bubbled up into his throat, the same sensation that warned him to keep moving every time he passed the hallway, but this time he couldn’t look away. A heart-clenching cold suffused him, making him want to cry out into the void of his life if only for the hopeless chance that someone, somewhere, might hear him. But his voice would only echo back to him, a reminder of the emptiness surrounding him. Deeper inside, shadows were clotting beyond the dim light from the grocery store. He was sweating profusely, now, as he stared and stared into the worst thing he had ever felt. The gallon of milk slipped out of his clammy hand, hit the floor, and exploded in a shower of white. The shadows rolled toward him, his mind screaming at him to get out of there, to run away before he lost himself, before everything he knew fell apart. Run! GET OUT! FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, RUN! But he couldn’t–the hallway and shadows had taken hold of him.
Jonathan slipped in the puddle of milk and came crashing to the floor. Those who were studying him wondered what he had seen and felt.
### II.
On his way home, Jonathan was shaking so violently that he almost swerved the car into the river. What was worse, he wasn’t even sure that he cared if he did. The world had suddenly stopped making sense. Distraught as he was, he didn’t notice that the boats in other driveways had filmed over with mildew since his trip to the store.
That night, hours passed before he could fall asleep, only to be later awakened by reaching out to touch the unoccupied side of the bed. He rested his hand on the sheets, wondering why he thought anyone else should have been there, why he even slept on one side of the bed. His fading dream echoed the cold hollowness that pervaded him then and the day before: There were blurred greys, greens, browns, blues–none of the comfortable pastels from his usual dreams, but dark colors that made him recall the river and his swerving car.
Jonathan lost himself in his thoughts–preferring to think about anything other than the hallway or the river–and nearly missed getting ready for work. The colors of the strange dream puzzled him throughout the day, but all he could grasp from them was a name: Lena. At first he thought it was a woman’s name. But it was only when the dream returned a few days later that he could piece together the full name: Lena Beach.
He wasn’t sure what to make of it, since he’d never been to the beach. But he was certain the dream would come back, and there was only one way to find out what it meant.
One morning, Jonathan sat up in bed and watched dawn’s solemn glow sieving in through his curtains. His legs itched to get him out of bed and ready for work, but his mind was again on Lena Beach. September rainclouds would be rolling in and frozen ocean winds would be scouring its shore. Jonathan shivered, slowly sliding his legs out from the covers and placing his bare feet on the icy carpet. The sensation briefly jolted him back to the present. Time to head downtown, where a new stack of papers would be waiting for him.
After his usual morning routine, Jonathan climbed into his car, suppressing Lena Beach. All along Riverside Drive, he felt the pressuring need to turn left at the light towards work.
Wrongness hounded him all the way to the intersection, but once he was there, he gave in to where he had to go, what he had to know. He turned right.
Jonathan’s breath became ragged. As the road stretched out behind him, he was certain that there was no going back, not since the milk had gone sour. Before he knew it, he was passing Auke Bay Harbor, where numerous Bayliners bobbed against their moorings. As he drove further away from home and work, the houses thinned and the evergreens and cottonwoods gathered. It was just as well that the trees swallowed the houses, since Jonathan found them increasingly difficult to look at without thinking of their dark windows and stale air. At the same time, however, he was keenly aware of leaves rustling as wind ripped them free of branches before the coming rain.
Eventually, he passed the ferry terminal, where the MV _Columbia_ sat moored with its loading bay open. When he saw the green sign just after the terminal marking the entrance to Lena Beach, he turned down the narrow road and drove until he found an opening in the trees. Already he was shaking again and had trouble rolling the window down to let in the pounding of the surf. Sprinkles of rain dotted his hands, dashboard, and wheel, spilling into the car along with the pungent smell of the tide.
Jonathan left his car parked alongside the road and slid down the dirty slope, avalanches of dead needles following in his wake. When the brown trunks pulled away, they revealed green mountains, slate blue ocean, and silvery-grey clouds barreling close to earth. The colors of his dream resolved into the damp, foreign vista around him, but as of yet, nothing looked out of place. Bleached tangles of driftwood rested in beds of shell and gravel. Dried kelp seeded with dead crabs marked the high-tide line. Nothing living was visible.
