DT
DELIRIUM TREMENS 
 Fiction Short Story 
 By 
 VIKRAM KARVE  
 From my Creative Writing Archives:
 Here is a rather old fashioned fiction short story written by me sometime  in the 1990s.
 I trust you will like the story, Dear Reader, and give me  your feedback and comments.
 
 The moment I see Muthu, the office-boy, standing at the door of the class room I feel a familiar fear.
   I        close my eyes and try to concentrate on Ms Bhalla who is reading      aloud   with dramatic effect Ruskin Bond’s story ‘The Woman on   Platform    8’.  It’s  a moving story about a brief encounter between a   woman and a     motherless  boy. 
                     I love short stories, especially Ruskin Bond, and Ms. Bhalla is  my       favourite teacher. But it’s no use. I can’t hear a word she is    saying.  
                    I open my eyes. Ms Bhalla is in a world of her own, reading away,      book   in her left hand and making gestures with her right. She   hasn’t     noticed  Muthu, or the fact that almost everyone in the class   are     looking at him  and not at her. So thoroughly is she absorbed   in herself     and so totally  is she oblivious of her surroundings  that  no one  dare    disturb her. 
                   “………..I watched her until she was lost in the milling crowd,” Ms       Bhalla  ends the story with a flourish and looks at us triumphantly    only    to  discover that most of her students are looking towards  the   door.    Her  expression starts changing. 
            Before she gets angry someone says, “It is Muthu, ma’am.”
Ms Bhalla glares at poor Muthu who sheepishly walks in and gives her the chit he is holding in his hand.
 Ms Bhalla glares at poor Muthu who sheepishly walks in and gives her the chit he is holding in his hand.
                  I look down into my notebook trying to keep my mind blank, but   even      without seeing I know that Ms Bhalla is looking at me.   “Shanta, go  to     the principal’s office,” she says, “and take your   bag with you.” 
          Take my bag with me? I feel scared, anxious. I hope it’s not too serious. 
                 “Must be a big binge this time,” I hear Rita’s voice behind me.     Tears    start to well up in my eyes. Rita is from such a happy  family.    Why is    she so mean and nasty? 
           I’m about to break down when I feel Lata’s reassuring hand on my wrist, “Let’s go, Shanta. I’ll bring your bag.” 
                   We walk through the silent corridors. Our school is located in  one    of    those ancient castle type buildings - cold, dark and  gloomy. 
          “I shouldn’t have left him alone last night,” I say.
           “I feel so sad for uncle,” Lata says.
                   “Whenever I’m there with him, he’s okay and controls himself. He      loves   me so much. I’m the only one he’s got in this world - after      mummy  died.”  
           “He was improving so much and looked so good last weekend,” Lata says.
           Lata        is my true friend who I can open my heart to. The others - they     watch    from a distance. Most look at me with pity. And a few like  Rita    with  an   evil delight at my misfortune. 
                 “Something must have happened yesterday,” I say. “I wish I had   gone      home last night. It’s in the evenings that he needs me the   most.” 
          “Shanta, you want me to come,” Lata asks. 
           “Yes,” I say. I really need some moral support. Facing the cruel world all alone. I can’t bear it any longer. 
             Ms. David, our class-teacher, is standing outside the principal’s office. I follow her in. 
                    I nervously enter the principal’s office. The principal, Mrs.     Nathan,    is talking to a lady sitting opposite her. Noticing me she     says, “Ah,    Shanta. You daddy’s not well again. He’s admitted in the     clinic  again.   You take the ten o’clock shuttle. And ring me up if   you   want  anything.” 
            “Can I go with her?” Lata asks.
             “You go back to class,” the principal says sternly, “you’ve got a mathematics test at 10 o’clock haven’t you?” 
                    “Please Miss!” Lata pleads with Ms David, our class teacher,   but Ms      David says, “Lata you are in the ninth standard now. Be   serious  about     your studies. And today afternoon is the basketball   final. How  can  you    be absent?” 
            I feel pain in the interiors of my mind. No one ever tells me to be serious about studies; or even sports. 
             Lata gives me my school-bag and leaves quickly. 
                    Mrs Nathan takes off her glasses and looks at me. There is     compassion    in her eyes. “Be brave, Shanta,” she says. “This is Ms.     Pushpa - an    ex-student of our school.” 
            “Good morning, ma’am,” I say.
             “Hello, Shanta.” Ms. Pushpa says. “I’m also taking the train to Coonoor. We’ll travel together.” 
