The Upper Storey...
It's hard overcoming a writer's block. You come up with many ideas and have no clue how to proceed with them. Frustrating times. English exams in school were fun. Especially the language ones. I got to write stories, and every time, every exam, from class six to my boards, I would end up writing a ghost story. It was a fascination for me, one that my teacher's greatly disliked. Not that they didn't like the stories, but they kept telling me to write something else, get over my weird fixation over spooks. Well, with time, I got there, but here, lost for ideas one day after eleven hours of training and travel, I sit down and indulge once more in that childhood fantasy world of mine. Oh yes, another complaint my teachers had with my essays was that I could never finish within the word limit, always ended up exceeding it. That is an issue, that I'm afraid, still persists. My bad!
*************************************
The raindrops splattered against the windshield making it
hard to see ahead, despite the wipers best attempts. Hari had to stop. He
pulled over to the side of the road, praying that the rain would lessen soon. He
shut off the engine and the only sound that came was that of the howling wind,
and the rain crashing against the roof of the car. He leaned back in his seat
and sighed. The radium dial of his watch indicated that it was six in the
evening. It was dark outside, barring a few lights glittering in the distance,
shining through the torrential downpour from little mud huts lining the side of
the road a little way ahead. Where he’d stopped, there were only trees on both
sides, dancing to sway of the wind.
Hari was returning from his Uncle’s village, about two
hundred kilometers outside town. He had left town early in the morning, hoping
to be back by nightfall, but the rain, and his aunt’s insistence on serving him
what she called a “light snack” before leaving, had him running behind
schedule. Stopping in the middle of these village roads, lined by forests on
both sides, was rather unsafe, but he had no choice. He took out his mobile
from his pocket, intending to call home, telling his folks that he’d be late,
but there was no signal. A flash of lightning lit up the world around him and
then came down the ear numbing thunder. The windows of the car shook, and then,
silence!
Half an hour had passed by, since Hari had made the stop and
the rain had eased up a bit. It was time to move on. He turned the key, revving
up the engine. But it wouldn’t start. He tried a few more times, thinking that
it just needed some time to warm up, but nothing. It stayed dead. Cursing he
banged his hands against the steering wheel. “Perfect” he hissed through
clenched teeth. Outside, the rain had stopped,
just the trickle of water, bouncing off the trees, and the occasional growl of
thunder and lightning. The lights of the nearby village huts became all the
more clear, shimmering off the rain soaked road, sparkling against the misty
windows of the car. Hari climbed out of the car, opened the bonnet and poked
around with the light of his mobile. But he was no mechanic and it was too dark.
All he understood was that it was probably the water that had clogged up the
machinery. Hands on hips, he looked around for any approaching vehicles, that
he could have stopped to ask for help, but it was a lonely stretch of road that
not many used after nightfall. He’d have to try his luck at the village up
ahead. Maybe there’d be a makeshift garage or, at least a telephone that he’d
be able to use.
Leaving his car like that, unattended was not something that
Hari was too comfortable with, but what choice did he have. There were no
valuables inside, and the car wouldn’t budge anyway. So locking it up, he
walked down the road towards the lights. It was a longer walk than he had
imagined it to be. The lights had looked deceptively close from the car but
walking towards them, he realized that it was further out than it looked. He
was proper wet when he finally reached, soaked from the trickle of water
flowing off the trees. He looked around. It wasn’t much of a village. A few
stray mud huts, a cow pen, a well, and surrounded by the dark shadow of the
trees.”So much for finding a garage” he thought. There were no overhead lines
either, so he doubted if there’d be a telephone. He saw a man, walking with a
bucket in hand. He was old, his hair white and the weight of whatever there was
in the bucket made him stoop. Hari called out to him as he walked closer. It
took a while before the man heard his calls. He looked up, squinting in the
darkness. He saw Hari, and there was surprise written on his face. Clearly,
this village wasn’t too used to visitors, especially at night. Hari approached
him. ”Hello, my name is Hari. I was driving down the road, when my car broke
down. It’s parked a little up the road from here. I was wondering if you know
someone here who can help, or if there is a telephone I can use.”
The man stared at Hari awhile, taking his time to register
all that was told to him. Slowly and in a low, wheezy voice, he replied, “No
telephone. You go talk to Choubay. He might help. He is the caretaker of the
old zamindar’s haveli.”
