Tuesday, December 18, 2007

An affair to forget (the same story with an end)

I was getting grouchy. My legs were moving restlessly and my stomach was cramping. The song on my iPod was thumping…thump…thump…and I could feel his face forming in front of mine, slowly and clearly. His tall frame, those soulful eyes and the way you couldn't tell if he really liked you or if you were just a lunch date. The way he indulged me so intimately sometimes and sometimes left me feeling a little out of the loop. The way he stood a little loopy, with a cigarette dangling off his lips, and that hair in his eyes, listening to a comedy show on his phone, as he waited for me outside pizza hut. The way he casually hugged me for the first 5 dates and then as I drove off after a morning rendezvous on our 6th date, pulled me just a little from my car window and gave me a sweet kiss. It had been a wonderful day.
I remember a few years ago when we had a small fling, just before we went our separate ways for a really long time. He had ended it by sending me a message on my phone that said, "The flame has died out". When I had asked him forlornly about what went wrong, he said that the passion had just died out. We never spoke about it again. I look back and wonder why I didn't react the way I usually did in such circumstances. Why didn't I sulk and brood, cry, call and message him. But as strange it may sound — I know I didn't go all ballistic because he had always been the tall, cool one. And I couldn't let him think I wasn't cool. And when we got back together, he was still the cool one, and I was still the uncool one pretending to be cool. So I could never tell. I had not been able to tell.
Rahul had stood with a bunch of posies in a light beige shirt that looked so good with his flawless face. The only thing I remember other than the shirt was his face. Ho could I forget that? The expression was a mixture of longing and strange apprehension on how I was going to react. There was joy too, the bubbling under kind of joy. A joy that was so innocent and so large in measure that I had felt shy as I walked up to him. He had slowly put his arms around me and leaned down. And then he just held me. My toes were off the floor and my arms around him. "People are looking," I whispered smiling into his ears. I don't think he heard me because he stood like that for a while before he finally let me go. "You're here now, and you're mine." I had always known with him, I could always tell. It had just been so much easier.
I went to watch the movie alone. It was about a woman who loses her husband in the war and then spends her life pining for him as his brother tries his best to keep her happy. Her last words are, "It was never anyone but him. I could see him till my dying day." I felt like that sometimes. Especially when I saw him sitting on a car, parked in a colony on one side of the rail tracks, as I stood on the edge of the women's compartment. I used to smile at him sometimes. And then here he was, sitting next to me, just sometimes leaning towards me, smiling a little, and then nodding in despair, the way he used to when I put on his favourite perfume. "You shouldn't have done that," he used to flirt. "I can't concentrate now…."
I slipped out of the theatre and put on my wedding ring. I couldn't wear it when I was sitting with him inside, could I? Granted, he wasn't actually there, but his thought was. It would have been a betrayal. But wasn't just thinking about anyone else a betrayal? He was suddenly talking to me. He was whispering in my ear. I tried to shake it off. "You know you want to call me. Please dial my number…you remember it. I am here. I knew you'll change your mind. You had kissed me that night you remember, that last kiss, when I wasn't letting you go. And you had suddenly slammed the car door and run away. You perfume had lingered in my car for days."
Though, there was no doubt that I loved Rahul. Every time he held me tight on a Monday morning before I left for work, I knew I loved him. Every time he carried me from the door to my bed when I came home after a long day, I knew I loved him. Every time he nestled his head in the nook of my arm and begged for forgiveness, I knew I loved him. I loved him and I knew I would never ever leave him. So why was I doing this?
"That's the real question. Why are you sitting here with me, when you say you love him," he smiled cockily at me. His fingers were in my hair and I could feel him laughing behind my back. "I can't explain it. But when you ask me questions like these, it makes me not want to be with you. It makes you mean," I said and looked back at him. He wasn't there. Oh, how I wished he was there.
Was I going to get in touch with him? Just a message. No, then he would know my number and if he ever called me or messaged me…no, no, no. Maybe I'd call from office or from a colleague's phone. No, that would still be traceable. I had to leave no trace. I just wanted to hear his voice, tell him how I was, ask him how he was. I just wanted to hear that he missed me. That he was trying to forget me and that he was delighted that I had called. Just for a bit, just to hear his voice. I wanted to call him, but I didn't want to stay in touch. Would he understand that? I held the phone in my hand and dialed his number for the 100th time. No, no, no…this wasn't how I was going to do this.
I was standing below his house. His car was parked in the driveway at a strange angle, leading me to believe that he was not okay. The stairs just seemed too many to climb, and at each step, I stopped and turned around. I couldn't do this to the one I truly loved. But I had to do it for myself. The door bell boomed in my ear and I suddenly before I could even breathe a breath, he stood there. What had I hoped would happen? What was going to happen?
I walked in and sat on the bed and looked around. The dust just sat there and I was part of it. Dull, lifeless and dirty, I was nothing better than the dirt on his books, on his music system, on the floor. He touched me on my hand and suddenly as if on cue, my phone rang.
The damn phone kept on ringing. And with each ring, he moved one step closer. I wanted to leave and I wanted to stay. Stay, sink, succumb, sleep…The ringing stopped, but I kept feeling the reverb. So we did the deed with the ring tone providing us with the ambience we deserved — shameful and heavy with guilt. And as the waves swept over me again and again, I could slowly feel the guilt being washed away.
He held me close and I could feel his deep warm breaths on my neck. I got up, put on the clothes back on my relieved frame and looked at him. He looked surprised at my doings, surprised I laughed, surprised I ran out, surprised I didn't look back when he ran behind my car and surprised that I left.
I returned home to find it as I had left. My left-over tea in a broken cup on the table, the laptop still playing the soundtrack of Amelie over and over again, my dog sleeping on expensive silk bedsheet. I sat down and whispered in his floppy ears "It's done. It's done. It's done. Let's move on now." And we moved on.