Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

COCKTAIL Short Stories about Relationships By VIKRAM KARVE - EBOOK


ebook - COCKTAIL Short Stories about Relationships By VIKRAM KARVE




I have written a book of short stories called COCKTAIL

The twenty-seven stories in this collection explore fascinating aspects of modern day relationships – love, romance, sex, betrayal, marriage, parenting and even pet parenting. Relationships are like cocktails, emotions shaken and stirred, and I assure you that you will enjoy reading these stories.

COCKTAIL is my first book of fiction. I want COCKTAIL to sell well as I feel that the success of this book will be an important morale booster and launch pad as I embark on my creative writing journey and help me successfully publish my novel, which I am currently writing.

I seek your blessings and good wishes and I am sure you will motivate me by buying a copy of my book COCKTAIL. 

Please click the links below to buy the book online:

http://www.flipkart.com/cocktail-vikram-karve-short-stories-book-8191091844?affid=nme




If you prefer reading ebooks on Kindle or your ebook reader, please order Cocktail E-book from smashwords by clicking the link below:


https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/87925

I promise you that you will thoroughly enjoy this delicious COCKTAIL and you will be happy to have this book on your bookshelves. 


Book Details
Book: Cocktail: Short Stories About Relationships
Author: Vikram Karve
ISBN: 8191091844
ISBN-13: 9788191091847, 978-8191091847
Binding: Paperback
Publishing Date: 2011
Publisher: APK Publishers
Number of Pages: 192
Language: English

ABOUT COCKTAIL by VIKRAM KARVE
Relationships are like cocktails. Every relationship is a unique labyrinthine melange of emotions, shaken and stirred, and, like each cocktail, has a distinctive flavour and taste. The twenty-seven stories in this collection explore fascinating aspects of modern day relationships: love, romance, sex, betrayal, marriage, parenting and even pet parenting. You will relish reading these riveting cocktails of intermingling emotions narrated in a temptingly engaging style, and once you start reading you will find this delicious “cocktail” unputdownable till the very end.
Author Bio

VIKRAM KARVE educated at IIT Delhi, ITBHU Varanasi, The Lawrence School Lovedale, and Bishop’s School Pune, who was once a Naval Officer by profession, likes to describe himself as an Electronics and Communications Engineer by qualification, a Human Resource Leader 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 and published a foodie book “Appetite for a Stroll”. Vikram lives in Pune, India and welcomes your feedback by email at vikramkarve@sify.com

COCKTAIL EBOOK

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Tuesday, July 06, 2010

CONTRIVED COINCIDENCE

CONTRIVED COINCIDENCE
Short Fiction – A Fun Story 
By 
VIKRAM KARVE

From my Archives - here is one of my Perky Fun Stories from my Pune Fiction Collection guaranteed to cheer you up...