                    As we leave the principal’s office I can feel the piercing looks   of      pity burning into me. The teachers, the staff, even the   gardener.      Everyone knows. And they know that I know that they know.   Morose  faces     creased with lines of compassion. The atmosphere of   pity. The   deafening    silence. It’s grotesque, terrible. I just want   to get away   from the    place. These people - they just don’t   understand that I  want  empathy;    not sympathy. 
                   I walk with Ms. Pushpa taking the short-cut to Lovedale railway        station. It’s cold, damp and the smell of eucalyptus fills my   nostrils.  A     typical winter morning in the Nilgiris. 
                    I look at Ms. Pushpa. She looks so chic. Blue jeans, bright red        pullover, fair creamy flawless complexion, jet-black hair neatly  tied   in     a bun, dark Ray-Ban sunglasses of the latest style. A    good-looking     woman with smart feminine features. Elegant.    Fashionable. Well  groomed. 
             We walk in silence. I wait for her to start the conversation. I don’t know how much she knows. 
             “You’re in Rose house, aren’t you?” she asks looking at the crest on my blazer. 
             Polite conversation. Asking a question to which you already know the answer! 
            “Yes ma’am,” I answer.
            “I too was in Rose house,” she says.
            “When did you pass out, ma’am?” I ask.
            “1990,” she says.
                    I do a quick mental calculation. In 1990 suppose she was 16. Now    she     must be in her mid-thirties – 35, 36 maybe. She certainly  looks    young    for her age. And she is very beautiful; so gorgeous,  so chic,    that I    want to be like her when I grow up. 
              We cross the tracks and reach the solitary platform of the lovely yet lonely Lovedale railway station. 
             “Let me buy your ticket. You’re going to Coonoor aren’t you?” she asks.
             “Thank you ma’am. I’ve got a season ticket,” I say.
             “Season ticket?” she asked surprised.
             “I’m a day scholar, ma’am. I travel every day from Coonoor,” I say.
              “Oh! In our time it was strictly a boarding school,” she says.
                     “Even now it is, ma’am,” I say. “I’ve got special permission. My       father  doesn’t keep well. I have to look after him.”            
             “Oh, yes,” she says, and walks towards the deserted booking window. 
                     Lovedale is the most picturesque railway station on the Nilgiri        Mountain Railway but today it looks gloomy, desolate.
  One has to be happy inside for things to look beautiful outside. 
             She returns with her ticket and we sit on the solitary bench on the lonely platform of Lovedale railway station.
             “Where do you stay ma’am?” I ask.
             “Bangalore,” she says. “You’ve been there?”
             “Yes”
             “Often?”
             “Only once. Last month. For my father’s treatment,” I say.            
                     She asks the question I am waiting for, “Shanta. Tell me. Your      father?   What’s wrong with him? What’s he suffering from?” 
                     I have never really understood why people ask me this question to       which  I suspect they already know the answer. Each probably has   their     own  reason. Curiosity, lip-sympathy, genuine concern,   sadistic     pleasure! At  first I used to feel embarrassed, try to   cover up, mask,     and give all  sorts of explanations. But now I have   learnt that it is     best to be blunt  and straightforward. 
             “He is an alcoholic,” I say.
                   Most people shut up after this. Or change the topic of    conversation.     But Ms. Pushpa pursues, “It must be terrible living    with him. He  must  be   getting violent?”            
              “No,” I say trying to suppress my emotion. “With me papa is very gentle. He loves me a lot.”
                     Tears well up in my eyes and my nose feels heavy. I take out my        handkerchief. I feel her comforting arm around my shoulder and know   her      concern is genuine. 
                    Suddenly the station bell rings, I hear the whistle and the blue        mountain “Toy Train” streams into the platform. They still use  steam       engines here on the Nilgiri mountain railway.
  The        train is almost empty. It’s off-season, there are no tourists,  and    in    any case this train is never crowded as it returns to  Coonoor    after    transporting all the office-goers to Ooty. 
                     We sit opposite each other in an empty compartment. She still    hasn’t     taken off her dark sunglasses even though it is overcast and    it  begins    to drizzle.
             She looks at her watch. I look at mine. 10 AM. Half-an-hour’s journey to Coonoor. 
              “You came today morning, ma’am?” I ask.
              “No. Last evening. I stayed with Monica David. Your class teacher. We were classmates.” 
              What a difference! Miss David is so schoolmarmish. And Ms. Pushpa so mod and chic and gorgeous. 
 But I better be careful what I say. After all, classmates are classmates. 
              The train begins its journey and soon Ketti valley comes into view. 
              “There used to be orchards down there. Now there are buildings,” she says. 
              “You’ve come after a long time?” I ask.
