Three dinnersA Story by shivamA story of how a person's life changes over the course three dinners taken in different eras of his life. Experience the pain, the joy and the final redemption of our young protagonist!The moment was
critical. “Do or die”, an oft repeated cliché, was the way forward for Shyam,
arguably one of the best surgeons in the city hospital. But the case demanded
the best of him. The shrapnel had penetrated and perforated the stomach and the
colon, and could give rise to a massive septicemia any time. Amidst utmost
concentration, Shyam carefully extracted the shrapnel. “What a nasty piece!” he
commented as he took it out. As he walked out of the OT, the relatives of the
patient surrounded him. They soon got the magic words from the doctor, “He is
all right.” Nothing could be a greater
relief to the patient or his relative than to know that the operation was
successful. As Shyam headed all alone towards the hospital cafeteria for an
insipid coffee and a stale sandwich, he remembered the dinner he had at
Manekchowk with his friends after their 2nd year exams, and the
events that followed it, which somehow, culminated into the Shyam that the
world knew. “Hey dude! Let’s
go to Manekchowk!” Shyam’s friend Mihir called out and asked him to go at a
popular place for street food in Ahmedabad. It was a momentous event for them
as their exams had ended that day. It was a month long torture-chamber and they
were extremely excited to get freedom. “Sure. Let’s
call the rest of group.” Shyam’s group was a motley collection of individuals,
ranging from toppers who studied like crazy to Shyam, who was languishing at
the bottom of the totem pole. But, nothing came in between their friendship.
They called their group ‘Bhai group’, an apt name since they were as close as
blood brothers. A group of seven people, they filled two cars later that night.
Loud music blared from the stereos, and the pulse of the excited group was
palpable. They reached to the designated place within half hour after
negotiating narrow by lanes, made narrower courtesy the cattle, and the traffic
consisting of all thinkable and unthinkable vehicles ranging from cycles to
scooters with a side car, that could seat 4 people at ease. “Waiter, get
the order!” shouted Shyam. It was the only way to get the attention of the
pricey waiters who didn’t care to take order unless a group of five or more
comes. After ordering seven pau bhajis, six butter pulaos and three ‘special’
pineapple sandwiches, the group of friends sat down to discuss their favorite
topic- exams. “S**t man,
this time I am going to be screwed in pharmacology!” “Don’t think
you will be alone friend. Bhai group sticks together! I haven’t written enough
to pass!” “You saw the
face of that Prof when she caught Mihir red-handed? It seemed like she had
caught Osama bin Laden!” Their banter
had to be brought to an abrupt halt as a loud screeching sound of an ambulance
was heard. It was immediately followed by an announcement “A blue WagonR has
been parked on the road and is obstructing the traffic. The owner is requested
to park it at the correct location.” Sattu looked
doubtfully at Shyam “Is it our car?” “I don’t know.
I parked it somewhere on the road, but I don’t remember where. What the hell
man! Enjoy the meal! Who cares about traffic?” “Hey Shyam,
you are a real cool dude man!” Shyam merely
replied with a smile. They didn’t mind the noises for the next hour as they all
gorged in their meals with pleasure, topping it with a kulfi, chocolate for
Shyam and malai kulfi for the rest. As they leisurely walked out, they were
greeted with a sight for which they were totally unprepared, least of all
Shyam, who had almost forgotten about his wrongly parked car. A man walked
up to the car and merely asked “Who is the owner of this car?” Shyam moved
forward, hesitatingly. The man deposited a tight slap across his cheeks and
went away sobbing. For a moment, everyone, including those caught in the
traffic due to the wrongly parked car was shocked. Being late is one thing, but
slapping the accused and crying afterwards? It was out of place. Shyam mouthed
a few expletives to the person who slapped him, apologized the other people and
removed his car. During the return journey, nobody spoke. They were all dazed
by the incident. But if that incident was shocking, the one that was to follow
would put them out in shock for a long time to come, for they would discover
that they have been unwitting accomplices of a murder. The headlines
of next day in the morning tabloid would scream: Bad
Parking sense leads to death
In what was a shocking
incident, a man died in an ambulance because he was not able to reach the
hospital timely. While this might not ring a bell of surprise in many of the
readers, what is indeed appalling is that it was because of a car parked in a
wrong place! It caused such traffic that the ambulance was unable to move. We
have printed the photo of the car. If any of the readers catch its owner, make
him know that his crime amounts to murder, at least in the moral sense. We
condemn such people and hope that the authorities levy stronger parking fines. “How bloody
immature I was in those days!” Shyam murmured to himself, as he scrubbed for
another operation. It was a busy day, one of ‘those’ days which every surgeon
feared- terrorist attacks. A series of blasts had just ripped across the city,
and for each treated person, two injured were ready to take the place.