Pune. Fergusson College Road. Vaishali Restaurant. 5 PM on a Sunday evening.  
Crowded. Crammed full. Jam-packed. All tables occupied chock-a-block. Aisles teeming with people waiting with watchful eyes for signs of someone finishing their refreshments.   
Suddenly I see a woman waving to me, beckoning me with her hand. Her face seems familiar – oh yes, she is Ravi’s wife. She is sitting all alone on a table for two with a half eaten masala dosa in front of her.  
I walk towards her and give her a smile. 
“Sit down, sit down,” she says to me, gesturing with her hand towards the empty chair opposite her, “Sit down here with me, otherwise you will have to wait for hours.” 
I sit down opposite her and say, “Thanks.” 
She summons a waiter and orders peremptorily, “SPDP.” 
“Two?” the waiter asks. 
“No, one SPDP for Madam,” she says pointing to the empty plate in front of me without even bothering to ask me, “and get one Kachori for me.” 
Before I can recover my wits, she says, “You like SPDP don’t you? Ravi told me.” 
“Yes, I love the SPDP at Vaishali. In fact I come all the way here every Sunday…” 
“To spend the day reading in the library opposite followed by an SPDP at Vaishali,” she completes my sentence. 
Ravi told you all this?” 
“Of course. He’s told me everything about you. Ravi admires you so much, he always talks about you.”  
“Really? But he never tells me anything about you.” 
“What’s there to tell? I am only his housewife, you are his office wife.” 
“Come on. Please don’t say that. There is nothing like that between me and Ravi. We are just colleagues – workmates. That’s all.” 
“Workmates? I think you are his soulmate – and I am only his mate!” 
I am struck dumb, feel a bit uneasy, but suddenly the plate of SPDP is kept in front of me, so I look down and begin to eat. 
“I’m sorry,” she says, “Don’t get angry. I was just teasing. I want you to be Ravi’s friend. He likes you so much. That’s why he is so happy in office and doing so well in his work.” 
I stop eating and look up at her vacuously, wondering what to say. 
Ravi appreciates you so much he even brings you home to me every evening in his thoughts and talks…that’s why I wanted to meet you.” 
“We’ve met before…” 
“Only once, that too only an introduction, at the Office Annual Day get-together…we are hardly married for three months, you know, and you all are so busy, with your targets and all, so I decided to meet you, talk to you, get to know you better, make a friendship…” 
“You mean…” 
“Yes, I contrived this coincidence. I came to the library also, but you were so busy browsing that I did not want to disturb you, so I waited here in Vaishali knowing you would surely come for your SPDP.” 
“You’re not eating your Kachori,” I say, trying to change the direction of the conversation.  
“Here, you eat,” she says pushing her untouched plate of Kachori and katori of whipped curds towards me, “I am all full – I ate an Uttapam, Idli-Vada Sambar, god-knows-what, waiting for you to come…”  
She leans forward and casually picks up a Sev Potato Dahi Puri from my plate, pops into her mouth and says, “Wow. I love the chatpata flavour of SPDP – you call it Umami taste or something – that’s what you told Ravi, isn’t it?” 
“I think I’ll go now,” I say, feeling distinctly uncomfortable, making up my mind to have a long talk with Ravi the moment I meet him in the morning at work. 
“No, no, don’t go, I want to show you something.”  
“Show me something?” 
“Yes, that’s why I came all the way here to meet you.” 
We finish the SPDP and Kachori, I insist on paying the bill, she doesn’t object too much, and then she takes me to the drapery section of the Shopping Mall nearby. 
“We are furnishing our new house,” she says, pointing at the curtain cloth on display. 
I look at her clueless. 
“I like yellow, you like blue, and since you have told him about the aesthetic cool tranquil beauty of the blue colour, Ravi is besotted with everything blue – blue shirts, blue trousers, blue table-covers, blue bed-sheets, blue napkins, the sober blue everything that you make him buy…” 
I look furtively and self-consciously at the blue dress I am wearing, and say, “Okay, tell me which curtains you like.” 
She points to a bright yellow floral print and says, “I like that one, I love yellow, so lively and cheerful… I hate sober gloomy colours, especially blue, it depresses me.”   
Next morning at the office, Ravi says to me, “Hey, keep yourself free in the evening. We’ll go to Deccan for some shopping. You’ve got to help me select curtains for our new home. Then we’ll have SPDP at Vaishali.”  
“Sure, Ravi, I’ll love to come with you,” I say. 
Now I’ve got till evening to decide one thing – which colour curtains should I tell Ravi to buy – Yellow Curtains or Blue Curtains?

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.





Wednesday, June 16, 2010

The Proposal - A Beautiful Woman sets a Love Trap

THE PROPOSAL
Short Fiction – A Love Story

By


VIKRAM KARVE 



I look at myself in the full-length mirror.


I like what I see.

Yes. I am beautiful, very beautiful, very very beautiful indeed!

No doubt about it. I always was a great beauty.

They say that a beautiful woman often has a tragic life.

Does tragedy always come from being a great beauty?

I don’t know whether this is universally true, but certainly, I have had a very tragic life. But I will not tell you too much about it right now and spoil my mood.  Now I will look into the mirror and admire myself, my exquisite body.

Not many women close to forty can stand in front of a mirror with so much pride and assurance. A woman in full bloom. I admire my perfect body; almost fall in love with my own body. Like Narcissus.

Suddenly I experience a tremor of anxiety as I see the first signs of the process of ageing. Infinitesimal. Almost indiscernible.  But indisputable.

Two minute furrows on my forehead, the slight coarsening of the skin below the eyes, the almost unnoticeable heaviness of the abdomen with its suggestion of fold….

I can easily cover them up. With make-up. And the right dress. But for how long can I wear a mask?

Time is running out for me. Sameer could be my last chance. I’m already regretting that I had put the matter so lightly the last time we had met, and before that. Tonight is my probably my last chance – I have to go in for the kill.

Love Trap. 

What a phrase to use.

But that’s exactly what I’m going to do – ensnare Sameer in my Love Trap and move in for the kill.

Like a predator.

For the first time in my life I would use my beauty to my advantage, not to be taken advantage of – like it happened all these years.

I was just 19, a fresh graduate wondering what to do in life, when my elder sister Nisha died in childbirth, leaving behind a newborn girl and a young heartbroken husband, Ashok.

We, my mother and I, went to stay with Ashok in Mumbai to nurse the baby girl and after a few months named her Smita – as she was a cheerful smiling baby.

