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Of Course I Love You!: Till I find someone better…

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by Durjoy Datta




  Durjoy Datta

  Maanvi Ahuja

  OF COURSE I LOVE YOU

  Till I Find Someone Better

  Contents

  About the Author

  Also by Durjoy Datta

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  Follow Penguin

  Copyright Page

  PENGUIN METRO READS

  OF COURSE I LOVE YOU …

  DURJOY DATTA was born and brought up in New Delhi. He completed a degree in engineering and business management before embarking on a writing career. His first book, Of Course I Love You …, was published when he was twenty-one years old and was an instant bestseller. His successive novels—Now That You’re Rich …, She Broke Up, I Didn’t! …, Oh Yes, I’m Single! …, If It’s Not Forever …, Someone Like You—have also found prominence on various bestseller lists, making him one of the highest-selling authors in India. Durjoy lives in New Delhi, loves dogs and is an active CrossFitter.

  For more updates, you can follow him on Facebook (www.facebook.com/durjoydatta1) or Twitter (@durjoydatta).

  MAANVI AHUJA was born in New Delhi, India, and did her post graduation in finance from IIM, Kozhikode. She is the author of two books, Of Course I Love You! … and Now That You’re Rich! …, both of which have been on various bestseller lists. Currently gappaa dot org residing in Mumbai, she works as an investment banker at a leading banking firm. To know more about her, you can mail her at maanviahuja@gmail.com.

  Also by Durjoy Datta

  Hold My Hand

  She Broke Up, I Didn’t!

  I Just Kissed Someone Else!

  Till the Last Breath …

  Oh Yes, I’m Single!

  And So Is My Girlfriend!

  (With Neeti Rustagi)

  Now That You’re Rich

  Let’s Fall in Love!

  (With Maanvi Ahuja)

  Someone Like You

  (With Nikita Singh)

  You Were My Crush

  Till You Said You Love Me!

  (With Orvana Ghai)

  If It’s Not Forever

  It’s Not Love

  (With Nikita Singh)

  Chapter 1

  This is perfect. This is perfect, I kept telling myself. It had been twelve hours on the trot. I had already spent my entire month’s allowance on her and there were no signs that I would be treated to any sort of guilty pleasures other than the expensive and the utterly fattening ones any time soon. The fact that Smriti looked smoking hot in her floral spaghetti and the short, pleated skirt that ended inches below her butt, wasn’t doing me any good either. The very purpose of the skirt’s existence—easy accessibility and eventual get rid-ability—was being defeated that night.

  It had been a long day and I was ruing the moment I had asked her out tonight. I had missed all my classes that day, all in vain.

  ‘So, what next?’ she asked.

  What next? For starters, she could fry my bloody head and chomp it down. Oh no, wait! That won’t cost me anything. No doubt, she would order her third cocktail that evening to wash it down. Now if only she would get tipsy, start seeing things in double and eventually be oblivious to my rendering her clothes useless. I might be a jerk, but many guys would agree with me on this: nudity suits girls.

  ‘I don’t know,’ I said, plastering a dreamy look on my face, one that screamed that I needed nothing but her. I hoped it would work this time, though it was the millionth time that day and she had not even blown a kiss, let alone do it real time.

  I wondered why I had decided to be in love with her. I could have lived with the tag of an ugly but lucky jerk with a one-track mind. For a guy who looked as bad as I did, it was surprising that I had dated a few girls before Smriti. However, none of my relationships worked and apparently every break-up was my fault. This time, I had vowed that I would make it work.

  Why?

  Because I was tired of the nonsense being said about me. That I had no respect for women. It’s not true at all. I was losing every bit of credibility on the dating scene. Soon, no friend who would set me up with anybody, which itself happened very rarely. Being a perennially struggling-to-save-money-for-dates student of a nerdy engineering college, in my world relationships were more than about partying each night and drinking oneself to sexual inability. People around me wanted love, care and long conversations, whatever that meant.