“And where is this haveli?” Hari asked, surprised. He could
see no big structures around, never mind an entire haveli.
“Follow that dirt path around the cow pen, for a while into
the forest, you’ll see it. Its behind the trees back there.” He said, pointing
towards the darkness.
Hari followed his finger and could vaguely make out the outline
of dark swaying trees behind the cow pen. His stomach squirmed. Walking into a
lonely forest, in the darkness, didn’t seem like a great idea. For even the
staunchest of hearts can be spooked in such surroundings.
“Go there, knock on the door, and ask for Choubay. He might
help you.” Having said this, the old man picked up his load and trudged away
towards his hut, mumbling under his breath. Hari was all alone, surrounded by the
darkness, in a strange place. Deciding to chuck his fears, he took the path
around the cow pen and followed the road. After all, if this Choubey could
really help, maybe he’d still be able to reach home tonight. The dirt path was
covered in mud and very slippery. Hari had to take small careful steps to avoid
falling over, his feet sinking deep into the mud with every step. Finally, he
reached the edge of the tree line and followed the path into the forest. It was
pitch black darkness, the constant chirping of crickets rang in his ears. Hari
flicked on the screen light in his mobile to see the way ahead. Every now and
then, it flicked off, leaving him blind. Not even his hands he could see. “Why
would anyone ever build a house in this kind of place?” he wondered. He had not
long to walk on the dirt path, before a clearing opened up, and in it stood a
two storey building. It wasn’t huge, but big enough to house four-five people
in it comfortably. The architecture was old world. One could see where once a
gate had stood, now, just scraps hung off the broken boundary wall. Two steps
and a long porch, led the way to a doorway with a brass knocker, the colour
fading off over the years. Big windows lined either side of the door
overlooking the grounds. The grounds itself was a tangle of overgrown grass and
weeds, some thorny bushes lined on one side, and a well on one side. Cracks had
appeared on every inch of crumbling paint on the walls, and there were small
holes in the sides. It was all that Hari could make out in the dim flickering
candle light that emanated from on the rooms next to the door. All the other
rooms had their windows shut tight and in it, resided the darkness. Walking up
to the door, he knocked hard and waited. Silence greeted him!
He knocked again, louder. Inside, he heard the creak of a
chair being pushed back. The light of the candle in the neighboring window
moved away, and the shuffle of feet. It got closer and closer and then stopped
on the other side of the door. “Who is it?”Asked a deep gruff voice from
inside. Hari cleared his throat and said, ”My name is Hari. I was driving down
the road here when my car broke down not far from here. I came here for help. I
was asked to look for someone called Choubay. Could you please help me?” Once
again, silence!
“Please, I’ll pay you.” Hari added incentive as an
afterthought. It worked. He heard the rattle of bolts being drawn and with a
loud squeak, the door opened. Inside, holding a candle was a rather grim
looking man, short and thin, about fifty or thereabouts, graying thin hair, and
a scraggy beard. He was wearing a torn vest and pyjamas, looking up curiously
at Hari with flickering flame of the candle in his hand casting shadows over
his scarred face.
“Are you Choubay?” Hari enquired.
“Yes.”
“Can you help me? My car is down the road, a short way.”
“Not today. Too late. In the morning, we go.”
“Can I spend the night here? Will it be alright to leave the
car there, is it safe?”
“Yes. Come in.” And he moved away from the door, making way
for Hari to enter. Behind him, Choubay bolted the door shut, and shuffled ahead
with his candle. Hari followed in silence.
It was a short narrow corridor that they walked through. The
walls were bare barring the dust and cobwebs. Passing through another door,
they entered a large, square room that formed the centre of the haveli. This
must be where the zamindar of old, must have received their guests. Hari could
imagine the room being lined with mattresses and cushions, where the zamindar
sat attending to his business and guests, smoking from a hookah, and two
servants fanning him with giant feathers. All that was there now was an old
rotting wooden chair and an upturned bucket by its side, barring which, the
room was empty. A staircase at the other end led to the upper storey. Choubay
meanwhile, walked into a room, that Hari guessed was the one next to the
doorway, where he’d been when Hari had knocked. Walking inside, he saw a small
room, probably a store room or a guest room in the past. This room was cleaner
than the others and sparsely furnished. A cot in one corner of the room, a
table and a chair, and a little wooden box lying under the cot. On the table,
Choubay placed the candle lamp. Hari noticed a couple of letters and a torn
cover of a book. That was all there was to see.
