Monday 6 October 2014

Southern Misfit



I really don't know how to begin. Noel Albert-I go by this name. Britona- I hail from, and what relaxes me is a tin of good German beer in my father's not-so-popular resort on a summer night. It was in 2001 when Britona(Goa) was visited less by tourists and most of the resorts were home to bugs and flies. My father, Jonathan Albert was a simple man- I mean he is-and is still alive. Apart from a business that earned him loans and losses, two things in his life never met:

a) The ends of his mustache and beard(as he craved for a perfectly Goan French circle)

b)His plea for a licensed Jet-ski venture over a lake adjoining the resort.

The first thing was naturally unattained, but the second wish was punctured by a strict and a piece of oddity Municipal Commissioner. He hailed from somewhere down south and would only raise his fat spectacles to reject applications in the office. He didn't want bribe, he wanted things systematic. Whenever I asked dad about the 'jet-ski' thing, he would turn his eyes away and concentrate on the glass of sherry in his hand. One day, I somehow got to know why was that:

With frustration and a nothing-to-lose attitude, father once yelled at the commissioner, “You fine piece of decayed scum! I want my damn permission and I will get it! Clean your kickass eyegear and see for yourself!”
The man sitting in the chair welcomed
Jonathan Albert's words through a cold passage and maintained a frozen expression on his face. It was as if he believed that revenge flows slowly, but it does.
We had a great laugh while cherishing that memory and added it to our 'Record Of Craziest Memories'; A diary dad kept just in case we found ourselves falling short of devilishly loud laughter, not enough to suffice for a day.

Our life in Britona was simple, slow but always ecstatic. Every little thing-even a free drop of coconut water dripped from above would make us wonder how magical this world can be at times. We loathed all lectures discussing the bittersweet, or maybe just bitter reality of life. And we loathed the lecturer even more. We were content in one chapel, eight resorts(to form the little infrastructure), a few homes and shops and Peace, falling within the diameter of our dainty village.

Besides all the means of relaxation at my disposal in Britona, I had a great treasure back home; My mother. Joanna. She fell off a coconut tree along with seven coconuts that cried lots of water on her fall. Now before you wonder how she got up there, let me tell you she's a coconut fanatic and can go heights to fetch them and wouldn't even mind doing that in a crane. So, she now drives a wheelchair through the house, curses all series of events and secretly plans to make her wheelchair elevate, so as to...you know what.

Our family discussions took place post dinner in our courtyard, with dad boasting over beer about how he, in his thirties, boosted the family income and status by starting a resort and mother reminding his senses that it was all possible only because of her father's money and support. And then an argument would break out. Cute a family, we are.

One night, in such a talk, dad mentioned something. “Noel, you are totally wasting your time in this godforsaken village. I want you to travel to Cochin and assist uncle Shawn”, he said sipping his sherry and mother already fixing her eyes on him.

“It's after many years that you've said something good, Jonathan”, mother patted him.
And then came the final call in unison,

“Pack your bags, Noel!”



Cochin was quite not the place for me. Coconut water replaces wine in most of the places, commercialization is pretty good but Kerela has its own natural patches
;Peaceful, green, but may appertain shrub-sickness, if biology doesn't fall in the ambit of your interest. I liked the market areas, they are clean. The entire place exudes the essence of just one thing; Coconut.
Coconut flowers, coconut coir, stalls selling Putthu; A coconut dominated dish and much more.
Infact, the irony was ridiculous-the name of the inn was staying at-'Kalpavriksha'.It gave me a funny visual of my mother getting baffled in Cochin.

But Cochin was not my destination either. I had to advance to somewhere, more uncivilized.
“Catch a train to Chalakudy. I'll keep you posted about the details once you get there”, dad informed me the next morning.

“Alright, dad.”

“I hope you're not bored, Noel.”

“Not at all, dad. I am in love with coconuts. You want some?”

He hung up.

Alright, Chalakudy is somewhere you wouldn't dare traveling to, unless you crave for 'sanyasa' or you want more coconuts-more than what you get in Cochin. Before I could map the size of the town, I found myself near its limits. A-boy-from-Goa-tortured-best-by-being-placed-abreast-from-core urbanization-in-a-town-even-the chief-minister-hardly-knows-of. Who cares about the chief minister. “I need a drink. A real drink”, I declared to myself. I badly needed to find uncle Shawn's residence and drain his stock of beer(if he had any, in this dainty and detached town)
 A little opulence welcomed me when I visited him. He had a lovely house, not like the typically 'Gouda' home, but a good catholic house. Uncle Shawn ran a business of tourism and offering travel bookings as well. He was the only chap in town who could book tickets for people going out of Chalakudy. I got the gist of my job-it was boring and I regretted not accepting dad's offer of joining him in our resort. But now the die was cast and my life was done for.