But once the heart thumping in his ears subsided, he could hear a sound he had never heard before–a harsh, distant buzzing noise. Jonathan searched the horizon for the source. Near one of the islands of the archipelago was a small white shape: a fiberglass boat, no canopy, barely more than a smudge against the mountains. Squinting, he saw two shapes sitting in the boat. People, Jonathan thought. There were people in that boat. And this time, they were real. Time stopped as he watched.
But when it resumed, he saw the boat moving away from him. Anxiety dissolved into fear, and fear into desperation.
As Jonathan stumbled down the beach, once tripping and skinning his hands on shards of shell, he felt a surge of the terrible emptiness from the hallway. He yelled at the top of his lungs for the boat to come back. More than anything, he wanted those people to hear him and come back for him, talk to him, touch him, tell him he had found what he had been searching for. He screamed and shouted until his throat was hoarse, waved his arms, threw rocks out into the water–anything to get their attention. He couldn’t go back to the way things were, never again. He had found them and his heart was close to bursting. Still, even as the patch of white shrank, he begged and pleaded for them to come back. He went so far as to wade out into the freezing water as if every inch of distance he closed between himself and the boat mattered.
But the boat disappeared from view as it rounded a peninsula, leaving Jonathan alone on the deserted shoreline. Still he shouted until he lost his voice altogether and, without registering the movement of his legs, trudged backward out of the water. He collapsed on the gritty debris; for the first time in his life, his insides were knotting up and he wept. The boat and people were gone, taking the sound of its outboard motor with it.
### III.
Everywhere he went, the silence haunted him. Even when the sky cleared and the sun painted leafless trees golden, all he felt was hopelessness and the penetrating cold of autumn’s early onset. The sun, which had always cheered him after Juneau’s long stretches of rain, didn’t matter. Not anymore.
The loneliness was tearing him apart. He had long since stopped going to work and instead took to wandering the useless streets, screaming since no one could hear him anyway, since his world was a farce. When he could no longer bear seeing all of the peeling and slumping houses he passed, he stopped getting out of bed, laying there until lonely dusk turned into lonely dawn. All he could think about was losing sight of the boat as it rounded the peninsula. The people were all that mattered, but they were gone.
A whisper in his head told him that he should end his life. At first he was frightened, but the voice steadily convinced him that there was nothing worth living for in this world. His whole life had been a sham–he couldn’t even remember his childhood, his parents, friends, college… he must have had all of these things once. What was going on, and why hadn’t he questioned his existence before? Because doing so would lead to this? No going back, now. But would he, given the chance?
He got as far as pressing a knife into his wrist before deciding to step outside his front door one last time. A line of blood was already welling up around the blade’s edge, and tears soaked his face.
Outside the day was brilliant, casting deep slices of shadow on Thunder Mountain and making the aluminum Lund skiffs sitting in driveways difficult to miss. Every one of them, flashing under the light of noon, made him think of the fiberglass boat and made him drive the knife deeper, but something else was stirring in his mind the longer he looked at them. Jonathan began trembling uncontrollably, imagining the waves beating against the hulls of the skiffs sitting quietly in front of him. Suddenly he lost his nerve as the thought hit him: What if the boat passed by that peninsula every day? What if he could reach it, instead of vice versa? There still might be a chance. Everything else followed a routine–why not the boat? The knife dropped from his hand and clattered on the porch. The realization shook him, especially in light of what he had almost done. If he still had a chance, he’d almost lost it.
Hope flared anew, but he had to hurry. Something told him that if he had broken routine, the boat might soon break it as well. Perhaps it already had, but the dream still came to him every night since that day at the beach–he couldn’t let himself believe it was gone forever after such a realization.
In his car’s rearview mirror, Jonathan saw a dust cloud rising off Thunder Mountain and felt rumbling vibrations in the air and ground. A rock slide tumbling down the mountain. Over the skeletal trees, the tip of Mt. McGinnis was already gone, replaced by a halo of more dust. The very earth seemed to be giving way, now that his plan was set.