It had been a while since Choubay had spoken and Hari found
this silence to be very unnerving. It
was almost as if the man didn’t seem to care or notice that a complete stranger
whom he had never before seen walked around in his sanctuary of isolation. The
darkness creeping in around him, the constant chirp of crickets outside, and
the soft drip of water trickling somewhere and the mysterious haveli in the
middle of nowhere coupled with a stone of a caretaker, all combined to give
Hari the creeps. He decided to end this monologue of silence. “So where is this
place? And why build a haveli in the middle of nowhere like this? What do you
do here?” he enquired. Choubay turned around slowly, looked at him through his
deep dark eyes. Suddenly Hari wished that he hadn’t said anything. Silence was
better than this man’s gaze, he decided. The candle light fell on Choubay’s
deep scarred face, casting shadows on each contour, but the eyes remained pitch
black. Not a light shone in it.
Slowly, with heavy breathing, he spoke. “I’m the caretaker.
I look after this place. This haveli was built more than a hundred years ago,
in the time of my great grandfather. He was the first caretaker of this haveli
and most trusted aide of Seth Maganlal, the owner of it. There used to be huge
banana plantations around this haveli, and that was the Seth’s source of
income. Since that time, everyone in my family has been part of this haveli,
looking after its upkeep. That is how I am here today. The people of this small
village are all people whose folks have worked around here, for the Seth. This
is where their ancestors have been born and under this very soil, their
ancestors lay long after they are dead. That is why they too remain here.”
Finishing his story, he picked up a small pipe from the ground, lit it up,
leaned up against the walls and puffed, his eyes never straying of Hari. Hari
shifted on the floor, his eyes going around the room, a slight tinge of
uneasiness crept over him. Outside, a giant bolt of lightning lit up the world,
followed by a mighty roar of thunder. He could feel the walls vibrate. It
started raining again.
Looking around, he saw Choubay staring outside the window,
as if fascinated by the darkness. Without turning towards him, he asked, “And
you sahib? You seem like a city man. What brings you here through this little
village of ours?”
“I had gone to visit my uncle. His village is Ramdevpur.
It’s a little way along this road. On the way back, this infernal rain started
pouring down, so I had to stop. When it stopped raining, my car wouldn’t start
again. Speaking of which, how do you propose to get it fixed in the morning.
You any good with cars?” Hari asked warily. Choubay didn’t look like someone
who had even seen too many cars in his life, let alone fix one.
“I am a foolish man, how can I fix rich smart men’s car. But
many trucks pass by here in the morning. I will stop one and they can help you.
You’ll just have to somehow pass the night in this humble home of mine.”
Hari was a little embarrassed. It seemed Choubay had picked
up the uncertainty in his voice, and he was quick to express his gratefulness.
“Please, I’m very grateful for your help. Sitting in that car, with the rain
and the darkness, I was really at a loss for what to do. Atleast now I have a
roof above my head. But tell me this. There aren’t any other roads nearby and
the highway is a far way out. And yet,
there are so few vehicles travelling on this road. I hardly recall seeing any
on the way back. Why is that? ”
Choubay did not reply immediately. He looked long and hard
at Hari, his deep black eyes piercing into him. He let out a heavy breath and
said, “You must be hungry. I’ll get you something to eat.” Saying so, he slowly
got up and walked out of the room, dragging his feet behind him. Hari sat there
alone, rather surprised at the sudden change in topic. He did not even get a
chance to put in a mild protest, but he was rather hungry, so he let it go. He
got up and walked to the window. It was a moonless night. Even if there had
been a moon it would have been shrouded by the over bearing dark clouds
spitting thunder and lightning. The rain continued to fall. A wet breeze swept
over him, little droplets of water hitting his face. He could see the outlines
of the dark tall trees swaying to the gushing winds. A toad croaked, the
crickets continued with their merry song. Apart from this, nothing stirred.
There was a noise behind him. Turning around he saw Choubay walk in. In his
hands was a little bowl with dal in it and two thin roti’s. He put it down on
the floor. Hari sat down, tore a piece of roti, dipped it into the dal, and
ate. “I’m sorry, but this is all I had.” Choubay said. His eyes never leaving
Hari’s face. “You shouldn’t have bothered. This is more than enough. You have
been really very kind. But aren’t you eating?”