Shawn Albert had stocked more beer at his place than I could imagine. “You see, we can't live on coconut water forever”,He told me over a drink and I chuckled.
“But uncle, I can't sit all my life booking tickets to places-with-weirdest-names. I'll handle your tourism and show this place to tourists”, I demanded.
Uncle grinned, “Perfect. We begin tomorrow.”

Next day, Murthy, the guide appointed by my uncle was fired...with great difficulty though. He was promised the permanency of his job for another five years but my sudden arrival recessed him out-Oops.
“You may begin, Noel. Do it with all your heart. And whenever you find a good reason for returning   to Goa, let me know.”

“Okay,uncle.”

My new world was a somewhat luxurious cabin,
with a computer, a calender, two guest chairs, a fan, and a light and some posters depicting natural extravagance of Chalakudy. In Kerala, the belief that women bring fortune holds a significant position in people's perception. No wonder they assert that 'if your first customer is a lady,you will never have a last customer'; A smart way of saying that your business will flourish and be long-lasting.
Now before I could fashion a reactive expression on my face on a sudden barge-in, my first customer who was a female, had had her index finger pointed at me and a sweetly shrill voice coming from her round lips sprinkled beautifully triumphant water on my mind.
“Durganjali Shankar Venkatanarayanan, my name. Can you tell me is this some manners to remove my brother out of his job. When Mr. Albert promised him to work here for five years?”

“I understand, miss....”

“No you listen to me. My father very big person. Still this poor natured Murthy working here is called simplicity. I want to talk to Mr. Albert about it. Who are you?”

“Okay. Now with your kind permission, I shall speak. I am Noel Albert, Mr. Albert's nephew. And....”

“You nephew don't have any work or what? Joining small town business and harassing the dedicated. Go, educate and work in big city. My Murthy will work here.”

I remained quiet this time. Until a full-fledged permission to speak without being interrupted was granted to me by the beautiful moonlit-skinned girl who'd donned a round pair of spectacles.

“See, Miss Venkatanar..ay..ya..”

“Venkatanarayanan!”, came a stern correction.

“Exactly. I appreciate Murthy's support to this workplace. He can assist me here in my work.”

She was about to open her big mouth when I stopped her. “And now before you fire me again, Miss Venkatanar....whatever, I assure you that Murthy's job will remain permanent for the promised term at least”, I breathed out.

And then a miracle happened. No, not that magical evening of Chalakudy when chrome oil-lamps lit in every courtyard throw their soothing light on the streets, the miracle was-Her smile with a pinch of blush in it-as she walked out.

After fresh bananas, coconuts and healthy food served on banana leaves, I cherished Durga's friendship which bloomed with each passing day. She behaves strict, disciplined but has a soft corner for laughing and talks very good. In Kerala, I witnessed, sisters come to pick up their little brothers from schools or offices. Everyday, as we met, we began falling in love with each and with the beauty of Chalakudy river.

“I think we should go boating at dawn tomorrow”, Durga once suggested. “The river appears like a heavenly path that time.”

Dawn. The best time of the day. We rented a house-boat and were graduating into each other's life by trying to know the other to the fullest extent.

“Tell me about your family, Durga.”

“We come from disciplined background. My father is a Municipal Commissioner and is currently appointed  near Britona in Goa.”

I dropped my cup of coconut water on hearing that. “Where did you say he lives?”

“Britona. Why?”

And I narrated the entire truth to her about the wine-like old rivalry between our fathers. I told her everything. At first, she looked right into my eyes with an angry streak. The next moment, we both were loudly laughing. It was the perfect moment, I thought. I pulled her by her hand and softly kissed her round and berry-pink lips as the svelte clouds of the dawn paved the way for sunrays on the waters of Chalakudy...and on our fate. The very next moment, I received a mild slap. “Never do that again, we are cultured people”, she said that with another of her attractive blushes and then entered the territory of my arms and settled there for hours together.


“Your mother, Durga? You never mention her.”

“I don't have one, Noel. She left us too soon.”

This time, I went for her forehead and embraced her dense hair that scented of herbs. “I have one at home.”

“I'll treat her as mine.”

Finally, as uncle said, I had found a reason-a beautiful reason rather-to return to Goa.


Fairy tale over. Now, Britona seemed like a battleground and calming the tiff between two fathers, was the task. Arranging a face-off was  the tactic and holding on to hope was the strategy.   The meeting was actually a blind showdown. Mr. Shankar Venkatanarayanan was extremely happy on his daughter's surprise visit-everyone in the office saw him grinning for the first time-but the grin was short-lived. The very next moment he restored the usual expression on his face. “But why have you come here?”

