THE DEAD END
 Short Fiction – A Story
 By
 VIKRAM KARVE
 From my Creative Writing Archives: 
 I wrote this short story sometime in the mid 1990s. 
 Then, it was highly appreciated.  Now? You tell me.
 I think this story is quite relevant even today.
 Manjunath was a contended man. 
 He   was the  proud  owner of a coconut grove, more than a hundred trees,   located on  the  most picturesque stretch of the western coast, skirting   the Arabian   Sea. The land was fertile and the yield was excellent. 
 Every    morning,  along with his wife and two sons, Manjunath would cast his    fishing nets  into the gentle waters of Baicol Bay, and in the  evening,   when he  pulled in his nets with the receding tide, the catch  would be   adequate,  if not substantial.
 I   loved  Baicol  Bay. It was a most beautiful and pristine place by the   sea and  sunset,  on the western coast, was a special event. 
 So   every  evening,  I went for a jog on the soft unspoilt beach, and  after  a swim  in the  crystal-clear waters, I relaxed on the sands,  beholding  the   fascinating, yet soothing, spectacle of the mighty  orange sun  being   devoured under the horizon of the sea. 
 As darkness enveloped, Manjunath would gently appear by my side with a tender coconut in hand. 
 At that moment, there was nothing more refreshing than sweet coconut water.
 The   year was  1980  and I was a fresh, young and idealistic Indian Police   Service  (IPS)  Officer, on my first posting, as Assistant   Superintendent of  Police  (ASP) of this lovely coastal district. 
 The   air was  fresh  and unpolluted and the weather was temperate. There  was  no railway   line, no industries, and no noise. The district   headquarters was a   one-street town. Everybody knew everybody, the   people were peace-loving,   and in the prevailing climate of   contentment, it was no surprise that   the crime-rate was almost zero. 
 One day, my boss, the Superintendent of Police (SP) took me to an important meeting in the District Collector’s office. 
 As   I heard  the  words of the Collector, I experienced a deep sense of   distress. A   notification had been issued and a mammoth Steel Plant had   been   sanctioned in the Baicol Bay area. Land Acquisition was the   immediate   top priority. The police were to ensure that there was no   law and order   problem.
 “But   why  can’t  they locate the Steel Plant somewhere else?” I protested.   “This  lovely  palace will be ruined. And where will the people go?”
 At   first,  the  Collector appeared dumbstruck by my interruption. Then he   glowered  at  me with a fierce and threatening stare. I avoided his  gaze  and looked   around the room. Everyone was looking at me in a  curious  manner. My   boss, the SP, was desperately gesturing to me to  keep  quiet.
 “I wonder whose side you are on?” the Collector snapped angrily, still giving me an intimidating glare.
 “Don’t    worry,  Sir,” the SP spoke, addressing the Collector. “There will be   no   problems. The people here are a docile lot. Everything shall   proceed   smoothly.”
 When   we were   driving back to our office, the SP said, “Joshi, you better   tame your   tongue and watch what you say, especially in front of   others.”
 “Sir,   you  please  tell me. Isn’t this injustice? We pay them a pittance for   their  fertile  land. And then evict them from their habitat, and   destroy the  beauty  of this place, just because someone decides to set   up a set up a  Steel  Plant here.”
 “It’s   in the   national interest, Joshi. Why don’t you try and understand.   Everyone   shall be properly rehabilitated with a job and a house and   also get a   compensation.”
 “Come   on,  sir,” I  argued. “You know where we are going to relocate them.   The   rehabilitation camp is more than twenty kilometres away from the   sea   front. And we are putting them into small overcrowded   multi-storeyed   tenements, which are at complete variance from their   ethos. These people   are used to open spaces, fresh air, and most   important – the   waterfront, the sea.”
 “That’s    enough,  Joshi,” the SP said angrily. “Your job is to carry out my    orders. I  want you to take personal charge of this operation. The task    must be  completed smoothly and on schedule. Is that clear?”
 “Yes, sir,” I replied meekly.