From time to time, especially on weekends, my father, who was still working at that time, would come over from Pune, and I could see that he was getting quite irritable having to stay separate from his long-married wife though he didn’t say it.

One day Ashok proposed to me – actually he asked my mother for my hand in marriage.

My mother was overjoyed. She put lovingly her hand on my arm, looked into my eyes and said, “Ashok loves you, wants to marry you. He’s still young, only 27. He needs a wife. And Smita needs a mother.”

“Yes, Smita needs a mother,” I said tightly holding the baby wondering what would happen to the hapless baby is Ashok remarried someone else.

My mother spoke to my father. He agreed – to him it seemed quite a logical thing to do and maybe he was relieved that his much-married wife would be coming back to live with him.

So I got married to Ashok and I put on hold all my immediate dreams of higher studies, a career.

How should I describe my marriage?

No expectations, no disappointments, no role-ambiguity, a cordial relationship, a happy family, a blissful marriage – at least from the outside.

Children? Our children. Ashok’s and mine.

It just didn’t happen. With Nisha’s death, a little something in him had died. He must have loved her very much, intensely.

I accepted the situation with grace and tried to focus on being a good wife and a doting mother. As Smita grew older Ashok encouraged me to study, do an MBA, and start a career.

Ashok was married to his job. Things were fine, till one evening Ashok came home and broke the news that he had been passed over for promotion.

Ashok was shattered. He had worked sincerely, slogged hard, given his life for his career. He had remained loyal to his company without getting loyalty in return.
         
He felt terribly betrayed. For Ashok, after Nisha had gone, his career meant everything, and he just couldn’t take it, being sidelined in his career, having to work under his erstwhile juniors.

He just could not cope with this setback, so he tried to find solace in alcohol.

Within months he slipped into the abyss of alcoholism.

From a workaholic he became an alcoholic, bitter, cynical, and one day my world disintegrated. 

Ashok died in a car accident, driving home drunk.

I wish he had died in some better way.

So after eight years of marriage I found myself at the age of 27 with an 8 year old Smita, the light of my life, single, but not helpless as I was doing quite well in my career as a bank executive.

And now, Smita was 20, already working in my bank, and doing her MBA in the evenings, earning and learning, and I was so proud of her.

And then I fell in love – for the first time in my life I had fallen in love.

Let me tell you about it.

I still remember the day Sameer breezed into my office announcing that he would be working with me. “Hi, Nalini, I am Sameer, your new Deputy,” he announced superciliously, sitting down and lighting a cigarette.

“Put off that cigarette!” I shouted, “And don’t you dare come into my office unless I call you.

“Hey, Sweetie, you look red hot sexy when you are angry. My wife is going to be real jealous when I tell her how stunning my boss is,” he laughed mischievously.

“She won’t, when you tell her that your boss is a thirty five year old widow with college going daughter,” I retorted in anger and stormed out of my office to protest against his appointment for which I had not been consulted.

“Sameer is a genius,” my boss said, “the directors head-hunted him and managed to lure him over from our biggest rival with great difficulty. He’s going to rejuvenate your department…”

I got the message. This new man was a threat, and if I wasn’t careful it wouldn’t be surprising if he didn’t leap frog over me or even ease me out.

“I’m sorry Ma’am, I didn’t know the culture was so formal out here,” Sameer was contrite when I returned; “I’ll maintain decorum in future.”

“It’s okay,” I said, and began to tell him about our work.

Sameer was extremely intelligent, knowledgeable, supportive, open, sincere, affable and great to work with, but initially I kept my distance, treated him with forced geniality, tinged with wariness.

It was only during his painful divorce with his wife living in Delhi, the seeds of which seemed to have been sown much earlier and maybe the reason why he had relocated to Mumbai, that is when we became close and I often lent him my shoulder to cry on.

It was inevitable that we fell in love – lonely buddies with a thirst for life, soul-mates, attracted to each other, office-spouses who now needed to become real spouses.

Normally a man is supposed to make the first move, and I waited for Sameer to propose, but maybe he was shy, being seven years my junior. But I had waited long enough, maybe he too had waited long enough, and…I shuddered to think…if I lost him…I was thirty nine…Sameer was my last chance…my only love…soon my daughter Smita would go away too…I didn’t want to live the rest of my life like a loveless lonely maid. 

I looked at the wall-clock. 7:30. Sameer would he here any time now to take me out for dinner.

Normally we take Smita out with us too, but tonight I had insist that only the two of us, Sameer and me, would go, and surprisingly Smita doesn't protest.

I put on the final touches of make-up, generously dabbed on my favourite perfume.

The door-bell rang. “Mummy, Sameer is here,” I heard Smita yelling.