“Appa, Murthy will now be close to you. He will work in a resort here, in Britona. The owners are very good people. I came here to talk to the family....”

“Enough. You know why I don't allow you to leave Kerala? The outside world is not good. Our state people are better. Here, people..no discipline, no manners. Anyhow they talk, they abuse. And you want Murthy to rot here? Never.”

“But Appa, you cannot do like this to us. We have to experience outside world someday. Why not now? Please at least meet the family once. You will like them”, she said the last sentence with a loud heartbeat within.

At the Albert's, I brought dad home from the resort and requested my mother to stop asking questions.
“Unless you tell me why we need to meet your friend, I won't keep quiet.”
“Mom, she knows the Municipal Commissioner well and can get our jet-ski venture approved”, I looked at dad's surprised face after saying that.
“Hmm? Is there even a person who can make that jackass agree?”, dad shot.

“Yes, I mean...see for yourself.”

At sharp six-thirty PM, Jonathan Albert's eyes could spot a familiar-looking face striding towards their residence. He was used to spot customers at a distance, coming to the resort. As the face came near, the chances of having the two ricochet, fainted.
“This scum! What the hell is he doing here? Noel! Is this the person you want me to meet? Drive him out of this house and tell him he's been r-e-j-e-c-t-e-d. Haha! R-e-j-e-c-t-e-d”.

“Durga? What is this? You want Murthy to work in his resort? It doesn't even run. This man is mannerless and stupid. See how he talks? Murthy will never work here. Never! Come, we are going!”

Dad lost it, completely. “What did you just say, you freaking banana leaf!?”

And mom intervened, “he said your resort doesn't run, you deaf person.”

Durga's father laughed callously at that and dad slapped his laughter dead. It was all, a chaos as both of them wrestled in the courtyard and to make things worse, Mr. Venkatanarayanan fell on dad's favourite rocking-chair, and it broke. Me and Durga exchanged petrified looks. Marriage seemed to have transformed into a nightmare for us. It appeared as a big mismatch. A complicated southern mismatch.

“Noel, did you get coconuts for me?”, mom asked in the middle of the milee and I slapped my forehead.


It was nine-thirty and by the lake near our resort, me, Durga, our black and blue fathers and my upset mother(for not having the coconuts) were seated. The rift was solved-only physically-now, as Durga termed it, “We are going to face the verbal war.”

“So, it's marriage. Right?” Our parents were talking in unison. Me and Durga lowered our heads and our parent's questions were like guillotine; Ready to slice us. First, it was dad who opposed.

“Noel, these people are pure vegans. Look into my eyes and tell me. Are you ready to give up the exquisite lamb dishes I cook? And eat Idli Sambar for the rest of your life?”, he looked at her father and got a cold stare in return.

Then it was Mr. Commissioner's turn. “Durga? Saw how he talks? You always wanted discipline, didn't you? These disgusting people are not for you.”

After it, mom spoke. “Durga, can you make good coconut chutney?”

“Yes, Mrs. Albert. I make it delicious.”

“Noel, I like this girl. Stop this nuisance and let's discuss about wedding preparations”, she told dad.

“Mrs. Albert. I personally don't feel these two should marry...You see, our cultures don't match...”

And the argument deepened, thickened and worsened. I looked at Durga, we held hands, got up from the chairs...and jumped into the lake. No, no...the lake wasn't that deep. We started playing in the water before our parents. Stunned, everyone stopped talking, and saw us hugging in the middle of the lake. It was mom's idea and it succeeded. Looking at our childishness, Mr. Albert and Mr. Venkatanarayanan laughed and hugged each other. Okay, Albert, I will approve your venture on this lake. Keep my daughter's smile consistent, like this.”

“Don't order me, scum.”

The commissioner's violent streak returned in his eyes and he fixed his eyes angrily on Dad.

“...Order Noel.”

And they all had a hearty laugh that evening. Well, something in life-maybe an invisible energy, brings together two people from different backgrounds as one. The ones who are never meant to be as 'perfect' together in the eyes of the people, somehow meet and form the most perfect pair ever. But then, what do we call this driving force. Destiny?


Sagher

Monday 16 June 2014

Sun


Sun


What has fixed you at the centre,

and fixed all celestials on your Penetralium of crowbars?

Is it your clout that outshines

or your extreme beam?

I reckon it is your gigantic radius that has crowned you king.

Oh possessor of the mightiest blaze,

you can reduce to ash anything that invades your huge personal space,

and you think you are invincible.

There's a grave phenomenon that can harp your transcend and transcalent.

It
 is the deep blue ocean, where the quest of your invincibility lies.


Sagher

Saturday 14 June 2014

The King In Disguise

The King In Disguise

Through the city, a king used to stroll
with a burden of responsibilities on his shoulder.
He would stop in his path to pick up more,
such weight could make a man crawl.

