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Dear dairy

Author: Kokku
last update Last Updated: 2024-10-29 19:42:56

‘You’re in love when she’s around and when her voice alone is your guiding light, your only motivation in your life. I am in love.’

I will never forget this day. I cannot forget this day. This day defines me now. I hadn’t seen her for many days before today. It was just another morning and I was a little restless. Dejected, I reached the bus stop at the time she used to and waited for her to come, hoping against hope. She came, I looked at her and she looked amazing. I don’t think she saw me. The bus came and there was a mad rush to jump into the bus. She was standing right beside me as we waited for people to board the already crowded bus.

I went out of the line and motioned to her that she should get in first. There was way too much jostling and she couldn’t get in. The bus started moving and her eyebrows made a small frowning hill on her head. She looked adorable. She glanced at me and whispered an apology. ‘Sorry’-the first word she said to me. I thanked the bus driver in my heart and smiled at her. We waited for the bus, but I knew the next bus wouldn’t come for the next twenty minutes. I shifted in my place. I knew I wouldn’t get a better chance to talk to her. I have been in relationships before and it’s not as if I can’t talk to girls. But with her, it’s something different.

I looked at her and waited for her to look at me. When she looked at me, I said a feeble ‘Hi’ and she replied. The pressure of starting a conversation was on me and I was getting very nervous. I asked her if she was in my college and she nodded. She added that she had seen me around. I wondered if she knew that I was stalking her, but she told me that she knew me from a students’ council meeting. She sweetly complained about the buses and how far she lived from college. I nodded and added in. Her sweet, chirpy voice made me forget all about whatever was going on around us. We introduced ourselves. She asked me where I lived and I remembered an apartment near hers and lied.

The next bus came a little too early. We both got in. She got a seat and I stood. She offered to hold my bag and I gave it to her. We smiled. It seemed like one of those daydream sequences I had had about her and me, but it was actually happening. We didn’t talk much as the bus was jerking too much. We reached our bus stop and got down. She looked at me and asked me if I took this bus every day. I nodded and her smile seemed to say-will see you around. She walked away. I wish I had taken her number. But I have no complaints. I got to talk to her today.

I wish I could see her tomorrow.

‘Deb?’ A voice calls out from behind. It is Avantika. I always like her best when she is half-sleepy and all messed up. That’s when I feel the luckiest. Even when she is not at her best, she is still the best-looking girl I have ever come across. I feel like the guy from the diary, looking at someone I love like a cowardly geek.

It’s three in the night. I’d slept while reading the diary for the third time that night. The pages are now creased from where I had folded them. I have made some notes on my cell phone and some on little scraps of paper. They make no sense at all. I am very anxious and I cannot get what I have read out of my head. It is very disturbing yet enamouring. All I know is I have to find Ragini. The mysterious girl from the book, the girl who screwed up, the girl who has to know about this guy, RD, and his undying love for her.

‘Why did you get up?’ I ask. I slip the diary behind me to prevent her from spotting it.

‘Won’t you sleep?’

‘I guess I will,’ I say and hug her. For the first time in the past fortnight, I feel sleepy. The images are still there in my head but they are blurring a little. Suddenly, my head is filled with images from the notes in that diary. The guy. His best friend. The pretty girl. The unfortunate sister. The inconsiderate guy. There are no faces in the pictures in my head, there are no places, but there is a story. The story of a person who is now dead. The dead guy left a story behind. A story that I have to make sense of. It is incomplete and I cannot let it be that way. The girl has to know.

I write for a living and every time I write a book, the only thing I look forward to is the ending. A book without an ending makes no sense. It is the same with this diary. It is incomplete. The first and the last few pages are burnt beyond recognition. Maybe they were all blank, but I want to know and I will find out. Even if they were blank, Ragini, the girl from the diary, needs to know about this guys love for her! I hug Avantika that night and sleep like a baby.

The next morning, I wake up with a start. I am clutching and groping around on the bed for it. The diary.

‘What happened?’ Avantika asks as she dusts her face with make-up. Not that she needs any. She looks better without it.

‘Nothing,’ I say not wanting to sound like a creep.

 

 She tells me she has served the breakfast on the table and that she needs to rush. She is working very hard and I don’t like her working her ass off. She should work her ass off for me ... if you know what I mean. Anyway, she leaves and I get the diary from where I had hidden it. It almost draws me towards it. I turn over the pages I have already read thrice.

I finish breakfast and rush to the office. I take an auto and it takes the same route it had taken that day. For a second, I feel like getting down and walking around the place where I found the diary, but I decide against it. I have horrendous images in my head of this guy burning to death. I don’t want them to get more vivid. I can almost feel him around me, asking me, ‘So, now that you’ve read my diary, what will you do about it?’

There is a lot of pending work in office and Shrey is going to meet that ‘someone from the Times’ again. It’s strange to see him go for a second date. Maybe he’s taking his work very seriously. He is working too hard this time. He leaves me with a few manuscripts to go through. But none of them interests me.