I gave myself a final look in the mirror – I looked really gorgeous – yes, truly stunning, dressed to kill; I couldn’t have titivated better than this.

“Wow!” Smita said with delightful surprise in her eyes, “You look dashing!”

Sameer looked at me mesmerized.

He desperately tried to stop his eyes rove all over my body, even to places they it would be considered naughty.

“Hey, what’s with you two? Aren’t you going to go out fast and let me enjoy my TV and popcorn?” Smita teased.

Soon we were driving on Marine Drive towards our favourite restaurant, the best place for an unhurried romantic dinner.

“It’s a beautiful evening. Let’s sit by the sea,” Sameer said spontaneously, slowing down the car.

“I’d love to,” I said.

We sat close to each other on the parapet, facing the placid waters of the Arabian Sea, the lights of the ships in the distance, the twinkling stars in the clear sky above us, the sea breeze pure, refreshing.

“I want to say something…” Sameer hesitated.

“Say it!” I urged him.

“I wanted to ask…” he faltered.

“Ask. Please ask me,” I beseeched him.

Sameer looked at me, into my eyes, and said, “I want ask your permission to marry Smita. We love each other. We want to get married. I told her to tell you but Smita said I must ask you. She’ll do as you say…I promise I’ll keep her happy…” 

Sameer kept on speaking but his voice trailed off and his words did not register as my mind went blank...



THE PROPOSAL
Short Fiction – A Love Story 
By 
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.






  

vikramkarve@sify.com

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

INFIDELITY - Fiction Short Story

INFIDELITY
Fiction Short Story
By 
VIKRAM KARVE
 
 
“Your relationship has become so demoralized by distrust that you two better break up rather than try to patch up.”
 
“What?”
 
“Yes. It’s better you split instead of living in perpetual suspicion like this. Why live a lie?”
 
“How can you say this? You are a marriage counsellor; you’re supposed to save marriages, not break them.”
 
“But then what can I do if you don’t change your attitude?” I said in desperation, “you have to learn to trust your wife; just stop being jealous, suspicious, possessive. Mutual trust is important in a marriage, especially a long distance marriage like yours.”
 
I looked at the man sitting in front of me.

He was incredibly handsome; mid thirties, maybe forty, well groomed, sharp features accentuated by a smart neatly trimmed beard, clean brown eyes, he looked strong and confident, and his outward appearance betrayed no sign of what was going on inside him.

He looked at me longingly, in a lingering sort of way that women secretly want men to look at them.
 
I blushed, felt good, but quickly composed myself.

In such vulnerable situations anything could happen and I had to be careful, so I said to him in a firm dispassionate tone, “I think you better go now. It’s time for your flight.”
 
“It’s delayed.”
 
“You’re sure?”
 
“Of course. I’m the pilot – the commander of the aircraft. I’ve to report after an hour.”
 
“I’ll leave? It’s almost check-in time.”
 
“No! No! Please stay. There’s still two hours for your flight to London . I’ll get you checked-in. There’s something I want to tell you,” he pleaded, “I’ll order some more coffee.”
 
The airport restaurant was deserted at this late hour and wore a dark, eerie look, with just a few people huddled in muted whispers.
 
“I want to thank you for giving me this special appointment – agreeing to meet me here at such short notice,” he said.
 
“It’s okay. It was quite convenient for both of us, enroute catching our flights. A nice quiet discreet place, this airport restaurant.”
 
He paused for a moment, then spoke guiltily, “I did something terrible today.”
 
“What?”
 
“I stole my wife’s cell-phone.”
 
"Stole?"

"Yes."

"You stole your wife’s mobile?"
 
“Yes. Just before I left. I took it from her purse. She was fast asleep.”
 
“This is too much! Stealing your wife’s mobile. That was the most despicable thing to do. I don’t think we should talk any more. You need some serious help,” I said, gulped down my coffee and started to get up.
 
“No! No! Please listen. It’s those tell-tale SMS messages!”
 
“SMS messages?”
 
“From ‘Teddy Bear’.”
 
“Teddy Bear?”
 
“Someone she knows. 'Teddy Bear'. She’s saved his number. She keeps getting these SMSs, which she erases immediately.

"This 'Teddy Bear' SMSs your wife?"

"Yes. I think they are having a good time right behind my back the moment I take off on a flight. This 'Teddy Bear' and my wife. This evening when she was bathing while I was getting ready to leave for the airport, her cell-phone was lying on the bed, an SMS came from ‘Teddy Bear’ : “I am yearning for you. SPST.”
 
“SPST? What’s that?” I asked.
 
