The boy was called Vedant. His
actual name was Vedanta Desika Upadhyay with Vedanta Desika being his given
name and Upadhyay his family name as was the custom. He was named after a
Vaishnav saint of the same name (the same name being Vedanta Desika) and the
Upadhyay meant he was descended from a long line of upper-class Brahmin teacher-priests.
He was currently looking for the right clothes to wear on the occasion of
making a booty call.
Damn Vedant said. A booty call is
a meeting that has been decided beforehand to be of a purely carnal nature. Technically Vedant wasn’t actually headed to make a booty call but he was going to meet a girl
he’d befriended online in the flesh (ha ha) for the first time and he’d decided that that was close
enough. He had told his parents he was going to some friend’s birthday party
and they had been nice enough not to cross-question him.
He finally decided upon a
passable combination of jeans and shirt that passably traversed the thin line
between casual chic and desperation. He whistled the tune to Lovely Head by
Goldfrapp as he made his way from his room to the front door and onward to the
gates of the apartment complex where he lived. Then he hummed the chorus of Suck it and
See by Arctic Monkeys as he made his way from the gates of the apartment complex to
the bus stop.
He had almost climbed into the
first bus he saw when he realized there was a large stain underneath his front
pocket.
The shirt did not have a name but
Vedant called it his Luckey Shirt (the extra e being a reference to an obscure
Stephen King short story). There was nothing particularly lucky (or even luckey)
about that shirt: it was simply a shirt. It was white and had red and ochre
stripes alternating over it. The overall effect was vaguely like looking at a
sheet of wrapping paper with buttonholes and a collar creased into the
appropriate place.
Vedant called it his luckey shirt
because it was associated with some of the best times he’d ever had. He had
only worn it on three previous occasions –
a long-awaited date with a pretty
girl the day he went halfway across the city so they’d give him a trophy and
clap at him and finally the wedding of his favourite cousin who currently had
a baby on the way and a happy marriage to top it off
– but those three probably counted amongst his greatest
moments of jubilation. Even the slightest amount of rumination would have
revealed an unfortunate exchange between cause and effect but analysis had
never been Vedant’s strong point and the shirt had been there through thick and
thin and so his luckey shirt it was.
The stain on said shirt had come
from a rusted zipper on the trousers hanging adjacent to it in his closet and
there was nothing anyone could do about it. Vedant spared a lingering glance
for the easy ride he was abandoning and began the long trudge back home.
He did
not whistle or hum this time.
The bus would probably have
sympathized with his plight and stayed there for a while longer but it wasn’t
sentient and its actions dictated by the driver so there was a rough clank of
gears and off it went.
The bus was called Lilawati after
the mother of the driver although on paper its name was I2BN-A34V. The I2BN
indicated the specifications of the engine shipped from company
headquarters in Sweden. The A was a marker for which factory the bus was
assembled in. The 34V stood for the lot number of this particular
specimen. The Lilawati represented a strong nostalgic yearning for a better
place far away from the fungible reality of here and now.
The man at the wheel gunned the
throttle and the bus rumbled onwards. They passed a couple of intersections but
the number plastered across its forehead was GL-23 so there were no turns
required.
Under the next metro overpass another bus marked GL-23 suddenly
appeared in the rearview.
Lilawati bore the other bus no
animosity but the man at the wheel did not enjoy the sensation of being
overtaken. He squeezed down on the accelerator again and did not ease up until
they’d crossed the 60km/h mark.
(Sample Problem:
The accepted speed limit for public transport vehicles in the National Capital Region is 40km/h. The bus trailing Lilawati is running at 55km/h. How does she maintain her lead?
The accepted speed limit for public transport vehicles in the National Capital Region is 40km/h. The bus trailing Lilawati is running at 55km/h. How does she maintain her lead?
Answer:
The only way Lilawati can maintain her lead is by keeping her speed over the
incline and ignoring the crowds milling forth at whatever stop has the misfortune of being next)
As they passed Karkardooma
Crossing the other driver finally conceded the point and withdrew from both the
race and the narrative. The driver of Lilawati watched him fall back in the
rearview mirror and felt a large kernel of triumph settle in his innards like a
mango pit.
Then he saw the man on the bike
racing towards him and instinctively spun the wheel hard right.
The biker’s name was Tejwardhan
Parashar and he did not have a nickname because he did not have that sort of
friends. Tejwardhan’s friends were the sort of people you went to if the light
in the hall wasn’t working or if you needed somebody to watch your kids while
you went downstairs to go through the neighbours’ mail. Tejwardhan had chosen
them precisely because they were like that – and by extension like him. He had
been called a crashing bore by some acquaintances but he had never been late to
work so it all balanced out (or so he reasoned).
