Little ones.
They were frail creatures not from our world. They didn’t belong here, they couldn’t survive here, they consumed fresh air and sunshine, dewdrops to quench their thirst and fell-fruit collected from the Garden. They were delicate and breakable; their waif-like beauty was oh-so-terrible. They didn’t belong here, they couldn’t survive here.
The Garden provided them with ample space. They rested in tree-houses and were a romantic, magical lot. Their time was spent studying ways to take care of the Garden: beautifying it, growing it, cleaning it, loving it… They also read, wrote and drank berry wine when they were relaxing. They sang beautifully and danced in unabashed abandon when it rained. They used magic to spin soft, soft cloth for their carnivals and create magnificent armour of the strongest and lightest metal. They even liked accessorizing with silver, at times, platinum. See, they were not of our world.
She was the most skilled armour creator the Garden had ever seen. They said, there was magic in her hands. Some said, she never gave away the correct proportions of metals used for her armour. Others whispered about blood magic. They whispered for it was wrong to pour a part of yourself into metal, it was unacceptable that a creator will create another thing which could live through its owner, breathe through its owner’s skin and hunger for its owner’s enemy’s blood. To let blood be entwined with metal, to use magic to bind life and the unliving was punishable to say the very least.
The metal shone silver, a dark deathly silver, it was smooth and caressed him, clung to him protectively as he latched it on. She smiled at the perfect armour. He stared at himself in the mirror, he felt stronger, calmer and had an unavoidable urge to kill. Instead, he turned towards her and thanked her. She smiled and held out her hand, he grasped it and followed her inside her tree house. She reached for his surrendered hand and placed it near the mouth of a glass vial. She pierced his finger with a thin platinum knife, “it doesn’t contaminate the blood”, he stared helplessly as drop after drop of pure crimson trickled into the vial. A minute passed and finally the vial was full, she sealed it and placed it in one of the many cabinets that lined the curving walls of her chamber.
“This is payment for my craft. Your blood will be used to create strong armours for our kind. After all, the humans are coming…”
“So the rumours are true… they’ve found us!”
“They will… soon”
“How do you know these things?”
“My magic is stronger than yours could ever be…”
“For you have gone beyond silver and platinum!”
She laughed softly and looked deep into his scared, defiant eyes. “And for power, you have too! Donning an armour drenched in old magical blood! Yes! Don’t look so shocked now, you knew the second you comissioned it, you knew when I asked for payment in cash and blood!”
“I… I wasn’t sure…” he stammered.
She pressed the platinum knife against his pale neck and snarled at him, “The armour will not protect you against its maker. Remember that.”
“What in the Gardener’s name…?” he exclaimed as the entire tree house began to shake uncontrollably. The two fell sideways, unable to maintain balance. She grabbed on to the cabinets, these she had nailed to the walls in case of earthquakes. She gave him her free hand and he latched on. And as suddenly as it had started, it stopped. Furniture, rugs, her favourite looking glass – everything was ruined. She tried to get up and realised that her beloved tree house lay on its side. It was almost as if someone had snatched it from the tree and placed it sideways on solid ground.
She cringed and voiced both of their thoughts, “Humans”. And then they heard it, a very loud, booming giggle followed by a little girl’s voice, “Mommy! Look what I found? A doll’s tree house!’
See you soon!
We’ve come a long way since we last sat here. A very long way, a very long time, a very long tiring walk. Ah yes, a long way. Trouble is, we still don’t know where we’re headed.
So, where do we go from here?
Down the rabbit hole. Twirling and twisting and scraping pink elbows, she falls! Thank God she was wearing a pair of jeans and not some poufy skirt.
What about me? What about these tiny shorts, I don’t want my knees to be scarred.
Ah, so we take different ways. You go on, straight down the road and take a left. Keep on walking downhill till you meet me. Okay?
So, you’re going to jump now?
Yes, I am.
Oh alright then, good luck!
See you..!
Soon?
Misery needs a couple?
I love stories. Always have. Always will. Now, if I could only find a way of telling them stories. Tales spun from the tiniest possibilities, wrapped in smoke and stardust. Wouldn’t you like that? I know I would… let’s give it a try.
She was brilliant. A kind of brilliant that managed it all without trying too hard. She made passer-bys smile with her smile. Her eyes were something special. She was a drama queen and she used those eyes to perfection, without ever realising it. You see, she wasn’t really suited to this world… she wasn’t. She was kind and good and honest. She let people know when she was happy and was unable to hide her little moments of sadness and the all consuming grief. She cooked and she baked, only when she wanted to. She laughed whenever she found something funny; at times she laughed just to make herself feel better. She was a star, unfortunately, she didn’t know it. Sadly, she didn’t show it either. Did I tell you about her hair? She had crazy curly hair, gorgeous and wild and free… it felt just right on her. To understand hair, I’ll have to tell you a little story.
I had just moved to a hard-water area (yes, I can see some women cringing and smoothing their hair lovingly) and I was obsessed with fixing my hair and managing it without having to blow dry and hair spray every morning. So, I spoke to a gazillion stylists and even more people, if that is even possible, about this hair straightening, this re-bonding phenomenon. I was advised to get it done, I was told to never let those chemicals near my poor fine hair. I turned to her, for she and I had an uncannily similar taste in clothes, hair-styles, kajal and alcohol. We could be referred to as shallow, superficial soul-mates! She sat me down and looked at me. Her dark eyes staring at me disapprovingly, she said, You cannot get your hair straightened. No, I don’t care about the chemicals or the hair loss, it’s about YOU. Your hair reflects an essential part of you. Yes, I did ask her, what essential part of me is reflected with wavy, unmanageable hair? She smiled and said, fun, spontaneous and un-tame-able. You cannot be tied down and converted! Needless to say, I never got my hair straightened. It might have made my life easier, but it wouldn’t have been me. And being me is important. It is.
