Ramesh Kumar Mishra had known Shalini for quite some time. For about 7 years, to be precise. Ramesh's family had seen the thicks and thins of life and Shalini had always supported them in whatever ways she could. He remembered that market crash last year, when he had almost become a pauper. The time when he didn't even have the 700 Rs to give Shalini's salary, and, all she had said was, "give it to me whenever you can. Till then, let me just keep taking care of chote Baba". Shalini had come into Ramesh and Urmila's life when they had become the proud parents of Akhil, a tiny tot who had been abandoned by his young mother in front of an orphanage." Why?" Ramesh had asked the superintendent of the orphanage. "I really dont know--she just kept the baby and went away in the night. Maybe, some unwanted pregnancy. Who knows?" he had replied. "Sahib, if I start finding out the background of all these children, I would be the saddest man in the whole of Bombay. I am just happy that they would atleast study and stand on their own legs than get maimed and beg for some thug for the rest of their lives."
When Ramesh and Urmila had been looking for an aya for Akhil, one of the neighbours had suggested Shalini. "She is from some place near Dhanbaad." they had said. "Had a husband who died in some accident.Couldn't take care of her 3 children.So, she left them at some chachi's place and came here to Bombay.To look for some job."
Akhil had immediately grown a fondness for Shalini and soon, she and Chote Baba -- the title she gave Akhil -- became best friends, and, maybe her only friend. When she was not with Akhil, she prefered to be with the tulsi plant. Watering the plant and showing the same tenderness that she showed with Akhil. In the beginning , under Ramesh's prodding, Urmila had tried a few times to find out a little bit about her past,but, any mention of her family or of Dhanbaad only brought a sad look on her face, and, soon Urmila stopped it. More for herself, than for Shalini's sake.
Calling Shalini a reclusive person would have been a gross misunderstanding on reclusiveness. As far as he could remember, Shalini had talked to him only once. "Chote Baba will be all rigth na?" She had asked Ramesh, concern and sadness adorning her face, when Akhil had a bout of Jaundice last May. Chote Baba took some time, but, he did recover, and the jaundice took away the sadness too, and, she again went back to her cocoon -- herself, Chote Baba and the tulsi plant. She seemed to be very happy with this daily charade of activities--too happy for Ramesh's comfort. What was she trying to hide? What is being kept at bay? Why does she feel sad to talk about her family? What are her children doing? Are they being treated well by her relatives? Are they even with their relatives, or, were they abandoned long time back in some institution's gate? These dark thoughts often crossed Ramesh's mind, but, he knew the antidote for this.Hope. Had Akhil not got a better life? Had Ramesh himself not pulled out of so many tight situations? He had the confidence in Shalini's love for her children, that made him hopeful that wherever she had left them, they would be happy.
In the morning, during breakfast, Ramesh had been talking to Urmila about his plans to invest in the Coallite India IPO , when Shalini broke her silence."Sahib don't trust them." She had said."Their fame is blotched with the blood of innocent people."
Ramesh had been stunned. First, at the fact that Shalini had spoken and then at what she had spoken. While he was contemplating what to say, he could see Shalini's face go ash-white and those eyes--those beautiful brown eyes, fill with tears, and, she broke down, and, finally those emotions, that had been suppressed for years came pouring out.
Shalini came from a labourer's family. Life was comfortable during the harvesting season when his father and two brothers could get mazdoori in one of the zameedar's many farms for 20 Rs. per person per day, but, the harvesting season came only once in four months. Other times, they had to do odd jobs to sustain the family. So, everybody had been very happy when, at a mature age of 14 years, Shalini had been married-off to Pavan Pratap Singh, an orphan from the neighbouring village who worked in one of Coallite India's coal-mine. Atleast he had a steady source of income ! Life was happy in the new home and soon she and Pratap became parents. Proud parents of two beautiful twin daughters Karuna and Krupa and of a baby boy, Kamlesh. A modest upbringing and a less than enviable economic situation could never stifle Shalini and Pavan spirit's to dream, and what a dream that was ! They dreamt of Karuna and Krupa becoming a doctor and teacher, using knowledge to banish diseases from humanity and using intellect to remove evil from society, and , of Kamlesh becoming an IPS officer to use might and integrity to keep a clean society. This palace of dreams was raised in a village where no girl had studied past 5th standard and no boy had passed matriculation, but, these dreams were to come shattering down, because, a safety engineer in the mine had decided to sell his soul for a few thousand rupees.