“I don’t know. I called the number. A male voice said: ‘Hi Sugar!’ Just imagine, he calls her ‘Sugar’. I hung up in disgust immediately. Then during dinner she kept getting calls and SMSs – must be the same chap: ‘Teddy Bear’.”
 
“Your wife spoke to him?”
 
“No. She looked at the number and cut it off. Four or five times. Then she switched her mobile to silent and put in her purse.”
 
“You asked her who it was?”
 
“No.”
 
“You should have. It may have been a colleague, a friend. That’s your problem – you keep imagining things and have stopped communicating with her. Ask her next time and I’m sure everything will clear up.”
 
“No! No! I am sure she is having an affair with this ‘Teddy Bear’ chap. Had it not been for the last minute delay in my flight, I wouldn’t have been home at that time.” he said. And then suddenly he broke down, tears pouring down his cheeks, his voice uncontrollable, “The moment I take off, she starts cheating on me.”
 
It was a bizarre sight. A tough looking man totally shattered, weeping inconsolably.
 
“Please,” I said, “control yourself. And you better not fly in this state.”
 
“I think you’re right,” he said recovering his composure, “I’m in no mood to fly.”

He took out a cell-phone from his shirt pocket, dialled the standby pilot and a few other numbers and told them he was unwell and was going off the roster.
 
He kept the mobile phone on the table.
 
“Your wife’s cell-phone?” I asked pointing to the sleek mobile phone he had kept on the table.
 
“Yes.”
 
“She’ll be missing it.”
 
“No. She’ll be fast asleep. I’ll go back and put it in her purse.”

We sat for some time in silence. It appeared he was in a trance, a vacuous look in his eyes. Years of counselling had taught me that in such moments it was best to say nothing. So I just picked up my cup and sipped what remained of my coffee.

Suddenly he got up and said, “I think I'll go home,” and
he quickly turned and walked away.

It was only after he had gone, as I kept my coffee cup back on the table, that I noticed that he had forgotten
the cell-phone on the table, his unfaithful wife's cell-phone.

An idea struck me.

At first I was a bit hesitant; then curiosity took charge of me and I picked it the mobile phone.

Hurriedly I clicked on ‘names’, pressed ‘T’, quickly found ‘Teddy Bear’ and pressed the call button.

A few rings and I instantly recognized my husband’s baritone voice at the other end: “Hey Sugar, where are you? Why aren’t you answering? Did you get my SMS  -  ‘SPST’  -  ‘Same Place Same Time’. Why did you give me a blank call?.....” 
 
I couldn’t believe this. My dear own husband – ‘Teddy Bear’. Right under my nose. It was unimaginable, incredulous.

I felt shattered. My very own world came tumbling down like a pack of cards.
 
I cannot begin to describe the emotions that overwhelmed me at that moment, but I’ll tell you what I did.
 
I put the cell-phone in my purse, walked briskly to the check-in counter without looking back, quickly checked in, and boarded the flight; and, Dear Reader, as you read this, at this very moment, I am on my way to London to present my research paper on ‘The efficacy of marriage counselling in the alleviation of marital discord’ at the International Conference of Counsellors.
 
And till I return, let everyone here stew in suspense.  
 
 
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.

Saturday, June 05, 2010

DOING NOTHING Fiction Short Story


DOING NOTHING
Fiction Short Story
By
VIKRAM KARVE


From my Archives: One of my favourite fiction stories...a lazy Mumbai story I wrote a few years ago...
 


“What do you do?” she asks.
 
“Nothing!” I say.
 
“What do you mean ‘Nothing’? she asks. “You must be doing something!”
 
“I do nothing!” I say.
 
“Come on Vinay, stop kidding. I know you work somewhere.”
 
“Work? You asked me what I do, not where I work! I work at the Bureau of Statistics.”
 
“Bureau of Statistics? What statistics?”
 
“Vital Statistics.”
 
“Vital Statistics?” she asks her eyebrows arched in curious surprise.
 
“No, No. It’s not what you’re thinking. I meant statistics that are vital,” I say, trying to correct the faux pas. We compile, collate, consolidate, analyze and disseminate various statistics.”
 
“Wow! How interesting! Tell me more.”
 
“You can say that I am an obsolescent man dealing with obsolete things.”
 
“Obsolescent man? Obsolete things? I don’t understand. Where exactly do you work?”
 
“I’m in the smallpox section.”
 
“Smallpox?”
 
“Yes. Smallpox. I maintain statistics pertaining to smallpox.”
 
“That’s funny! I thought smallpox was eradicated long back.”
 
“Smallpox may have been eradicated, but my office is still going strong,” I say proudly. It’s true – sometimes the ends vanish but the means proliferate and flourish till eternity.
 