So, she with her brilliant eyes and crazy curly hair never tried to change that about herself, for she didn’t know how that would help her cause. You see, she was looking for passionate, extraordinary love. Yes, love. In life, in work, in friendships and in what we these days should refer to as heterosexual romantic relationships. Despite all her naivety, she had been taught to love unabashedly, question what she didn’t understand and observe and learn every new experience or happenstance that came her way. She believed she would eventually find the perfect relationship, for her. But she knew she couldn’t find it with straight hair and clubbing clothes. Just like you, yes, you with the straight hair and that gorgeous clutch, cannot find your man if you went looking for him with curls and a big tote and chappals. It just won’t fall into place… Those kind of opposites only attract in Woody Allen-esque movies and he too… let’s them go their separate ways now…
She had been fed Cindrella stories and numerous other fairy tales. She knew he won’t come on a white horse to whisk her away, but she desperately hoped for a Harley Davidson… or at least one of those nicer looking bikes. When she hit the age of twenty-three, she wanted him to come and get her in a car that had functional air-conditioning. Delhi burns in summers. It does. So, with her heart fluttering and stomach full of butterflies, she tried to put her mind to rest and waited patiently for the man in clean jeans, CK One or Davidoff Cool Water, a nice car, a happy smile and not a roving eye. On her way to finally settling with this list of demands, she had dated many, many boys: pained artists, romantic poets, lead guitarists, wannabe drummers and even, even the nice guy who turns out to be clingy and needy psycho eventually. She also realised that she had in some way, loved these boys/ men. It had been passionate and confusing, extraordinary and something new each time… and fantastic for the first three months. Three, right? Three successful dates in the States, the first date in Australia and a promise of an exclusive relationship after a lot of mixed signals, giggling and phone-conversations in India*.
We love as colourfully as our saris. We plan it all, we want them to be the ones. We fail miserably and we get up and get at it again, just like our political leaders. So, she loved. She failed. She ran. She stopped and took gulps of air and walked home to her parents, where she had a nice plate of hot food waiting for her. She really wanted to find her Prince, her saviour, the one. But she couldn’t help but cringe at the thought of being saved. She could take care of herself? Couldn’t she? Or did she really need the saving? She asked me once, do I need saving or do I need the drama? I thought and I thought while I fed her ice cream and smoked in the balcony attached to my room. We looked at each other and smiled.
He had been the perfectly charming, perfectly princely boy. He had wined and dined her. He had held her hand and opened the door for her. But he wore chinos and loafers and she liked cotton kurtis with her jeans. He gelled his hair! She didn’t care… It had lasted three visits to his favourite club with his friends… I was surprised it had lasted that long. The girl loved her beer and jumped around to The Doors.
Her question remained unanswered. We never really said it, but we both knew… we all need a little bit of both. We do! Our love-obsessed existence and Prince Charming-obsessed reading list makes us wish for a saviour, doesn’t it? But as there is nothing much to be saved from… we simply crave security, the comfort of finally stopping and breathing. We all want to stop making that extra effort and flirting like morons… don’t we? At least for a while…? We all fear commitment but look for it every time we dress up to go out and meet friends of friends. And all that reading! All those stories…! Even the sitcoms and movies! The butterflies, the meeting of the eyes, the first touch, the first kiss… ooooh! No wonder these passionate lovers died or got killed or separated (!), they got bored of each other after the first few orgasms! They didn’t have anything to talk about and they were sick of undressing each other. Oh no! don’t get me wrong, orgasms are wonderful. It’s just that they are not the only factor contributing to a healthy relationship… They cannot even guarantee the love will last for more than a few spasms… eh?
Do we subconsciously equate passion with misery? Do we want the drama, the tears, the bitching and moaning to make it seem worthwhile? Does our comfortable existence bore us so much that we go looking for trouble? Did the writers know it all? Had the story-tellers heard too many stories that had bored them to tears that they stopped at Happily ever after or the more exciting They died in each others arms? I wonder when she’ll finally find him? More importantly, does she need to wait with baited breath? I’ll let you know what happens… but today, she’s meeting this guy who wears clean jeans, likes beer and girls with curly hair…
————
Footnoting:
*We are a confused lot, and when I term it ‘in India’, it is a very incorrect representation of our population. I just represent a teeny tiny population of the country that is battling with what society is conditioning us to be and what our generation is trying to be. Sexuality, relationships and evolving of gender roles is rampant and at the same time very hush-hush. We struggle with technicalities and the terms and eventually come out breathing. We try and make them all happy – the opposite sex, the parents, even ourselves! People need to be serious and start thinking of settling down. Unfortunately (?) I am quite a bad example of the average Indian woman**.
**Warrants a book!
Black.
She looked at me suspiciously, peered into my upturned face and exhaled freshly inhaled smoke out of the corner of her mouth. She took a very deep breath, pulled herself up to her full height and began…
It is darker than darkness, it is viscous and shiny black, it is soft… so very soft and black… a deep, dark, hungry black. It consumes every ounce of light, every speck of life, every bit of you and so much of me. It slithers and slides through the doors, through the laughter, through the pain. It sneaks up on you when you least expect it. It stays, it settles down, it rests in the dark corners after it has had its fill. It waits for light to shine, eyes to smile, people to forget how it’s been waiting… waiting patiently, lazily… for quite some time now.
Without realising what I was saying, I whispered, don’t my eyes match that black?