 That   evening  I  held a meeting with the affected villagers. Manjunath was   sitting in   the first row, right in front of me. I spoke of  patriotism,  sacrifice   for the “national cause” and the prosperity the  Steel Plant  would bring   into their lives. 
 To   my utter   surprise, there was no resistance. Everyone seemed   convinced, I think   because they where simple people who believed every   word I said, but to   my own self, my own words sounded insincere and I   felt acutely   uncomfortable.
 And so the operation began. 
 Awe-struck,     Manjunath saw the might of the government on display. He watched  with    tears in his eyes, columns of police standing by, while  bulldozers    destroyed his beloved coconut grove. 
 A    few days later  Manjunath stood before the employment officer. The    employment officer  was in a foul mood. “These illiterate buggers get    jobs on a platter  while my matriculate brother-in-law rots unemployed   in  city,” he  complained, “I had promised my wife that I would wrangle   at  least a Class IV job for him out here.” 
 “Hold   your   tongue,” said the rehabilitation officer. “These so-called   ‘illiterate   buggers’, as you call them, were land-owners, displaced   from their own   land.”
 “Okay,   okay.   Don’t get hot,” the employment officer said to the   rehabilitation   officer. Then he looked at Manjunath and curtly asked   him, “Do you   posses any special skills?”
 Manjunath could not comprehend, so he just stood silent. 
 In an exasperated manner, the employment officer snapped, “We haven’t got all day. Tell me. What can you do?”
 “Coconuts,” Manjunath answered.
 “Coconuts?”
 “Yes, Sir. Coconuts.”
 “What else?”
 “Fish.”
 “Fish   and   Coconuts, eh! You’ll see plenty of them,” the employment officer   said.   He wrote the word ‘cook’ beside Manjunath’s name in the   register. 
 And   so, at  one  stroke, Manjunath was transformed, from land-owner into a   cook,  first  in the ramshackle canteen for construction workers and   later in  the  huge industrial canteen of the Steel Plant. 
 But    Manjunath was  lucky. At least he had become a cook. Most others   became  Unskilled  Labourers because the skills they possessed, like   farming and  fishing,  were not relevant as far as the Steel Plant was   concerned. 
 And   so  almost all  the “skilled” workers – the tradesmen, all the  welders,   fitters,  machinists, electricians etc. – they all came from  outside,   from  faraway places, the cities and the urban areas. And the   complexion  of  the place began to change. 
 Soon    I stooped  going for my daily evening jog to Baicol beach, for now it    was littered  with debris from the construction work and the air was  no   longer pure,  but polluted by fumes and dust and the noise was    unbearable. 
 And, of course, now there would be no Manjunath waiting for me with a tender coconut in hand. 
 So   when my   transfer came, I felt relieved and happy, for I no longer   loved the   place and, more so, because it was getting painful to see   the beginning   of the systematic metamorphosis of a beautiful natural   paradise into a   huge monster of concrete and steel.
 When   I  returned  after fifteen long years, the place had change beyond    recognition. The  gigantic steel plant, the railway line, the new port,    the industries,  the ‘fruits’ of liberalization and the signs of    prosperity, modern  buildings adorned by adjoining slums, filth and    polluted air, all types  of vehicles clogging the roads, restaurants and    bars, the noise and  even most of the people looked alien.
 As we drove down to the police headquarters, the SP said, “It’s not the same place when you were here, sir.”
 “The crime-rate was zero then,” I said. “What has gone wrong?”
 “There are two types of people now, Sir – the liberalised Indian and the marginalised Indian.”
 “And us!”
 “And us,” he laughed, “yes, sir, and us trying to sort the whole thing out.”
 I   was head  of the  crime branch at the state police headquarters and  had  been sent  down  to investigate a series of bizarre murders. A few   bigwigs were  waylaid,  had their heads chopped off and their headless   bodies dumped  outside  their houses. It had created such a scare that   my boss had  rushed me  down.
 The car stopped. I recognized the place at once. 