“I can’t believe it! If there’s no smallpox around, why maintain statistics?”
 
“If you don’t maintain statistics how will the world come to know that something has vanished, disappeared or become obsolete!”
 
“You work on vital statistics for things that are obsolete?”
 
“Yes. Obsolete! Earlier I worked in the typewriters statistics section and it was we who discovered that typewriters had become obsolete the moment we had nothing to do!”
 
“But what do you do whole day?”
 
“Nothing!” I answer emphatically. “I told you I do nothing, didn’t I?”
 
“Don’t you feel bored, restless, doing nothing whole day? Soon you’ll go crazy!”
 
“Bored, restless, crazy? Not at all. Thanks to my work, I have developed the ability to savor long hours of leisure – a gift most of you so-called ‘busy’ people have lost, or probably never acquired.”
 
Yes indeed, my dear Reader... I do nothing. That’s what I love to do the most, that’s what I do best, and that’s what I do almost all the time – ‘Nothing’!
 
Well, actually, I love doing nothing because for most of the time I have nothing to do. I have plenty of leisure, plenty of time to do nothing, which is rare in a place like Mumbai, and I am always busy doing nothing... my life’s leitmotif being that famous epigram of Chang Cha’ao :
 
Only those who take leisurely what the people of the world are busy about can be busy about what the people of the world take leisurely.
 
I told you I have the ability to enjoy and savor long hours of leisure – a talent which is quite rare in today’s hectic world where everyone is busy running their own rat-race.

I am lucky to enjoy so much leisure, for I am not running in any rat-race.

I may not be a rat, but I am a man of no importance, neither handsome, nor wealthy, nor successful, nor powerful, nor famous, nor, indeed, particularly well endowed.

How can I describe myself...?

The most apt word may be ‘anonymous’.
 
Oh yes, I am an ordinary man who looks so undistinguished and commonplace that you won’t notice me in a crowd, or even if there is no crowd, for I just blend into the surroundings. And in my anonymity lies my power, my freedom, to do nothing.

You may call me an idler, a loafer, a loser, a failure – but I just don’t care, as long as I can pleasurably wallow, revel and rejoice in my anonymity, doing nothing.

Indeed, anonymity is a sine qua non for my ‘doing nothing’ philosophy of life.
 
Hey, we’ve digressed...! Enough of pontification. Let’s return to the conversation I’m having with the beautiful lady and let me tell you how it all started.
 
One evening I leave my office, after a busy day of doing nothing, cross through the Horniman Circle garden, walk down Vir Nariman Road, past Flora Fountain, cross MG road at Hutatma Chowk, pick up a vada pav at Ashok Satam’s stall next to the CTO, stroll leisurely towards Churchgate while the sea of humanity rushes by like a deluge, fortify myself with a refreshing cup of Irani tea at Stadium restaurant and sit on the parapet on Marine Drive staring vacantly at the tranquil sea doing what I do best – Nothing...!
 
“Hi!” says a melodious feminine voice shaking me out of my reverie. I turn around. It’s Roopa, my classmate from college. She’s quite a looker and I feast my eyes on her in a yearning sort of way which is worth a hundred compliments.
 
She blushes at the genuine admiration in my eyes and says, “It’s so nice to see you, Vinay. After so many years. And here of all the places!”
 
“I like this place. It’s one of my favorites. I come here most evenings,” I say.
 
“And what were you doing sitting and staring blankly at the sea like a lost case?”
 
“Nothing.”
 
“Nothing? You spend every evening here doing nothing?”
 
“Yes,” I say. “Of course, once in a while I go to the Gateway, or land’s end at Nariman Point, or the Chowpatty side, or even HangingGardens. But this is my favorite place for hanging out and doing nothing and most evenings I’m here.”
 
“What do you do?” she asks.
 
“Nothing!” I say.
 
(And then we have the conversation about my work that I have described earlier in the beginning, at the start of my story...)
 
“Aren’t you happy to see me?” she asks.
 
“Of course I am happy to see you,” I say looking directly into her large brown eyes.
 
“You’ve told me everything about yourself, but you haven’t asked me anything about me,” she says.
 
“I’m no nosy parker. I don’t like to be too inquisitive,” I say.
 
“Inquisitive? But you can be a bit curious can’t you? Don’t you want to know about me? What all I’ve achieved since college, what I’m doing, my work – aren’t you interested in me?” she asks.
 
“I was always interested in you. Don’t you remember? It was you who never gave me any bhav. You used me as a messenger to carry love letters to your boy friends, that’s all,” I say.
 
“Please don’t say that. You know you were so sweet, that you were the only boy we all girls could confide in, talk to freely, knowing you would keep our secrets safe,” she says.
 
