HOW I DISCOVERED MY TRUE LOVE
A Romantic Love Story
By
VIKRAM KARVE
“I don’t want to marry Manisha,” I told my mother.
          My  mother looked as if she had been pole-axed. Suddenly there was a  metamorphosis in her expression – a distant look across my shoulder  followed by a smile of forced geniality.
           “Manisha is coming!” my mother whispered.
          I  turned around quickly and saw Manisha entering the wicket-gate and  walking towards us.
          She  wished my mother and smiled at me. “I want to come and see you off at  the airport.”
          “Why  bother? I’ll go on my own,” I said. “The flights are quite  unpredictable. They never leave on time. And how will you come back all  the way?”
          “You  two talk here in the garden,” my mother said. “I’ll go inside and pack  your things.”
          “I am  sorry about last night,” Manisha said, with genuine regret in her voice.
          “It’s  okay.” I looked at Manisha. Plump and full-faced, with small brown eyes  and dusky complexion, hair drawn back into a conventional knot – there  was only one adjective to describe Manisha – ‘prosaic’; yes, she looked  prosaic – so commonplace, unexciting and pedestrian.
          “I’ll  go inside and help your mother,” Manisha said, and went inside.
          ‘Last  night’ was the fiasco at the disco. Manisha and I - An unmitigated  disaster!
          “Let’s  dance,” I had asked Manisha.
          “No,”  Manisha was firm.
          “Come  on. I’ll teach you,” I pleaded. “Everyone is on the floor.”
          But  Manisha did not budge. So we just sat there watching. Everybody was  thoroughly enjoying themselves. Many of my friends and colleagues were  on the floor, with their wives, fiancées and girlfriends. Among them  Sanjiv and Swati.
          “Who  is this wallflower you’ve brought with you?” taunted Sanjiv, during a  break in the music.
          “My  fiancée, Manisha,” I answered, trying to keep cool.
          “Your  fiancée? How come you’ve hooked on to such a Vern?” Swati mocked.  “Come on Vijay,” she said derisively, coming close and looking directly  into my eyes. “You are an Executive now, not a clerk. Don’t live in  your past. Find someone better. She doesn’t belong here.”
          If  someone had stuck a knife into my heart it would have been easier to  endure than these words. It always rankled; the fact that I had come up  the hard way, promoted from the ranks.
          “This  is too much” I said angrily to Sanjiv.
          “Cool  down, Vijay,” Sanjiv said putting his hand on my shoulder. “You know  Swati doesn’t mean it.”
          But I  knew that Swati had meant every word she uttered.
          “Let’s  go,” I told Manisha. “I’ve had enough.”
          When  we were driving home, Manisha asked innocently, “What’s a Vern?”
           “Vernacular!” I answered. And at that moment there was a burst of  firecrackers and rockets lit up the sky to usher in the New Year.
          That  night I could not sleep. I thought of my future, trying to see both  halves of my future life, my career and my marriage, side by side. I  realized that my career was more important to me than anything else. I  had to succeed at any cost. And a key ingredient in the recipe for  success was a ‘socially valuable’ wife. It mattered. It was the truth.  The blunt truth – whether you liked it or not! Swati was right. Manisha  just didn’t belong to that status and class of society of which I was  now a part. I had crossed the class barrier; but Manisha had remained  where she was. And she would remain there, unwilling and unable to  change. 
          In  marriage one has to be rational. Manisha would be an encumbrance, maybe  even an embarrassment. It was a mistake - my getting engaged to her. She  was the girl next door, we had grown up together and everyone assumed  we would be married one day. And our parents got us engaged. At that  point of time I didn’t think much of it. It was only now, that my eyes  had opened; I realized the enormity of the situation. I was an upwardly  mobile executive now, not a mere clerk, and the equations had changed.  What I needed was someone like Swati. Smart, chic and savvy. Convent  educated, well groomed and accustomed to the prevalent lifestyle, a  perfect hostess, an asset to my career. And most importantly she was  from a well-connected family. I tired to imagine what life would have  been like had I married Swati. 
          Sanjiv  was so lucky. He was already going places. After all Swati was the  daughter of the senior VP.
           Suddenly I returned to the present. I could bear my mother calling me. I  went inside. Manisha was helping her pack my bags, unaware of what was  going on in my mind. I felt a sense of deep guilt, but then it was  question of my life.
           “What’s wrong with you?” my mother asked after Manisha had left.
          “Why  were so rude to Manisha, so distant? She loves you so much!”
          “I  don’t love her,” I said.
           “What?” my mother asked surprised, “Is there some else?”
          “No,” I  said.
          “I  don’t understand you.”
           “Manisha is not compatible anymore. She just doesn’t fit in.”
          I  could see that my mother was angry. Outwardly she remained calm and  nonchalant; her fury was visible only in her eyes.
           “Who  do you think you are?” she said icily, trying to control herself. “You  know Manisha from childhood, isn’t it? For the last two years you have  been engaged and moving around together. And suddenly you say Manisha is  not compatible?” My mother paused for a moment, and then taking my hand  asked me softly, “What happened last night?”