Something similar had happened before too. Shyam was the key man in that
incident too, albeit, in a different way. As he remembered the incident, a
voice blared across the speaker “Dr Shyam is requested to report to OT-4
please.” An hour later, he came out in the same way, with his typical running
cum walking style. It was the last operation of the day; at least the last
scheduled one. It was the time of medical emergency, and unpredictability was a
way of life. But he had to take his dinner, again in the same horrible canteen.
The menu for the day included masala dosa, idly and sambhar. So much for the
variety! But it was food, laced with its carbohydrates and proteins which would
sustain and nourish Shyam. However, food, before becoming nutritious, should be
palatable. And the canteen masala dosa was anything but that! It made Shyam
remember the best south Indian food he had, at a street ‘dosawalah’. It was
better than anything he had eaten at a posh restaurant. But what followed the
moment… Damn! Damn the moment and its horrible memories! It made the dosa on
his plate worse than it actually was! “And now, we
call upon Dr. Shyam.”, the announcer’s voice was heard. For Shyam, the whole
world was watching his graduation ceremony. Today, his dream of 23 years would
be fulfilled, and he would be labeled a doctor! An underachiever that he had
remained throughout his life, nobody expected him to accomplish what he had
done, and that made the moment all the more special. But, with a tinge of
sadness, he remembered that it was the last time the great Bhai group would be
together. They filled
two cars, and drove to a street ‘dosawalah’ or a lorry serving south Indian
food. After ordering seven masala dosas and one filter coffee, they sat down to
discuss their lives after college. “I am taking a
drop this year. Didn’t qualify for a PG seat this time.” “Same here.
Tough to get post grad seats in first attempt, especially in clinical field.” “Well guys, I
have a good news.” announced Shyam, “I have got admission in surgery at AIIMS” “What the
hell! AIIMS! It’s the best in “Hey thanks!
Party’s on me tonight.” said Shyam modestly. “I hope it
includes ice cream too!” In their
banter, nobody noticed a shadow creeping near them and leaving something there.
It was dark anyways, and the seven boys were on top of the world that day. Why
the hell would they care for a dropped tiffin box of a stranger? In retrospect,
Shyam wished he would have. It would have saved the lives of his friends, the
dosawalah and twenty other people in the vicinity from the bomb that exploded
in the tiffin. The Bhai group finally broke up, at the pinnacle of their
friendship. Shyam, his leg bleeding profusely, could only look as his whole
group was wiped off in an instant. There was blood everywhere, and despite
spending an year and half in the hospital and seeing so many patients bleed and
puke, Shyam felt nauseated at the sight of blood for the first time. Perhaps it
was the association he had with the blood. He had once said that friendship ran
in the blood of Bhai group. He was seeing his friendship ebb away slowly with
the blood of his friends. “Dr Shyam!
Emergency in OT-6!” a shrill voice over the loudspeaker announced. “Damn!
Another operation! Its my twentieth operation of the day! I need some relief
now,” he muttered to himself. His muttering was cut by another announcement by
the same shrill voice, “Dr Shyam! You are requested to report to OT-6 as soon
as possible!” Shyam hurried to the operation theatre. The patient was in a
delirious state, and was shouting violently, “Leave me! Leave me! I do not
deserve to live! Leave me!” The nurses
had held him tightly while the anesthetist quickly administered a sedative.
