A mark. A stain. A disgrace!
She was all of that, my Soundarya. My daughter, Soundarya. Ten tiny fingers, ten tiny toes and we thought the world was perfect, Vijay and I. We were a family, our beautiful daughter completed our family. And so, we named her Soundarya. And today she is beautiful only to my eyes, sometimes even my eyes deceive me. She stumbles and falls down and sometimes, I don't rush to pick her up. She falters and forgets words and sometimes, I don't correct her. I have done it for three years now. I don't have the strength in me to correct her, to make her what she was meant to be - Soundarya, anymore.
I have a son, Aditya, all of five years old, handsome, too mature for his age and perfect. God made one perfect child for me. I fight to not stay angry at the injustice of it all. I shall not ask why I was chosen, to be the mother who had failed. And yet, I can't forget the downcast eyes, the heavy sighs that surrounded us when we told them that Soundarya will be like this - moody at times, incoherent at times, clumsy at times...and at times like these, I forget I have Aditya. Something tells me, he understands. I wish he did not. A five-year-old had no business trying to fight the shadows that strangle the word, "special".
"Oh, she is a special child? Yes, we admit special children in our day care center."
And on our way out, Aditya asks, "Ma, is Soundarya special?"
And I am faced with one of those heart-wrenching decisions again. To burden a child with the realities of life or to leave him in the dark bliss of ignorance for some more time?
Soundarya stumbles on nothing, falls down and bruises her knee. Aditya rushes to help her and I make my decision.
"Yes Adi, she is special. Because God decided to make her special. God was so fond of her that he wanted to make sure everyone here in our world realize that she is a special child, special to God, special to us. She is God's gift to us, Adi. We always have to take care of her and love her."
"Did you hear that, Soundarya?"
Soundarya - his voice has so much conviction, so much love, so much beauty when he says her name that I wonder if I feel for my daughter what Aditya feels for his sister...
"God loves you Soundarya. We all love you."
The younger of the two consoles the older and they whisper to themselves in a language only children can understand. I watch from a distance as if afraid to intrude and I cry.
"She does not eat her food. Mrs.Watson said she tried and all she does is cry for Aditya."
"Okay. We will work something out."
Vijay's indifferent tone annoys me.
"We have to work something out, now! She can't go on like this. I can't go on like this."
I notice Aditya shrinking away to a corner of the room, noticing the familiar strains of anxiety in my shrill voice. This is not the first time.
"What do you want to do?"
"Me? Why can't you decide for a change? She is your daughter too!"
"I didn't mean that Poornima. I was just..."
"Or let me do this. Let me run away from all of this so that noone can blame me..."
I start to cry again. Vijay waits for a few moments, walks towards Aditya and takes him to his room. He no longer hugs me when I cry. He used to do that the first year. Now, I just cry myself to sleep. It's easy to sleep, to not live and face life, but Soundarya is in my dreams too. Only, in my dreams, she is beautiful, flawless and she hates me. I am grateful that she is capable of such emotions atleast in my dreams - be it love or hate and as I drift in and out of consciousness, I try to quell the voice in my head that seem to haunt me every night, "You hate your own child!".
I wake up late, with a headache. Vijay has left a note for me, stuck to the fridge door, "Dropped Adi at school. I will pick him up from Joy's place when I come back from work. Get some rest. Soundarya is still asleep. I love you."
I feel guilty for the previous night and I suddenly want to see Vijay and tell him that I am sorry. I start calling him, when I hear Soundarya calling out for Aditya, "Adi, Adi...". I walk towards her room and she looks at me with questioning eyes, "Adi...". She doesn't say much else. I wonder, irrationally, if she cannot call me, "amma" because she knows what goes through my mind sometimes. I walk towards her and hold my hands out to her, "Come here. Talk to me. Say a-m-m-a...".
She leans against the wall and watches me as if I were a stranger in her life. Her eyes move slowly, taking in each part of me. She holds my gaze for so long I think I cannot look into her eyes any longer. She has large, brown eyes. She looks at my expectant hands for a few moments and slowly turns her head away, towards the window. My arms drop down, lifelessly.
I look at the small figure framing the window - tousled hair all around her little face, small gold earrings that catch the sunlight at times. I go near her and without touching her, observe my daughter, as if seeing her for the first time. She has such a pensive look on her face - it suits her. She is not pretty, as children her age are. Her left leg is shorter than her right leg and she often leans to one side as she walks, like an old woman. Her left eye is smaller than her right eye, but just as expressive. No, she is not beautiful as girls her age are. No one oohs and aahs when she talks. No one rushes to pick her up when she seems to fall. They just twitch their lips and whisper among themselves.