He was seen everywhere, but noticed nowhere,
about his presence, even desolation wouldn't care.
Rag was his robe, torn was his gown,
he smiled, although cracked was his crown.

The king handpicked worries
from the streets of the dire city,
and each time he bent,
he grew ardent.

Such divine was his deed,
and this world termed him a rag-picker.
His need was only felt by the society asinine,
after he perished with time.

In every corner, every day,
such a person dies.
None seems to bother, to value
the king in disguise.


Sagher


Saturday 19 April 2014

Lover, Your Pang!

Lover, Your Pang!

The dour of this world,
may never get tamed,
traitors may never feel ashamed.
This situation prolix,
might never get fixed,
hearts might continue to behave,
as walls of bricks,
but never on any day and moment,
you choose to attain lethal fangs,
love until infinity Oh lover,
I know of your pang.

I can't assure you'll find,
upbeat sincerity,
Neither can I convince you,
to trust a fraternity.
But a thing I declare,
with a tight fist,
your purity and passion,
won't be lost in the mist.
Scheme to live such,
your example on walls
they will hang,
love until infinity Oh lover,
I know of your pang.

I will walk you
through this spate,
like a morally attached cognate,
preventing your inner rage,
to befriend the livid hate.
Be like none and be in all,
your spirit, of reverence,
will rise tall.
Many shades of deplore try staining,
the jubilant brightness.
Smile away the defaming slang
and love until infinity oh lover,
I do know...of your pang.


Sagher

Wednesday 12 March 2014

Poet; A Little Less Valued


Poet; A Little Less Valued
I took a local train back home at 6pm from Pune railway station. Witnessing the unusual mutiny resolved by unexpected monsoon, an enthusiastic me began longhanding odes to the weather's audacity, in a notebook I always carry. Rains in March washed away the cracks made by the summer scorch. Excess water running down the streets sanitized every corner of the cluttered road, and that dripping from the rooftops shone in turquoise blue, akin the colour of the skies. The shrewd raindrops befriended winds to slant their way in the train through every possible opening. The seats were soon booked by fresh water, which settled on them and traveled along. Some cool water suddenly hit my face and soaked my teenage beard, I smiled of utter relaxation. Winds not only rejoiced, but also they did yodel themselves in transparent sublimity!
As the train braked down in least friction at the very next station, Shivaji Nagar, popularly known as 'populated destination', the oxygen that the air in the coach held, was in no time replaced by suffocated vacuum. An-eager-to-get-home pack of around forty people barged in through an entrance, which was meant to welcome in two at a time. Sweat! Clumsiness! Congestion! Scavenging and scouring eyes for a seat, rants for some space began within the coach. A drunkard got in and added to the mediocre air inside, by the foulest intoxicated odour he exhaled. Soon, the reek of unfiltered alcohol exalted itself above all others in the category and rendered the breathable air squeamish!

I observed the crowd. The people belonged to that unnoticed group of 9-5 working clan, for whom grabbing a seat in the train back home would mean more than the purity of weather outside. Three men sitting opposite me could notice the calm that persisted on my face, as I penned of weather's greatness. “What scribbling work would give a man peace?” one of them frisked a taunt at me. I smiled, “Poetry and monsoon have always expected artists to make their rendezvous possible.”

Poetry!” He sneered. “May I have a look?”
I confidently handed over my script to him and awaited a smile on his face after he finished reading it. My expectation was scorned as the employee sneezed out thick influenza and by the grace of my bad fortune, it landed on my script. “Err...ahh, I am sorry, boy. Change in the climate you know. Here, your script.”
I threw it on the railway track, as the train departed from another station, leaving behind the piece of my creation fallen on the track. Rain hit it in millimeters and consequently in centimeters, decaying the crisp of the paper....The paper I had used to praise the same rain, the same showers more dramatically...poetically.

Sagher 

Saturday 1 February 2014

Come, Rhyme With Me...

The Moon and my desires,
are burgeoning together,
Breeze does tickle me like mellow feather.
Come, rhyme with me, at this instant auspicious!
Rhyme with me, for memories precious.

Match fervour to fervour,
Oh beloved, hug away my shiver.
Match what your heart sings, to mine,
on lush grass, let's lay supine!

Let me deter you from leaving,
my love is the portico you live in.
There's no escaping, you're mine,
for our lives have been rhymed,
in the arena of time.

I'll tell you a secret to a relation perfect,
where every difference will be bereft.
Come, rhyme with me, for an alliance auspicious!
Rhyme with me, for memories precious...