I have already found the perfect manuscript. It is on my desk—the diary. The only problem is that it doesn’t have an end. The last few pages are either missing or it just ended abruptly. Ever since I’ve read it, all my mental energies have been diverted to its content. It’s nothing phenomenal, but the sheer circumstance around it is so powerful. What lies on my desk are a dead man’s words. Could a story be more perfect?

There were some books that I had written before I started my own publishing house and they did well, but I don’t write much now.

I pick up the diary and flip through the pages. The writing is ornate, slow and deliberate. It hardly seems like a guy has written it. I guess the guy always wanted to show this diary to Ragini. The writing is too pretty to not show off.

I like this guy. He’s creepy, but he isn’t that creepy. I have tried to decode everything that’s there in the diary and made notes on a sheet of paper. It’s like a jigsaw puzzle with the major parts there but all the tiny critical parts are missing. No city no names, no addresses, no phone numbers. It looks like someone is playing with me. The questions keep troubling me.

My mind creates this image of a guy madly in love with a very pretty girl. It feels so picture-perfect. But as I feel the burnt edges of the diary, I feel unsettled. His hands were blown off from this diary. Somehow, I have assumed that this diary is about a guy who doesn’t get his girl and that’s

 why he carried it around. It makes perfect sense. If he was with the girl when the blast took place, why would he keep the diary with him? But I have to consider both possibilities. What if both of them died together? Could it be that? What if this was their last remembrance they’d left behind? Of all the people, I get the diary.

I g****e news results of the Chandni Chowk blast. The death count is rising. It’s now one hundred and twenty-seven dead and fifty-seven injured. Initially, there were three hospitals that all the blast victims had been taken to. I call up the first hospital. I pose as someone from the media and take down the names of twenty-three people who had died there. After the third hospital, I realize it’s futile.

‘Can you give me the names?’ I ask the disinterested guy on the other side of the phone.

There should have been twenty-nine names listed in the third hospital. He gives me three.

‘The rest? Twenty-nine people should be on the list. I called all the hospitals and have got just ninety-eight names,’ I say.

‘People get transferred to different hospitals within hours of when they get here. Some of them are reported, some of them are not,’ he answers.

I pester him to give me more details, but he says he can’t help me. Overeager and scared relatives transfer patients to better, private hospitals as soon as possible. So, the number of people dead is reported on an estimate basis. I hang up, fuming, not knowing what to do next. The tease was thrilling, but now, it’s annoying. I want to know who the hell this RD is. I am pretty sure he is dead, but I want it in writing.

Shrey walks in a little while later.

‘Working?’ he asks. His ruffled hair is more ruffled. This time his hair is

strange not because of his botched-up genes. This time I am sure it’s a girl. The glow on his face is more evident than a pregnant woman’s. He smiles and waits for me to ask him about the love bite I spot on his neck, which is big, red and very prominent.

‘Yes, and you have been working hard, I suppose.’ I smirk.

‘You wouldn’t believe!’ Shrey comes and jumps on my table. I hate it when he does that. Twice he has broken the glass top. Twice.

‘Do I have an option of not listening?’ I ask. I know I have no choice. He would still tell me. I don’t mind his sexual escapades, though. They are

 usually very entertaining till the point he decides to dump the girl. Because after that, it’s just sad and pathetic.

‘You’ve got to meet her!’ he says. ‘Every time we meet, it’s like freaking amazing sex.’

‘You had sex? C’mon! Even I didn’t have sex today and I am engaged. This is just unfair.’

‘Not only that! We did it in the washroom. Can you beat that?’

I have done that, but I let him have his moment of glory. Why would Shrey even think he has done something that I have not? Yes, I am very possessive and proud about my very healthy sex life. Any insult to my sex life is a direct insult to my lust for Avantika, which I think is unmatched and phenomenal by any standards.

‘Washroom! Nice. But in the afternoon? How?’

‘We got drunk. And she needed help to walk up to the washroom! She just pulled me in and we did it.’

‘She pulled you in?’ I smirk again.

‘Okay, whatever,’ Shrey says and I hear the glass top creak under his weight. ‘The manager came and shouted while we were still at it!’

‘Then?’

‘We just said that she was vomiting and he went away. All in all— awesome day, awesome girl, awesome date,’ he says and smiles creepily ‘Look! Look!’

‘What?’

‘She sent me a picture! I am sure she’s still drunk,’ he says and pushes his phone in my face.

‘I don’t want to see!’ I push it away. But I catch a glimpse from the corner of my eye. She is in a really low-cut dress and is hot. Slutty hot. Too big a cleavage for my taste. I am more of a nice-ass guy.

‘I am meeting her again tonight. We are going drinking first and then a movie. But I don’t think we will be watching it. We will be making one.’

‘Just make sure you don’t make babies.’

The last girl Shrey had gone out with ended up pregnant. And he paid for her ‘treatment’ through company accounts. The expense was accounted under ‘indirect expenses’. Why can’t he just keep his pants zipped up? Horny bastard. But it’s good to have him around. He lives a crazy life and does things that are hard to digest or believe.

 Anyway, he gets back to work and so do I. Life’s easy these days. I am not working for anybody and I make my own rules. Well, almost. I do have to pay for abortions sometimes, but yes, more or less, I can dictate what I want to do.