“I have my meals at sunset.”
They spent the next few moments in silence. Hari ate the
meager meal put before him while Choubay continued to suck on his pipe. He
finished his meal and put the plate aside. Choubay led him outside to small
bathroom. There was a pot of water on the floor, using which Hari washed up. “I
fill that from the well, once in the morning and once before sundown.” Choubay
announced. Hari nodded and went back to the room. He checked his watch, it was
almost ten thirty. Hari was used to late hours living in the city, he didn’t
feel sleepy but people in villages woke up really early, so turning to Choubay,
he asked him when he’d sleep and not to stay awake for him. Choubay laughed. It
was a deep laugh that could be easily mistaken for a cough if you didn’t notice
the curl of the lips and the sudden twinkle in the dark eyes. With a groan, he
sat down again. “Sleep” he sighed, ”It has been so many years since last I
slept soundly. Having to live here is my curse. I get neither sleep, nor peace.
Fear not Sahib, you are causing me no discomfort at all. Infact, it has been
such a long time since I had company at this lonely house.”
“Why? Don’t the other village folks come here?”
“What to say Sahib. They have their own lives and their own
troubles to deal with. We all live here oblivious to each others presence. So
you coming over tonight, has been cause for much joy in my heart.”
“So why do you continue to stay here? It doesn’t look like
any of the old Seth’s folks are coming to reclaim the place back. You can just
as well leave and look for a better job in the city. Why stay here?”
“All my ancestors have lived and died here, Sahib. My work
is my curse. I have no children, no wife. After I am gone, there will be no one
to look after this place. But I upheld my duty, the duty passed on to me by my
forefathers. And when I’m dead, they shall be happy that I did what they
entrusted me to do.”
Hari said no more. It was useless to argue with a man of
such staunch beliefs, no matter how wild those beliefs were. He decided to
change the topic.
“So what’s the upstairs portion like?”
The candle flame flickered. A dark shadow passed over
Choubay’s face. For a moment, the wind seemed to be sucked out of the room and
all of outside became deadly still. And then, in an instant, all was back to
normal. Such was the sudden transformation in the atmosphere and for such a
fleeting moment that Hari wondered if he’d imagined it all. Looking at Choubay
he saw him staring at the floor, twirling the pipe in his hands, a sad look on
his face.
“So?” Hari asked again. “You didn’t tell me.”
Choubay sat there in silence for a while longer as if
fascinated by the twirling pipe in his fingers. And then he looked curiously at
me. “Maybe you don’t want to know.”
“What is that supposed to mean?” Hari asked, the sense of
uneasiness was back, creeping up his spine, slowly, deliberately. He felt the
chills.
“You are a man from the city, a man of science and
knowledge. You don’t believe in these things. But here in these little remote
villages and jungles, where man rarely walks, we hear and see many things that
your science cannot explain. So maybe you’ll laugh. Maybe you’ll not believe
me.”
“You mean ghosts? You’re telling me a bunch of spooks are
living above us now as we speak? Is the rent good?” Hari asked with a laugh.
But there was a little tinge of fear in the laugh. A hint of uncertainty. He let it pass. This was ridiculous, he
reasoned. Ghost stories are things you amuse children with.
“I told you, you will laugh. To be honest, I do not know
what it is, ghosts or otherwise. Ever since I was a little boy, my father had
forbidden me from going upstairs at night. There are bad things there, he said.
Never go there after sundown, he had told me. Never had he given me a reason.