“Okay Roopa, confide in me. Tell me, what are doing here?”
 
“I’ve come for my visa. They said it’d take an hour. So I just came here to kill time.”
 
“Visa? Here in Churchgate? I thought the visa office was in Breach Candy or somewhere there!”
 
“That’s the US Consulate. I’ve already got that. The UK visa office is here. In the Brabourne Stadium building, near Rustom Ice Cream.”
 
“Ah! Rustoms! Come on Roopa, let’s have some ice cream. Or sweet curds. Or whatever you like.”
 
“Let’s eat something first. That place looks good,” she says pointing to the Pizzeria, opposite the Marine Drive, where Talk of the Town was once there. “We’ll sit there and talk. And have some pizza.”
 
I order a huge special pizza, she orders a small one, and she begins talking about herself.

I am easy to talk to, for I listen well. You'll understand what I mean once you talk to me. I know when to egg you on... by a subtle gesture, an encouraging look, or an appreciative word of genuine interest. It's all about building rapport...sensory acuity...matching and mirroring...if you've done NLP you know what I mean. Believe me... I have the knack... and when you talk to me your words will just come tumbling out.
 
Roopa tells me everything, about her Masters in Computers after we graduated in Maths, her natural talent in Software, her meteoric success, her globetrotting projects, her career rise from job to job, from Mumbai, Bangalore, Gurgaon, to her present job in a top IT company in Pune. And also about her recent marriage to Deepak, another hotshot IT type working in the same company as hers.
 
“You know Vinay,” she says excitedly, “I am on the verge of breaking the glass ceiling. This project, the next one year, is crucial, it’s a do or die situation for me. If I succeed, my life is made forever. It will be a career breakthrough for me and there will be no looking back. I’ll be able to set up my own company. Maybe move to the States, Seattle.”
 
I nod and focus on my pizza.
 
“It’s going to be very hectic. US, UK, Europe, Far East, Middle East, everywhere – I’ll be globetrotting all over, living out of a suitcase.”
 
“Great,” I say. “When do you take off? Tonight?”
 
“I wish I could, but there’s a small hitch.”
 
“Hitch?”
 
“I’m pregnant.”
 
“Fantastic!” I say... but from the expression on her face I instantly realize that I have said the wrong thing, so I look down into my pizza and pretend to dig deep.
 
“It’s all wrong. The timing, I mean,” she says. “I’m so meticulous at work... I just don’t know how I could be so careless in my personal life and mess up everything.”
 
I say nothing. She wants to hear silence, silent approbation, and that is what she will hear. That’s the trick... always say something that the person you are talking to wants to hear... otherwise just keep quiet.
 
“I have to do something fast!”
 
“You asked your husband?”
 
“Are you mad? The moment Deepak comes to know, he’ll start jumping with joy having proven his virility. Everyone will come to know. And it’ll be curtains for me as far as this project is concerned.”
 
“You can still go, can’t you?”
 
“It’s a one year project. The moment my MCP bosses hear I’m pregnant, I’m out. And my husband – he’ll be the happiest. As it is he is inwardly jealous that I’ve got this project; that I’ll succeed and leave him behind. I must do something fast, isn’t it?”
 
My mouth full of pizza, I nod my head.
 
“Vinay, please tell me,” she says getting emotional, “my priorities are right, aren’t they?”
 
“Yes, of course, your priorities are right,” I say emphatically.
 
“What do you say? Now, at this crucial juncture, I should focus on my career, don’t you think? I can always have all the children I want later... isn’t it?”
 
“Very right. Very right!” I say. “Roopa, you’re absolutely right!”
 
“Thanks, Vinay. I’m so lucky I met you. You are the only one I’ve told all this. Thanks for talking to me. You’ve helped me make my decision,” she says extending her hand on the table.
 
I place my hand on hers, press gently and look into her brown eyes.
 
“You’re such a darling, Vinay,” she says, “it’s so comforting to talk to you.”

And then tears well up in her eyes and suddenly she breaks down, oblivious of the surroundings. I move across, caress her head and gently soothe her.
 
We talk a bit, and I walk her down to Rustom for a ‘Sandwich Ice Cream’, she collects her visa, and I bid good bye to a reassured, composed and determined Roopa as she gets into a taxi on her way to catch a Volvo Bus to Pune.
 
And then I leisurely stroll towards my favorite place on Marine Drive to continue 'doing nothing'.
 
I rinse my lungs with the refreshing sea breeze, and suddenly smell a strong whiff of perfume, or maybe it’s one of those overpowering deos!