I leave the office after a few hours and come back home. A friend of Avantika’s is throwing a birthday party at her place and she’s invited us. The friend has married a pot-bellied, ugly guy who doesn’t even reach my shoulder. And I am 5’10”, which is not a very high scale anyway. But then, of course, he is rich. That adds another foot to his height.

It’s going to be another boring party, but Avantika told me she’s going to dress up and I never miss a chance to see her dress up. I put on the cleanest, whitest shirt I can find. She dresses up exquisitely and makes me look like ragged beggar. I look at her and ask her, ‘Do you wish you were dating someone rich too?’

‘Why would I? I am already dating the richest guy. You give me everything I have ever wanted,’ she says and smiles at me.

A little later, we get inside the car. She is driving today. There’s nothing hotter than a girl driving a big car. Plus, she is wearing a really short dress and I want my hands on her porcelain-smooth skin and not on the hard leather of the steering wheel.

‘Avantika, the only reason you go to these parties is because you like dressing up!’

‘Everyone likes dressing up,’ she says and puts the car into gear.

‘But you dress up to make other people realize that you’re prettier and hotter than them.’

‘That’s just a by-product.’ She smiles and winks at me.

‘I tell you every day that you’re the hottest! Why isn’t that enough for you?’

‘It is, baby. We will stay there for just an hour, pucca,’ she assures me.

‘Can’t we just stay home and get you naked?’ I ask and run my fingers over her bare thighs. I hope she gets turned on. She doesn’t. She gives me a cold stare instead. I still don’t take my hand off—too stubborn, too horny.

‘Be a good boy till the party ends and I promise I’ll be a very bad girl for the rest of the night.’ She winks.

The smile on her face tells me that things will get nasty tonight. I take my hand off. Soon, we’ll be doing much more.

My mind drifts off. The diary. I still haven’t decided whether I should tell her about it or not. It’s kind of killing me. I take out my cell phone and start to find anything that I can on the internet. I have searched the name ‘Ragini’ a million times on G****e, F******k, Orkut and MySpace, but nothing substantial has come out. There are just too many girls with that name. The only concrete information I have is that this guy was from Imperial Academy, Dehradun. But there is one sentence that can tell me more—‘I used to call him Pappu, to show him down, but he was the champion, his name etched on the achievements board of 2007 as the All- Rounder of the Batch.’

I search the name of the school on G****e. They have a very elaborate website, but I can’t find any list of toppers or rank holders. We drive on. I can hardly stop myself from making her stop at a deserted road and ‘ruffling’ her hair, but there is still time for that. We reach the place. It’s a humungous house at Aurangzeb Road, Delhi. Fucking huge.

I look at Avantika. I don’t have a big house, but at least my girlfriend is hot. Within minutes, I am bored. There is no beer in the party. Only expensive whisky, wines and whatnot. I sit in the corner and watch television when my phone rings. It’s Shrey As usual, he’s in trouble and sounds frantic. This time, I don’t mind.

‘I hope you’re not lying,’ Avantika says as we get inside the car. ‘You can ask Shrey! He called and said he needed me.’

‘But why?’

‘He banged his car into a divider,’ I say.

‘So can’t he call a taxi? Or a crane? Why us?’

‘I don’t know.’

Avantika sounds really pissed. I am wishing he really fucked up his car or

I would be the worst loser. No sex. Maybe no breakfast tomorrow too. We reach where Shrey had asked me to come. It’s really deserted and I am scared. It really shouldn’t be a silly prank or I will be so screwed. Or not screwed at all.

At a distance, I see two pairs of headlights. I drive towards the cars. As we go closer, I see things more clearly. Shrey s car is smashed! Thank God! I hope he’s a little hurt too. I can act upset then and Avantika can give me a consolatory handjob. Yes, I know I am pathetic.

‘Fuck! That is his car, right?’ says Avantika in shock. Yes! It wasn’t a prank. I will get laid tonight.

 ‘Yes,’ I say and park our car nearby. I ask Avantika to stay in the car as I see a police car near his. Girls and policemen is a bad combination. For the police, every girl out in the streets after six in the evening is a slut. I walk up to where Shrey is standing. He is still smiling. On his right is a frail girl, who looks pretty young and she is shivering in fear. A disgusting, pot- bellied policeman is taking down information on his pad in Hindi.

‘Sir, he is Tiya’s brother. Ask him. We’re getting married next month,’ Shrey says in a very timid voice. He winks at me playfully.

‘You are?’ The police guy looks at me.

Before I can say anything, the young girl comes and hugs me. ‘Bhaiya!’ ‘Ummm ... I am her brother,’ I say and point to the young girl who has

held me tight around my waist.

I see Shrey smile. The girl is a better actor. She keeps clutching me, as if

hanging on for dear life.

‘You two can go home,’ the policeman points at the girl and me. Shrey

nods and tells us he will come home and explain our parents everything. The girl’s arms are still around me. We walk towards the car. Avantika looks strangely at us.

‘What’s going on?’ Avantika asks as soon as we get inside the car.

‘No fucking idea!’ I say, and we both look at the young girl in the back seat.