Slowly but with urgency, Jonathan backed his car into a driveway and secured the skiff’s trailer to the ball hitch, pinching his fingers in the process. He cautiously towed the skiff to Auke Bay, afraid of seeing it jump off the hitch and roll down the hill. He consoled himself that he could always go back for another, though it would waste precious time and behind him–his mouth gaped–new cracks were opening in the pavement, following the back of the trailer. Every minute that passed, he felt the boat (and the rest of his world) slipping farther and farther away. It would take him with it whether he wanted it or not.
When he reached the top of the road that curved down to the harbor, he caught his breath. Gliding through the harbor toward open water was the sought-after bit of white: the fiberglass boat. He backed his car catawampus down the launch ramp, then got out and fumbled with the skiff’s restraints. He heard more rumbling in the distance and tried to hurry. Thankfully, the Lund unexpectedly slid off the trailer, prompting him to splash after it through the green shallows to keep it from drifting away. The skiff, with Jonathan hauling himself into it, moved just far enough into the harbor to avoid what he saw coming down the hill. Petrified, he watched as a land slide surged into the water, sweeping his car with it and submerging part of the floating dock. He desperately held on as the resultant wave carried him into the other moored boats, the impact forcing him to his knees. When the skiff remained upright, he breathed a sigh of relief.
Once the waves subsided and after some trouble lowering and starting the outboard, he found himself zig-zagging through the harbor and past the breakwater, the Lund’s bow slamming into every wave and jarring the senses from his head. He did his best to ignore the bite of the wretched end-of-summer breakers that splashed onto his legs and instead tried to keep his goal in mind. Despite the cold, sweat glued his shirt to his body.
As daylight faded and the sky clouded over, Jonathan shouted over the noise of his outboard, but neither the boat nor its passengers turned in his direction and instead chose to continue ignoring him. Low-hanging clouds bled rain on his face. He used his free arm to wipe it clear, but his vision only blurred and made tracking the boat difficult.
It was now or never, though–the aberrant boat and dreams of Lena Beach would soon disappear from his life along with the rest of his world. He squeezed the last of his flagging strength into his grip on the outboard’s rubber-coated handle, as if every ounce of effort would lend it speed. Regardless, the boat seemed to pull away. The clouds plunged into the water and further obscured its shape. Somewhere beyond, tumbling bits of the world were thundering into the ocean, marking the time he had left.
But as his Lund struggled harder through the waves, the white boat finally drew near enough for him to see its registration number. Soon he would be on top of it; he tried to yell even louder but failed to raise his voice through the scratching pain. The two figures in the boat, a man and woman both roughly his age, kept their backs to him despite his proximity. The man was in the captain’s chair, listening to the woman as she pointed to different gauges and rested his hand on the throttle. But even when Jonathan reached over and banged on the fiberglass hull, the woman didn’t pause her instruction, and the man kept his gaze straight ahead of them. Jonathan might as well have been invisible, the destruction non-existent. It was only when the man finally turned in response to something that Jonathan saw the real face of another human being for the first time, only it wasn’t what he had expected.
The man’s face mirrored his own exactly, lines and grey hairs and all. His eyes–Jonathan’s eyes-
-were far away, as if he was also looking for something but had no hope of finding it. As if he had already given up, much as Jonathan almost had.
Seeing that face, Jonathan almost released his grip on the side of the boat, but he couldn’t let this moment go. He reaffirmed his hold, wincing as the boats scraped and thumped together and jerked at his arm with every wave. His mirror image pointed, water droplets shattering on his fingers; he said something lost in the noise of the outboards and collapsing mountains. The air between them turned soft and thick like butter, but painfully charged with static.
Desperately, without understanding why, Jonathan reached out for the other’s hand.
When their fingers met, an explosion of white pain knocked Jonathan free of his consciousness. His last thought was that he had chosen wrongly.
But when he could see again, he knew that he wasn’t dead. Instead, he felt numbingly cold and gasped for air. Through his hazy vision, he saw that his world had completely changed: Autumn had reawakened as spring, and sun had replaced rain. The silken water, choppy only moments before, was now glassy with wavering threads of light. At first, he thought that he had lost the white boat and awakened the next morning.