          I told  her. Then we argued for over two hours and till the end I stuck to my  guns. Finally my mother said, “This is going to be difficult. And  relations between our families are going to be permanently strained.  Think about Manisha. It will be so difficult for her to get married  after the stigma of a broken engagement. Forget about last night. It’s  just a small incident. Think about it again. Manisha is the ideal wife,  so suitable for you.”
          But I  had made up my mind, so I told my mother, “If you want I’ll go and talk  to her father right now and break off the engagement.”
          “No,”  my mother snapped. “Let your father come home. He will decide what to  do.”
          The  doorbell rang. I opened the door. Standing outside along with my father  were Manisha and her parents.
          “I  have fixed up your wedding with Manisha Patwardhan on the 30th of May of  this year,” my father thundered peremptorily in his usual impetuous  style.
           “Congratulations,” echoed Manisha’s parents, Mr. and Mr. Patwardhan.
          I was  dumbstruck. Manisha was smiling coyly. My mother was signaling to me  with her eyes not to say anything. She was probably happy at the fait  accompli. I felt trapped. I excused myself and went up to my room. I  locked the door. Someone knocked.
          “Give  me five minutes,” I said. “I’ll get ready and come down.”
          “Come  soon,” said Manisha from the other side of the door.
          I took  out my notepad and wrote a letter to Manisha:
          Dear Manisha,
                             Forgive me, but I  have discovered that I can’t marry you and I think that it is best for  us to say goodbye. 
                                                                              Yours sincerely,
                                                                              Vijay
          I knew  the words sounded insincere, but that was all I could write for my mind  had bone blank and I wanted to get it over with as fast as possible;  just one sentence to terminate our long relationship. I knew I was being  cruel but I just couldn’t help it. 
          I  sealed the letter in a postal envelope, wrote Manisha’s name and address  on it and put it in my bag. I looked at my watch. It was time to leave.
           Everyone came to the airport to see me off. Sanjiv and Swati had come  too. They were located at Pune and I was off on a promotion to Delhi  .
          “I’m  really very sorry about last night,” Swati apologized to us. She took  Manisha’s hand and said tenderly, “Manisha, please forgive me. You are  truly an ideal couple – both made for each other.”
          As I  walked towards the boarding area Manisha’s father Mr. Patwardhan shouted  to me jovially, “Hey, Vijay. Don’t forget to come on 30th of May. The  wedding muhurat is exactly at 10.35 in the morning. Everything is  fixed. I have already booked the best hall in town. If you don’t turn  up I’ll lose my deposit!”
          I  nodded to him but in my mind’s eye I smiled to myself – the “joke” was  going to be on him!  Then I waved everyone goodbye, went to the waiting  hall, sat on a chair, opened my bag and took out the letter I had  written to Manisha. I wish I had torn up the letter there and then, but  some strange force stopped me. I put the envelope in my pocket and  remembered my mother’s parting words: “Please Vijay. Marry Manisha.  Don’t make everyone unhappy. Manisha is good girl. She’ll adjust. I’ll  talk to her.”
          During  the flight I thought about it. I tried my utmost, but I just could not  visualize Manisha as my wife in my new life any more. Till now I had  done everything to make everybody happy. But what about me? It was my  life after all. Time would heal wounds, abate the injury and dissipate  the anger; but if I got trapped for life with Manisha, it would be an  unmitigated sheer disaster.
I  collected my baggage and walked towards the exit of Delhi  Airport  .  Suddenly I spotted a red post box. I felt the envelope in my pocket. I  knew I had to make the crucial decision right now. Yes, it was now or  never.
I walked towards  the red post box and stood in front of it, indecisive and confused. I  took a deep breath, took out the envelope from my pocket and looked at  it – the address, postage stamp – everything was okay.
I moved my hand  to post the letter. A strange force stopped my hand in its tracks. I  hesitated, and in my mind I tried to imagine the severe ramifications,  the terrible consequences of what I was about to do. 
At first Manisha  would be delighted, even surprised, to see my handwriting on the  letter. And then she would read it…! I dreaded to even think about the  unimaginable hurt and distress she would feel… and then her parents… and  mine…the sense of betrayal and insult…relationships built and nurtured  for years would be strained, even broken, forever. And poor  Manisha…everyone knew we were engaged…how tongues would wag…the stigma  of broken engagement…the anguish of my betrayal of her love… she would  be devastated… may even commit…
Suddenly my  cell-phone rang interrupting my train of thoughts. ‘Must be Manisha  monitoring me as usual,’ I thought getting irritated at her – Manisha’s  suffocating familiarity and closeness seemed like manacles and I was  glad I was getting away from her. I decided not to answer, but my mobile  kept ringing persistently, so I looked at the display. It wasn’t  Manisha, but an unknown new number.
“Hello,” I said  into my cell-phone.
“Mr. Joshi?” a  male voice spoke.
“Yes. Vijay  Joshi here. Who is it, please?” I asked. 
“Sir, we’ve come  to receive you. Please come to the exit gate and look for the board  with your name.”
“I’m coming,” I  said and looked the letter addressed to Manisha in my hand.
No. Not now in a  hurry. Providence    was giving me signals to wait, reflect, and think it over, not to do  something so irretrievable in such a hurry. So I put the envelope in my  pocket and walked away from the post box towards the exit.