Suddenly, she is calm and composed and stares right back at us. Before I can say anything else, she asks me to turn the air conditioner a notch up. I am a little offended by her audacity.

‘He was teaching me how to drive. We started making out and I didn’t see the divider,’ she says nonchalantly and keeps chewing on her bubblegum.

‘Why are the police here?’ Avantika asks.

‘We banged the car, that’s why! And they think I’m under eighteen, so they wanted to call my parents. That’s why Shrey called you guys. And that’s why you’re my brother,’ she says with absolutely no change in the expression on her face.

‘How old are you?’ Avantika asks her.

‘Seventeen,’ she says.

Fuck. Is this the girl from the washroom? She’s not even eighteen! Old

pervert.

‘Then what are you doing with him?’ Avantika asks, shocked.

 ‘Hove him!’

‘Love? Avantika asks. ‘He’s just using you! He just wants to sleep with you.’

‘But he has already slept with me.’

‘He has?’

‘Quite a few times and he’s still with me. And Avantika di, he’s really

good in bed.’

If you ask me, she looks at least twenty. And she is too hot to be

seventeen. But that’s not what I’m concerned about. I am stunned at the ease with which she started discussing her sex life with Avantika. I don’t know why, but girls discuss everything. It’s very disturbing.

Anyway, Avantika isn’t too interested in the discussion. In fact, she’s furious and takes it out on the car. She puts it in gear and goes full throttle on the accelerator. I’m a little scared now. I don’t have a car any more, and if things go like this, Avantika’s car would not be in a good condition either.

‘Where are we going?’ I ask.

‘Home,’ she says.

‘And where is she going?’ I point to the girl in the back seat. Tiya, Shrey

had called her in front of the policeman. But nothing Shrey says in front of a policeman can be considered truth.

‘She’s coming with us,’ Avantika replies.

‘And Shrey?’ the girl asks.

‘I don’t give a fuck,’ Avantika says. She’s angry and she pushes the pedal

all the way down. She shouldn’t do that. She is a girl, after all; people expect her to drive badly and bang into dividers and not weave seamlessly through the traffic. But, I have to admit, I am a little turned on.

A little after we get home, Shrey drops in. We are sitting in the drawing room and no one says anything. I steal a glance at the girl. Despite the dead serious look on Avantika’s face, the girl is unfazed. She sits cross-legged next to Shrey and is least bothered. I hadn’t noticed it before but she is quite tall—around five-eight-and a little too skinny for my taste. She looks a little like those anorexic models on Fashion TV, though with a bigger cleavage. But her face still has a kid-like glow. Her long hair is a mix of black and golden brown, and strangely enough, she is only seventeen.

‘I didn’t know Tiya wasn’t eighteen!’ Shrey says finally. I guess her real name is Tiya, after all.

‘How does that matter?’ the girl protests.

 Everyone is looking at Avantika to react. She looks like a mafia don presiding over a gang meeting. Her cold stares are scary and her posture is menacing. I know why Avantika is taking it so seriously. Avantika has a screwed-up past. She had gotten into drugs and alcohol pretty early in her life. She’s had many flings before me and she blames them for the years she lost to drug abuse. So every time Shrey starts sleeping around with someone young, she freaks out. And this girl is seventeen! I can tell she’s very angry at Shrey and Tiya.

I don’t think I’m getting laid tonight.

‘Come. You’re sharing a bed with me,’ Avantika says.

‘Why?’ Tiya protests.

‘Because I’m asking you to.’

‘Why should I listen to you?’

‘My house, my rules. Though you are free to go home. I can call your

parents and they will be more than happy to pick you up from here,’ Avantika says.

‘Fuck.’

‘Now come with me,’ she says and takes her away. The girl looks at Shrey blows him a kiss and winks at him. He responds. I look at Shrey. I so want to kill him! I had things planned with Avantika and he just came and ruined everything.

‘You’re such an asshole,’ I say.

‘Why? I didn’t know, okay? She said she was nineteen!’ Shrey insists. ‘Whatever it is, had it not been for you, I would have been getting laid,

fucker.’

‘Had it not been for Avantika, I would have been getting laid too. Why

does she have to behave like her granny?’ he says.

I give him a warning stare. We don’t exchange a word and get into bed.

Such a waste.

‘You think they’re doing something?’ Shrey asks with a smirk.

‘Fuck off.’

I fantasize about Avantika and what we would’ve done and slowly drift

off to sleep.

When I wake up, I find that Shrey and Tiya have already left. Avantika

still looks angry about what happened last night. I think she’s making a big deal out of it so that she doesn’t have to sleep with me. Maybe she doesn’t lust for me any more. I look at myself in the mirror. I am not that bad-

 looking She has made out with worse versions of me—like when I had a paunch and really long rope-like hair! And once when I had kept an ugly beard as I thought it was cool. The beard is still there, a little less bushy though. It’s there to hide my ugly face.

Despite my attempts, she doesn’t talk much and leaves for office. Every time Shrey does something like this, I have to bear the brunt of Avantika’s anger. When will she understand that no one, absolutely no one, can make Shrey mend his ways?