But his hands were strangling the wheel of the very boat he had been chasing. Gradually, he slowed his breathing and loosened his cold-stiffened fingers, then leaned back in the chair to
stare up at the sky–it was such a deep blue, he could feel it saturating his eyes. Cessnas whirred, and puffy clouds trailed across the zenith. Sunlight warmed his face, melting his body into floods of pins and needles as feeling, real feeling, finally returned. Tears streamed across his cheeks as he choked back a sob. He’d found it, after so many years. The part of him that dreamed its own dreams for so long had reawakened. As the memories of both halves merged inside a throbbing headache, Jonathan understood at last.
“Jonathan, what’s wrong with you? Are you all right?” The woman behind him asked.
His voice coarse from disuse, Jonathan said, “Yes… yes. It’s finally over. I can’t believe it.” He had by now completely broken down. His other half’s memories–now his own–told him about the terrible accident some years ago that had caused the partial loss of his mind. No doctor had thought he’d recover from it, but they were all too eager to study it. They were wrong. He’d made it through.
The woman frowned, creasing her weather-beaten features. “What are you talking about, Jonathan? What’s over?” She asked slowly.
Through his tears, tears of happiness he never thought possible, Jonathan said, “Amy, I love you. So much.” And he really did love her for never giving up on him, for never again leaving his side after the accident. He smiled. Amy sat in stunned silence; then, whispering his name, let her face crumple into tears as she wrapped her arms around him and held him tightly. Jonathan buried his face in her hair, never wanting to let her go.
Those who watched him went out to get a late lunch, also smiling.
Vice, virtue or something of that sort
Translated Story by Gopa Nayak
From Original in Oriya by Paramita Sathpathy You’ll need to find the e-mail for this one
“Your case is amazingly complicated. We have to treat it some what differently from other divorce cases. We need your complete cooperation in this. I hope you understand.”
“Yes, I do.”
“You believe that your wife has developed some mental abnormality”. “Yes.”
“However, the specialist has reported that her mental state is not at all different from any normal individual.”
“Agreed, but Dr.Chopra also feels that such a thing is impossible to happen without any mental abnormality.”
“Now, could you please some more questions? When did you get married?” “Almost two years. The marriage took place on the 2nd of January, 1984” Did you know Ms Snigdha before marriage?”
“Yes.”
“For how long?”
“One year before marriage. Atanu, her elder brother was my classmate. We were studying together in Rourkela. Once I had been to Atanu’s house with him during our holidays. After that…..”
“Now, something about your personal matters. How was your conjugal life?” “Fine”
“Any difference- I mean any serious difference any day?” “No, never. I don’t remember anything serious happening.” “When did the event happen?”
“It is almost six months now”
“Did your wife make any effort to explain it to you?”
“Yes she did. But she is gone mad that’s why she is talking that way. You must have come to have the same opinion.”
“So you want to establish that your wife has become mad and that is why you are seeking divorce. Your Honour, according to the report of Dr Chopra Ms Mishra does not have any sign of any mental abnormality. You may go now.”
There was a hushed disturbance in the room. The court room was small. There was not much of a crowd. A few lawyers who were loitering on the veranda without any assignment had entered into the room out of sheer curiosity. Only they seem to be discussing something in low voices.
They also seem to be very excited. Snigdha turned slightly from her seat. Pradipta was sitting across with his back towards her. Amar and Dinesh have also accompanied him. None of them are looking towards her. All three of them are discussing something quite casually. Her parents- in-law have not come. This episode would not have appealed to them anyway. Snigdha looked towards the chair beside her from the corner of her eyes. Her mother was looking very sad as if
some one has drained every drop of blood from it! Her father was sitting on the chair as if someone has tied him to the seat; appearing as if he wanted to flee from the place under some pretense. He looks very disgraced and offended. Maybe the final order would not be given today.
“I am Mr. Choudhury.” Snigdha looked up.
“I was interrogating your husband. Perhaps, you don’t know me. Mr. Mahapatra had given me the case history. I had been to your place once or twice but was unable to meet you as you were not at home. It would have better if I had heard it from you. Anyway it does not matter. There will be no need for the case to go to the highcourt. It is a matter of separation. The order will be passed on today. Only thing is that we will not accept the allegation. There is no evidence of insanity. The doctor also denied it. You need not worry.” The lawyer took a deep breath. “Do you want to have something? Tea, or cold drinks?”