I hold her by the shoulders and gently, make her face me.
"Soundarya, Soundarya, Soundarya..."
I say her name, clearly, lovingly until she suddenly raises a hand and touches my cheek. I wait for her to do something that would make me love her so much, that it will hurt. I wait for her to wipe my tears away with her tiny hand. I wait for her to hug me. I wait for her to treat me as her child.
Instead, she takes her hand back and puts her wet fingers in her mouth. Her face assumes a comical expression as she tastes my salty tears.
I laugh, hysterically.
It is Aditya's big day today. He plays the role of the genie in Aladdin and the magic lamp. His school has been preparing for the play for the past six months. Aditya is excited to be the genie.
"Did you iron my costume?", he demands.
I smile at him and say yes for the third time.
"Now Aditya, don't be nervous. Genies are not nervous. Be confident and smile at the people."
"Ma, I can't smile. I am a genie. I grant wishes, I can't keep grinning at people!"
I shut up and help him get ready. Vijay is trying to give Soundarya her dinner. She is sulking and does not want Aditya to leave her.
"Adi..."
"It's ok Adi. Appa will take care of her. We are getting late for the play. They will join us soon as Soundarya has her dinner."
Instead Aditya leaves his costume bag down and goes to Soundarya.
"Soundarya, if you have your dinner soon, you can come see my play. I am going to be a genie..." and he waves his hands, in his best possible imitation of a friendly genie. Vijay smiles and I do too. Soundarya begins to cry.
She repeats his name and holds on to his sleeve. Vijay and I watch helplessly.
"Soundarya, I am not leaving you. I will be with you always", Aditya holds her close and its as if the words were spoken by someone a lot older than five years.
She cries loudly now and begins to hit him. I try to pry Aditya away from her. I receive a few of her slaps - tiny slaps on my cheeks, her nails scratching my face and leaving little red marks. I am used to them by now - the only way she knows to touch me. And as Aditya and I walk away, she frees herself from Vijay and before I can stop her, bites Aditya on his right arm.
He screams in pain and I do the one thing that comes to my mind then, I drag her aside and slap her - a resounding slap for the years of pain she has given me. Soundarya stops crying instantly and moves away from me, as if I were evil, a witch come to hurt her, a bad dream.
Aditya cries silently. And so does Soundarya. She walks towards him and touches his hand. He shrugs her hand away and says something that makes me forget my own pain, "I hate you, Soundarya, I really hate you."
And her face - the expression in her eyes, keeps coming back to me as I drive Aditya to the play. It's as if she understood every word of what he said, as if its import had killed something within her. She watched him with those surprised, tear-filled eyes until we walked out of the house. And then I realize what it was that I read in her evocative eyes but did not comprehend until later - hurt.
And it is as if I found my daughter again. It is as if I had become a mother again.
"Your son was amazing! We loved the genie!", his bubbly English teacher tells me, shaking my hands vigorously.
I smile and say thank you. Aditya grins shyly and hides behind me. Mrs.Kapoor ambles towards me, smiling widely.
My cell phone rings.
"Vijay, Adi was great today. You missed it. Is Soundarya giving you a hard time?"
"Poornima, Soundarya was not feeling good. I am with her at St.Johns hospital. Can you come here? Do you know the way? It's on Woodhill drive..."
My heart skips a beat.
"Your son is a natural on stage, Poornima", Mrs.Kapoor is saying, patting Aditya's head.
I try to smile, excuse myself and Aditya and first walk, then run towards my car. I drop my keys down, curse and take the car ahead instead of backing out of the parking spot and go over the pavement.
"Mom!"
I stop the car and try to take a deep breath. Aditya deserves an explanation.
"Adi, Soundarya has fever and we are going to see the doctor now."
He nods, with a frightened look on his face and asks no questions.
At the hospital, I know something is wrong when I take one look at Vijay's face.
"I just talked to the doctor. She is doing better now. She wouldn't stop crying when you left with Aditya and then she started turning blue, stopped breathing...but she is out of danger now. Its ok."