As soon as Avantika leaves, I open the website for Imperial Academy, Dehradun, again. I call on the numbers given there but there is no response. It seems like it has been an eternity since I’ve read the diary and the suspense is killing me. But I’m very bad at resisting temptation-naked girls (read: Avantika!) and books without endings. I can’t help but want to open them both. A very dirty pun intended.

I want to know more about the dead guy, what his name was, where he lived, what he did, everything. All I know is that he is obsessively in love with a girl. And such love needs to be confessed and not hidden. It has never done anyone any good.

Even if Avantika left me, I would tell her every day how much I love her- till my last breath. Ah! I am so in love with her. There are days when I just sit and stare at her. Those are the days when I feel really lucky. She is so perfect and so freakishly beautiful. Suddenly, I can’t recall the last time I’d told her that I love her. So I pick up the phone and dial her number.

‘Hey!’

‘Deb? I’m working! I really can’t have phone sex right now,’ she says very seriously.

‘Is that the only thing I call you for?’ I’m a little taken aback. When I had picked up the phone to dial her number, the only thing I’d felt was love, but she is branding me a lusty bastard!

‘Yes. When was the last time you called me and said something nice?’ she whispers into the phone.

‘I called to say that now!’

‘Of course you did,’ she says sarcastically.

‘Oh c’mon! I really did.’

‘Deb, you don’t have to lie. It’s okay. I know you love me. Yes, you try to

get me naked half the time, but I love you for that too. You are my

 boyfriend and it’s always great to have a boyfriend who gets turned on by a mere touch. Makes life a lot easier.’

‘But I do love you!’ I protest.

‘Yeah, yeah,’ she says. ‘And yes, I might need to go out tomorrow morning to Mumbai for a couple of weeks. A project is stuck there.’

‘What? Tomorrow? For two weeks? And you tell me now? Tell them you can’t go!’

‘Just a few days, Deb. Okay, I really need to go,’ she says and disconnects the call.

Almost immediately, I find myself in depression. A couple of weeks without sex? I mean, love? No Avantika for the next two weeks? That’s disastrous! I haven’t learnt to be without her. She makes my life possible. This just can’t be. She will have fun in Mumbai and I will rot here in Delhi and wait for her?

I am angry and unreasonable. Well, she has work there ... but whatever. I am not staying here and missing her. This is unfair. I know my senses are overreacting and I know why. I am restless to find everything about the guy. And Avantika is the only thing that has kept me and can keep me from thinking about it. I will go crazy thinking about that mysterious girl, the dead guy, and the burnt diary if Avantika goes away to Mumbai.

23 September 2010

‘I don’t believe in putting a timeline on love. It will happen when it has to. It doesn’t start on a specific date, nor does it end on one. It’s eternal.’

It had been five days that I had been waiting for her at the bus stop. Every morning, I woke up at six, took a morning bus to her place and waited for her at the bus stop. I had started to think that it was stupid of me ... until today. Today was different. I waited. Like every day, I had woken up at six, put my best shirt on, sprinkled cologne all over, and waited at her bus stop from seven. At eight-thirty, I saw her. Her hair was wet and she looked fresh, like a drop of morning dew. As soon as she reached the bus stop, I waved a big ‘Hi’ and she acknowledged it with a lovely smile. We sat next to each other on the bus. I have stalked her for quite some time now, so I knew she could talk and she didn’t disappoint. And once she started talking, she just didn’t stop. While she talked, I told myself, ‘This is the best sight in the whole wide world.’

She told me about her days in Delhi and how much she missed them. She spoke about everything she likes about her city and everything she hates about mine. I listened. She asked me which school I was from and as soon as I told her that I was from a boarding school, her eyes widened and she begged me to tell her stories about my school. She told me that she has always been very fascinated by elitist boarding schools—Doon, Mayo’s, Welham, etc. I wished I could tell her that she was too fragile and too tender to be told stories from my boarding school. I still remember my first day. Mom cried a lot, but Dad was confident that it was the best for me. I had mixed feelings about it. I thought it would be exciting, but I knew I would miss Mom and her home-cooked food.

But soon, everything changed. I was twelve and I was being sexually abused by three older kids in the common bathing area. For about a week, I was constantly teased by those seniors. I didn’t bathe all of the next week as I was too scared to go anywhere alone. But one day, I saw them in my dormitory and I panicked. We were alone. The minute they came close to me, I picked a compass from my geometry box and drove it through the hand of one of the boys. I pushed it till it came out from the other side of his hand. The other two boys looked in horror and ran even as their friend lay on the ground, bleeding and writhing for help.

The school authorities got to know about the whole incident and all three of them were expelled the very next day. Mom wanted to take me back home, but I had a newfound confidence. Suddenly, I was famous in my boarding school. I commanded respect. People saw me as a guy who was frail and weak, but could still fight for what was right. I told Mom I would be okay and she wished me luck with tears in her eyes. Dad was proud of me.

It was one of the best days of my schooling life, but I couldn’t have told her about it. Instead, I told her about my best friend in school. I used to call him Pappu, to show him down, but he was the champion, his name etched on the achievements board of 2007 as the All-Ro under of the Batch. We were the best of friends—before we drifted apart.