I settled down  well in my new job and liked my place in Delhi  . Every morning I would put the  envelope in my pocket determined to post it in the post box outside my  office on my way to work but something happened and I didn’t post the  letter to Manisha. Meanwhile I rang up Manisha, and my mother, every  evening, and made pretence that everything was okay. The stress and  strain within me was steadily building up.
Every time I  looked at the envelope I felt as if was holding a primed grenade in my  hand. With every passing day, the 30th of May was approaching  nearer and nearer. Time was running out, and I knew I would have to  unburden myself of the bombshell pretty fast. So one day, during lunch  break, I decided to post the fateful letter and get it over with once  and for all.
As I was walking  out someone from the reception called out to me, “Hey, Mr. Joshi, is  Mr. Gokhale in his office?”
Gokhale was my  boss, and he was out on tour, so I said, “No, he’s gone on tour.  Anything I can do?”
“Sir, there’s a  courier for him,” the receptionist said.
“I’ll take it  and give it to him when he comes,” I said, signed the voucher and took  the envelope from the courier.
The moment I  looked at the envelope an electric tremor of trepidation quivered  through me like a thunderbolt. 
I  cannot begin to describe the bewildered astonishment and shocking  consternation I felt when I saw Manisha’s distinctive handwriting on the  envelope. Beautiful large flowing feminine writing with her trademark  star-shaped ‘t’ crossing, the huge circle dotting the ‘i’… there was no  doubt about it. And of course her favorite turquoise blue ink. There was  no doubt about it but I turned the envelope around hoping I was wrong,  but I was right – the letter to my boss Mr. Gokhale was indeed from  Manisha; she had written her name and address on the reverse, as bold as  brass!
My  pulse raced, my insides quivered, my brain resonated and I trembled with  feverish anxiety. At first impulse I wanted to tear open the envelope  and see what was inside, but I controlled myself, tried to mask my inner  emotions, put on a fake smile of geniality for everyone around, gently  put the letter in my pocket and began retracing my steps back to my  office.
I  discreetly felt the two envelopes in my suit pocket – one, my unposted  letter to Manisha; and the other, much fatter, Manisha’s unopened letter  to my boss Mr. Avinash Gokhale. 
I locked myself  in my office, sat down, calmed myself with a glass of water, took out  the two envelopes and put them on the table in front of me. My unposted  letter to Manisha would now have to wait – I thanked my stars that some  mysterious hidden restraining force had stopped me from posting it every  time I tried to.
I picked up  Manisha’s envelope addressed to Avinash Gokhale. It was sheer  serendipity that I happened to be at the reception when the courier  arrived – otherwise I would have never known.
I looked at the  envelope. The whole thing was incredulous. Why on earth should Manisha  write to Avinash Gokhale? What was the connection? How did she know  Gokhale? What had she written to him?
Had my simpleton  mother blurted out something to her – told Manisha or her parents what  I’d said – that I didn’t want to marry her? My mind went haywire with  strange thoughts. Revenge! Yes, revenge. Stung by my betrayal, Manisha  had somehow found out the name of my boss, from Sanjiv or Swati most  probably, and was out to ruin my career – wreck vengeance on me for  ditching her. Written to Avinash Gokhale what a jerk I was. These things  mattered in my company. My heart skipped a beat. I felt a tremor of  trepidation. I suddenly realized that I had to swiftly interrupt this  pernicious line of thinking and insidious train of thoughts.
No, No! It was  just not possible. No chance.  Manisha was not the vindictive type. She  would never do such a thing. Especially to me. She always loved me so  much. And I was sure my mother would not have been so indiscreet and  would have kept our conversation to herself.
But then  anything is possible. I couldn’t take any chances. Dying with curiosity I  desperately felt like tearing open the envelope and reading the letter.  I had to get to the bottom of this mystery. It was simple. I would open  the letter in the privacy of my house. Steam-open the envelope very  carefully so no one would even discern. Then I would read it and  accordingly decide the further course of action.
I wondered why  Manisha had sent this letter so indiscreetly to the office address with  her name and address written so blatantly. Was it on purpose? She could  have spoken privately to Gokhale, or even e-mailed him. Why this bold as  brass missive? Was it on purpose?  She wanted me to know…No. No. It was  too bizarre! 
I had an impulse  to call up Manisha then and there and get it over with once and for  all, but I stopped myself. I had to know first what she had written in  that letter before I could do anything.
The suspense was  killing. I felt restless and uneasy. When I feel tense I go for a long  walk. That’s what I did. I went for a long walk around my entire office,  each department, making pretence of MBWA [Management By Walking  Around]. When I returned to my office it was four, still an hour to go.  The next hour was the longest hour of my life.
The moment it  was five, I rushed out of my office. The moment I opened the door I ran  bang into the receptionist. “Mr. Joshi, Sir. That letter for Mr. Gokhale  – you want me to give it to his PA?”
“No. No. I’ll  give to him personally,” I said feeling the envelope in my coat pocket. 
She gave me a  curious questioning look so I hastily said, “Don’t worry, I’ve locked it  carefully in my drawer,” and hurriedly walked away.