Sagher

Thursday 23 January 2014

The Dwarf Of Divinity

The Dwarf Of Divinity

A hollow beneath ground left ajar,
amid the woods, not far,
was a route
for,
the dwarf of divinity.
Daily who walked
places and
par.

They say the angels and friends,
with their tears and groans,
could free him
for,
the proliferation of smiles
in this world
full of
pang.

Love!
Was his message to all.
Pulchritude!
Was his effect on the appalled.
The little friend of goodwill,
blended with affliction,
to slay it to redemption.

Once at dawn,
the winds were again filled
with clamour and agony.
Blowing a cover the dwarf's manhole
and blocked his path to humanity.

Sagher

Saturday 18 January 2014

Deep In...

I wish to be a livid storm,
cut and break through every norm.
For the truth has vanished,
betrayal exists in every form.
Here on earth was a time, I kept calm,
even when my neighbour stole the palm.
The outcome of immense treachery,
chains my heart and causes harm.
I walked the path of honesty,
but fell in the pothole of lies.
Complaining that I preach about truth,

they said the reward is to sleep with the flies.
Behind the walls of my rage,
a soft heart is mured up in a cage.
None seems to notice,
below slangs, I write wishes on every page.
Through life and relations, I've staggered a lot,
In less time, many battles I fought.

Deep in, down there lies a small wish.
Slicing all bonding, I want to breathe fair.

Sagher

Tuesday 14 January 2014

Nights With Elmer 3: The Last Heir

Nights With Elmer 3: The Last Heir
There was a boy, a more than unique person. Kevin, who lived with his parents in Denver did possess unreal abilities IN REALITY. His psyche was amazing and the way he influenced his audiences while speaking, at times seemed to captivate them, rather hypnotize. Kevin's talent was well-adulated by the people around him. However, there was a thing about him which led his parents into a pit of suspicion. Their son locked himself up post sunset everyday, without answering any knocks at his door, neither revealing the reason behind him doing so. Locked up in a room with dim lights, Kevin would compose lines that zapped out from the 'nowhere' in his mind. He couldn't ever figure out what made him compose such lines...lines, that would describe his coming future and he would stay prepared for it. Kevin was happy, “I don't understand what happens every night, but indeed, it is a gift.”
One night, he wrote something that threw a trail at him. A trail that was going to procure him with a task.
'A life of gift you have lived,

it's time to repay.

A man on the coming day

shall lead you to your destiny's sway.

Let negligence go off your window,

right there, towards the calm widow.'

The Dwell Of The Collins
Kevin's heart paced and his chair made a loud noise as he turned around and stared at the window. A bright and calm face of a lady was visible. She smiled at him as her hair gracefully floated in the soft yet chilled air.

Next morning, Kevin's mother was talking to Simon Roberts, Kevin's uncle. “Please brother, I am worried about his life and career. He doesn't even utter a word about his nocturnal activity. You are our last hope, please interact with him and try to find out what my son is involved into.”
Simon and Kevin were sitting in a restaurant. Looking at his uncle, Kevin recalled the lines he penned the previous night. He thus decided to open his secret to uncle Simon. After listening carefully, Roberts ended up in a gadzook. “Look, Kevin. The more you will blanket your darker secrets, the darkness will haunt you more. It is always better to stay in the light of the good. Back there in Edinburgh, I faced such a problem when the students in my school started dying in series..... Elmer is the man. Visit him and speak out your puzzle, he shall cure.”

The air at the Elmer's was dry and desolate. Suddenly, the door disembarked from its frame as Elmer saw a teenager holding bags, standing right before him, breathing heavily. “This room stinks!” Kevin threw a remark. “Your life stinks more, boy. That's why you are here. Now tell me.”
“I don't know...I can't talk to you here. Smells like thousands of terminated turtles were cut open right here!” The boy was about to faint.
They were sitting on a bench at the Railway Station. “While leaving your office, I saw a picture-frame of two children. Who are they?”

“The guy was Cedzie....Cedric. And she was Caddie a.k.a. Clara. The two kids were somehow..related to me”. Elmer gave a praising gaze to Kevin for his good observation. “And now, would you prefer telling me your reason for coming here?”
“I am embezzled, Elmer. Besides possessing a good talent, I also have a dark secret in stock. Elmer heard his tale and after knowing about the poems, breathed out. “The Dwell Of The Collins, huh....So, have you extracted any information on it, as your homework?” Elmer asked.
“Yes, I know almost everything. It might sound scurrilous to you, but I am the last heir of the Collins”, beamed Kevin. He received a puzzled look from the exorcist. “Believe me, I have seen the souls of Molly and Henry Collins. Molly died a widow because Henry got killed. Their questioning and wandering souls knock my windows every night. They are asking for help.”
Elmer was listening attentively, “Okay, but how can you be so sure about it?”
“Believe me or not. The biography of the Collins was written by a close family friend. I read the entire book, but a page was missing. Caddie's ghost wanted to suck blood out of Cedric and the last heir, as her father's revenge. I have to put an end to her unsatisfied and famish souls which haunts my life. Moreover, I can see and feel the couple's spirits around me every moment. They were my parents in....in my previous birth. According to the knowledge I obtained, I and my old father were killed by the old enemy of Collins, The Preachs, back then. Mother died in grief. And so I have incarnated again to avenge!”
“If you are so sure, then await the darkness. The answers will be clearly visible then”, Elmer winked.
“But there's a thing. While coming, at the airport, I penned these lines,
“The last heir is cursed to restriction,