Then one day when I was a boy of around ten, two men came to the village. They
were rich men, came in a big van, and carried cameras and other things with
them. They came to my father and told him that they were from the TV. They were
doing a show on ghosts and haunted buildings in the state and wanted to shoot
in the haveli. They had heard stories about it, and wanted to investigate. They
had planned to spend a night in the upper floor of the haveli. Father refused. Telling
them that it was unsafe, he asked them to go back. But they paid him a lot of
money and he agreed. It was decided, that me and father would stay with them
till sundown and show them around and cook their meal for the night. At
sundown, we were asked to leave the haveli and spend the night with the folks
of the village. They’d leave the following morning, and we could have the
haveli back. They promised that they’d cause no damage to it. It was all
settled. Accordingly, that day, my father showed them around while I cooked. At
sundown, we left them alone and spent the night with Rahim Kaka, one of my
father’s friends at the village. I had nightmares that night. Often my sleep
was broken by sudden flashes of disturbing images. During these times, I
noticed Baba’s bed was empty. Looking out the door, I saw him sitting outside
the hut in a small stool, smoking, the smoke curling from his lips, as he
stared intently, with unwavering attention towards the clump of trees behind
which stood the haveli. Once he even got up and walked a few paces towards it,
but came back before long, shaking his head. This went on till morning. When the first rays
of sunlight, lit up the sky, Baba with his quick strides, went down the dirt
path towards the house. I followed. We went past the broken gate. All was
still. Not a soul stirred. My eyes scanned the second floor windows. Two were
open. Inside, nothing but the paint scraping off the walls could be seen. As
agreed, the door had been left open, so that we could enter in the morning, in
case they’d fallen asleep. We went in. All was silent. The air hung heavy
inside the haveli. There was an odd stillness in it. My heart thumped loud
enough to be heard all the way from the village, goosebumps on my flesh. Baba
called out the men’s names standing in the hall, but no reply came. We spent a
good five minutes calling their names without response. Some other village folk
had also joined us by then. Gathering
our breath with careful steps, we climbed up the stairs. The upper floor has a
long corridor in the middle and two bedrooms on either side of it. The first
one was empty. I remember the open windows that I had seen while coming in.
They were of the second bedroom on the left. The door was closed, but it wasn’t
locked. Baba knocked on it loudly. Not a soul stirred. So, slowly, carefully he
pushed it open. I tell you Sahib, for as long as I shall live, I will never
forget the sight I saw before me that day. The windows on the far side were
open, lighting the room. The bedrooms were all bare, the furniture had been
long sold off. The white paint scraping off the wall, had cobwebs and dark
patches all over it. On the floor were two mattresses and a camera was placed
on a stand beside them. On one of the mattresses lay a man, hands behind his
head, staring at the ceiling. His eyes glassy, his mouth curled up in a curious
smile, froth trickling down the side. The other man sat under one of the
windows, with a curious bordering on gleeful look in his eyes, as if amazed,
his mouth open, his hands hanging loosely by his sides. And just like the
other, he was looking up at the same bare patch of ceiling, the life sucked out
of him. We all must have stood there for a long time, stunned, struck by
disbelief. And then Baba lunged forward, shaking the men, in hope that they’d
rise up. But their sleep was too deep for anyone to wake them. Their lifeless
limbs hung about them. They had seen something wondrous and amazing before the
life had been sucked out them, teeth bared in half grimace, half laughter
rendering a horrific look about their faces.
There was an uproar in the village that day. Baba and Rahim
Kaka eventually went to the nearest town and brought the police. There was a
lot of hue and cry. The police asked a lot of questions, there were people from
the news and our little village and the second floor room of the haveli became
famous. Police sealed the room off, and we were forbidden to enter or allow
anyone else to enter. Some days later the excitement and the attention died
down, and life went back to normal. But since then, never, have I been to the
upper floor after sundown. I usually avoid the place even during the day, but
sometimes I go to clean or fix a leak. But every time I walk into that room, I
can see the faces of those two men drawn in a horrifying half grin, staring
fixatedly at the roof with such wonder in their eyes as the life was drawn out
of them and I wonder, what it could have been that could do something like
that. It is something that I hope that I never have to find out. And that,
sahib, is the story of the haveli. It has a bad name. That is why no one comes
to our village, and that is why so few cars take this road after nightfall. You
city people can laugh, but having lived with this curse all my life, I have
learnt to accept it, to fear it.”
His voice trailed off as his story ended. His eyes wide,
staring at the floor lost in his memories, probably recounting the horror in
his mind’s eye. He shuddered and looked up with those dark deep eyes, straight
into Hari’s.
“You never asked your father why he forbade you from going
to the upper floor?”
“Many times, I asked him. He never said anything apart from
that it was a bad place. After that incident, he would always refer to it when
I asked and used to say
-See! See why I had warned you. Don’t ever forget that.
Sometimes I think he didn’t know either. Maybe he had heard
it from his father and was merely passing the warning. I never found out.”