I rushed home to  my apartment. I put some water in a pot to boil and then carefully held  the envelope over it. I had to steam it open very meticulously and  delicately – no tell tale signs.
Soon  I had Manisha letter in my hands.
Dear  Avinash… she began.  Oh … great… Dear Avinash indeed! 
Already on first name terms – Thank God for small mercies it wasn’t Darling Avinash, Sweetie-pie or something even more mushy!
Already on first name terms – Thank God for small mercies it wasn’t Darling Avinash, Sweetie-pie or something even more mushy!
Dear Avinash,
The suddenness with which you popped the question  left me so dumbfounded that I am still recovering from the shock.  Shock? Maybe that’s the wrong word, but the swiftness of your proposal,  out of the blue, on our very first date – well I am a simple girl and it  really left me dazed. 
You called once. I didn’t answer. You didn’t call  again. I really appreciate that. That was very gentlemanly of you. 
You sent me an e-mail. Explaining your feelings.  Apologizing for what you did at the spur of the moment. Said sorry for  having hurt my feelings. Please don’t say sorry. You haven’t hurt my  feelings at all. Maybe outwardly I didn’t show it, but in fact, inside, I  felt so good, so happy, that a suave man like you found a simple  ordinary looking girl like me so attractive.
Avinash, please try to understand. I also feel  the same way about you. I can’t exactly describe the emotions I  experienced when we were together. Is it love? I don’t know. It’s the  first time it’s happened to me that I’ve  felt so attracted to someone. I  really feel like being with you, forever, spending the rest of our  lives together. Thanks for proposing to me, Avinash – I accept. 
What I want to say now I don’t want to say over  the phone, or e-mail, so I am writing this letter. I am writing this  because I believe that there is no place for secrets between husband and  wife. Please read it carefully and destroy it. For my sake. Please.  Read what I have written, think about it carefully, and I’ll wait for  your reply.   
You know Vijay, don’t you? Vijay Joshi. Of course  you do. He works with you in Delhi  .  You are his boss.
In fact, I came to Sanjiv and Swati’s party in  Pune just to see what Vijay’s boss looked like. Of course, I’d also come  to help out Swati, but I was more interested to know how Vijay is doing  in his new job in Delhi and maybe say something good about him. But the  thunderbolt struck and we ended saying sweet nothings to each other. I  hope Swati didn’t notice, as she seemed the busy hostess most of the  time, and I haven’t told her, or anyone, about our hush-hush dinner-date  the next evening in that lovely romantic garden restaurant.   
Now, let’s talk about Vijay. Vijay and me were  neighbors ever since I remember. Our families are very very close,  deeply bonded to each other. Vijay and I are the dearest of dearest  childhood friends, inseparable buddies who grew up together. Vijay has  always been my most intimate confidant. I have always told him  everything. Except about you – about us. It’s the first time I have  hidden something from Vijay. And I’m feeling so guilty about it. 
Avinash, I really love Vijay. But not in that  way. Vijay is my friend, yes; buddy, yes; even soul mate, yes; but I  just can’t imagine Vijay as my lover. Like I can visualize you!
Now brace your heart, Avinash!
I am engaged to Vijay. And our wedding date has  been fixed on the 30th of May. Everyone knows about it.
This was fixed long back by both our families. My  marriage to Vijay – a foregone conclusion and implicit happy  culmination of our friendship. I too was happy. Till I met you. Now it  is different.
What do we do, Avinash? 
I just can’t bear to tell Vijay myself. To him it  will be a terrible betrayal, a stab in his back. I can’t break his  heart. He will be devastated.
I don’t have the guts to tell my parents; or his,  either. They will be shattered, the hurt very painful and relationships  will be strained forever. 
So what do we do, Avinash?
I have an idea. It may sound bizarre, but let’s  give it a try. Why not make Vijay fall in love with someone else?
Avinash, why don’t you introduce Vijay to some  nice girl out there? Someone smart and chic, like Swati. I think he  likes girls like that – I’ve seen him stealing canny glances at Swati  when he thought I wasn’t looking. Right now he is lonely, vulnerable,  and I am sure you there are many lovely, mod, savvy, attractive women  out there in Delhi    who are also lonely and vulnerable. You’ve just got to match them and  hope for the best.
Avinash, try to understand. I want Vijay to call  off our engagement. I want him to “break” my heart. It will be better  that way, isn’t it? For me, for you, and for all of us.
Avinash. Am I asking too much of you? You like  the idea, or is it too weird? Or can you think of anything better?
I am waiting for your reply. Please send me  e-mails only. Don’t ring up or write – we have to very careful of hidden  ears and curious eyes.
And remember to destroy this letter right now.
Yours lovingly,
Manisha.
I read the letter once again, slowly,  carefully, word by word, till the last line – “And remember to  destroy this letter right now”. 
It was unbelievable – this bolt from the blue from Manisha.  I laughed to myself. I thought I was smart, but it was Manisha who was  playing the double game.
I put the letter on the table, closed my eyes, and tried to  think clearly. It was crazy – a classy snob like Avinash Gokhale  falling for a pedestrian Plain Jane like Manisha Patwardhan! Yes, Love  is blind – Love is truly blind! Or, is it?   