to enter the dwell only with a purpose,

and a person who never sinned.

Then that innocent will be chopped till the toes

as sacrifice,

after he learns of the heir's identification.”

The Dwell Of The Collins

But you need not worry, Elmer. I have no reason to kill you.” The two had a hearty laugh.
As the daylight dulled, the two proceeded towards the Collins mansion marked on a map which Kevin had. The atmosphere suffocated and succumbed to the terrorizing howls and cries that emerged in the vicinity of the Collins Mansion. The pointed grills on the gate were decorated with pig and dog heads. As the two stepped in, owls hooted of their arrival, probably to someone hidden inside. “YOUR HEAD WILL BE SLAUGHTERED.!!!!!!!!!!!!” Kevin ducked to avoid the sudden charge by an old woman with a disfigured face. Her Grey hair and more-than-wrinkled face spoke of the desire for revenge. “Elmer!! Save me!”
They ran in the house, a house which smelled of blood...more and more blood brought in and stocked. Rather spilled inside. They walked through the hallway and passed through isles between a lot of dead people's wasted bodies...exorcists who attempted purifying 'the hell of the Collins.'
As they took the staircase, Elmer checked the series of pictures on the wall. “See, the lineage of the family. I think, Kevin, half-knowledge can be dangerous.”

“What?”

A crumpled page hit Kevin's face. He read it....'Caddie's fierce ghost killed Cedric. But her lips craved for more blood because she wanted the last heir of the Collins the most......It is believed that when the last heir's sould would enter the mansion finally with a 'sacrifice', Caddie's ghost will forgive him.'
“W..What's this Elmer? The soul of the last heir? Sacrifice? When the heir has reincarnated, what is the need of his soul then?? I think you are in danger, I cannot jeopardize your life”, Kevin trembled as he said this.

“Don't worry about me, Kevin. Let's check the family's descent.”

Kevin went further.... “Hmm...Sylvester Collins, Mike Collins, Henry Collins and the last heir....there is no picture of him, Elmer.” The name-plate below the frame was under dust. He dusted it, there was a slogan.

''A Soul Reincarnates Only When It's Freed Itself From The Previous Birth''-
Elmer Henry Collins, The Last Heir.

A callous laughter was heard throughout the mansion after which a silence followed, a permanent one.

Sagher

Wednesday 8 January 2014


My Secret Mentor

Life when ceases to favour,
when under siege, I hear a clamour,
souls and hearts fail to console,
when I shiver from head to sole.

Just when my fear caresses,
destiny gives up before darkness,
An angelic light of the brightest tone,
slices through silt, making it moan.

Armed with arrows of joy,
the blazing sphere, never coy,
takes in arms my frail courage,
as I accept it's incandescent salvage.

All hail to you, oh mighty sun,
let your fire and flare burn,
in my eyes and ambition be firm.
Life is a mistletoe,
about the berries, let me learn.

Sagher

Saturday 4 January 2014

Nights With Elmer 2: Wrathful Math

Nights With Elmer 2: Wrathful Math

St. Andrews High School, Edinburgh, 1993: Mr. Preach had engaged the 10th graders for a slothfully timed Math class. “So, fellas! All you need to do in time, is 7 assignments, 3 tutorials and 100 of my best sums, oh yes! If you need to walk out of that gate with a merit in hand.”
The students were drowsy enough to make benches their last resort for a nap. The drizzling over the town consolidated their desire to do so.
“And Oh! The junked punk, Cedzie. Come up, come up. I request you, learned sir to tell the class about the latest increment in the number of asses admitted to this school. Using a graph.” The class burst out laughing and the poor chap, a phobic, surrendered to math again, in shame. His very living was made miserable by those numbers and his aims, rendered obfuscation by them.
He held serious despise for Mr. Preach, his formulae and their applications. After all who would afford to bear humiliation forever?
“This needs to be taken care of. That jerk will pay.” Cedzie was furiously determined.