  It was time I fell in love. I had to find somebody to love. Or at least somebody I would not hate after the first few weeks. And somebody who wouldn’t dump me either. Smriti fit the bill. I was lucky I got her.

  She was not too hard to handle and was low on maintenance. At least, that’s what I had thought when I started pursuing her. But the most important thing—she was busy. As a medical student, she did not have a lot of time to spend on long phone conversations. She spent more time examining other people’s crotches than mine. Although that made me uncomfortable, at least I didn’t have to endure sleepless nights yakking on the phone.

  She was a little too fair and a little too thin, compared to my bulky five-foot-ten frame, and consequently a little less endowed in the places I would have liked. But what the hell, she was beautiful. Not like the ones you would fantasize about till you were blue and frothing at the mouth, but the kind you would take home to your mom. Although in our case, I could never imagine that happening.

  Something kept her from reaching the dizzying heights of dollish beauty. It was either her smile that extended from ear to ear, making her look like the little pug from a television commercial, or her slightly long, crooked nose. Whatever it was, there was something wrong about her. I guess I would find out in due time and find her not likeable. For now, I had to concentrate on getting her to kiss me.

  I was not in a position to comment on something such as looks, anyway. The only redeeming feature on my face was the patch of unmanaged beard that covered my chin and took away attention from the below-average features I had managed to crowd my face with. The unruly mop of hair on my head helped too. The basic idea was to hide as much of my face as possible. Okay, well, I had a dimple, too, but more or less, I was ugly.

  It had been almost a month since Smriti and I had accepted that we loved each other, but so far there was no physical proof to back it. We had not even kissed. However, a night-out was exactly what I needed to weave my magic, and weave her clothes off her. If I failed, I would tell myself it was pure, untainted love that I was after. As 50 Cent preached in one of his songs—Be a Gentleman. It was tough, though; she was not letting me be a man. Gentle, I never was.

  Anyway, I had managed to put my arm around her and land a peck on her cheek during the wretched movie we watched earlier, gold-class plus popcorn. Moreover, the peck was so woefully devoid of passion, it could have graced a greeting card rather than a Cosmopolitan centrefold.

  How was I supposed to know she would find The Chronicles of Narnia so interesting that she would fail to notice the stolen kiss on her cheek? She was a doctor, all right. But not a vet! Definitely not Dr D
oolittle. Ideally, she shouldn’t have been interested in a talking lion, let alone cry for the damned thing.

  ‘It’s closing down. Let’s go to a place that will be open all night,’ she suggested.

  Nightlife in Delhi in those days was pathetic, to say the least. I suspected even a tribal region in Sikkim showed up more on the US military radar systems than Delhi did. We’d have to go to Comesum, the only all-night place that I could afford since the money in my wallet had hit rock bottom that boring night. Comesum was where all the inexpensive night-outs invariably ended, amidst lots of pathetic food and mosquitoes. Nevertheless, its large and empty parking space and low do-not-disturb bribe rates excited me, and many others who spent the night acting funny behind tinted car windows.

  Sex was engulfing every part of Delhi, having long replaced television as the favourite pastime. The only people who refused to accept it were the ones not doing it. However, it was all around. The geeky girl in your class, the stud, the backbencher Sardar—however incapable you might have thought them to be, morally or physically, they were all doing it. If you had a girl, then you would be doing it. Sex was everywhere—schools, office backrooms, movie halls and parking lots. Secluded places were paradise. Illegal though they might have been, tinted car windows were in. In a few years, not having a girlfriend became as odd as having one had been, a few years back. The Delhi Public School MMS scandal of 2004 was just the tip of the iceberg.

  ‘How about going to Comesum?’ I asked a seemingly stupid question in response to a seemingly stupid suggestion.

  Still, I did not blame Smriti for her naivety. The girl I had dated before her was so astonishingly boring when we weren’t making out that I had to look for interesting places that one could go to in Delhi.