Instinctively I picked up my cell-phone and called Manisha.
“Hi, Vijay,” Manisha said, “what’s up?”
“Just thought of you, so called to say Hi,” I said.
“How’s life out there?”
“Good. I like Delhi  .  You’ll like it too – when you come here.”
“Come there?”
“You’re going to come here and stay with me in Delhi   after we get  married, aren’t you?”
“Of course,” Manisha said smoothly – so smoothly, so  slickly, so effortlessly, so glibly, without even the slightest demur or  trace of dither, that, for a moment I was struck dumb.
“Hey, Vijay, what happened?” Manisha asked.
“Nothing,” I answered, “everything okay out there?”
“Oh, yes, I’d gone to your place this morning – everyone is  fine.”
“Your parents?”
“My Mum and Dad are fine. Everyone is okay – just waiting  for you to come. When are you coming to Pune?”
“I don’t know. There’s lots of work.”
“Come on, Vijay. Don’t tell me you can’t come for a day or  two, at least on a weekend. I’m sure there’s not that much work that the  heavens will fall if you are not there.”
“It’s not that – my boss here is a funny guy.”
“Funny Guy?”
“A painful killjoy called Avinash Gokhale,” I said, and  listened carefully, but I couldn’t even detect even the slightest gasp  or tremor in her voice as Manisha continued talking smoothly and glibly  as ever, “Never mind, Vijay, you just work hard,” and then she  effortlessly changed the subject to the latest happenings in Pune and  started off with mushy ‘sweet nothings’ about how much she missed me.
Listening to her, for a moment, I thought the letter in  front of me was a forgery, but then I knew Manisha’s handwriting too  well. I was too flabbergasted to continue the conversation so I quickly  said bye and kept the cell-phone on the table.
I never imagined Manisha could be so secretive, so  mendacious. 
It was strange – how close one can be to a person and yet know nothing about her.
And Avinash Gokhale? I worked with him every day, spent hours together, yet knew nothing about him, except that he was brilliant workaholic and a recluse – a most boring and private person who always kept to himself, never mixed around, never socialized or attended parties, a pain in the neck who everyone avoided and the only thing he ever talked was about work.
It was strange – how close one can be to a person and yet know nothing about her.
And Avinash Gokhale? I worked with him every day, spent hours together, yet knew nothing about him, except that he was brilliant workaholic and a recluse – a most boring and private person who always kept to himself, never mixed around, never socialized or attended parties, a pain in the neck who everyone avoided and the only thing he ever talked was about work.
Made for each other – two secretive loners – Manisha  Patwardhan and Avinash Gokhale.
But why was I so bothered? Good Luck to them! My problem  was being solved. I had to just quietly wait and watch, do nothing, till  my boss found some nice smart chic girl for me. Can anyone be luckier?  Life was going to be exciting!
I carefully put Manisha’s letter back into the envelope and  resealed it meticulously with a glue-stick. No one could have suspected  that it had been steamed open. Now all I had to do was to quietly put  it in the mail folder of Avinash Gokhale before he reached office on  Monday morning. 
Suddenly, I was jolted out of my thoughts by the ring-tone  of my cell-phone.
“Hello!” I said.
“Is that Mr. Joshi?” a sweet mellifluous feminine voice  said.
“Yes. Vijay Joshi here,” I said.
“I’m Vibha speaking.” 
“Vibha?” I asked surprised. I didn’t know any Vibha.  
“Oh I’m sorry Mr. Joshi, we haven’t met. I’m Vibha Gokhale.  Avinash Gokhale’s wife.”
“Oh, I’m so  sorry Mrs. Gokhale. I didn’t know Mr. Gokhale had a wife,” I mumbled.
“Well, Well, Mr.  Joshi! Of course your Mr. Gokhale is a much married man and has a Mrs.  Gokhale and you are speaking to her right now,” she said playfully, and  added, “You don’t believe me, do you?”
“No. No. Ma’am.  It’s not that. I didn’t know he was married. He’s never told me anything  about you.”
“Really? That’s  curious,” she said, “Because he’s told me everything about you.”
“What? He’s told  you everything about me?” I blurted in surprise.
“Oh, yes Mr.  Joshi,” she said mischievously, “I know all about you. And what I don’t  know, you can tell me yourself when we meet.”
“Meet?”
“At the  airport.”
“Airport?” I  asked, totally baffled.
“Yes, Mr. Joshi,  Delhi  Airport ,  I’m just about to board the direct flight from Singapore  ,”  she said matter-of-factly.
“Singapore  ?”
“Yes, Singapore  .  I live and work here. You don’t know? Of course you don’t – he hasn’t  even told you he’s married. Well, I was on my way to London   for a conference, and, on the spur of the moment, thought I’ll stopover  at Delhi    and spend the weekend with Avinash.”
“How sad?” I  stammered, “Gokhale Sir is on tour to Chennai till Monday.”
“Chennai? You’re  totally clueless aren’t you – don’t even know where your boss is?”
I was at a loss  for words, confused.
“He’s already  left Chennai this morning. And right now your boss Avinash is in Pune.”
“Pune?” I  exclaimed incredulously.