Once, Cedzie was playing soccer with his friends. Mr. Preach sent Clara, his daughter to call the boy upstairs. “This is the right time, man” he said to himself. An old lady was seen passing by the school campus, shouting something. “All in the house of the Preach are cursed. All in their house are cursed.....The last heir of the Collins! The last man of the clan!”
Mr. Preach's body was found decaying in the toilets, with his eyes destroyed and tongue plucked. Clara cried her desolation out on her father's corpse. Everybody saw redness in her eyes, as if she'd swore something to herself. Cedzie was the clear center of doubt and was somehow proved guilty. He smelled the remand home until his adulthood rose, and was finally released five years after that. However, the boy was mysterious. He often wrote things on paper scrolls and stored them in his locker. Nobody ever cared to ransack that secret of the teenager.

. . .
35, Louis Towers, Harper Street, Present Day: “Elmer, save my school. Mr. Preach never left it even after his death. Now his fierce soul targets one student every week, and......”
“Here, Mr. Roberts. Water. You need to relax a bit.” Elmer got more cozy in his chair, scrutinizing the newly handled case. “So you think Mr. Preach's ghost has something to do with that old lady.”
Roberts nodded in answer.
“Now, now. It's a double job. We have a pair to exorcise. A filthy old hag and a math scion” Elmer breathed out.

“Don't worry. You'll be paid handsomely. Just....”

The exorcist interrupted with a grin, “Mr. Roberts, I suppose you did hear I don't charge. You can do a thing for me, nevertheless. Ask your students to make merry at home for two days, none should come to school.”
“Done.” The worried principal left.

Over Whiskey, Elmer's mind clicked on to the old lady's words. “The last man of the Collins....hmmm.” He checked the note obtained from the dickey of Ellie's car. It was from 'The Dwell Of The Collins'.
“Good connection” he chuckled.

The clock told it was 7pm and in Elmer's language, it was 'time to smoke it'. He left for the school as the dusk grew dark. The watchman's sliced body lay in his way, as he entered the huge gate which led to darkness; The ferocious one. Trees shot chills of wind, with Elmer's every step in the soil. The scenario clearly meant that his arrival was awaited and his footsteps were heard...somewhere within.
The black blanket had taken over everything inside the campus. Fearing the frightening flames of the ghost, no one had switched on the lights, hence promoting the dark. Elmer checked the washrooms and the very next moment, blood gushed through his feet. He needed to uncover the source and stepped ahead into the toilets. “Hello! You've got blood reservoirs, right? Show yourself!”

There was a sudden halt in everything. The gushing of blood, creaking of branches, songs of the crickets and also the flow and presence of air. Within moments, Elmer fell down and fainted.
He opened his eyes in a classroom where the atmosphere was devilishly filled with the chortle of the spirit he was looking for.
“Crimson Cadaver! What!?...” Elmer's head perambulated around a hillock called confusion.

“Shocked to see me here? I have several reasons for a revenge, Elmer! Remember me? Caddie. Or Clara Preach. My father was killed and I shall revenge it!!! I've been hunting for you. I tried a lot to get to you and finish you, but you escaped. Remember the attacks on you at the Avramson's mansion? It was a trap to kill you! But you got saved. Now you are in my hands.” She slashed Elmer's body and he was thrown towards the wall.
“Revenge! Die!” She followed Elmer through dark porches as he fled the scene to reach the locker room. “Come on! Come on! Cedzie's locker...” He could lay his hands on one scroll which read
'Sprinkle her blood,

On her own corpse.

It'll give you time to breathe,

before she again hops.

Learn a lesson, be wise.

Know it, evil never dies.'

-
'The Dwell Of The Collins'


Next day, at the Elmer's, Mr. Roberts didn't care about the sugar in his coffee. All he expected the man sitting before him to say, were few words of assurance. “Mr. Principal, I, in all my senses assure you that I have exorcised the evil, not from the world, but from the premises of your school at least. And in my guard, your school is safe. Now, a good cup of roasted coffee awaits your lips.”
“I hope your words come true. I wouldn't appreciate another murder at St. Andrews, you see” Roberts stared Elmer in the eye.

“They will sir. After all, the guarantors are the Collins.” Elmer grinned huge.

Sagher

Friday 3 January 2014

Nights With Elmer

Nights With Elmer

The lust for exorcism was high in the heart of Elmer, a man who scrapped 15 years like 15 wrappers in his debatable attempt to seep in the real truth through the seen truth. This insane, partially eccentric anti-ghost person was 45, earning livelihood at the Edinburgh University Of Moral Sciences...and satisfaction at 35, Louis Towers, Harper Street.
He had set up a small workplace in the room, from where Elmer had solved larger than life mysteries. There was no sleep for him, as according to him, the modern world was repeatedly led into dicey by what they called, Supernatural.
Cops save the day. I, the night” was his tag-line hung at the door.