 “The common thread, sir,” the SP said. “All the victims lived in this luxury residential enclave.”
 “I   knew this   place,” I said, feeling a tinge of nostalgia. “There used   to be a   coconut grove here. This place was acquired for the steel   plant. But now   I see that it is just outside the perimeter wall. I   wonder why they   excluded this area.” 
 “Must   be the   environment stipulations, sir,” the SP mumbled, “the two   hundred meter   zone or something. They must have de-notified it.”
 “Don’t   give  me  bullshit!” I shouted. “Then how the hell has this posh   residential   complex come up here? And if they didn’t want the land for   the steel   plant then why wasn’t this land returned back to the   original owners?”
 “Sir, land which was sold by the acre in your time, fifteen years ago, is now priced the same per square foot.”
 “The fruits of progress, is it?” I snapped. 
 I   could see  that  the SP was getting confused by my unexpected line of   investigation,  and  he was getting a bit scared too, for I was a DIG.   So I decided to  put  him at ease.
 “Tell me, Pandey,” I said patronizingly. “What were you before joining the IPS?”
 “An Engineer, Sir. From IIT, Delhi.”
 I   wasn’t   surprised. Engineers, even doctors, were joining the IAS and   IPS   nowadays. I looked at the SP and said, “Let me explain in a way   you will   understand.” 
 Pandey was looking at me intently. 
 I paused, and asked him. “Do you know what’s a system?”
 “Yes, sir,” he answered.
 “Every    system has  a natural rhythm,” I said, “take this place for example.   All  the  people here in this system, farmers, fishermen, everyone,  they  all  had a  natural rhythm of life which perfectly matched the  rhythm  of this   place. And there was harmony. Then suddenly we disturb  the  system. We   drastically change the rhythm of the place. Create a   mismatch. And when   the people can’t cope up, we call them   ‘marginalised Indians’ – as you   put it.”
 Pandey    looked  thoroughly confused, so I avoided further rhetoric and came    straight to  the point, “You are looking for a motive, isn’t it,   Pandey?”
 “Yes, Sir,” he said.
 “Okay,    consider  this. You own some fertile land. We forcibly acquire it,    mouthing  platitudes like ‘national interest’, ‘patriotism’ etc. Then we    sit on  your land for fifteen long years while you are reduced from  an   owner to  a labourer. And then, one fine day, you find that your   beloved  land  been grabbed by some land-sharks from the city. What   would you do?”
 The SP did not reply.
 “Do   one  thing,  Pandey,” I said. “There’s a man called Manjunath. He   probably  works as a  cook in the Steel Plant canteen. Bring him to me.   He may have  some  clue and maybe he will give us a lead.”
 In my mind’s eye I was thinking how to get Manjunath off the hook.
 An   hour  later the  SP came rushing into the police headquarters. He   looked dazed,  as if  he had been pole-axed. “The guy went crazy,” he   stammered. “When  the  police party approached him, he was chopping   coconuts with a sharp   sickle. Suddenly he slashed his own neck. He   died on the way to   hospital. There’s blood everywhere.”
 In   the  morgue,  looking at Manjunath’s dead body the SP commented, “Look   at the   expression on his face, sir. He looks so content.”
 “Yes,” I said. “He’s reached the dead end.”
 VIKRAM KARVE
 Copyright © Vikram Karve 2011
 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., all rights reserved.
 If you liked this story you will love the stories in COCKTAIL - my book of short stories about relationships. To know more please click the links below:
 VIKRAM KARVE     educated at IIT Delhi, ITBHU Varanasi, The Lawrence School Lovedale,     and Bishop's School Pune, 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". A collection of   his short stories about relationships titled COCKTAIL     has been published and Vikram is currently busy writing his first    novel  and with his teaching and training assignments. Vikram lives in    Pune  with his family and his muse – his pet DobermanX girl Sherry,  with   whom  he takes long walks thinking creative thoughts. 
 COCKTAIL - Stories about Relationships by Vikram Karve 
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