I turn around. It’s the ravishing Nina, another of my ‘achiever’ go-getter classmates who after her MBA is now a hotshot in a top MNC.
 
I’ve seen her sometimes on Marine Drive, in her chauffer driven car, driving home late evening from her office in Nariman Point to her home on Malabar Hill. Once she even stopped and asked me if I wanted a lift, an offer I politely declined, and then she asked me what I was doing, and when I told her I was doing nothing, she gave me an uncanny smile, and I notice that every time she sees me ‘doing nothing’ on my favorite spot on Marine Drive from her car, she looks at me in a curious sort of way.
 
“Doing nothing?” she asks naughtily, her eyes dancing.
 
“Yes. How did you know?”
 
“Come on, Vinay! You told me once, remember? I see you here almost every evening while driving home.”
 
“And you never stop to say hello?”
 
“I don’t want to disturb your penance.”
 
“Penance? That’s malapropism!”
 
“Sorry. I mean your ‘doing nothing’ meditation.”
 
“That’s better! And what makes you disturb my meditation now?”
 
“I want to talk to you.”
 
“Okay. Talk.”
 
“Not here. Too many people here. Let’s go to some quiet place where we can be alone.”
 
Hanging Gardens? Remember our favorite bench in the secluded corner?”
 
“Okay. But don’t do anything naughty!”
 
“Let’s go. Where is your car?”
 
“I let it go and I walked down from my office. Didn’t want the driver getting too curious.”
 
“Okay, I’ll get a cab. Hey, why not just walk down Marine Drive? Walking and talking – it wouldn’t look suspicious.”
 
“Okay,” she says, "let's walk and talk."

And we walk and we talk.
 
Being a ‘facts and figures’ finance person she doesn’t beat about the bush and comes straight to the point.
 
“I’m pregnant,” she says.
 
I suppress my emotion. This is too much for one evening. First Roopa, and now Nina.

Coincidence, serendipity, I don’t know what...or maybe it's pregnancy season.
 
This time I’m careful not to say anything.
 
“Aren’t you going to congratulate me?” she asks.
 
“Of course. Congratulations!” I say.
 
“You’re the first one I’ve told. I just got the report this evening.”
 
“Your husband? You didn't tell your husband?”
 
“No.”
 
“Oh my God! Is it someone else?”
 
“Shut up!”
 
“I’m sorry. But you must tell your husband immediately.”
 
“And he will immediately rush me to the nearest abortionist!”
 
“What?”
 
“We took all the precautions, but it’s happened. I want the baby.”
 
“Of course you must have the baby,” I say.
 
“I must. Isn’t it? What do you feel...I must have the baby...isn't it...?”
 
“Of course you must have the baby. But why doesn’t your husband want it?”
 
“I told him that when I have a baby I’m going to quit my job... at least take a long break to bring up my child. That’s the right thing to do, isn’t it...?”
 
“Oh yes, of course that’s the right thing to do.”
 
“I feel being a full time mother is more important. At least when the baby is small, isn’t it?”
 
“Of course being a full time mother is most important...especially when the baby is small. You must take care of yourself from right now. Come on I’ll call a taxi. You shouldn’t strain yourself so much.”
 
“How sweet of you! Just let’s sit there by the sea.”
 
“Tell me, why doesn’t your husband want you to have a baby now?”
 
“Because he knows I’ll quit my job.”
 
“So?”
 
“Who is going to pay the EMI for the luxurious penthouse apartment he wants to book?”
 
“Penthouse Apartment? It can wait. The baby is more important.”
 
“That’s just what I’ve been saying since we got married.”
 
“So?”
 
“He feels we should have all the material things first before we have a baby.”
 
“He’s got his priorities wrong.”
 
“He’s wrong, isn’t it?”
 
“Yes, he’s wrong. And you’re right.”
 
“So I should go ahead with the baby, isn’t it?”
 
“Of course.”
 
“And quit my job.”
 
“Of course you should,” I say, “and you go and tell your husband right away and put your foot down. Tell him: ‘The baby takes priority, the penthouse apartment can come later’.”
 
“I will, I will,” she says looking happy and emboldened.
 
“You must do what your conscience tells you. Listen to your inner voice. Be the strong girl like you were in college,” I say.
 
Nina gives me a genuine smile of affection and says, “I’m so glad I talked to you, Vinay. Thanks for helping me make my decision.”
 
After Nina leaves in a taxi I sit by the sea at Chowpatty at the end of Marine Drive, marvel at the spectacle of the sun being swallowed by the sea, and reflect.

Roopa and Nina. What contrasts!

I loved talking to them.

I love to talk to anyone who wants to talk to me.

Talking to someone who needs comforting seems to make my own troubles go away!
 
 
 
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