We reached college and I didn’t want to lose sight of her. I wanted her to stay right in front of me, to look at me, smile at me and enrapture me with her silly, long tales of how her best friends ditched her, how her heel broke on an important occasion, and so on and so forth. I was so in love with her. We exchanged numbers, and I have been staring at it ever since. I couldn’t study the entire day. I was thinking about her during the classes, outside the classes, on my way home and till the time I started writing this. I am in love. It’s a strange feeling and I have never been happier.

I wish I could see her tomorrow

1 October 2010

‘Every time her eyes look at me, I am scared that she would see through me. I am scared that eventually I am not a perfect human being and, unlike her, I have flaws.’

It has been days since she gave me her number but I haven’t mustered enough courage to call her. She has been busy with her Western Dance practice for the college festival, three hours every day, in the college auditorium. I have watched her dance and she looks the happiest when she’s dancing.

Finally, after so many days, I caught her on the bus back home. It’s amazing how perfect she looks every day. She looked tired from her dance practice, but that didn’t stop her from talking. She asked me if I had a girlfriend and I blushed and shook my head. I didn’t take her question too seriously. She couldn’t have been interested in me. Or maybe she was. I don’t know. I dropped her home and wondered if she had dated before.

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  • IS IT LOVE???   Intresting

    It’s been four hours since I’ve been in office and I still don’t know how to approach it. Ever since Shrey and I had started working together, he has been pestering me to take a vacation. But I’ve always turned it down as we both can’t take leave from the office at the same time.But when Avantika left this morning, I felt like going on a vacation myself. Not really a vacation, more like an investigative journalism mission sort of thing. It sounds super cool in my head, like what those men in Hollywood movies do. I just have to find out more about this guy.All I know is the nickname of his best friend and where he did his schooling from. I have to know more. I rub my hands together in excitement and mentally start packing my bags for a road trip. I have been waiting for the right moment. I don’t want to sound like I have an agenda in mind. I don’t want to sound stupid going on a road trip to trace a dead guy’s girlfrie

  • IS IT LOVE???   Nobody’s gonna take her

    Our argument regarding Tiya reaches a crescendo and we are almost at each other’s throats. We’re shouting outside our hotel and a lot of people are staring at us.‘Are you crazy?’ I say out aloud. Shrey makes a face and pulls me away from his car. ‘She is not coming with us, Shrey. This isn’t happening.’‘But why not?’‘She is a girl. She can’t go on a road trip. It’s not safe. Plus, we stay at really dirty places.’‘She would be more comfortable in a filthy room than you. Stop being so sexist. And I really want her to tag along. She’s special,’ Shrey counters.‘She is seventeen.’‘Eighteen. And how does that matter? I really like her. This could be something new and meaningful.’‘You always say that, Shrey. Three weeks later, it’s all history. All that will remain will be a few naked pictures of her. I am not ru

  • IS IT LOVE???   Holyplace

    A warm breath grazes my neck, and I hear a soft whisper in my ear: ‘Get up.’ Avantika looks at me and smiles, her hair falls over my face and she smells of expensive moisturizers and shampoo.Shrey and Tiya haven’t woken up yet. I get up and follow Avantika to the balcony, where she has already ordered tea for us. The tea tastes horrible but the early morning breeze is amazing. We look inside and Shrey has already moved to the bed. He hugs Tiya, who purrs in her sleep, and kisses her on her neck. Avantika looks at them and smiles. I wrap myself around Avantika and hold her close.‘That girl is crazy,’ she says.‘I know. I don’t know what Shrey is doing with her.’‘Naah, she is a nice girl. She apologized yesterday’ she says.‘She did?’Avantika nods.‘Deb ... why Haridwar?’‘Umm, just like that,’ I say.‘You can hide it from them, b

  • IS IT LOVE???   Off the charts

    It’s becoming embarrassing now. I can’t take my eyes off my own girlfriend, the girl I’ve been dating for five years. My jaw had dropped the moment I’d seen her walk out of the hotel door and I have not returned to normal yet. I thank Shrey for it. Avantika and I have been driving for the past six hours and it is the best drive ever. She has mastered the art of seduction. Though, I should add here that my threshold is shamefully low. At times I have gotten seduced seeing her brush her teeth.But today is off-the-charts awesome. Avantika has been slipping her hands in ... everywhere! I liked her anyway but I like the new her more. But it’s bothering me. She does not have to pretend in front of me. That’s not what people in love do, right?‘You really don’t have to do this. I think you’re still fun and awesome.’ ‘Why do you think I’m doing this for you?’ she says and looks at me.‘I don&

  • IS IT LOVE???   Another place

    I find us packing our stuff as soon as we get to the hotel. The adrenaline is getting to us. We are finally getting somewhere. Though the thought of Ritam’s crippled sister saddens us. But at least we have a name. Ritam Dey. That’s a start. I am sure we will be at Ragini’s doorstep soon.‘Are we leaving already?’ I ask. ‘It’s a nice city. Can we rest a while? Have a few walks along the city lanes? Nice dinner?’‘Deb,’ Avantika says and throws my bag to me.‘What?’‘Nivedita. It must have been weeks since her brother hasn’t met her.What if Ritam’s parents didn’t let Nivedita know? What if they never tell her that Ritam is never coming back?’ she says with concern.‘I was just kidding. I wanted to see how kicked you were.’From what I inferred from the diary Ritam’s parents had never bothered to contact Nivedita after they sent her