Tejwardhan did not like driving
his bike even remotely close to the speed limit. He always kept it hovering
near the 40km/h mark although the law said he could go all the way up to 50.
That day however Tejwardhan had
been thrown by an emergency roundup at the office in order to discuss the latest
round of downsizing. He winced slightly as he cut into the opposite lane at the next intersection but he reckoned in a few more minutes he’d be pulling into the community center
sprinting up the stairs to his office oblivious to the world once more.
The world had other plans.
Too
late he saw the parrot green behemoth bearing down on him he jerked the handle
to the right but everything had slowed down now. The bike skidded to horizontal
and then pinballed between the barriers on either side of the road.
What happened next was too
horrific to describe but the prime-time news would try its best.
The first responder however was a representative of the local news called Shitikanth Parasher (no relation to the biker). Shitikanth had precisely the sort of friends who were good with nicknames but in his case they hadn't needed much effort. He had gone through school acquiring an ever-expanding knowledge of vernacular slang for fecal matter and a near-homicidal rage at the smart alecks who substituted simulations of flatulence for actual humour.
Even so his fondest wish at the moment was to give a brief and unobtrusive account and get off the scene before somebody from the old days saw him on live television and decided to congratulate him with a phonecall consisting exclusively of fart jokes.
T-this is Shitikanth Parasher of Delhi Now he began and was instantly aware of the misstep. Then he began to move towards the bus as he spoke and there was a literal misstep as he stumbled over something belonging to Tejwardhan Parashar (no relation to the reporter).
Don't panic Shitikanth told himself. Then he saw his cameraman's eyes widen and realized he'd said it out loud and into the microphone.
This day couldn't get any worse he thought through clenched teeth. He glanced back at the object he'd stumbled over.
There followed a decisive moment of the sort that can transform an entire news career - the iconic sort of moment that surpasses context and rises to the level of self-sufficient tableau.
Is that some guy's foot? Shitikanth Parasher said with an expression that you have probably seen already if you are on familiar terms with the internet.
Then he went down in local news history as the first reporter to regurgitate his lunch on live television.
Vedant saw the video on his smartphone near the end of what was otherwise a wasted day.
The girl he'd gone to meet had not turned up at all and tried to lecture him about the real life applications of sarcasm when he called her. He'd hung up confused and disappointed.
The video on the other hand was promising. In fact Vedant was still chuckling when he finally got home.
No dinner he said to his mom by way of greeting. No dinner he repeated to his father who was watching a different report of the same incident on television
Then he shut the door and turned on the light and came face-to-face with the man in his room.
The man in the room was sitting in Vedant's chair although he must've been roughly a hundred miles tall. He had white hair. He wore black clothes. His hands were the colour of moldy bread.
Finally said the man in the room. I thought you'd never come back.
Who? Vedant asked the man in the room who wasn't really a man and wasn't really in the room. What?
There's been a bit of a problem the man in the room said. And I have been sitting here all afternoon and all evening trying to figure it out. Care to help me out a little?
I don't understand Vedant explained. Part of his mind was telling him he should scream but he seemed to have forgotten how.
You were supposed to be on that bus the man in the room said. That's pretty easy to grasp isn't it? You were supposed to get on that bus. And you were supposed to go down with that bus.
I had to change my shirt.
Ah yes. The man in the room held up Vedant's shirt. Your luckey shirt. He stressed the 'e' rather sharply.
Vedant said nothing.
This isn't a game the man said. And you certainly don't get to cheat.
He brought the shirt near his face and sniffed. For a second or two that's all he really did - sniff - but then something changed. The man's nostrils flared wide. The shirt lost first the red stripes then the ochre ones and finally the crisp white backdrop.
When the man dropped it back on the bed the shirt was a diseased and tattered yellow. There was a slight hiss from the spot where it made contact.
I've got your scent the man grinned. We will settle this soon.
Vedant didn't say anything.
The man in the room got off the chair walked right up to the boy stood in front of him.
Soon he repeated
breathing the word out into the boy's face
turning his complexion the same yellow as the shirt
his hair grey and then snowy white.
The man's grin never faltered.
Don't try any funnier business he said in parting. We know where you live.
Then he opened the nearest drawer stepped into it and was gone.
Vedant continued to stand next to the light switch continued to stare at the exact same spot continued to say nothing.
And that is exactly how his mother found him five minutes later.
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