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When I Tell You A Story: Book 1 (Black River Trilogy)

Page 13

by Himalaya Goswami

mobile,

  and

  swiped

  his

  finger

  to

  the

  right

  of screen as soon as he saw the caller’s name. My love.

  ‘WHERE ARE YOU?’ she screamed blue murder as the call was picked up. ‘WHERE

  THE HELL ARE YOU?’

  Raman was frowned. He gulped his nervousness inside, and asked, ‘I was…..

  sleeping. What happened.’ He had sensed a calamity.

  ‘Ipsa...they took her,’ she burst out in crying at her loudest. Raman was frozen so

  deep that a thousand stones pelted on him would go waste.

  ‘Where are you?’ he asked. His tone had grown authoritative now, and rageous.

  ‘I am at Akanksha's house,’ Namrata shrieked, still sobbing. Raman didn't know the

  friends she made in past four years, but Akanksha was not among those.

  ‘Are you alright?’

  ‘Yes. My daughter is kidnapped, my home has been

  burnt.

  And

  i almost

  died

  a

  dozen

  times in past 24 hours. I see no reason to be worried,’ she was howling.

  I am sorry you have to go through this ruin because of me.

  ‘Meet me at Great India Place...at 11,’ Raman said, and she disconnected the call.

  Raman dropped the phone on the bed and glanced around his home. The sofa had

  been turned upside down, and the books had been dropped off the shelves. The

  telescreen had a hole in it, and every glass made artefact was broken into pieces.

  Even the bathroom and the kitchen was not spared.

  He saw his hands. The circular black marks on his palm had swollen, and a design

  had appeared over its surface, of a maze with

  many

  wrong

  ways

  to

  reach

  the

  centre,

  but just one correct path. Hs hands had patches of dried blood,including the rest of

  his body.

  The dream was real. And the memory of the blue glowing stone struck his mind. In

  another instant, he was searching for them.

  The diary was where he had left it last night, on the table in front o

  f h

  is b

  ed. It a mazed h

  im

  to see how everything else had been messed up except the diary. It hadn’t been moved an

  inch. He lifted it up, blowed the dust and ran his fingers over t he b

  rown c over. C

  reases h

  ad

  appeared on its spongy leather, and the ‘W’ at front was battered. On the back right c orner

  of the diary were the letters H G in an old serif typeface. And he found it heavier than the

  last time. Something is hiding inside the diary.

  He put the diary back on the table, and opened it slowly from the middle. And blue light

  discharged from the cracks between the pages. He opened it further, and the light w

  ent o

  n

  intensifying a s h

  e p

  ul ed a part t he two f aces o

  f t he n

  otebook. The v ivid b

  lue l ight p

  enetrated

  through his eyes and a series of scenes flashed in his mind.

  The mark on his palm had appeared on the surface of stone- he adjoined the marks on his p alms w

  ith

  those on the stone a nd curled his fingers a round i t- the stone s plendored w

  ith flame a nd h

  e maneuvered

  it inside a mechanical hole- the stone sent a beam and it hit a football shaped ball with o nly e dges. A

  buckminster ful er. The ful er charged up, and its nodes began glowing like stars t hat found li

  ght. The

  current flew from a w

  ire that e merged f rom a circuit at the c entre of the fuller, a nd h

  e turned h

  is h

  ead t o

  face the dead screen on the wall. And the screen lit up. A terminal appeared on t he b lack s creen w

  ith a

  prompt. His machine was working.

  He closed the diary, and stepped back. Freakin’ Impossible.

  -----*-----

  19

  Raman was in a dilemma. After al the events, it w

  as i mpossible t o k

  eep h

  is f aith s turdy a nd

  shal ow. The power was real, he had felt it himself. And the power was with him. The dead

  hope revived, and he set out to wash al the blames he had taken, and al the failures he

  endured. The anger for his master was gone, and he found himself weeping in the shower.

  The world was in a dilemma too, as it always has been. The dilemma of freedom from self,

  the dilemma of having abundance o

  f t ime. B

  ut t hat d

  ay, i t w

  as d

  ifferent. T

  hey were s tunned

  by the behavior of weather from past evening. The clouds were stiff black, as if made of

  paint, and the rain w

  as s traight a nd u

  niform. A

  nd i t w

  as just o

  ver a c ity, l eaving t he weather

  forecasters scratching their heads. And in the morning, the clouds were melting. Now, the

  Sun was boiling water fil ed in New Delhi, and extreme humidity took over. The domestic

  electricity supply had been cut off, and each person’s sweat could fil a bucket in an hour.