  • IS IT LOVE???   Ununderstandable girl

    Shrey and Tiya are still sleeping when we leave the hotel for the mental asylum where Nivedita is admitted. We had looked up the address yesterday and everyone we asked knew where it was. Avantika and I have hardly talked since morning. We are a little unsure of what we’ll say to Nivedita. Not only that; we don’t know what to expect.According to his notes, Nivedita doesn’t talk or understand anybody other than her brother. She talks through her smiles, which only Ritam understood. We won’t be able to tell her anything. And even if we do, what will we even say to her? I sweat thinking what I would’ve done had Avantika not been with me.‘This is going to be strange,’ I tell Avantika.‘I know.’We enter the building. It’s an old one, probably standing since the early1890s. We ask the receptionist if we could meet Nivedita. She asks if we are from her family. We nod. She brings out a register, goes to

  • IS IT LOVE???   Maybe

    My breathing is ragged and strained. Every breath I take and release hurts a little more. I feel choked and my throat burns. My head hurts. I try to open my eyes but a bandage wrapped around my head obstructs them. I adjust the bandage to open my eyes. My whole body is broken and it pains as if it has been put into a blender and ground.I take some time to gather where I am. Why does everything hurt so much? Is this a bad dream? I slowly open my eyes partially and look at the ceiling above. It’s not familiar. Then it strikes me. The Chandni Chowk blast.It all comes back to me. The noise, the people, the blood, the severed limbs, the mangled remains of people, cars and buildings. It is a lot harder this time. I can think more clearly. I could’ve been among the dead.‘Deb?’ a female voice says. ‘Are you okay?’I look at her and my eyes light up. She is like a shot of morphine that takes every bit of pain away. I feel alive

  • IS IT LOVE???   Not asleep

    I can feel Avantika’s soft hands running over my chest. She is sleeping, tired from what we finished about an hour ago. Avantika has always been good in bed. Over the last five years, she has only gotten better. Even tonight, when she crept up on the bed, her eyes dripping with passion and her hands going to all the places they should have, I felt like a man bereft of love since eternity. It took me just a few seconds to rip every shred of cloth off her and subject her to pain and ecstasy.She was incredible with her hands, her tongue and her body tonight. I know the reason. She wanted to tire me out and make me sleep. She had her reasons. She was getting worried about me. I was getting worried about me. I have not slept for the last fifteen days. Neither have I been to my office or the gym. She was afraid I might fall sick.Last night she asked me to see a psychologist or a therapist. I was totally averse to the idea.‘Are you sure you don’t w

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  • IS IT LOVE???   Ununderstandable girl

    Shrey and Tiya are still sleeping when we leave the hotel for the mental asylum where Nivedita is admitted. We had looked up the address yesterday and everyone we asked knew where it was. Avantika and I have hardly talked since morning. We are a little unsure of what we’ll say to Nivedita. Not only that; we don’t know what to expect.According to his notes, Nivedita doesn’t talk or understand anybody other than her brother. She talks through her smiles, which only Ritam understood. We won’t be able to tell her anything. And even if we do, what will we even say to her? I sweat thinking what I would’ve done had Avantika not been with me.‘This is going to be strange,’ I tell Avantika.‘I know.’We enter the building. It’s an old one, probably standing since the early1890s. We ask the receptionist if we could meet Nivedita. She asks if we are from her family. We nod. She brings out a register, goes to

  • IS IT LOVE???   Another place

    I find us packing our stuff as soon as we get to the hotel. The adrenaline is getting to us. We are finally getting somewhere. Though the thought of Ritam’s crippled sister saddens us. But at least we have a name. Ritam Dey. That’s a start. I am sure we will be at Ragini’s doorstep soon.‘Are we leaving already?’ I ask. ‘It’s a nice city. Can we rest a while? Have a few walks along the city lanes? Nice dinner?’‘Deb,’ Avantika says and throws my bag to me.‘What?’‘Nivedita. It must have been weeks since her brother hasn’t met her.What if Ritam’s parents didn’t let Nivedita know? What if they never tell her that Ritam is never coming back?’ she says with concern.‘I was just kidding. I wanted to see how kicked you were.’From what I inferred from the diary Ritam’s parents had never bothered to contact Nivedita after they sent her

  • IS IT LOVE???   Off the charts

    It’s becoming embarrassing now. I can’t take my eyes off my own girlfriend, the girl I’ve been dating for five years. My jaw had dropped the moment I’d seen her walk out of the hotel door and I have not returned to normal yet. I thank Shrey for it. Avantika and I have been driving for the past six hours and it is the best drive ever. She has mastered the art of seduction. Though, I should add here that my threshold is shamefully low. At times I have gotten seduced seeing her brush her teeth.But today is off-the-charts awesome. Avantika has been slipping her hands in ... everywhere! I liked her anyway but I like the new her more. But it’s bothering me. She does not have to pretend in front of me. That’s not what people in love do, right?‘You really don’t have to do this. I think you’re still fun and awesome.’ ‘Why do you think I’m doing this for you?’ she says and looks at me.‘I don&