“Yes, Pune. I  wanted him to finish off his work in Chennai and come back fast to Delhi  today itself, so we could meet up, but he told me he was already in  Pune as something very important and urgent suddenly came up and he  wouldn’t be able to make it. So he asked me get in touch with you. He’ll  be coming back to Delhi    on Wednesday now.”
“Wednesday?  Urgent work in Pune?” I uttered like a zombie.
“Don’t tell me  he hasn’t told you!” she exclaimed in amazement.
Overwhelmed by  the maze of confusion, my mind went numb, and I was struck dumb.
“Mr. Joshi, Mr.  Joshi. Are you there? Please Mr. Joshi,” Vibha Gokhale said rapidly with  hint of impatience, “I have to board now. It’s a six hour flight. Just  find out the arrival details and make sure you are there on time. You  don’t want your boss’s wife to be left high and dry, do you?”
“I’ll be there  Ma’am,” I said, “but how will I recognize you?”
“Don’t worry.  Just be there at the arrival lounge. I’ll recognize and find you,” she  said and abruptly switched off. 
I keep my cell-phone on the table beside the two letters  [my unposted letter to Manisha and her shocking letter to my boss  Avinash], close my eyes, and try to analyse the mystifying happenings of  this most eventful day of my life.
First Manisha’s letter asking Avinash to set me up with  some chic girl in Delhi so that I call off the marriage, instead of her,  become the villain of the piece, take the rap from family and friends  and look like a dirty jilting philandering rascal in everyone’s eyes,  while Manisha looks the poor victimized wronged all-suffering  sanctimonious goody-goody, besides saving her a guilt conscience.
And at the opportune moment our gallant knight in armour  Mr. Avinash Gokhale rushes in to rescue the devastated inconsolable  innocent damsel in distress and magnanimously proposes to marry her.
Only, this Mr. Avinash Gokhale is a dirtier rat one up on  her. He’s married, and is obviously hiding this from Manisha, at least  till now. And he’s not told his wife about Manisha either, or has he? 
And what’s this sudden urgent work in Pune which no one in  the office has a clue about? Devious cheat, making a jackass of everyone  while romancing in Pune at company expense! 
Suddenly I feel a premonition – that at this very moment  they are together – at some secluded place, having a romantic dinner, or  maybe…
I stop my train of thoughts and ring up Manisha. “Out of  coverage area,” says the recorded voice. My worst fears are confirmed.  Scheming scoundrels – both of them! And why the hell did Avinash give  his wife my number, without even bothering to tell me?  
In a flash, comprehension dawns on me. Avinash is setting  me up with his own wife Vibha! In connivance with his wily lady-love  Manisha. It’s truly disgusting! How low can anyone get?
“Okay friends,” I say to Avinash and Manisha in my mind’s  eye, “you want to play a double game? I’m game. Let’s play!”
I reach the airport well in time and take up a strong  tactical position where I can clearly observe the passengers coming out  of the arrival gate without being easily seen myself.
I recognize her at once without ever having seen her.  Stunningly attractive, a real beauty, smashing, sophisticated, elegant;  truly chic – my type of woman – optimally designed, precisely engineered  and finished to perfection. She looks so extraordinarily exquisite, so  tantalizing, so sensuous, so temptingly inviting, that I cannot take my  eyes off her. Suddenly she looks in my direction and realizes that I am  feasting my eyes on her. At first she gives me stern look, then seeing  the frank admiration in my eyes, she melts, her lovely, dark, expressive  eyes begin to dance and she gives me a smile so captivating that I  experience a delightful twinge in my heart.
“Excuse me,” someone is tapping my shoulder form behind.  Exasperatingly I turn around, glare at the podgy pedestrian suburban  unpretentious looking homely woman who has disturbed me and snap  angrily, “Yes. What is it?”
“Mr. Vijay Joshi?” she says grinning like a Cheshire cat,  “I am Vibha Gokhale. I told you I’ll recognize you, didn’t I?”
My Dear Reader, I have no words to describe my feelings at  that moment. I’ll only say this. Deflated. Yes, deflated! I’d never felt  so deflated before – or since!
Vibha Gokhale  peeps past me at the object of my attention, arches her eyebrows, and  says naughtily, “Aha, Mr. Vijay Joshi. So you thought that sexy dish  over there is me, is it?”
I swivel round,  then back, all confused, and stammer, “No, actually…”
“It’s okay.  You’re not the first one to wonder how a handsome hulk like Avinash  Gokhale married a Plain Jane like me,” she says, adjusting the hair pin  in her bun.
“No, No…” I  stammer in acute embarrassment.
“IIT,” she says.
“IIT?” I ask,  confused.
“Avinash wooed  me when we were classmates at IIT.”
I say nothing;  try to conjure up a contrived smile of polite geniality.
“You know how  ‘dry’ it used to be out there in IIT, isn’t it? The mirage! The  mirage!,” she says as if it is some secret joke, “When you are starved,  and thirsty, even a Plain Jane like me looks as if she is a Cleopatra…”  she laughs with such frank innocence that I instantly take a liking to  her. 
Now I break out  into a genuine friendly smile, amused in my mind’s eye about Avinash  Gokhale’s penchant for Plain Janes.