              “Yes. It’s been almost eighteen years. I am returning here the first time since I passed out,” she says.
              “For some work? Children’s admission?”
             “No, No,” she bursts out laughing, “I’m single. Happily unmarried.”
              “I’m sorry,” I say, contrite.
              “Come        on, Shanta. It’s Okay,” she says. “I’ve come for some work in      Coonoor.   Just visited the school for old times’ sake.” 
             “You must come during Founder’s day. You’ll meet everyone,” I say. 
                   “Yes,” she says. “All these years I was abroad. America,  Singapore,      Manila, Europe. Now that I’m in Bangalore, I’ll  definitely make  it.” 
              “You work?” I ask.
              “Yes. In an MNC.”
                    She must be an MBA from a top business school. Like IIM. Or maybe      even   Harvard. Wish I could be like her. Independent. Smart.   Elegant.      Successful. I certainly have the talent. But what about   papa? Who  will     look after him? 
                    I try not to think of the future. It all looks so bleak,   uncertain.      Better not think of it. I don’t even know what awaits me   at the   clinic.    Just a few minutes more. It’s unbearable - the   tension. Why   do I have   to  go through all this? 
                    She’s looking out of the window. It’s grey and cold. Dark clouds.     But    she still wears her dark sunglasses. Hasn’t taken them off  even    once.  
                    Suddenly we enter the Ketti tunnel. It’s pitch dark. The smell of       steam  and smoke. It’s warm. Comforting. I close my eyes. 
                     The train whistles. Slows down. I open my eyes. She’s still   wearing      dark glasses. Maybe she too has something to hide. And me.   What I   want    to hide, everyone knows; but makes a pretence of not   knowing. At   least    in my presence. 
                     The train stops at Ketti. On the platform there is a group of    girls,    my  age. They are in a jovial mood; giggling, eyes dancing,    faces    beaming,  so carefree and happy. Their happiness hurts me deep    down in    my heart. 
                    The girls don’t get in. Dressed in track-suits, and Ketti valley       school  blazers, they are probably waiting for the up train to Ooty       which  crosses here. Must be going for the basketball match. 
             A girl with a familiar face walks up to me with her friend.
              “Not playing?” she asks.
              “No,” I say.
             “I wish we knew. We wouldn’t have gone so early to practice,” she says.
              “Who’s captaining?” her friend asks.
             “Lata maybe. I don’t know,” I say.
              “Where are you going?”
              “Coonoor.”
              “Coonoor?”
              “My father is in hospital. He’s not well.”
              “Oh! Hope he gets well soon. Okay bye.”
                     The girls walk away whispering to each other. And I hear the   hushed      voice of the one I’ve met for the first time, “Poor thing.” 
                     “Poor thing.” The words pierce through my heart. “Poor thing.”  The       words echo in the interiors of my mind. “Poor thing!” “Poor   thing!”      “Poor thing!” The resonance is deafening. I feel I’m going   mad. I  feel     Ms. Pushpa’s hand on mine. A slight pressure.   Comforting. 
              The up train going up to Ooty comes, the girls get in, and train leaves towards Lovedale. 
                     Our engine’s whistle shrieks, our train starts moving. Outside it        starts to rain. We close the windows. The smallness of the    compartment     forces us into a strange intimacy. 
              “I’ll come with you to the hospital,” Ms. Pushpa says. 
                     I know she means well, but nowadays I hate to depend on the    kindness    of  strangers; so I reply, “Thank you ma’am, but I’ll    manage. I’m  used   to  it.” 
              “Is your father often like this?” she asks. 
                     Why is she asking me all this? It seems genuine compassion. Or    maybe     she has her own troubles and talking to even more troubled    people  like    me makes her own troubles go away. 
                     I decide to give her every thing in one go. “When I am there he’s       okay.  He controls himself. He loves me more than his drink. Last    night I     stayed at the hostel to study for a test. And he must have    felt   lonely   and hit the bottle. I shouldn’t have left him alone.    After   mummy’s  gone I  am the only one he’s got, and he’s the only  one   I’ve   got.” I  pause and I  say, “He was improving so much.  Something   must   have  happened last  evening. Something disturbing!  He must  have  got   upset -  really badly  upset.” 
             “I’m so sorry,” she says. Her tone is apologetic as if she were responsible in some way. 
                     “Why should you feel sorry, ma’am. It’s my fate. I’ve to just  find     out   what’s upset him. And see it doesn’t happen again. Maybe    somebody     visited him, passed some hurting remark. He’s very    sensitive.” 
              Her expression changes slightly. She winces. “Does he tell you everything?” she asks. 