  • IS IT LOVE???   Holyplace

    A warm breath grazes my neck, and I hear a soft whisper in my ear: ‘Get up.’ Avantika looks at me and smiles, her hair falls over my face and she smells of expensive moisturizers and shampoo.Shrey and Tiya haven’t woken up yet. I get up and follow Avantika to the balcony, where she has already ordered tea for us. The tea tastes horrible but the early morning breeze is amazing. We look inside and Shrey has already moved to the bed. He hugs Tiya, who purrs in her sleep, and kisses her on her neck. Avantika looks at them and smiles. I wrap myself around Avantika and hold her close.‘That girl is crazy,’ she says.‘I know. I don’t know what Shrey is doing with her.’‘Naah, she is a nice girl. She apologized yesterday’ she says.‘She did?’Avantika nods.‘Deb ... why Haridwar?’‘Umm, just like that,’ I say.‘You can hide it from them, b

  • IS IT LOVE???   Nobody’s gonna take her

    Our argument regarding Tiya reaches a crescendo and we are almost at each other’s throats. We’re shouting outside our hotel and a lot of people are staring at us.‘Are you crazy?’ I say out aloud. Shrey makes a face and pulls me away from his car. ‘She is not coming with us, Shrey. This isn’t happening.’‘But why not?’‘She is a girl. She can’t go on a road trip. It’s not safe. Plus, we stay at really dirty places.’‘She would be more comfortable in a filthy room than you. Stop being so sexist. And I really want her to tag along. She’s special,’ Shrey counters.‘She is seventeen.’‘Eighteen. And how does that matter? I really like her. This could be something new and meaningful.’‘You always say that, Shrey. Three weeks later, it’s all history. All that will remain will be a few naked pictures of her. I am not ru

  • IS IT LOVE???   Intresting

    It’s been four hours since I’ve been in office and I still don’t know how to approach it. Ever since Shrey and I had started working together, he has been pestering me to take a vacation. But I’ve always turned it down as we both can’t take leave from the office at the same time.But when Avantika left this morning, I felt like going on a vacation myself. Not really a vacation, more like an investigative journalism mission sort of thing. It sounds super cool in my head, like what those men in Hollywood movies do. I just have to find out more about this guy.All I know is the nickname of his best friend and where he did his schooling from. I have to know more. I rub my hands together in excitement and mentally start packing my bags for a road trip. I have been waiting for the right moment. I don’t want to sound like I have an agenda in mind. I don’t want to sound stupid going on a road trip to trace a dead guy’s girlfrie

  • IS IT LOVE???   Dear dairy

    ‘You’re in love when she’s around and when her voice alone is your guiding light, your only motivation in your life. I am in love.’I will never forget this day. I cannot forget this day. This day defines me now. I hadn’t seen her for many days before today. It was just another morning and I was a little restless. Dejected, I reached the bus stop at the time she used to and waited for her to come, hoping against hope. She came, I looked at her and she looked amazing. I don’t think she saw me. The bus came and there was a mad rush to jump into the bus. She was standing right beside me as we waited for people to board the already crowded bus.I went out of the line and motioned to her that she should get in first. There was way too much jostling and she couldn’t get in. The bus started moving and her eyebrows made a small frowning hill on her head. She looked adorable. She glanced at me and whispered an apology. ‘Sorry&rs

  • IS IT LOVE???   Not asleep

    I can feel Avantika’s soft hands running over my chest. She is sleeping, tired from what we finished about an hour ago. Avantika has always been good in bed. Over the last five years, she has only gotten better. Even tonight, when she crept up on the bed, her eyes dripping with passion and her hands going to all the places they should have, I felt like a man bereft of love since eternity. It took me just a few seconds to rip every shred of cloth off her and subject her to pain and ecstasy.She was incredible with her hands, her tongue and her body tonight. I know the reason. She wanted to tire me out and make me sleep. She had her reasons. She was getting worried about me. I was getting worried about me. I have not slept for the last fifteen days. Neither have I been to my office or the gym. She was afraid I might fall sick.Last night she asked me to see a psychologist or a therapist. I was totally averse to the idea.‘Are you sure you don’t w

  • IS IT LOVE???   Maybe

    My breathing is ragged and strained. Every breath I take and release hurts a little more. I feel choked and my throat burns. My head hurts. I try to open my eyes but a bandage wrapped around my head obstructs them. I adjust the bandage to open my eyes. My whole body is broken and it pains as if it has been put into a blender and ground.I take some time to gather where I am. Why does everything hurt so much? Is this a bad dream? I slowly open my eyes partially and look at the ceiling above. It’s not familiar. Then it strikes me. The Chandni Chowk blast.It all comes back to me. The noise, the people, the blood, the severed limbs, the mangled remains of people, cars and buildings. It is a lot harder this time. I can think more clearly. I could’ve been among the dead.‘Deb?’ a female voice says. ‘Are you okay?’I look at her and my eyes light up. She is like a shot of morphine that takes every bit of pain away. I feel alive

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