They sat in silence for a while. To Hari, this supernatural
stuff was too hard to take in. Sure, it gave him the creeps, but to actually
have to believe every word of it was just not what his science schooling had
taught him. There must have been a very logical reason to it.
“Didn’t the police find anything?”
“They investigated for a long time. Kept coming up against
loose ends, unable to explain it. In the end, they passed the deaths off to
heart attacks. The reason for two perfectly healthy people simultaneously
suffering heart attacks at the same time in the same room, remained
un-explained.”
Again silence. Hari sat there, his mind racing over all that
Choubay had just told him. It seemed ridiculous. “Ghosts? Pah! Idle village
gossip.” He thought. Maybe Choubay had just made up this elaborate cock and
bull story just to sound impressive. And he had the perfect setting to convince
people of it too. A lonely village in the middle of nowhere, a broken down old
house surrounded by forests. It seemed even the elements were on his side, with
the rain and the thunder. Bottomline being that the man had either made it all
up, maybe the rest of the villagers were in on it too, hoping to attract some
publicity towards the village, or that the man Choubay was a little crazy, had imagined
all of this. How could one blame him. Living alone like this in an old dark
broken house for year after year fulfilling some wild oath of duty taken by
some great grandfather centuries ago, it was truly madness. Living like this,
one was bound to imagine things like that. Hari decided to go no further into
it. The man for all his weirdness, had helped him in a tight spot and it was
best not to accuse a savior of sorts by calling him a liar, or mad for that
matter. Instead, he decided that it was best to catch some sleep. After all, if
he had to drive in the morning, he’d rather not do it sleep deprived and puffy
eyed. He looked at his watch, it was almost two in the morning. “It’s gotten
pretty late. I’m sorry to keep you up like this. I’d also like to catch an hour
or two’s sleep before leaving, to be honest. I’ll sleep here on the floor. If
you can get me a spare sheet, that would be very kind of you.”
Choubay laughed his cough like laugh again. Two of his front
teeth were missing and one looked infected. “No need to be so modest, Sahib.
Please, take the cot. I’ll sleep in the next room. There is a spare cot there.
No trouble at all.”
“You’re sure about it? I’d hate to put you through any more
trouble than I already have.”
“No trouble at all Sahib. It’s always a pleasure having
company.” He stood up slowly and shuffled out the door, “Great pleasure Sahib,
great pleasure….” Repeating that under his breath, he walked out. His feet
dragging against the floor outside till it faded away, and Hari was alone.
The rain had come down to a trickle, but the sky was red.
The storm hadn’t passed over. The heavens occasionally flashed open followed by
the roll of thunder. It had been a long tiring day for Hari. He blew out the
lamp that Choubay had left on the table. The darkness closed in around him. He
twitched nervously, the story coming back to him again. The light had taken
away with it some of his rationalism and courage. But he pulled himself
together and walked over to the cot. It was old, the wood chipped in various
places, the spring creaked loudly when he sat on it. There was a thin rag of a
sheet at the foot of the cot, meant to be used as a blanket. It smelled badly,
so Hari left it where it was. He lay down, using his hands for a pillow and
within a few minutes was fast asleep. Outside, the crickets droned on.
The window lit up with the flash of lightning. It was the
third time that he’d awoken from his sleep. He looked at his watch, it was
three twenty. The winds howled outside,
the thunder clapped down. What made him wake up each time, he knew not. But he
couldn’t sleep. Haunting images flashed by. Two men staring into nothingness at
wonder, sitting dead, a man with white hair and a stoop, walking with a pail in
the night, saying, “Never go upstairs at night, never”, Choubay chiding him,
“You’re a man of the city, you shall laugh. Great pleasure, great pleasure… You
shall laugh…” Something inside him was burning up. Not letting him sleep. His
mind was obsessed. Fear was superseded by curiosity. Choubay was a fool, to
believe such things. He himself was a fool, to be scared of such things. He’d
show him. “But why? Why does it bother me so much. Why couldn’t I just sleep
and forget about it. Another fireside tale. But this was different. When you’re
children, you’re told tales of dark lonely villages, of deep forests and places
no one goes. That is where the ghosts live, that is where they haunt, they
scare, they kill. Sitting in the bedroom of a high rise surrounded by the noise
of cars and amplifiers and televisions, and a million other people, it’s easy
to laugh it all off, but here he was, in a broken down house, in a lonely
village in the middle of the forest, a place that hardly anyone lives in. And
the ghosts were there. Right upstairs. This was the moment of truth. What a
story he’d have.”