  Amidst al flaming chaos, he set out for Noida. The metros were on, helping people reach

  their destinations, as it always has been. Perhaps, they were built for that day.

  *

  Namrata was seated in a corner on the top floor of Grand India Place, the heart of

  Noida. The vast stretched mall was once the biggest mall in India, and it was a

  complete different world in itself. And she was thinking about life and death. Her

  eyes were swollen, and burning

  red.

  Her

  face

  was

  an

  eroded

  ground.

  She

  was

  seated

  with her back facing the entry points, and kept an

  eye

  around

  to

  protect

  herself

  from

  any goon.

  Raman walked up to her from behind and

  patted

  her

  back.

  She

  sensed

  her

  hand,

  and

  her eyes closed themselves. He got up and wrapped herself around his chest. He

  blanketed his hands as well, and she immersed her head in his chest.

  ‘My family….I want my family,’ she said, sobbing.

  Raman kissed her forehead, and the nostalgia gripped both of them. The smell of

  dove fused with a familiar aroma of body lotion pulled back the memories they had

  locked in the deepest corners of the hearts. He put his brown leather bag on the

  table and they sat beside each other.

  ‘Please give them whatever they need.’

  ‘I do not have it,’ he shrieked.

  ‘You are a terrible liar,’ she looked at him. ‘You do not love us?’

  ‘Yes I do. You are my world. But if i give it to them, they’ll destroy the world.’

  She jerked her shoulders. Do not tell me stories.

  ‘They are after the gemstone. And they won’t stop after acquiring it. They’ll kill us,


  and they’ll kill millions of innocent others.’

  His words struck her like a bullet. They

  made her re-think

  of the dreams that recurring

  for some time. ‘This can’t be real.’

  ‘My feeling was mutual, until i saw them myself.’

  Namrata thought for a moment, and something clicked her mind. This was

  spontaneous, because the same idea struck him as well. There is telepathy between

  hearts. The light can save us.

  He pulled out the diary from his bag, and handed it over to her. Do. Not. open. It.

  ‘This diary….I recovered it from Guha’s home,’ he explained, ‘it is that cursed diary

  that haunts its owner in their dreams.’

  ‘Did it affect you?’

  ‘Not much. But it almost killed me.’

  She didn’t say a word. Neither did he. ‘You don't believe me?’

  ‘I believed you once. And once more. And again once more. And you shattered my

  faith every single time.’

  She knew it was impossible to forget the past. Nothing

  could

  do

  that,

  no

  matter

  how

  much someone else loved her, a part of her heart would

  always

  burn.

  She

  knew

  how

  to respond to situations like these, which were a once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon.

  Neeta’s phone

  began

  to

  ring

  and

  the

  name

  that

  flashed

  on

  the

  screen

  straightened

  all

  the lines on her forehead. She got off the chair and rushed to

  a

  corner,

  not

  willing

  to

  miss it by any chance.

  When she returned back, she was sweating. ‘They’re here.’

  It was noon

  and

  the

  heat

  was

  at

  its

  peak.

  Raman

  and

  Namrata

  walked

  out

  of

  the

  east

  gate of the mall and found hundreds of men waiting for them, lead by their boss.

  ‘Here you are, two old birds flocking together again.’

  -----*-----

  20

  ‘I feel closer to our maker when i see pain, and tragedy. He puts us through pain,

  because he enjoys watching us suffer. It certainly makes him feel superior over us,

  over all of us.’ Qadri was preaching his prisoners, who were on their knees with two

  men holding guns at their back. It certainly made him feel superior over them. Over

  all of them.

  ‘Search him,’ he commanded, and his loyal ones snatched away his bag while the

  others began scavenging him.

  The goon holding the bag was a young, new lad who was flooding in loyalty for his

  new boss. The amateur ones, they have always been the most dangerous. He tore

  apart the flap cover of bag, opened all the zips, turned it upside down and shook the

  bag as turbulently as he could. Raman’s eyes were fixed on his bag, and his heart

  skipped a beat as the diary fell out of it.