“Hey, what are  you thinking?” Vibha says, “Come, let’s collect my baggage and go home.”
“Yes, Ma’am,” I  say, remembering she is my boss’s wife.
“Hey, don’t  ‘Ma’am’ me!” she commands, “My name is Vibha. And I’ll call you Vijay.”
Soon we sit in  my car and I ask her, “Where to?”
“Where to? What  do you mean ‘Where to’? We’re going to your place, of course! I’m  staying with you, isn’t it?” she says with childlike naiveté. 
Probably seeing  my shocked expression on my face, she says, “You don’t want to take me  home? I thought it would be okay with you if I stayed over! Or should I  stay here, at the airport, or in some hotel? I don’t want to go all the  way to Avinash’s empty flat in NOIDA…”
“No, No. Of  course you’re most welcome to stay with me,” I say, “Only thing is that  I’m a bachelor.”
“I know,” she  says matter-of-factly.
“I stay alone…” I  stammer.
“Come on, shy  boy, drive on. I won’t eat you up,” she says vivaciously, and I begin  driving towards my house nearby in Vasant Vihar. 
We reach my  apartment and I open the door. I look at the wall clock – it’s almost  three in the morning. She looks around my small one room studio  apartment (an erstwhile decked up Barsati) and says, “A comfy,  cozy bachelor’s den – I like it!”
“If you want to  sleep you can sleep on the bed…”
“Hey, I’m dying  for a cup of coffee, then I’ll bathe, and then we’ll see – we’ve got the  full day ahead of us,” she says, walking towards the kitchenette.
“No, No,  please…”
“Come on, Vijay,  trust me. I make a decent cup of coffee, and I too live all alone like a  bachelor girl in Singapore  .  Just tell me where the things are.”
Together we make  coffee. 
We sit down and  talk. She is easy to talk to and my words come tumbling out. I tell her  everything about myself, well, almost everything!
“Any love life?”  she asks with a naughty conspiratorial look in her laughing eyes, at  once inviting and taunting.
“No,” I say,  “And you?”
“I told you –  Avinash, Avinash, Avinash! Thst’s all. And a long distance marriage,  pining for him, hoping that absence makes our hearts go fonder!”
I remain silent,  not knowing what to say.
“Vijay, I like  you,” she suddenly says with undisguised affection in her eyes.
“Like me?” I say  nonplussed.
“Yes. After a  long time I’ve met someone with whom I can be myself.”
“Me too,” I say,  and I genuinely mean it. I feel a soft tenderness for her, a warm  feeling of elation, but I quickly check my thoughts and hastily say,  “You’ll like to have a nice hot shower, won’t you?” for I believe that  thoughts can transmit themselves if they are strong enough.
“I’ll love to,”  she says, and I show her the bathroom. 
She comes out,  freshly bathed, wearing a slim nightie that is so revealing that she  might as well have worn nothing, but she conveys such innocence that it  is obvious that she has no inkling of this. She looks so pure, so  pristine, so desirable, and I realize that she’s not that plain looking  at all, in fact, she is quite appealing, sensuous in a natural sort of  way.
By instinct, and  almost against my will, my eyes linger, travel all over her body. The  transformation in her is amazing. Now she looks so wonderful, so  feminine, so tender, so alluring, and so new – a woman in full bloom.
“I’ve become a  little plump sitting on my haunches all day,” she says candidly, without  a trace of coyness, throwing away the towel wrapped around her head,  letting her luxuriant hair fall on her shoulders. She looks so  tantalizing that I feel a moment of alarm. Maybe we are unthinkingly  beginning something dangerous…so I blurt out, “I’ll have a shower too,”  and rush towards the bathroom.
I have a  soothing hot shower, and when I come out of the bathroom in my dressing  gown, I see Vibha reading Manisha’s ludicrous “love letter” to Avinash  Gokhale.
Oh, my God! I  curse myself. What a careless fool I have been to let those letters lie  on the table.
As she reads, I  stare at her, dumbstruck, not knowing what to do.
Suddenly she  turns and looks at me in incredulous despair.
“I can’t believe  this,” Vibha moans, “It’s horrible,” she sobs, “Everything’s collapsed  like a pack of cards,” she cries, “I invested my life in two things – my  marriage and my career –and look what I’ve got in return? My marriage  is a sham and my job – the two things I banked on, both have jilted me,  and all I am left with is myself.”
“Your career?  Your job? What happened?”
“It’s terrible,”  she says, “I’m going through a very bad patch. Last week I was demoted,  my junior promoted over my head,” she pauses, wipes her nose, “And I  this so-called conference at the Head Office in London   – it’s all a masquerade. I have  a feeling they are going to fire me, give me termination letter, have  an exit interview, settle my dues and tell me to go home.”
I listen  silently, say nothing.
“I’m feeling so  down,” she weeps. “I thought I’ll stop over, talk things over with  Avinash, find some solace in his arms, plan our future, and see what  happens! He does this!” she sobs holding out the letter.
“Maybe you can  talk to him, patch up…”
“Patch up…?” she  scorns mockingly, “A relationship in which the seeds of distrust have  been sown – such a relationship, I think it is better to sever it, break  it, terminate it permanently, than try to patch it up, isn’t it?”