             “Of course he tells me everything,” I say, “There are no secrets between us. I’m his best friend.” 
             “I wish I could help you in some way,” she says. 
                     I don’t say anything. I close my eyes. What a fool I have been,    I’ve     told her everything. And I know nothing about her. Not even  the    colour    of her eyes - she hasn’t even once taken off her dark     sunglasses even    once though it is quite misty – I wonder why. 
 How        cleverly she’s manipulated the conversation. Maybe people who are       happy  and successful feel good listening to other people’s  sorrows.  
                     I feel stifled. I open my eyes and the window. A shrill whistle   and    we   pass through a gorge. Noise, steam, smoke, and suddenly it    becomes    sunny  and the train begins to slow down. 
              “We’ve reached,” I say. We get down on the platform at Coonoor. 
              “I’ll come with you,” she says.            
              “Thanks. But it’s okay. I’ll go by myself.” 
              “Sure?”
             “I’m sure, thanks.”       
                     Ms. Pushpa takes off her dark sunglasses and looks at me. I see   her      eyes for the first time. A shiver passes through me as I look   into   her    eyes. They are greenish-grey. She’s got cat-eyes, dazzling   cat   eyes.    Exactly like mine. Yes her eyes are exactly like mine.
 I stare into her eyes mesmerized – as if I am looking into my own eyes. 
              Suddenly she takes me in her arms and hugs me in a tight embrace.
              Stunned, I struggle, feeling acutely uncomfortable.
              She releases me and I just stand there feeling numb, confused. 
              The whistle shrieks. I come to my senses. Look up at her. Her eyes are red and tears flow down her cheeks. 
              Suddenly she puts on her sunglasses, turns and walks away. 
                     As I walk towards the hospital I think about my brief encounter    with    Ms  Pushpa, her rather strange behaviour. It’s certainly not  one   of    those  hail fellow – well met types of time-pass  conversations   between     co-passengers. But suddenly she’s gone and I  don’t know   anything  about    her. She hasn’t even given me her card,  address,   phone,  nothing. It  all   happened so fast. 
             I        reach the clinic. Well laid-out. Neat. Spick and span. Anesthetic        smell. An air of discipline. I walk through the corridor. I know    where     to go. 
              “Yes?” a voice says from behind.
              I turn around. It’s a matron. I’ve never seen her before. Her eyes are hard, pitiless. 
                     I tell her who I am. Her expression changes. Lines of compassion      begin   to crease her face. But still, her face has something  terrible     written   on it. 
             I smile. I have learnt to smile even when I feel like weeping.
             I enter the room. Papa is lying on the solitary bed. He looks okay. His eyes are closed. 
             “Papa,” I say softly.
                     He opens his eyes. “Shanta! Come to me,” he says. I rush to his    bed.    He  hugs me tightly, “Don’t go Shanta. Don’t leave me and go    away,”  he    cries. 
              “Don’t cry papa. I’ll always be with you. I’ll never leave you alone again,” I say, tears rolling down my checks. 
                     We both cry copiously. Time stands still. I sense the presence of        people in the room. Apart from the matron, there is the  comforting   face     of Dr. Ghosh and a young doctor in white coat,  stethoscope   around  his    neck. 
             “Can I take him home?” I ask.
              “Of course,” Dr. Ghosh says.” He’s okay now.”
              “But sir,” the young doctor protests and says, “He’s hallucinating….”
                     “It’s okay,” Dr. Ghosh interrupts giving him a sharp look.  “Shanta       knows how to look after him; like a mother. Isn’t it  Shanta?” 
              “Yes,” I say.            
                    Papa gives sheepish look. That’s what I like about Dr. Ghosh. The     way    he gets his message across. There is no need for him to   reprimand    papa.   Especially in front of me. My papa’s own remorse is   his own    worst   reprimand. 
             We talk in silence. I don’t ask him any thing. He’ll tell me when he wants to. 
            “You’re hungry?” he asks.
             “Yes,” I say. It’s almost noon.
                     Soon we sit at the Garden Restaurant overlooking Sim’s Park. He     takes    his hands out of the overcoat pockets and picks up the menu     card. His    hands tremble. DT. Delirium Tremens. Withdrawal symptoms.     Must have  had a   prolonged bout of drinking last night. I know  what  to   do. Just  in  case.  I don’t want him to turn cold turkey. 
                   “Papa, you order,” I say and pick up my school bag and briskly   walk      across the road to the wine shop. On seeing me the owner puts a    small     bottle of brandy in a brown paper bag and gives it to me. I    put in  my    school bag. No words are exchanged. No permit is   required.  It  doesn’t    matter that I’m a 14 year old schoolgirl. He   knows.  Everyone  knows.    Pity. Compassion.