Hari’s eyes lit up. Sleep forgotten, the adrenaline pumping
through is veins. He had to do it. To go up, to see. If nothing else, just to
satisfy his own curiosity. His mind was made up, his body was unwilling. Fear
still resided in some corner of his heart. But he pushed it aside. The thrill
of the adventure before him was too great for fear to ruin. He got up. Another
flash of lightning lit up the room. Walking over to the table, he picked up the
lamp. But there were no matches around. He used his light of his mobile to look
around but found none. He wondered if he should wake up Choubay and tell him.
And then he remembered those dark deep eyes, blacker than that blackest of
pits, boring into him, warning him, about the perils that roamed upstairs, and
he decided against telling him. He imagined the scene when in the morning, he’d
walk in before a shocked Choubay having spent a few hours in the night in the
dreaded upper floor, demolishing the ghosts from his mind. He let the lamp be.
The mobile light would suffice. And with that in hand, emitting a faint glow on
the way ahead, Hari walked out of the room, embraced by the darkness.
The air was damp and cold in the durbar. The light of the
mobile screen sweeping the dusty floors, canvassing up the cracked white
pillars from which hung cobwebs. The silence hurt his ears. Any second, he
expected Choubay to call out to him from somewhere behind the shadows. Hari
walked slowly, carefully, measuring each step, his eyes darting around, senses
on edge, looking out for the slightest sounds. The dark staircase lay ahead. It
was made of stone with wooden railings by its side, the wood had become rotten
over the years, but the staircase stood strong, leading into a world of
darkness. Hari stood on the first step and stared into the pitch blackness.
That flame that had flickered in him had dampened considerably. His mind was at
war. There was still time to turn back. And in that state of conflict, he heard
a scurry behind him. He jumped. Turned around, flashing the mobile screen round
the room. In its light, he was just able to catch a rat scurry across the
floor, disappearing into another room. His heart was racing. But the false alarm
of terror had eased his mind. Suddenly, he was feeling slightly embarrassed at
his own cowardice. And with this new found courage, he started up the forbidden
staircase. Outside, the night was at its darkest, the howling winds raged on.
It seemed like hours to Hari, as he climbed the staircase.
At each step, he’d stopped and looked around, willing his heart on. Sweat
dripped down his brows as he reached the top. Not a light was to be seen. He
flashed his little light around. The landing led to a long corridor, and on
either side of it were two doors apiece, the four bedrooms that Choubay had
spoken of. The walls like that of the floor below, were dust covered with holes
in certain places from which water trickled through. The air was heavy, with
damp and a sense of foreboding. Maybe that was just his imagination at play,
but Hari was sure he heard whispers. What they said, he knew not. “It’s just
the wind playing tricks on my mind.” He walked on. He looked everywhere,
scanned each corner of the corridors as he walked through it. He knew which
room to go into. His eyes focused on the little brass doorknob adorning the
stout wooden door that shut out the second bedroom on the left. The same
bedroom where many years from now, two men were discovered dead, with fear and
wonder etched on their lifeless faces. That same room was the one before which
Hari now stood. He stopped, waited, listened for a sound, a warning maybe just
about any indication to turn back. But none came. He had not come this far to
chicken out. Deciding thus, he slowly turned the doorknob. The lock clicked
open, he stopped, waited once more. Silence. Then he pushed the door open and
walked inside.
It was a room with two large windows, both shut. The walls
were white, the paint scrapping off with dark patches and cobwebs all over. It
was free of any furniture, except two dark shapes on the floor. Flashing his
mobile over it, he saw two, damp, insect infested and rotten mattresses lying
on the floor. Hari’s heart beat escalated, he felt a chill down his spine and
goosebumps erupted on his body. The images of two men, sitting there, mouths
open in half grimace, half grins, eyes, echoing terror, flashed before him. He
wanted to run, but his feet refused to move. He stood there rooted, horrified
and fascinated. He looked up to the ceiling, the object of those men’s fascination,
but saw nothing of any interest. A flash of lightning erupted outside, the
light briefly entering the room through the gaps in the windows, where the wood
had become rotten and fallen off. Hari walked over to the nearest one and
pushed it open. The dark treetops swayed before him in the dark, the rain had
stopped but the storm raged on. Looking away, Hari walked around the room, his
light flashing over every nook and corner, examining it through darting eyes,
but there was nothing to be seen or heard. He walked back to the window, and
sat down below it, daring the elements. Nothing happened for thirty minutes. He
started to doze off. The light on his mobile flicked off, his head fell on his
shoulder.