With the patient finally calmed down, Shyam held his scalpel and began his
procedure. The injury was the worst he had seen in the day. Not only that there
were multiple puncture wounds on the abdomen, with two of them puncturing the
liver, there was also signs of infection in the wounds over the leg, which was
totally drenched with blood. Shyam wondered whether the patient would even
survive. After an exhaustive operation, which stretched for four hours, Shyam
hardly had the energy to walk to his room in the hostel. Once he reached his
room, his didn’t even care to shower and went to sleep straight away. Next morning
promised more of the grisly sights which formed the graffiti of Shyam’s
previous day. But there was something else in store for Shyam, as he got an
envelope which contained a letter. “What is it
doctor?” the pretty nurse, who just adored Shyam, asked. “I’ve no idea,
Sheena. Its from a person called Shahid, saying that I’ve saved his life.” “What is new
in it doc? You save so many lives daily! And yesterday, you were just awesome,
like an operating machine!” Sheena couldn’t stop herself from lavishing praises
on Shyam. “Sheena,
that’s a part of our job. Remember, I’ve joined the profession to save lives.
And so have you, right?” “Yes, but you
know what, before you came, I thought good doctors have become extinct. At
least the good looking ones!” Shyam smiled
slightly and walked away. The contents of the letter were equally strange. An
address was written on it, and a simple sentence, inviting him to a dinner was
written. Shyam was perplexed. In his three years of surgery in the hospital, he
had never been invited to a dinner by a patient. “At least something to look
forward to today,” he muttered as he scrubbed for another marathon of
operations on blast-afflicted victims. Shyam was assisting Dr Kartik, who was
Shyam’s senior in college and his very good friend. “Kartik, why do these
people explode bombs? I mean how have we harmed them?” Shyam asked to divert
his mind for a while from the blood and gore around them. “Shyam, it is
difficult to give a particular reason. Some of them are religious zealots,
asking for revenge against some real, some imagined injustice to their people.
There are people who are angry over their rulers and have no faith in
democracy, so they take the matter in their own hands. Too much anger is
prevalent today, friend. I am afraid that what we are seeing is just the tip of
the iceberg.” “I can’t
believe it. I mean, how low has mankind fallen to? You know, I had once read
somewhere that man is the only species that has the power to wipe out its own
existence from the earth. Today, I am forced to agree with the statement.” “We have
nothing in our hands. After all, the perpetrators of this heinous crime must
realize that they are only digging a deeper grave for themselves, and they’ll
probably pull the entire mankind with them,” Kartik added in a mournful voice. After the
operations for the day ended, Shyam headed quickly to his room, showered and
changed his clothes for the dinner. The place was not difficult to locate, and
Shyam reached there in twenty minutes. His host lived in a two bedroom flat in
one of the most expensive areas of Ahmedabad. It indicated that he must be well
off financially. Shyam knocked the door hesitatingly. A man dressed in a blue
shirt and khakee pants opened the door. He had full beard, and looked serious. “Yes?” he
inquired. “Er, I am
Shyam. Dr Shyam,” Shyam replied hesitatingly. “Of course! I
am sorry for not having recognized you doctor!” the man’s expressions changed
immediately on hearing Shyam’s name and designation. “So, may I
know who invited me today? I had performed so many operations yesterday that I
don’t remember anyone.” “Doc, you
surely remember your last patient of yesterday!” a croaking voice came from
within one of the rooms. “Yes, I do,”
Shyam replied, and then looking at the man who opened the door, he asked, “Can
I meet my patient?” “Of course you
can! Follow me.” Shyam followed the man to the inner room from where the voice
had come. Shyam looked at the patient and asked kindly, “How are you feeling
now?” “Better. But
worse!” the man on the bed replied. “What does it
mean?” Shyam was confused at the oxymoron. “It means that
my health is better, but inside myself, I feel rotten!” “Why?” “I’ll tell you
later. First, let’s have dinner. You are our honored guest, and it would be
improper to keep you waiting for long.” The two men
took Shyam to the dining table. A lavish spread was on display. The dishes
included mutton biryani, chicken curry, fresh tandoor breads and kheer.
