The Girl In Blue | Story Of A Girl
Ones upon a time in delhi, there is a girl named Seema, clad in a blue polka dot frock, cried out from her colourfully decked up stall that faced the frolicking waves of the sea on the beach, “Only five rupees per story! Only five rupees per story!”
Out of curiosity, I decided to check out what she had
to narrate for just five rupees. I went to her stall and paid her five rupees.
I suppose I was her first customer for the day.
Thrilled to the core, Seema said, “Thank you, Saabji.
Please sit down. You are my first customer. God bless you!”
Then, she carefully ironed out the five rupee note I
had given her and kept it inside her small wallet.
She came closer and whispered in my ear, “Saabji,
would you like to listen to a happy or a mysterious story?
”I replied, “Tell me a mysterious story, please.”
Seema began, “Once upon a time, there was a girl
called Anjali. She was the apple of her parents’ eye. She lived with her
parents in an old, colonial house in Cochin, Kerala. Her father was a retired
librarian and loved to read and collect books.
Anjali also acquired this habit
from her father. Once, when her parents went out of town, Anjali decided to
explore the locked rooms of her home. So she climbed the stairs leading to the
first-floor bedroom.
The bedroom was painted in peach and white hues and was
huge. Anjali managed to get the keys to the bedroom from the secret spot her
Dad thought she was unaware of.
“Slowly, she put the keys and turned the knob. As
expected, a slow creaking noise of the door could be heard. But wait! She heard
some other noise too! For a second, Anjali wondered if her too-imaginative mind
was playing tricks with her!
She looked sideways to inspect the source of the
other noise.
As she stood there pondering what to do, she heard the same noise
again—it was a low murmur cum whisper, as if somebody was talking to her.
Cautiously, she walked toward the source of the murmur. She didn’t see anybody
but could still hear a human voice murmuring at her.
The voice seemed to
emanate from an old black-and-white photograph hanging on the wall. For a
minute, Anjali got lost in the beauty of the photograph. Staring out of the
photograph was a couple—a young man in a black suit and a young lady in a
beautiful laced white frock.
What struck Anjali were the young lady’s eyes. Those
eyes were arresting and seemed to look through her into the unknown world. Her
eyes seemed to tell a tale, a tale of love perhaps; a tale of lost childhood, a
tale of things yet to come.
While the lady bewitched Anjali with her eyes, the man in the photograph
captivated her with his manly confidence!
The lady murmured, “Anjali, Anjali!’”
“Anjali couldn’t believe that the lady in the
photograph was actually talking to her! Stunned with fear, Anjali stood rooted
to the spot. ‘The lady continued, “Anjali, it’s me.
I am your long-lost Grandmaa.
I know I am etched in all your memories. But please believe me, I am alive
through this photograph. The man next to me in the photograph is my husband who
fought during Kargil War. But, he has been missing ever since Kargil War ended.
A few days after the war, he swore his love to me and said he is going
somewhere. When I asked him to specify the place, he said ‘time would tell
me.’”
The lady moved her hands to hug Anjali. Suddenly, Anjali felt dizzy. Her head
spun and so did her body. Anjali though in a semi-conscious state could still
hear the same voice talking to her.
She reached out to hug her Grandmaa, and
instead she saw her Dad standing over her with an anxious look on his face. He
splashed some water on Anjali’s face, and suddenly Anjali regained her full
consciousness,
“Dad, your mom is alive! I just saw her and talked to
her. In that old photograph…”
“Anjali, don’t play with me. Your mind as usual is
playing tricks.”
“No, Dad! I am telling the truth. Come with me to the
upstairs bedroom.”
Her Dad followed her to the upstairs bedroom. As she
opened the door, she realized that the old photograph was no longer there!’
_______________________________
In“So, Saabji, do you believe that photographs can
talk?” asked Seema.
I replied wistfully, “Yes, if only all photographs
could talk and re-unite people!”
Blinking her eyes, Seema asked me, “Saabji, why do you
say so?”
“Well, I left my wife to explore strange and unknown
places around the world. During my travels, I found out so many interesting
tidbits about many cultures around the world.
In one of my trips, I managed to
meet a fortune teller from Kashi. In his small tent on the burial sites of Kashi,
the fortune teller, clad in a long grey cloak, spread his sea shells on a mat
in front of me and said, “Young man, you have wanderlust in you.
Till now, you
have roamed across Asam, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand and Kashmir, and I see that you
have the thirst to travel and explore more, in search of elusive happiness.”
Stunned, I replied, “Sir, you are right. I do not know
how you know so much about me. But, yes, I am in search of happiness.”
The fortune teller made a pattern with the sea shells
and said, “I also see you have left your beloved friend and a baby girl back
home . Your wife is depressed as she misses you.”
The fortune teller smiled mystically and took out an
artifact; it was a small sapphire blue peacock made of crystal. He handed it
over to me and said, “Young man, take this and keep with you as a travel
memento.
One day, you will definitely re-unite with your wife and daughter . On that day, gift it to
them as a token of happiness.”
“I thanked him and continued my travel and managed to
do a lot of fun activities. I learnt how to milk a cow from the locals of Kashi,
I learnt the tricks of the gypsies of Rajasthan, I spent time under the faraway
stars, gazing at the moonlit skies from an open tent, and the list is endless…Seema,
I am the man in the photograph, Anjali’s Auntie’s husband.”
With awe and tears, the girl replied, “I am your
daughter, Seema. You left us when I was just six months old. I love you, Pa. I
missed you so much. Ma has been waiting for you to return ever since you left
us to fulfill your wanderlust.”
I hugged Seema and held her for a few minutes. A
complete man, I looked forward to present the crystal peacock as a token of
pure happiness, a memento of restored faith, a tribute to a new life to my
beloved wife and Seema.
A million sun beams will not reflect the gleam of
happiness that my face reflected. I held my daughter’s hands, held my head
high, raised my nose high in the air as a proud father would do, and we walked
in unison to the approaching sunset - the sun was a fiery orange ball drowning
into the open arms of the sea.
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