  ‘We can go to Aura. It’s in Hotel Ashoka. I heard it’s fine, too. Lots of girls! I bet you will like it,’ she said and nudged me. Sure, I could have leered at wiggly tits in a club, but an option like that is more alluring when you are no longer trying to get inside your girl’s shirt. It had been ten months since I had broken up and it’s not very easy convincing people to still be in contact, especially physical.

  ‘I have been to Aura. It’s not as good as people say it is. It just has a few drunken local brats dancing. That’s it. And it’s anyway not worth it, driving that far,’ I said.

  ‘Your call. After all, it is your treat. You decide.’

  Thank god for that.

  I loved Aura. Especially on evenings when stags weren’t allowed, it was heaven and an expensive one at that. I had to shoot either the plan down or myself. I loved myself. So we headed off to Comesum, driving off on a drunken auto driver’s directions. His breath was in no way different from Smriti’s. It’s amazing: I paid for her bad breath and she isn’t even drunk!

  We had to ask directions of whoever we came across, thanks to two of my most feminine attributes combined with a masculine one—I couldn’t remember roads, was a terrible driver, and pretended to know it all.

  After about a million detours, we finally reached the place where I hoped all my hard work for the day and the few weeks preceding it would pay off. I told myself not to expect anything because I was so damn much in love, after all.

  Wasn’t I?

  ‘Ice cream?’ Smriti asked.

  ‘Sure!’

  The urge to kill her was now coursing through my veins. I could feel it seeping out of my skin. I had started wondering what options she had if I were to abandon her in a desolate street at 3 a.m. at night in New Delhi, the rape capital of India. It wasn’t a particularly clever idea but I did consider it when she looked the other way while I fuelled the car up! It costs money and I was barely above the poverty line. I wished someone would tell her that. It’s not that I minded paying, but she could have offered at least.

  Well, actually, I did mind paying.

  For guys like us, with limited means, dating is like playing Russian roulette. High risk, high gain. If the girl offers to split on a date and it goes well, you’re the king. If she doesn’t and the date goes bad, you’re dead. I was running out of luck.

  I wished I hadn’t turned down my college senior Nitin’s invitation to his birthday treat. But then, girls make the world go round, and I was no different.

  My eyes started roving around the complex as we gulped down the slimy, sweet thing she had ordered. It was a two-storeyed building and most people sat outside. It wasn’t anything spectacular—in fact, it wasn’t even air-conditioned or heated, but then you couldn’t expect it to be. It opened primarily for railway passengers and not drunk party revellers. Every weekend it turned into a hot spot for ‘bird’ watching! Anyone who ran out of money, got thrown out of a club or got too drunk, landed up here. So we would have here a mix of short skirts and long, flowing ones (but mostly short!) bought from anywhere on Janpath (the place where you can bargain till you drop) or some swanky upscale mall in Vasant Kunj.

  Delhi girls never dress conservatively, making it a pleasure to ogle them. I had no fashion sense and anything that started below the navel and ended above mid-thigh was fine by me. Exposure is always in vogue! There is nothing more refreshing than a pair of well-toned, attractive legs. This is not objectifying women; it’s just appreciating a certain fact about them a little more than others.

  Suddenly, I heard a lot of girls bitching to their boyfriends in tight T-shirts about other girls who wore shorter skirts or heavier make-up. Those girls could have fired up a power station to full capacity. It just worsened my already sky-high testosterone levels. I tried to finish off the ice cream quickly, as it had been a pain watching her chew it down to atomic levels before swallowing.

  ‘Aren’t you feeling cold?’ I asked, rubbing my hands. Obviously, she wasn’t. Girls have an internal heating system that is activated once they put on a short dress or an off-shoulder.

  ‘No. Are you?’ she asked.

  ‘Not really, I just thought we could sit in the car; there is too much noise out here,’ I said.