“No, thank you” Snigdha smiled a little.
“Dr Behera is here so we will start our work again.” Choudhury left quickly to take his seat. “Hello Snigdha! I was a bit late.I hope there is no problem.”
“It’s alright. Please take a seat.” “Dr Behera, please come here”
“I will speak only the truth and nothing but the truth.” Dr Behera touched the Gita. She arranged her saree took out a hand-ker-chief from her purse and wiped her face.
“Do you know Mrs Mishra?”
“Yes, she was one year junior to me in college studying ISC. Moreover, since we both live in this town we often get to meet each other.”
“You have done the abortion for Mrs Mishra. Could you tell us how old the child was?” “It was just an embryo of two and a half months only.”
“Did Mrs Mishra give you the cause behind her getting an abortion?”
“No, she said that she did not want the child at that time.I had asked her about Pradipata’s opinion and had suggested that he should have come. Snigdha told me that both of them had the same opinion and he was out of town for ten to twelve days on an official tour. I knew her for a long time that why………..”
“Okay. Did you come across this case before?” “No.”
“Do you think whatever Mrs Mishra is saying is possible?” “I have no idea.”
“Still, as a doctor, have you read or come across any other case like this?” “No, not yet.”
“This could have happened as a result of some mental abnormality of Mrs Mishra. What do you think?”
“I cannot answer that. I am only a gynecologist.” “Okay Mr Chaudhury, now it is your turn.” “Abortion is legalized now”
“Of course, yes.”
You have started practicing only recently. Perhaps, you have never come across such a case. But can you vouch that such a case can never happen?”
“To be frank with you, I have really no idea about this. I have never come across such a case in our profession. If this is true, then it is possible that this is the first case of its kind.”
“Do you think that Mrs Mishra had developed a temporary condition of abnormality?”
“I have never found any abnormality during the thorough check up. Moreover, I had never felt her being unnerved.”
“Do you think you would have believed her, had she told you the real reason?”
“Perhaps, I would not have believed her. I would have asked for Pradipta’s to come over to know his view on the abortion.”
“You may go now. Your Honour, Mrs Mishra had her abortion without her husband’s knowledge. This could be a valid reason for separation. However, the allegation of insanity has to be withdrawn. Both the doctors have reported her to be normal after thorough diagnosis. There is no chance of her being abnormal. Moreover, why is such an event not possible?”
Hushed noises and laughter was heard. “Now Mrs Mishra, please come over.” Snigdha took the oath.
“Mrs Mishra- How is your relation with your husband?”
“He is a nice person.” Snigdha looked towards Pradipta. Pradipta had, as if, vowed not to look at him.
“What was reaction when you came to know that you had conceived?”
“I was very happy. My mother-in-law had come to know even before I told her and she informed Pradipta. That day there was a festival kind of atmosphere at home. The same night, I had written to my parents about it.” Snigdha’s face lighted up.
“Then why didn’t you inform Mr Mishra about the abortion?” “He wouldn’t have agreed.”
“You should have respected his opinion because it is his child as well.”
“I had no choice.” Snigdha had a straightforward answer. She looked at her mother. Her mother and her father were sitting with their heads towards the ground appearing as if they were reading something from the floor.
“Your husband has complained that you have developed some kind of insanity. Can you give a detailed description of the whole incident.”
“I have already told him.”
“Even then you have to describe it again for the court so that a decision can be made.”
“It was June the 5th, last year. My mother-in-law was not a home. She had gone to visit my sister-in-law. Pradipta was supposed to have his food at the club. Both me and my father-in-law had a light supper. I was feeling very sleepy. I asked the servant to open the door when Pradipta came home and went to bed. Suddenly I woke up in the middle of the night. It was 1.30 in the morning. Pradipta was snoring lightly…….”
“Hang on. How did you know that it was 1.30 in the morning?”