  ‘What is that?’ asked Qadri,

  with

  his

  eyes

  fixed

  on

  the

  object

  that

  wasn't

  behaving

  like

  all the other lifeless things in the world. Only he didn't know, man made things are

  more alive than man himself now a days.

  The diary closed itself as soon as it touched the ground, and smoke began rising

  from the pages inside. It was shivering, its four edges vibrating violently like a

  drowning man withers for air.

  The goon picked up the diary, without a wave of fear in his eyes, and handed it over

  to his boss. He was standing with his back facing the sun, and as he held the spine

  of the diary, its vibrations dulled down. The pages were still sending out smokes

  though.

  ‘Amazing,’ he said, and flipped it over to see

  the

  back.

  He

  rubbed

  his

  fingers

  over

  the

  letters HG, and opened the diary in a shot.

  Just a simple diary. He smirked, and tossed the diary at Raman. It fell close to

  Raman, who was still on his knees, his hands at his back. The notebook was

  smoldering, and tiny streams of smoke were erupting out from inside. Bubbles had

  appeared on the leather of its cover, as if it were baked in an oven.

  ‘I need them….right now.’ Qadri walked closer to R

  aman, a nd w

  hispered i n h

  is e ars. ‘ Or, s he

  dies. .right now.’

  And upon his naked words, the goons behind the two captives p

  ul ed o

  ut a m

  auser f rom h

  is

  inner pocket and pointed the gun’s barrel at her head.

  Namrata’s heart was bumping like a car on a rocky path, struggling to maintain her calm

  while a beast was reluctant to sprout her skul with a bul et. One bul et could be a lifetime

  supply, one time payment of al her sufferings.

  Her eyes were wet when he saw them, but fearless. The wilful woman was not afraid of

  dying, but the mother inside her was on edge for her child’s life.

  ‘I do not have them,’ Raman yel ed after a motionless glare into her eyes.

  ‘You are a liar. And you wil burn in hel for your sins,’ Qadri cried.

  ‘Wil I? And what about your sins,’ Namrata screamed at her loudest. ‘You wil burn 100

  times and stil your deeds won't wash away.’

  ‘Let's put it this way: I have my place reserved in paradise already.’

  ‘You need a revision, a psychiatrist and a spiritual guru’ Raman said in a n unusual s arcastic

  tone, fil ed with disgust.

  Though everything Qadri didn't want to hear offended him, but the one that most hurt his

  pride was the underestimation of his wisdom, and beliefs.

  ‘Where is the fucking stone?’ he screamed at his loudest score, and his terrifying voice got

  everyone’s attention around. His eyes were fuming r ed, f il ed w

  ith f rustration, a nd h

  is teeth

  were grinding. He stood silent for a moment, then screamed again, and k

  icked t he d

  iary a s

  hard he could.

  Nobody was attending to the weird events happening to the cursed notebook. Flames were

  erupting out o

  f i ts sides, a nd it w

  as t rembling l ike a f ish p

  ul ed o

  ut o

  f w

  ater. A

  s h

  e k

  icked t he

  burning notebook, it swung in air and fel open. And what happened n

  ext s hook e veryone’s

  beliefs about reality and myths, about the contemporary and the timeless.

  Dazzling blue light sprinkled out of i t, and i t w

  as so b

  lue t hat t he s unlight f aded dul a gainst

  it. Every eyebal w

  as directed t o t he s ource o

  f a bu
ndant b

  lue l ight. I t w

  as indeed, d

  ivine. A

  nd

  people, as expected, began clicking pictures and recording videos of the light that was

  brighter than the brightest they had ever known.

  ‘YOU ARE A LIAR, RAMAN,’ Qadri cried in rejoice. ‘Bring the kit,’ he commanded his men

  the other moment and rushed toward his precious.

  He knew what the blue light was. He had heard stories from his departed companion, of a

  light that could the sun, a light that could open doors of infinite power for them. A goon

  fetched a metal ic silver suitcase and Qadri pul ed out a pair of leather gloves out of it. The

  gloves that could hold any object with touching were a g

  ift t o h

  im, a s ign o

  f their f riendship

  from his pal. A gift on a purpose.

  Raman saw the gloves with bleeding eyes. It was his invention, an innovative approach to

 

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