One warm evening, a-seeming-to-be-Italian lady hotfooted into Elmer's, speaking Raggish; A step sister to English. “No man born who save Ellie. I hear you do..will?”

Elmer, as usual, studied the victim before the case. This time his analysis was petrified. The lady didn't have 5 fore-teeth, which substantially killed her looks.
Yes, lady? Care to have a seat and explain?”

I..see ghost and scared. Ghost in garden, ghost in home, ghost in cup, ghost in tea. I no more can talk.” Ellie started palpitating.
Elmer had two questions of astonishment. One, did the British government began tolerating nuisance of the language? And second, was the lady a deserter who pretended falsely to make his room a hideout?
He neither did stress on any of those questions and decided to go by the ethics, to do his job.
Let's go.”

They ushered into the lady's Cadillac, as the lamps flickered..probably of boredom. As they started moving, the dickey shuddered, making a loud noise. “The dickey jam. Do not worry” Ellie assured.
This night will be long” Elmer thought. “I don't know where will this take me. I can really sense something extraordinary.”
They stopped outside a bunglow, 'The Avramson's'. Ellie got off and began screaming, “You witch, out..come out! I and Cedric have love. We marry! You not stop us!” Elmer rushed to her and forced her in the car. “Hey, you cannot serenade around here. This is modern Europe!”
The lady calmed down and began silently cursing the supposed villain in her life who was up there. Suddenly, the gates opened and a woman ran towards them. She was wearing a night-gown and looked as if she'd just escaped a riot. Getting into the car she said, “I am Caddie, the one she's looking for. Drive away quick. I'll explain everything.”

The three were at the graveyard, near a grave which read, 'In the fond memory of CEDRIC AVRAMSON'
You see Ellie, this is the reason I kept you away from Cedric. He's not living anymore” Caddie revealed.

But I see him, everyday. You lie.”

Elmer was listening carefully. “That's his ghost, dear. He has confined me to the house. When we once met to finally end our dispute, he went mad on me and committed suicide. But his ghost, his terrorizing soul stayed back in the house. He uses me in his bed all night and during the day roams out. Only both of us can see him” Caddie wept while describing her exploitation by an evil spirit.

Ellie was led into a great shock. She was about to marry a living ghost, who would restrict her to his bed along with Caddie and her life would be ruined. She owed Caddie her life, but at the same time felt sorry for her. “Elmer help you!” she exclaimed. “Elmer knows trick. He runs ghost away.”
The exorcist summed up a plan and asked the ladies to halt at his place and let him investigate in his way.
He dropped them to his office and took Ellie's car back to the Avramson's.
Elmer was welcomed by rats and kingdoms of spider-webs. The walls had a red theme, with patches of crimson blood on them. An anchor fell from the ceiling and just missed Elmer's head. He was alert, the air grew colder and chrome moonlight scattered on the floor. Elmer was lifted in midair and he collided with the flickering chandelier. He stuck up there and below in the moonlight, stood a jet black figure with sea-green eyes, looking at Elmer. The figure seemed to ask a question, it begged for freedom; Not from the dark house, but from the darkness of betrayal. He uttered some words, “Woman...Crimson Woman” and vanished with his voice growing louder, causing a headache.

As Elmer stepped in his office, Ellie had already breathed her last. A shocked him also witnessed Caddie's gown lying beside Ellie. “Damn! He took Caddie back I suppose!” Finding the truth was the most important thing for Elmer then. He put Ellie's corpse to sleep and rushed to save Caddie.
He went to the graveyard. It was dead silent. No sign of the ghost he was hunting for. Elmer went near Cedric's grave. “Elmer” a frail voice approached him. “You are here to stop the evil. Yes?”

Why are you asking me this?”

There was a movement on the grave. Elmer saw, the letters rearranged. In a blink of the eye, CEDRIC AVRAMSON shuffled to CRIMSON CADAVER.

Because I need to dig your grave here!!!!!!” A crimson-coloured supernatural cluster with a disheveled face, not Caddie, jumped at Elmer, to his sudden hullabaloo. Elmer ran and entered the shed. “There's always a stone-hammer in a graveyard!”
He dodged the fierce evil's attacks and somehow reached the grave and destroyed it. Crimson Cadaver turned to ashes and mixed with the mud.

. . .

A week later, Elmer was relaxing at his office. He closed his eyes and recalled another terrifying experience.
He left for saving Caddie. The jammed dickey of Ellie's car drew his attention and he struggled to open it. Cedric Avramson lay stiff within with a note clutched in his hands. It read, 'To destroy the spirit, destroy its grave, which is a mere illusion.'- The Dwell Of The Collins.

Elmer woke up with a knock at his door. “Come in!”

Sagher