"How could an engineer do this?" Ramesh could hear Shalini whisper, in between her sobs."Is this what their 16 years of education teach them?" A faulty safety fuse and alarm system in the mine had been deliberately over-looked for about three years,becuase, replacing it would have meant a shut-down of 2 days, resulting in production losses. A penalty has to be paid when an error is over-looked, and here it was paid with the lives of 16 miners, including Pavan, when a methane gas leakage never got detected. The police promptly arrested the mine owner and the safety engineer, more to protect them from the mob fury, than to punish them,and soon released them on bail. In the shok samaroh held on the 13th day, Badri Prasad Sharma, the local MLA had personally met Shalini and promised her that the government would bear the cost of the children's education and help her in fulfilling the dreams that she and Pavan had dreamt of, but, life soon became a nightmare. The local tantrik, who had always had an eye on the small plot of land in front of Shalini's house, decided that the village had to be exorcised of witches like Shalini."God alone is witness to that ghastly night, when I had packed whatever I could in this little jhola bag and had carried Kamlesh and ran. Lucky for me that Karuna and Krupa were old enough to run.We had ran for about eight kilometers with the villagers chasing us with mashals and knives and sickles." Dawn had broken out when she finally reached Badriji's house. After trying to shoo her away for about 2 hours, the guard had finally agreed to allow her to meet the MLA when he would arrive outside in his car. When the car did come, the guard talked to MLAji and called Shalini towards the car. The MLA looked with pity at her sorry state and instructed the guard to take care of her and drove off only to stop a few feet away and the MLA was seen handing a 50 Rs note to the guard to give to Shalini and to send her away, to avoid her embarrasing presence during the evening press-meet.The guard did as instructed, well almost, he pocketed the 50Rs note and drove away Shalini.
"Why didn't you go to your parents house?" Urmila had asked. "Memsaab, I would have rather jumped into the village well that go and bring disrepute to my parents.My brothers wouldn't have allowed me to stay anyway." "A daughter is parent's sampati, a wife is husband's, but, a widow---nobody's." Urmila could see Ramesh's face twitch with anger at the treatment that had been meted out to Shalini, but, she knew that he understood the Indian feudal system very well. What could a miner's widow do, except run away to save her own life and that of her children? "So, where are your children now?" Ramesh asked."I left them at my chachi's place, near Kishangunj. She was the only person whom I could trust at that time. The money order that I send every month helps her in running her own family and in educating my children." Shalini, who by now had composed herself, replied. "Kamlesh is studying in the 5th standard, while Karuna and Krupa are studying in the 8th standard. Chachi tells me that they are very bright and are very sincere in their studies.Bas, once they finish their studies and take up whatever god has decided for them, then I can also rest in peace. Here is a photo of them." Shalini said, holding a half crumpled photo.It showed 3 children in school uniform, giving a toothy grin. Their face was radiating with innocence, but, somewhere deep in their eyes, Ramesh could see a flicker of determination. The kind of determination that you would see in a person who has always failed and is still ready to take on the next challenge. A determination to succeed against all odds. A determination that could stand in front of a whole village mob and mock at them for trying to attack their aspirations, and Ramesh decided on his investment. He decided to invest in the futue of these young children -- the children of a dead miner.
When Ramesh and Urmila had been looking for an aya for Akhil, one of the neighbours had suggested Shalini. "She is from some place near Dhanbaad." they had said. "Had a husband who died in some accident.Couldn't take care of her 3 children.So, she left them at some chachi's place and came here to Bombay.To look for some job."
Akhil had immediately grown a fondness for Shalini and soon, she and Chote Baba -- the title she gave Akhil -- became best friends, and, maybe her only friend. When she was not with Akhil, she prefered to be with the tulsi plant. Watering the plant and showing the same tenderness that she showed with Akhil. In the beginning , under Ramesh's prodding, Urmila had tried a few times to find out a little bit about her past,but, any mention of her family or of Dhanbaad only brought a sad look on her face, and, soon Urmila stopped it. More for herself, than for Shalini's sake.
Calling Shalini a reclusive person would have been a gross misunderstanding on reclusiveness. As far as he could remember, Shalini had talked to him only once. "Chote Baba will be all rigth na?" She had asked Ramesh, concern and sadness adorning her face, when Akhil had a bout of Jaundice last May. Chote Baba took some time, but, he did recover, and the jaundice took away the sadness too, and, she again went back to her cocoon -- herself, Chote Baba and the tulsi plant. She seemed to be very happy with this daily charade of activities--too happy for Ramesh's comfort. What was she trying to hide? What is being kept at bay? Why does she feel sad to talk about her family? What are her children doing? Are they being treated well by her relatives? Are they even with their relatives, or, were they abandoned long time back in some institution's gate? These dark thoughts often crossed Ramesh's mind, but, he knew the antidote for this.Hope. Had Akhil not got a better life? Had Ramesh himself not pulled out of so many tight situations? He had the confidence in Shalini's love for her children, that made him hopeful that wherever she had left them, they would be happy.
In the morning, during breakfast, Ramesh had been talking to Urmila about his plans to invest in the Coallite India IPO , when Shalini broke her silence."Sahib don't trust them." She had said."Their fame is blotched with the blood of innocent people."
