I sat there staring at my gold rimmed watch. I am not
particularly dotty about gold. Neither am I an ardent investigator of the
effect of relativity on time and space. I nonetheless sat there, staring at my watch,
lost in thoughts. Apparently, I was too engrossed being lost in my thoughts, to
even blink; my lacrimal gland started throwing tantrums and my eyes were
flooded with the rebukes. I blinked a couple of times and shook away the tears.
When I tried to stare back at my watch, it had lost all its appeal. I broke out
of my trance and looked up.
A typical Indian railway station / junction is a no fancy place to loiter about in. In addition to the inevitable, pivotal requirements for a place to be termed a Railway Station, viz., the railway tracks, the trains and the passengers, Indian railway stations seem to include various other entities. Torn, emptied KurkureTM and LaysTM covers of various colors, debilitated paper cups and shiny papery remains of what were once food containers are the forerunners. Then there are these healthy plump rats that have imperceptibly become the perpetual dwellers of the dark, dingy crevices under the railway platforms. Every once in a while, they can be seen scurrying about busily and purposefully. They have become a common sight to such a degree, even that one fat woman doesn’t bother holding up her skirt and screaming ‘eeeeeeeee’ at their sight. In addition to these little beings, you might also find stuff that is bound to make you gag. Since I do not want to run to the nearest rest room to throw up, I refrain from describing those.
I turned a blind eye to those (I don’t really have one. It
is just a term I preferred to use in this context because every time I
encounter the worst of these, it almost makes me wish I had one) and walked to
my train. At the door of my compartment, I was royally greeted by a formidable
odor of concentrated urea that struck me right on my face. Since this was not
my first such confrontation, I, as usual, forbade myself from respiration till
I was well out of the vicinity. With a few compartments between the doomed
enclosure (well, that is how I refer to the lavatory as) and me, I could once
again breathe without the need to fumigate my nose and the larynx and trachea
and the lungs. I located my seat. To my huge relief, I found I had my seat
beside the window. The craze I had for ‘jannal place’ has never dwindled from
forever (for those of you wondering what the heck is a ‘jannal’, it is the
window – in tamil). I grinned to myself and dumped my back pack onto the
luggage alcove over head and lumped into my seat. My fall on the seat resulted
in a loud *KRRRRRRRKKKK*. Shocked, I turned to look what I had landed on. It
was an almost empty water bottle with no lid on. Before I had landed on it, it was
incidentally more than an ‘almost empty’ water bottle with no lid on. The ex-load
of the maimed bottle was now all over my back. I looked like an over grown baby
who had forgotten her diapers. I looked around to check if there was someone who
might be snickering at my predicament. No one was. Conclusively, I failed to
flounder. I chose to think instead -on the bright side, Chennai is a very hot
place. And the water I was now seated on gave me a Limited-Area-AC effect. Not
bad huh? With a cold back, I threw the assaulted bottle out the window into the
gargantuan trash can the Indian railways offer – the railway track itself.
Technically however, it cannot be termed ‘a can’. ‘A channel’ would be more
like it. The trash channel – yeah! Boy am I good.
With just over fifteen minutes left for departure, the
compartment was about full. Two over sized, middle aged women with a huge appetite
(as it turned out later) got into the train sonorously cursing some guy who had
collided with one of them on the platform. I pitied the guy, for I could
scarcely reckon the magnitude of physical injury a collision with such a party
would caused to him. Just as I was praying they wouldn’t sit beside me, they
did. God loves mockery.
In about an hour, the peddlers came around hawking. The
first guy went about ‘chaaaaaiiiii chai chai chai chai chai’. The lady beside
me (I am going to call her Lady 1) squealed in excitement. She was probably a
previous inhabitant of the Kalahari Desert, that the sight of a liquid
consumable excited her to her toes. Her travel companion (Lady 2) stopped the
chai guy and asked for 2 cups of that fuming tea-colored liquid. Lady 2 sitting
beside the aisle passed on the chai cup to Lady 1, who drained the boiling
thing down her mouth and gave out a loud throaty belch. I could’ve sworn that I
saw whiffs of smoke escaping her not-very-small mouth. Lady 2 who decided to
act a lot lady-like, started sipping at the cup at a rate, I thought would take
her 7 hours to finish the tea. Surprisingly, she completed it in less than an
hour.
The ladies kept the pantry guys quite occupied. Tea, the
instigator, was followed by Masal Dosai. The Masal Dosai from railway pantries,
always come on feeble paper plates often over flowing with chutney and sambar,
customarily forming a not-very-sapid mixture and making the dosai go all saggy.
In addition, one must be warned that the plates might bend and curve
inconveniently, eventually leading to dripping of the chambar (chutney +
sambar) onto the dresses of the girls sitting beside the consumers. If the girl
beside happens to be reading a Tinkle Digest, the chambar might also *PLOP*
onto the ‘See and Smile’ section on the last cover page, besmirching the
sanctity of the whole book. The process of consumption on the whole might not
seem very salubrious or appetizing, at least to the girl sitting beside the lady
who would be slurping and hogging the wet deformed dosai, with no intentions
whatsoever to apologize. There I was. Fitting all the descriptions as snug as a glove.
My mom had always warned me. One bad deed of mine would
return to me ten times magnified. I then repented for never having listened to
her. I shrunk back on my seat spooked, wondering what more might befall on me.
The petrifying episode of my journey came to an end when I
got down at the Bangalore City station and held back my stomach till I reached
my room.
Last week, I narrated this to a room full of sympathizing
audience. The old lady seated in the front row burst into tears, unable to
stand listening to the gloom I had encountered; my brother had to walk her out
of the room and console her assuring her that I wouldn’t have any psychological
impact of the mishap. The psychologist that tested me assured me of that.
P.S : Many thanks to http://www.clipartof.com for the clip arts that seem to speak my words. :)
P.S : Many thanks to http://www.clipartof.com for the clip arts that seem to speak my words. :)