              But I know that unseen eyes see, and tongues I cannot hear will wag. 
              The silence. It’s grotesque. Deafening. Unbearable.
              As I give him a hundred-rupee note, the owner asks, “Saab - I hope he’s okay.” 
                     I nod. I don’t seem to have a private life anymore. Unsolicited        sympathy is a burden I find difficult to carry nowadays.
              Papa has ordered Chinese food. My favourite. He has a nip of brandy. His hands become steady. We start eating.
             “She wants to take you away from me,” he says.
              “Who wants take me away? I don’t understand,” I say perplexed.
              “Yes. She’s going to take you away. She came last evening.”
             “Who?”
              “Your mother.”
                     I feel a strange sensation in my stomach. The food becomes    tasteless    in  my mouth. It seems he’s reached the final stage.    Hallucinations.     Loneliness. Driving him insane. He’s seeing images    of mummy now. The     point of no return. Fear drills into my vitals. 
              “Please papa. Mummy is dead. You’re hallucinating again.” I say.
              “She came last evening. Wanted your custody.”
              “Custody? What are you talking?”
              “Yes. She wants to take you away from me.”
              “Who?”
              “Your birthmother.”
              “Birthmother?”
              “Yes.”
              “But mummy?”
              “Don’t delve too much.” 
                     In the evening we sit on the lawns of the club waiting for my        birthmother. I feel like a volcano about to erupt. Daddy sits with  his       head in his hands; nervous, scared. Dr. Ghosh looks away into  the       distance, as if he’s in our group but not a part of it. I  wonder  what’s      his role in all this. 
                     And opposite me is that hideous woman with suspiciously black   hair.      Mrs. Murthy. The social worker from the child welfare   department.
                     Social work indeed! Removing adopted children from happy homes  and       forcibly returning them to their biological parents who had    abandoned     them in the first place. 
                     And this birthmother of mine. I hate her without even knowing  her.       First she abandons me. And then after fourteen long years she    emerges     from nowhere with an overflowing love and concern for me.    ‘My papa is  a    dangerous man,’ she decides. It’s unsafe for me to    live with him.  So   she  wants to take me away into the unknown. 
              “Don’t worry,” Mrs. Murthy the social worker says,” Everything will be okay.” 
                     Yes. Everything will be okay. Papa will land up in an asylum.  I’ll    be    condemned to spend the rest of my life with a woman I  hate. Our    lives    will be ruined. Great social service will be done.  Yes.    Everything  will   be okay. 
              Papa is silent. Scared. He’s been warmed by Dr. Ghosh. No outbursts. It’ll only worsen the case. 
                     And me. I’m only a minor. They’ll decide what is good for me. Of       course  they’ll take my views into consideration. I can see my  world       disintegrating in front of me. 
              We sit in silence. Six-thirty. Seven. The longest half-hour of my life. 
                     “She said she’ll be here at six-thirty sharp,” Mrs. Murthy says,      “I’ll   check up.” She pulls out her cell phone. Signal’s weak. She      walks to  the  reception.
             We wait. And gradually, a depressing and frightening darkness envelopes.
                     Mrs. Murthy returns. There’s urgency in her step. “Her cell phone    is     switched off. I rang up the hotel,” she says, “It’s strange.  She     checked   out in the afternoon. Hired a taxi to Bangalore.    It’s   funny.   She hasn’t even bothered to leave a message for me.”  Mrs.     Murthy is   disappointed and says angrily, “After all the  trouble I have     taken.   She just goes away without even informing  me. She promised    she’ll  be   here at six-thirty sharp.”
              Looking perturbed, Mrs. Murthy leaves, promising to check up and let us know. 
              After she leaves, Dr. Ghosh says to my father, “Come on. Let’s have a drink.” 
              “No,” my papa says,” I don’t need a drink.”
              “Sure?”
              “Absolutely sure.”
              We take leave of Dr. Ghosh and begin walking home.
              “Papa?”
              “Yes.”
                     “This woman…my ‘birthmother’…Does she have       cat-eyes…greenish-grey…Like  my eyes…Tell me…Papa…Does she have cat eyes       like me?”
                     “Don’t delve too much!” Papa says lovingly as he puts his    protective     arm around me and we walk together into the enveloping    darkness. 
                As we walk together in a newfound harmony, I      think of the gorgeous  woman with the dazzling cat eyes and suddenly  I     see the flashing  lights of the evening Toy Train meandering up  the     silhouettes of  the dark hills in the distance.
 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., 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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