I move my hands,  wanting to take her into my arms, console her, but hesitate, not  knowing what to do.
 “I’ll never  forgive him for this, for betraying me so terribly when I needed him the  most,” she screams, and then suddenly her flaming red eyes look at me  with such furious distress that I think she has gone raving mad.
“Please…”I say.
“Why didn’t you  tell me?” she asks hoarsely, waving the letter. I see tears trickling  down her cheeks. She covers her face with her hands, wildly shakes her  head, disheveling her hair.
I want to  comfort her. I touch her shoulder. She flashes her eyes at me through  the tangled strands of her hair, and suddenly the blazing fury in her  eyes collapses into incredulous despair.
“I loved him so  much! Why did he do this to me, why did he do this…?” she sobs  hysterically, wildly clutching my arms, totally breaking down, her knees  giving way.
I grab her, hold  her tight, and she slumps forward into my arms. Then she looks up into  my eyes, yearning, thirsty, ravishing. And suddenly, naturally,  instinctively, it happens. The most spontaneous, natural, beautiful and  passionate experience of my life. Spur of the moment, unplanned,  unforeseen frenzied love. Like a volcano. 
It’s wonderful,  lovely, exquisite. I feel good, cherished. But what about her? Vibha? Is  it spontaneous love? An explosion of fiery pent up passion? Or is it an  act of frenzy, rage, expiation?
I gradually come  into consciousness, my eyes heavy, my body overwhelmed by the  pleasurable sensation of lethargy in the aftermath of passion.  Everything looks blurred and slowly Vibha’s face comes into focus.
“Vibha. I’m so…”
She gently puts  her hand on my mouth and says, “It was lovely.” Then she lovingly  ruffles my hair with her fingers. I close my eyes, snuggle up to her,  and let her ruffle my hair. The emotion that comes to me is compassion  for what we have done; never before have I felt such tenderness.
It’s almost noon  by the time we are ready. We’ve still got most of the weekend ahead of  us.
“What shall we  do?” I ask Vibha, “Movie, shopping, sightseeing…whatever you want...”
“Let’s  disappear,” Vibha says roguishly.
“Disappear?”
“Yes, Vijay,  let’s just disappear, vanish into thin air, where no one will find us.”
“Where?”
“Anywhere, far  away from this suffocating life,” she says, “Come Vijay, let’s head for  the hills, breathe some new pure fresh air, cleanse the cobwebs, the  demons from our minds.”
“Your flight? London  ?”
“I’ll cancel  it.” She calls up, cancels her flight to London  .
Then Vibha gives  me her cell-phone, and says, “Switch it off and lock up this leash  somewhere. Your mobile too. We don’t want to be tracked down, do we?”
“But…?”
“To hell with  world - let them stew in suspense.”
I put the mobile  phones in a drawer. 
“What about  these?” I point to the two letters lying on the table – My unposted  letter to Manisha, in the envelope, and Manisha’a pathetic love letter  to Avinash, tear-stained, crumpled.
Vibha opens my  unposted letter to Manisha, reads it and just tears it up, shreds it to  pieces.
“What…?” I  shout, taken aback.
“This flotsam  and jetsam; memories of betrayal – better get rid of it,” she says,  shredding the other letter too. “No point carrying useless painful  baggage of the past.”
 “Come,” she  says taking my hand, “Let’s get away from all this. Be free. We both  need to breathe some fresh air.”
And so we  disappear. 
At sunset we sit  together, all by ourselves on the precipice, relishing the breathtaking  spectacle of the delightful dance of the panoply of colours on the  awesome vista in front of us as the soothing orange sun plays  hide-and-seek behind the snow capped peaks of the Himalayas, and then  disappearing below the horizon and lighting up sky with vanishing  crimson rays, streaks slowly dissolving in the enveloping grayness of  twilight.
I feel wonderful, my spirits uplifted, my  head in the clouds after savoring this inspiring soul-elevating feast  for the eyes, I turn towards Vibha, cup her face in my hands and drown  myself deep into her eyes. I can sense her finger-tips caressing the  nape of my neck. The debris of the past has disappeared and a fresh new  life is about to begin. I know that I have discovered my true love, my  enduring love. 
VIKRAM KARVE
 Copyright © Vikram Karve  2010 
Vikram Karve has  asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to  be identified as the author of this work.
VIKRAM KARVE educated at IIT Delhi, ITBHU and The Lawrence School Lovedale, is an Electronics and Communications Engineer by profession, a Human Resource Manager and Trainer by occupation, a Teacher by vocation, a Creative Writer by inclination and a Foodie by passion. An avid blogger, he has written a number of fiction short stories and creative non-fiction articles in magazines and journals for many years before the advent of blogging. His delicious foodie blogs have been compiled in a book "Appetite for a Stroll". Vikram lives in Pune with his family and pet Doberman girl Sherry, with whom he takes long walks thinking creative thoughts. 
Vikram Karve Creative Writing Blog - http://vikramkarve.sulekha.com  
Professional Profile of Vikram Karve - http://www.linkedin.com/in/karve  
Email: vikramkarve@sify.com
Links to my creative writing blog and profile
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