And then there was the light. At first, Hari thought it was
the lightning. He didn’t open his eyes. But the light never went away. He
opened his eyes, slowly. The light came from above, a strange whitish hue
piercing through the darkness around him. Hari looked up. His eyes widened, his
heart stopped, a soft scream left his mouth. He wanted to get up but his hands
and feet wouldn’t budge from his sides. He felt cold, and out of nowhere, he
started smiling. The terror never left his eyes, but a smile erupted on his
lips, he couldn’t breathe, he choked, but the grin was etched on his face, as
if carved, a soft moan escaped his lips and the light flicked out from his
eyes. His hands relaxed, slumped down, his head rolled onto his shoulders, terror
in his eyes, and his teeth gnashed into a horrible twisted grin. A bolt of
lightning flashed outside, and the crickets chirped once more. All else was
still.
The raindrops splattered against the windshield, birds chirped
in trees, the sun hidden behind the clouds. A truck passed by with an almighty
roar, splashing water off the road, and Hari awoke with a start. His breathing
heavy, his heart racing. He looked around wide eyed. He was in his car, where
he’d been stuck the night before. The rain had stopped, the water dripping was
coming off the trees above. It took a
while before his senses returned to normal. It was all a dream. He’d dozed off
in the car that night. He laughed, relief spread across his body. He stretched
in his seat and turned the key, but the engine wouldn’t start. Maybe if he
pushed it a bit. He got out, the cool fresh morning air swept across his face,
water dripping on him from above. He looked around. The road was empty again, up
ahead was the little village, he had seen in the night and many times over in
his nightmares. He shuddered at the sight of it. “It was all a dream. Relax!”
he reassured himself. Turning the wheel with one hand, he pushed the car, but
it was not long before he realized the futility of his efforts. Pushing the
car, holding the wheel and turning the key at the same time was near
impossible. He needed some help. Looking around, he saw a figure approaching
from the side of the village. He was covered in a shawl, was holding an
umbrella, and walked with a shuffle. As he approached, Hari called out to him, “Could
you please help push the car for me. It won’t start.”
The man looked around, his face was mostly covered by the
shawl. He looked at Hari, nodded and came over. He put down his umbrella and
going over to the back, pushed the car, Hari standing by the driver’s seat,
helped along and having gathered a little momentum, turned the ignition on the
engine. It spluttered, the car jerked forward and then, it roared into life and
started ticking over. Relieved, he got out and turned to his helper, “Thank
you. If it hadn’t been for you, I’d be in a fix. My name is Hari, could I drop
you off somewhere here?”
The man, came over, lifted his shawl. He was a grim looking
man, short and thin, about fifty or thereabouts, graying thin hair, and a
scraggy beard. He was wearing a torn vest and pyjamas, looking up curiously at
Hari, his eyes as dark as tunnels looking straight into his. His scarred face
contorted and he let out a cough like laugh. Hari stood there stunned, his feet
shaking, his hands cold, a chill ran down his spine.
“No, Sahib. My name is Choubay. I am the caretaker of the
old zamindar’s haveli here in the forest, right behind the village over there.
Thank you for the offer, but it’s no trouble at all. It’s a great pleasure to
have helped you sahib, a great pleasure…” He smiled, two teeth were missing and
one was rotting. Hari stood there mouth open, a soft scream escaped his lips.
Without a word, he dropped into his seat, and accelerated away, as fast as he
could. He looked into his rear view mirror, and saw nothing.
The End.
Loved the long spooky tale ! The word limit went for a six as always and I was holding my breath hoping the protagonist doesn't meet a horrific death !!!
ReplyDeleteThat is one long breath that you claim to have held! But, thank you! I hope the protagonist's fate matched up to your expectations. :)
Deletei did not read this
ReplyDeletebhooter golpo porina =D
but such a looooooong story
try writing a book =)
oh yes! you have that 36 ka aakhra with the supernatural elements! :D
DeleteAr boyi, ke porbe. Etai bhalo. Free te likhe, free te pore!