  ‘Are you sure?’ she asked and smirked at me.

  What is that supposed to mean? Is that a yes? If it is, why doesn’t she bloody say so? Can we please cut the crap and make out? At least kiss, damn it! It’s been ten months since I have done that!

  I guess she was getting some kind of a sadistic pleasure in teasing me. I think all girls do.

  ‘Yes,’ I said.

  I started walking towards the parked car, hoping she would follow. For the first time that night, I was being headstrong and manly. I definitely knew what I wanted: I was curious to know what it would be like to kiss her. I took the first few steps and paddled my hands around me to hold her by the waist but my hands caught nothing but air. She hadn’t followed, and when I looked back, I found her standing near the ice-cream vendor waiting for me to pay the guy. The night just kept getting longer. I paid the guy and asked Smriti, ‘Can we go now?’

  ‘Yeah, sure,’ she said.

  At this point, I was destructively angry but I had to stay focused. As we walked towards the car, I handed over a hundred-rupee note to the moustached security guard. It was a worthwhile investment. I could already feel my hormones kicking into action. I pulled up my jeans and walked swiftly towards the car. The problem with low-waist jeans is that when you walk, it is always as if you have a helmet stuck right between your thighs and if you have mammoth thighs like me, God help you. Yeah, I was a little healthy and majorly detestable.

  ‘Deb, why did you get Vernita’s car? The mileage on it sucks, doesn’t it?’ she asked as she walked ahead of me. I didn’t stop her from doing that. Her skirt looked even shorter and more alluring from behind. Yeah, I was being a cheap pervert. But then, every guy goes through this phase!

  ‘My car wasn’t serviced,’ I said. It doesn’t have tinted glasses.

  She was playing around. She couldn’t possibly be concerned with the mileage of the car I drove. If she had, she would have offered to go Dutch, or at least paid for her own ice cream. I might have r
efused, but she could have offered!

  As soon as we settled down in the car, I got the elementary step wrong. However, I didn’t blame myself for it. It had been quite some time since I had stared at a real naked girl and I was dying to do it that night. I had started to rub my nose against the nape of her neck, which was meant to send her into the throes of a hormonal overdrive.

  ‘Are you trying to seduce me, Deb?’ she asked. I don’t think she didn’t like it, but I think she still wanted to play hard to get.

  ‘Mmm … err … no.’

  ‘Mmm, err, no,’ she mocked me and I turned red, only to turn scarlet later. ‘You might have had your way with girls in the past, but not this time,’ she said.

  It was strange because I had never had my way with girls in the past. Girls always found me repulsive in that department.

  ‘As in? What do you mean?’

  ‘As in, I will initiate things when I feel like doing so, when I am comfortable with it.’ I was embarrassed at my failed attempt. She was in control? Something in that tone was incredibly inviting. I wanted her bad now. Only I didn’t know how to go about it. Stupid nerd.

  ‘Okay, whatever you say. I love you,’ I said.

  ‘I love you, too,’ she replied and I faked a smile, as an airhostess would at ogling old perverts when what she really wants is to have minced by the turbine blades. I sunk back into my seat, wondering if there was any porn left to download. I wished I were in Mumbai or Bangalore. Delhi girls are tough, Shrey had once told me.

  ‘Why do you love me?’ she asked. She looked at me as if she was expecting me take out a pen and start making a list on a mile-long piece of toilet paper.

  ‘You are very different from others.’ That was supposed to include everything on the list.

  ‘How am I different from the other girls you have gone out with?’

  I resisted telling her she was no different; she asked the same questions they had.

  ‘I love you. With the others, it didn’t feel the way it feels with you. It wasn’t love. Love is what I feel for you, pure and untainted. With you, I feel different, I feel special, wanted. I feel loved and I long to make you feel the same. You make me feel so … You complete me, Smriti. I love you. I really do.’

 

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