The aroma of the food was alluring to Shyam, who had his last proper dinner a
month ago, with Sheena. The meal was consumed without much talking, and Shyam
happily tucked into the delicacies on the table. “So, Shahid,”
Shyam called out to his host, the man whom he had operated the pervious day,
“why do you feel rotten inside?” “Brother, I
will tell you who I am. I am the most wanted terrorist of the city, who
triggered yesterday’s blasts and killed hundreds. Unfortunately, I was not able
to run away on time and one of my own bombs exploded near me,” Shahid said in a
remorseful voice. “You b*****d!
How dare you even invite me here? I feel like taking an emetic and vomiting out
your food on your face! You bloody gutless swine!” Shyam exploded in anger.” “A gutless
swine indeed!” Shahid snarled, “Another gutless swine, years ago, is
responsible for making me who I am. You want to know what made an innocent ten
year old into a dreaded terrorist?” Shahid threw a gauntlet of question. “Sure! Tell me
who made you an animal that you are,” Shyam said. “My father was
a police informant. Years ago, he died while on duty. No, not by a gangster!
That would be a far more honorable way to die! Instead he was killed because
his ambulance could not reach the hospital on time. And you know why?” Shyam
held his hand up to stop Shahid in the middle of his inflamed speech, and
closed his eyes. A tear streaked down his cheek. He rubbed the tear and asked
Shahid to continue. “So, as I was
saying before your emotional drama interrupted me, my father’s ambulance could
not reach the hospital because the road was blocked by a callous driver. We
tried to call the owner of the car, but he didn’t show up! And my father, my abbu died without any fault of his! And
the government did not even pay us a penny! Disgusted with the people and
disgruntled with the government, I turned a terrorist. I wanted to make such a
loud noise that would shake the whole country.” For an
instant, Shyam said nothing. His throat went dry, and he it seemed like all the
moisture of his throat had permeated into his eyes. He cried incessantly. Like
a child who had been told that he was responsible for the murder of his
parents. “Brother, why
are you telling me all this? Why am I so special to you?” Shyam managed to ask
amidst sobs. “Because you
saved my life yesterday. It brought my belief in humanity back. You have
extinguished the fire that had been smoldering inside me for years, consuming
my insides in its inferno. You have given me a new birth.” “What I did
was my duty. Now, let me reveal something. I too am a gutless swine! That day
it was my car that led to the death of your father. God made me pay for my sins
by making me lose my friends, who were like my brothers. I feel your pain,
friend, I feel your pain,” Shyam put his hand around Shahid’s shoulder, who in
turn, was crying like Shyam was doing a few moments ago. “Shyam, I have
decided to reform myself fully. No more violence for me. Now, I will devote the
rest of life towards upliftment of our community,” Shahid vowed. Shyam gently
patted Shahid’s back and walked out of the house slowly. Somehow, his mind felt
lighter than ever. The circle was complete. The crime he committed by causing
the death of a father was punished by the death of his friends, and now, the
redemption was complete as the series of events ultimately led to the reforming
of a terrorist. As he was walking towards his hostel, Shyam looked around to
see countless men and women milling around, chatting unabashedly, lovers deep
into each other’s eyes. Only one thought had occupied his mind- How can the
actions of one man change the life of hundreds around him? Maybe, that’s called
karma, the endless cycle of sin, punishment and redemption. © 2010 shivamAuthor's Note
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Added on June 8, 2010Last Updated on June 8, 2010 AuthorshivamIndiaAboutI am a medical student who writes in his free time. My favorite genre is drama and thrillers. Currenlty, i am working on my first novel titled Different Shades of Shyam. more..Writing
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