I look through the glass door, at the little figure huddled under blue hospital sheets and wires running around her. But, what concerns me further is the way Aditya presses his nose against the door and stares at his sister, stiff and unmoving, I can't even tell if he is breathing. Vijay moves towards Aditya and I motion for him to stop. I need to handle this. Vijay is too exhasusted to argue. He walks inside and sits with Soundarya, holding her hand.
I stand next to Aditya and look at my husband and daughter through the glass door.
I hear a sniff and Aditya says, "It's my fault. I made her cry and now she won't wake up, ma"
"No Adi. It's not your fault. Soundarya will wake up but...she is sick because I did not understand her, because I have not been a good mother to her."
And once again, I forget I am talking to my son. It's as if I am conversing with someone my age, exchanging views, arguing, consoling each other...
"Does Soundarya hate me?"
"No, Adi. She loves you...she loves you more than she loves me or appa...you are her big brother who will take care of her forever, remember?"
Adi nods, his eyes still on his sister and he says, "Ma, God gave me the best little sister."
"And the best daughter I can ask for", I whisper, hoping Soundarya will hear it, someday.
I put my arm around my son and we stand together, hoping, praying for Soundarya. Vijay looks up at us and motions for us to come in.
We take tentative steps towards Soundarya, tentative steps towards the destiny that Soundarya will carve for us. We sit around her, taking turns to hold her hand, talking to her, waiting for her to wake up, to complete us.
And she does. She opens her eyes and smiles at Adi and then at us. And in the bluish glow that night, I realize I have the most beautiful daughter in the world - she creates beauty all around her - beauty in a brother's love, beauty in a father's tears, beauty in a mother's realization, beauty that defines life, us - my beautiful daughter, Soundarya.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
Soundarya.
A mark. A stain. A disgrace!
She was all of that, my Soundarya. My daughter, Soundarya. Ten tiny fingers, ten tiny toes and we thought the world was perfect, Vijay and I. We were a family, our beautiful daughter completed our family. And so, we named her Soundarya. And today she is beautiful only to my eyes, sometimes even my eyes deceive me. She stumbles and falls down and sometimes, I don't rush to pick her up. She falters and forgets words and sometimes, I don't correct her. I have done it for three years now. I don't have the strength in me to correct her, to make her what she was meant to be - Soundarya, anymore.
Posted by RS at Tuesday, December 27, 2005
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21 comments:
Interesting topic to write on, I am glad you are varying a bit from friendship themes :)
I liked Aditya's character best in this story.
beautiful story... reminds me of the days when my sister worked for The Spastic Society of India... and also reminds of 'Black'.. :)
very touching story.. i'd say one one of your best ! keep it up babe !
i felt like watching ANJALI
agree with kamal, about the topic!
good one, RS!
beautiful RS.....
very well written!
kamal - hmm, took me more effort to write this story than the other ones...had to kind of use my imagination more :)
arun - thanks buddy!
anon - you know what? I remembered scenes from Anjali too when I wrote this story...I tried not to make them too similar :)
ph - thanks!
ibh - thanks!
Hey,
beautifuly written :)
agree with what's been said
- good that you are diversifying
- was reminded of anjali
- L
i did n't realise that i was crying when i was reading ur blog.
Very emotional !
Just one word - Amazing !
reading ur stories gives me a feel-good feeling!
:)
khushi - thanks :)
L - thats good, I guess :)
golden face - I dont write sad stories often...esp with sad endings because I dont want anyone to leave my blog feeling bad - I am glad I didnt write a sad ending for this story.
And thanks! do keep visiting!
dinesh - thanks a lot! appreciate your feedback, as always :)
monu - glad it does :)
Beautiful story.. Reminded me a lot of anjali.. could relate a lot to it ( esp the mothers anguish , the strain in the marraige etc) cos my cousin is a special child.
...and you said you used your 'imagination' more on this one?
-Siva
divya - thanks :)
bhoomika_fan - yes, indeed!
I love this story. Very different from the others.
senthil - Thanks a lot :)
Hi
Been reading your stories for some time now. Nice read - most of them.
Have you written stories in a totally grey/black(!!) shade? Have your stories involved the bad guys and ended without the feel-good ending?
Just curious!
Sowmya
Hi Rumya
The story was very well said.
Each character was excellently personified which in turn gave a very realistic feeling to it.
To compliment your efforts i could just say that through the story i just kept wondering to myself that this surely is a true story.
meena - sure, will take a look, thanks for the link!
madhura - hey there! Glad you liked the story, keep visiting :)
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