Who would have believed where I am
sitting right now? It’s a library which half exists in a world, which is
non-existent at least to me. It’s long shelves look at me with a scorn
and a lack of recognition, which is vaguely familiar. There are long
hanging fans too which are suspended from ceilings with gray and black
soot foamed in their arms. They don’t rotate, not right now. There is
laughter and a voice, which is drooling away from the corridors. There
are a couple of folks who share this library space with me. One of them
is an old man whose life could be possibly as different from me as it
possibly could. I cannot avoid his narrowing glance towards my new coat
through his spectacles. Nor the thousands of invisible arrows hurled in
my direction to which I don’t have a bow. I didn’t come to the library
thinking that I might have to fight. In fact it was preposterous, a
stopgap stop waiting between stations before changing the train. So here
I sit with an air of unpleasantness or rather a sense of uncomfortable
seeps through me like the waves of a waning ocean on the shores of
Istanbul, where presently the morning is about to start. The girl whose
eyes are like lonely islands and whose smile is like the morning ferry
on a deserted island is now standing at her doorstep, waiting one last
second before she plans to go somewhere. Her hair is open; she has
forgot to tie it in a hurry. Her dress casual, white folded full-sleeved
shirt and blue jeans with a shade of gray at its base because of dust
and possible over use.
I meanwhile gaze outside, through the
humongous library door outside into the social psychology corridor. All I
can see are mad men and women sitting in wooden benches waiting their
turns to get the call from professors who are cheaper than
psychiatrists, who don’t prescribe medicines but prescribe well being
and investigative, contemplative cure at the cost of a mobile number, a
cup of tea which gets cold before you can finish it and a bus which
brings you to this place called Madness café. Oh, I had almost forgot
that old man. He let me know of his omnipresence with the clearing of
his nose that reminded me of farts from the times of Alexander, loud and
frankly unnerving. His nervous folding and unfolding of his hands tells
me that he has an old woman back in his home. It is a bus ride plus a
thousand steps away, from here. He has a dog whose eyes look blind
because they are cloudy. We can never know for sure whether it’s blind,
though. We can judge by placing a bone of meat devoid of fragrance, cut
in the market by merchants, who stay close to the sea and see ships
coming to the port, bringing unknown faces and known commodities to
town. The old man talks about the heat present in Indian winters and the
reasons he carries his stole with him tonight. Because he had suffered.
But haven’t we all? His however, is endless, written all over his lined
face and are like exclamation marks all over his old, smelly body.
I
instead of focusing on this man start thinking about the journey that
brings me to this wooden table. The same wooden table where innocents
had sat before. Innocents and the innocuous who used to friends, with
whom I managed to connect in a superficially real away in a time, when I
had best friends who detested the fact that I chose a girlfriend at the
very first, few months of my ever unanticipated college life. The crows
cry all day long as the day comes towards an end. There are some people
who like to arrange and rearrange. There are some who sing with loud
microphones and with a tune that is as religious as Quran in a wooden
cover and painted red borders. I wonder how it all started. Was it the
desert heat? Was it the meaningless life? Was it the lizards all over
the desert sand that instigated? Was it the faceless women who were
beautiful but were unborn because birth is a process not initiated in
wombs but in men’s head? In libraries such as this one or the one where
the highway ends into the small road glittered with shops, which stay
closed on Thursday and Sunday, because they would rather live a life
than sell, Déjà vu happens. It is a feeling that reminisces us of an
event that has never really happened before but seems oddly familiar. It
is like a memory from a past life or the bubbling of a memory into the
head of a man who has short-term memory loss.
The old man has
come back and he seems to be the man who cannot keep anything else but
this library. His recurrences is making me afraid of sins I did not
commit. The man I killed because he was innocent. The girl I ditched
because she didn’t cheat on me. The prize I won because I did not
contribute anything in that research. He is keeping a count of books, a
job he doesn’t get tired even if he does the exact, same thing everyday.
Just like every morning, he sits in the toilet with his morning
newspaper and his bowels fail to clear out. Just as his wife, calls his
name whenever he is inside the toilet, saying that the morning tea mixed
with ginger is ready and she will cover it with a metal lid possibly
made up of aluminum. Just as he calls an unknown number every day at
5.00 pm for the last thirteen years even if he has a grandson who was
seen fooling around with two young lasses none of whom he (his grandson)
will end up marrying. After all, he is a librarian. You cannot just
discount him. There are other things I notice about this man whom we see
everyday but never recognize. His slippers, his bag and his stick all
resembling him as many ways as Julia Roberts resembles that girl whom I
dated last Friday night and forgot to take the number before I left
early morning.
As I would plan to pack my stuffs and head for
some more of the real world, the debate where it’s colder, inside the
library or in the corridor just outside it, would remain a question
whose answer I may not know at least not in this lifetime. Just as I
would never see that very pretty face whom I saw in a bus for whole
seventeen seconds, while I was waiting for someone in the pavement and
thought of what would happen if she was destined for me. How the
children I could have with her or the kisses she would give me by the
riverside on a winter evening like this would never really happen. It’s
something that made me so sad that I shrink to the depths of my
melancholy without poetry, old grandfather watches and hair aromas of
all beautiful women of this whole wide world.