Untitled...A Story by SOUL LESSI take a state of mind and illustrate it with incidents. This is just one of those stories.Even the wind was dead. The trees had
long stopped swaying in the breeze; their comforting rustle faded slowly into a
deafening silence. A Divine silence… Just Anam and I, sitting on a meager
tuft of grass- she deserved better. Better than this, better than me … I was
neglecting her, ignoring her. I was worse than a selfish cat- an ungrateful
brother. She was my only comfort. She stuck to me
like a burr, trotting after me with her soft smile, radiant if I stopped for a
second to smile back. A touch of her gentle hand would soothe away all the
trouble in my heart. Anam reached hesitatingly out to me and
gave my burning hand a slight squeeze. I responded to the pressure of her
fingers, but I could dismiss the ugly fact no longer. We were motherless. Not merely orphans, as other children
were, with memories and stories of their mothers to lull them into sweet
dreams. There were not even pictures of her in the house, or any letters…it was
like she had never been here at all. An eternal vacuum… I needed to know where she was " whether
she was severed from us forever, or whether she lived still … and ifso, why she
had chosen thus to abandon us? Why did my cheeks lack the rosiness, my eyes the
complacent self-assurance of those blessed with a mother’s caresses? I needed
to know. “Anam, we are leaving.” My voice was
uncharacteristically harsh. Anam was building a little house of clay, but she
did not argue. Not her. She knew I was upset and she would do nothing to
aggravate me. Her own face was sad and serious as she stood up, and her eyes
brimmed suddenly with sympathetic tears. The perfect angel… My father interpreted my countenance to
perfection " he always did read me like an open book. Suddenly, he looked an
old man; a sort of resignation crossed his face as I planted my self resolutely
in front of him. Anam had tiptoed up the stairs to her
room. I was glad; for all her sweet seriousness she was little more than a
baby. “You want to know why you don’t have a
mother, don’t you?” he said softly. I remained silent, offering no answer to
this assumption except the slightest of grim nods. He carried on with another
sigh. “Well Raza, I think it is time I
told you. For the past six years I have been trying " but I was always too much
of a coward … It was so easy just to keep on hiding it, instead of " here. Look
at this.” He extracted a highly folded, yellowing
envelope out of his breast pocket. My clammy hands grasped it desperately. It was a photograph. Through the faded
card Anam’s eyes twinkled at me from the pretty young face tha had to belong to
… my mother? I raised my head. Father nodded. We looked away hastily, unable to
look long into each other’s tearful eyes. Shaking his head, he began. “Let me tell you a story. Your mother’s
story. A warrior’s story. One summer morning, while you and Ito your Uncle’s
house, people from a neighbouring village raided our little hamlet. It was an
old family feud between the landlords - we had nothing to do with it. It was an
enmity passed down through the generations. It is like war; the common people
just get caught up in the fighting. Innocent, defenseless and helpless people.
That’s how it is.” “What happened? How did Anam and I
survive? Why didn’t she escape like us?” I needed answers, though I was not
sure now that I would not regret it. “Your mother was a determined and
courageous woman. When the villains attacked our house she hid Anam. She could
have tried escaping with Anam, but it might have cost both their lives. She
could not bear the thought of Anam dying. All the odds were against her, but
she never gave in.” I was so glad my mother didn’t give up,
that she had been courageous and noble " a true ideal of motherhood. She had
provided me my only comfort in life. Anam. I could not bear the thought of life
without Anam. As I trudged up the stairs to my room, Anam ran out from her
hiding place (she had been listening all the time) and hugged me. I clutched
her to my chest and silently thanked Mother for her priceless gift… SOUL LESS. © 2011 SOUL LESSAuthor's Note
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21 Reviews Added on January 1, 2011 Last Updated on January 23, 2011 AuthorSOUL LESSNakushita, KansukiAboutI am a boy. I love English Literature. I love to write. Some people hate me for it, but for me writing is like an escape from the real world. Its like reading a book except that I control what happens.. more..Writing
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