Ramesh had been stunned. First, at the fact that Shalini had spoken and then at what she had spoken. While he was contemplating what to say, he could see Shalini's face go ash-white and those eyes--those beautiful brown eyes, fill with tears, and, she broke down, and, finally those emotions, that had been suppressed for years came pouring out.
Shalini came from a labourer's family. Life was comfortable during the harvesting season when his father and two brothers could get mazdoori in one of the zameedar's many farms for 20 Rs. per person per day, but, the harvesting season came only once in four months. Other times, they had to do odd jobs to sustain the family. So, everybody had been very happy when, at a mature age of 14 years, Shalini had been married-off to Pavan Pratap Singh, an orphan from the neighbouring village who worked in one of Coallite India's coal-mine. Atleast he had a steady source of income ! Life was happy in the new home and soon she and Pratap became parents. Proud parents of two beautiful twin daughters Karuna and Krupa and of a baby boy, Kamlesh. A modest upbringing and a less than enviable economic situation could never stifle Shalini and Pavan spirit's to dream, and what a dream that was ! They dreamt of Karuna and Krupa becoming a doctor and teacher, using knowledge to banish diseases from humanity and using intellect to remove evil from society, and , of Kamlesh becoming an IPS officer to use might and integrity to keep a clean society. This palace of dreams was raised in a village where no girl had studied past 5th standard and no boy had passed matriculation, but, these dreams were to come shattering down, because, a safety engineer in the mine had decided to sell his soul for a few thousand rupees.
"How could an engineer do this?" Ramesh could hear Shalini whisper, in between her sobs."Is this what their 16 years of education teach them?" A faulty safety fuse and alarm system in the mine had been deliberately over-looked for about three years,becuase, replacing it would have meant a shut-down of 2 days, resulting in production losses. A penalty has to be paid when an error is over-looked, and here it was paid with the lives of 16 miners, including Pavan, when a methane gas leakage never got detected. The police promptly arrested the mine owner and the safety engineer, more to protect them from the mob fury, than to punish them,and soon released them on bail. In the shok samaroh held on the 13th day, Badri Prasad Sharma, the local MLA had personally met Shalini and promised her that the government would bear the cost of the children's education and help her in fulfilling the dreams that she and Pavan had dreamt of, but, life soon became a nightmare. The local tantrik, who had always had an eye on the small plot of land in front of Shalini's house, decided that the village had to be exorcised of witches like Shalini."God alone is witness to that ghastly night, when I had packed whatever I could in this little jhola bag and had carried Kamlesh and ran. Lucky for me that Karuna and Krupa were old enough to run.We had ran for about eight kilometers with the villagers chasing us with mashals and knives and sickles." Dawn had broken out when she finally reached Badriji's house. After trying to shoo her away for about 2 hours, the guard had finally agreed to allow her to meet the MLA when he would arrive outside in his car. When the car did come, the guard talked to MLAji and called Shalini towards the car. The MLA looked with pity at her sorry state and instructed the guard to take care of her and drove off only to stop a few feet away and the MLA was seen handing a 50 Rs note to the guard to give to Shalini and to send her away, to avoid her embarrasing presence during the evening press-meet.The guard did as instructed, well almost, he pocketed the 50Rs note and drove away Shalini.
"Why didn't you go to your parents house?" Urmila had asked. "Memsaab, I would have rather jumped into the village well that go and bring disrepute to my parents.My brothers wouldn't have allowed me to stay anyway." "A daughter is parent's sampati, a wife is husband's, but, a widow---nobody's." Urmila could see Ramesh's face twitch with anger at the treatment that had been meted out to Shalini, but, she knew that he understood the Indian feudal system very well. What could a miner's widow do, except run away to save her own life and that of her children? "So, where are your children now?" Ramesh asked."I left them at my chachi's place, near Kishangunj. She was the only person whom I could trust at that time. The money order that I send every month helps her in running her own family and in educating my children." Shalini, who by now had composed herself, replied. "Kamlesh is studying in the 5th standard, while Karuna and Krupa are studying in the 8th standard. Chachi tells me that they are very bright and are very sincere in their studies.Bas, once they finish their studies and take up whatever god has decided for them, then I can also rest in peace. Here is a photo of them." Shalini said, holding a half crumpled photo.It showed 3 children in school uniform, giving a toothy grin. Their face was radiating with innocence, but, somewhere deep in their eyes, Ramesh could see a flicker of determination. The kind of determination that you would see in a person who has always failed and is still ready to take on the next challenge. A determination to succeed against all odds. A determination that could stand in front of a whole village mob and mock at them for trying to attack their aspirations, and Ramesh decided on his investment. He decided to invest in the futue of these young children -- the children of a dead miner.