“There was a table clock on the table next to the window. The digits of the clock were shining. It was a moonlit night. We used to keep the window open because it was quite hot those days. The window let in moon light and cool breeze. The whole room was bright. Suddenly I heard some one calling –‘Maa , Maa’. Where was it coming from? Who was crying out for her in such a sweet melodious voice? I heard the sweet and soft call again. This time I came to know that the voice was coming from inside me. Who is calling? I felt my hand standing on end. Then I heard the pleading call of desperation. It was coming away from afar. I had never heard such a voice before. It was not a voice but appeared as if a soul was speaking! As if life had turned into words! I realized that the girl inside me was speaking.”
“Wait. How did you know that the sound was the voice of your daughter? It is not possible to know the sex of the child by that time.”
“I have indeed heard the voice of my daughter. I can never go wrong on this. I can make out from the softness of her voice. Moreover, only a daughter’s voice can be so heavy and pleading. I was feeling very light- I was overwhelmed. Again the same pleading voice came sweeping- Don’t bring me to this world. Don’t let me suffer in this system from birth to death-Please heed to this request of mine, my mother. Maybe you are imagining that you will be excited with the surreal and amazing presence of this doll made of flesh and blood. Maybe you are thinking that through me you will chant some mantra and breathe life into the drying buds in the soft branches and make them bloom again. But I am suffering, my mother, the ground under my feet is trembling. It is all going down. Dear mother, where will I put my feet and stand straight? How pathetic is her voice! How painful her words! Streams of tears were flowing down from her eyes. In that haziness I could see- there was no bed, Pradipta was also not there-no walls, no floor, no room. I could not make out if there was the sky, the earth or even the mountains. I could only see that my daughter standing alone- only my daughter was standing. I put my hand forward longingly -to see her face and her smile. I wanted to embrace her and hold her close to my chest- to kiss her face and her body. I remembered everything that I had imagined after I realized she had taken her place inside me. But what is my daughter saying? What is she blabbering? My darling- please, come to my lap. I screamed. It appeared as if the moon let a silver stream flow on her. The moonlight was shining on the body of my daughter. I saw, I indeed saw- Snigdha’s voice started trembling. Streams of tears were flowing down my daughter’s eyes. She did not even stretch out her hands. Her lips were trembling in making an effort to speak but only blood was coming out of her mouth- blood started coming out of her eyes, nose, face, legs and arms- her whole shape became a pool of blood. What is this that happened to my daughter? I was impatient to ask everyone and felt like waking up everyone from sleep. But how could I say?
Who was with me? Slowly my daughter disintegrated before me. The walls came into existence; the windows, the floor and the bed – everything was put into place. Pradipta turned in his sleep. I was sweating profusely. I though of waking him up. But I resisted because I thought he will advise me to sleep and stop dreaming. I was lying in that half asleep state. Pradipta got up after a while-took a glass of water from the table and drank it. Perhaps, he was not aware that I was awake. After a while I felt a bit cold. The cuckoo’s voice could be heard from the mango tree on the garden behind the house. I realized that the sun was going to rise soon and I had decided by then what I needed to do. Snigdha was silent.
Suddenly there was pin-drop silence in the small court room for a while. Snigdha’s parents had lowered their heads even more as if they were engrossed in deep prayer. Pradipta and his friends were also sitting with their eyes to the floor.
“So you put an end to a human life in your own sweet will just because she pleaded with you. Will you kill Mr. Mishra or even your parents if they asked you to do so?” The lawyer fighting for Pradipta put forth this argument after a while.
“Never, why must I kill people? Are you suggesting that I have killed my daughter? I loved her dearly but why couldn’t anyone do anything- neither me nor anyone. Why did I feel that my daughter was suffering from abject pain? Who inflicted that pain on her? How could she not find
a place to put her soft feet? What else could I do? How could I tolerate her suffering? Do I have any right to put her through the suffering? Snigdha was, as if, posing these questions to herself.
“Indeed, but you have served a severe blow at motherhood”. Pradipta’s lawyer heaved a sigh. “I have only made an attempt at understanding motherhood.” Snigdha raised her head.
“But surely you would not have dared to do this in case abortion was not legalized” Pradipta’s lawyer struck the last weapon in his armour. “I would have taken the same course of action even if time had gone back a thousand years, and had the events shaped up like this then.