The air in the
apartment was a pressurized vessel of unspoken accusations and the sharp,
metallic tang of anxiety. To Nirmala, silence was the quiet before a structural
failure. To her husband, Mukund, it was the only sanctuary left in a world that
had become increasingly loud and unnecessarily frantic.
They were
seventy-two and sixty-eight, respectively, ages where time should have slowed
to the pace of honey. Instead, the upcoming trip to Nainital, orchestrated
through a fly-by-night storefront titled “Easy Travels,” had turned their
living room into a theater of the absurd.
Nirmala’s panic
was not a frantic thing but rather was architectural. She built it brick by
brick, starting at 6:00 AM when the first dial to Bharat, the proprietor, went
straight to a sterile recording: “The number you are trying to reach is
currently switched off.”
“He’s gone,” she
announced, her voice a vibrato of practiced doom. She was standing by the
window, her silhouette framed by the dusty light of a Delhi morning. “The shop
is shuttered. He has our twelve thousand rupees, Mukund, and he is likely
halfway to Kathmandu by now.”
Mukund didn’t look
up from his newspaper. He knew the geography of his wife’s mind better than the
streets of the colony. She fed on the ‘unresolved drama’—the friction of life
gave her a caloric heat that kept her moving. Without a crisis to manage, she
felt invisible.
“Bharat is a local
boy, Nirmala,” he said, his voice a low, rhythmic anchor. “His mother has
gallbladder stones. He is likely at the hospital where the reception is poor.
Patience is a muscle; you should try exercising it.”
“Patience is a
luxury for those who don’t mind sleeping on a railway platform,” she snapped.
She began to pace.
Every few minutes, the ritual repeated: the frantic stabbing of the phone
screen, the mechanical rejection from the network, and the subsequent exhale
that sounded like a tire losing air. She wasn’t just worried about the tickets
but seemed to be auditioning for the role of the victim in The Great Swindle.
It energized her. Her eyes were bright, her movements sharp. She was, in her
own exhausting way, profoundly alive.
As the weekend
approached, the distance between them grew, not in meters, but in temperament.
Mukund retreated into a studied indifference. He ironed his linen shirts with a
slow, meditative precision. He curated a small bag of lemon drops and digestive
tablets. He moved with the steady gait of a man who believed that the universe,
while indifferent, was rarely malicious.
Nirmala,
conversely, was a whirlwind of catastrophic preparation. She packed and
unpacked. She called the neighbor, Mrs. Iyer, to narrate the saga of the
"Vanishing Travel Agent."
“It’s the
uncertainty, Shanti,” Nirmala would hiss into the phone, loud enough for Mukund
to hear. “The complete lack of accountability! And Mukund? He sits there like a
Buddha made of clay. If the house were on fire, he’d ask if the tea was ready.”
Mukund listened to
the cadence of her outrage. He understood that her anger was a shield against
the fragility of their age. If they were being cheated, it meant they were
still players in the world. To be ignored by a travel agent was better than
being ignored by life itself.
On Wednesday, four
days before departure, the tension reached a crescendo.
“I am going to his
office,” she declared, tying her sari with a violent jerk.
“It’s forty
degrees out, Nirmala. Sit down.”
“I will not sit! I
will find him. I will find his house. I will find his mother’s gallbladder!”
“And if he is
simply busy?” Mukund asked. “You will have spent three hours in the sun to
prove what? That you are capable of being angry in public?”
She glared at him.
For a moment, the movie of their shared history flashed in her eyes—the decades
of his quietude and her storm. She didn't go. Instead, she sat on the edge of
the bed and wept a single, sharp tear of frustration. Mukund did not comfort
her with words. He merely brought her a glass of water with a pinch of salt and
sugar.
Friday evening
arrived with the weight of a funeral. No tickets. No Bharat. The phone remained
a brick of plastic and glass.
Nirmala had
reached the stage of ‘Stony Resignation.’ She sat in the dark, her suitcase
zipped and locked, a monument to a journey that would never happen. She had
already drafted the lecture she would give Mukund for the next ten years about
his "fatalistic laziness."
Then, at 9:14 PM,
the phone chirped.
A WhatsApp
message. Two PDF files. A voice note from Bharat, sounding harried and
breathless: “Uncle, sorry, sorry! Mobile dropped in water, just got new SIM.
Tickets attached. Driver will be at your gate at 5:00 AM. Sorry, Uncle.”
Mukund looked at
the screen and then at his wife. He felt no triumph, only a quiet relief that
the structural integrity of his weekend might be preserved.
“He sent them,”
Mukund said softly.
Nirmala took the
phone. She scrolled through the PDFs, her eyes scanning for a flaw, a
misspelled name, a wrong date. Finding none, she let out a long, shuddering
breath. The drama was resolved. The antagonist had been a watery grave for a
smartphone, not a criminal mastermind.
The energy seemed
to drain from her instantly. The ‘unresolved drama’ had been settled, and she
was left with the mundane reality of actually having to go.
The car arrived at
5:15 AM. The drive up the winding hairpins toward Nainital was a slow
transition from the yellow dust of the plains to the bruised purples and deep
greens of the mountains.
As the car
climbed, the air thinned and cooled. Inside the cabin, a strange thing
happened.
Nirmala leaned her
head against the window. The frantic, vibrating woman of the previous week was
gone. The resolution of the crisis had robbed her of her fire, leaving behind a
tired, elderly woman who just wanted to see the lake. She watched the pines flicker
past, her breath misting the glass. She was silent, not with anger, but with a
profound, sudden exhaustion.
Mukund, however,
began to wake up.
With the threat of
Nirmala’s panic removed, he felt a lightness in his chest. He watched the way
the sunlight hit the peaks, turning the snow into liquid silver. He wasn't
thinking about Bharat or the twelve thousand rupees, rather about the smell of
oak fire and the taste of mountain tea.
By the time they
reached the Mall Road, the roles had fully inverted.
“Look at the
water, Nirmala,” Mukund said, his voice bright, almost youthful. “The color of
an emerald.”
Nirmala looked.
She gave a small, weary nod. “It’s cold,” she whispered, wrapping her shawl
tighter. “I’m glad we’re here. But the stress, Mukund... it takes a toll.”
He smiled,
reaching out to pat her hand. He knew better. The stress hadn't taken a toll;
it had been the fuel that got her to the car. Now that they were safe, she
could afford to be old. And he, finally free of the shadow of her fear, could
afford to be happy.
They stepped out
of the car. The crisp Himalayan air rushed into their lungs—a final, silent
witness to their dance.
“Easy Travels,”
Mukund read the heading on the printed ticket one last time before crumpling it
and dropping it into a bin.
“Nothing is ever
easy, Mukund,” she sighed, leaning on his arm as they walked towards the hotel.
“No,” he agreed,
feeling the steady strength in his legs. “But it’s always worth the trip.”