Tuesday, March 5, 2019

The Unfortunate Mother


Sharmila glanced at her exquisite collection of saris and hastily picked out a peach silk one. Then she spent fifteen minutes of careful attention to choose her lingerie. The correct selection assisted her to shave off inches of excess fat and perked up her sagging curves. Pleased with the visibly younger self reflecting back from the mirror, Sharmila started to pleat the sari around herself. And that’s when she heard a huge furor from the adjacent bedroom.

She hurried into the next room with the half draped sari trailing behind her. There she found her daughter Priyami hunched down and rampaging through everything while cursing out aloud. 

“Priya! What’s wrong with you?”

“The fucking packet of cigs,” Priyami pushed her voluminous curls back and looked up at her mother from behind the black rimmed big glasses.

“Are you high again?” Sharmila held Priyami by her bony shoulders and pulled her up.

“I’m always high mum.” A strong alcoholic breath made Sharmila flinch as Priyami placed her hands on her slim waist and looked at her mother defiantly.

“Where have you been all night?” she asked.

“I was with Jonty.”

“Aren’t you dating Rishi?”

“Yes, him too. Him too…him too! Hahahah…” Priyami started laughing incoherently.

“What’s so funny?”

“Hashtag him too is a cyberspace movement…against women like you!”

Sharmila raised her hand in a slap but stopped herself way before landing it on Priyami’s face.

“I can’t believe my own daughter has turned out to be such a slut.”

“I earn my salary as a journalist mum…I sleep around for fun. So technically, am not a slut.” 

Priyami sat down on an armchair and yawned casually.

“I think I’ll sleep a bit…”

With this sudden declaration she curled herself up and promptly fell into a peaceful sleep.

Sharmila walked up to the windows and closed the curtains to darken the morning and placed a pillow to prop up her daughter’s hanging head. She tucked in Priyami’s curls behind her ears, finished draping the sari, took her set of keys for the apartment and left.

For almost an hour Sharmila drove aimlessly in loops before braking her car at a by-lane close to her home. This was a place where the gloss of city affluence was peeling off, offering a peek into its true struggling condition. A huge gurgling canal was washing out the inky sludge of the humans, dousing the area in a perpetual methane stench. The abundance of trees and birds along its bank made it look like a cursed river doing its time, in the hope of being restored some day in the future by some magical touch.

Sharmila found a huge boulder on the other side of the lane, flattened conveniently at the top, probably due to erosion by hundreds of gossiping butts over untracked time. It is here that she sat down and placed one leg comfortably over the other. She watched the canal’s silent submission to fate as she smoked a cigarette. It gave her some solace.

She took out one more cigarette after a while and attempted to set it alight. But her lighter refused to work. She looked around in dismay, hoping for a little glimmer of fire somewhere. The small shop at the corner was closed and there was no other person to borrow a match stick from. At this moment a rag picker, who had been camouflaged against the brown and grey of the backdrop, stood up and hobbled towards her, holding out her lit-up bidi. Sharmila uncomfortably lit her cigarette and fished out ten bucks from her purse instead of voicing a thank-you.

The rag picker happily accepted it and sat down on the ground, right next to Sharmila’s feet. Her tattered sari was pulled high up, exposing her legs. Thick dirt had accumulated in the cracks of her feet and her matted hair looked like a perfect party zone for lice.

“Cigarettes remind us that we’ll go up in smoke one day…that’s why smoking makes us happy,” the rag picker made a comment.

Although startled, Sharmila chose to remain silent.

“Can you go sit elsewhere? I’d prefer to sit in silence for a while,” she added after a few seconds.

“Why? Is it because I’m ugly?” the rag picker asked.

 “Do you always sit exposing your legs…don’t you feel…mmm…” Sharmila quickly attempted to change the subject.

“Embarrassed?” The rag picker offered to end the sentence with a generous smile. Many of her teeth were missing and the remaining ones were blackened.

“Aren’t you scared of sexual assault?” Sharmila said.

“My legs aren’t creamy and enticing as yours. The scumbags would get turned off by the view.”

Sharmila took another look. They were mottled with a melee of wounds and scars, some still raw. She crinkled her nose and turned her face away.

 “I know all about you,” started the rag picker again. “You live in the C block…flat number 34. Strong locks installed in the doors. Only way to break in is by compromising the temporary security guard who comes during the summers.”

“You are planning to break in to my home?” Sharmila was surprised and vexed.

“Wouldn’t I have done it already if I had wanted to? I keep myself busy by plotting crimes I never commit. No money for entertainment you see.”

“Don’t you have any family?”

The rag picker laughed out aloud for 10 long seconds.

“You should know that I wasn’t repulsive always. I too had a pretty face in my youth. My parents had named me Phool kumari.”

There was no discernible trace of beauty left in her face and Sharmila found the name “Phool kumari” to be quite preposterous.

“When I was sixteen I had run away with Abdul, the son of the local ferry man, after he got me pregnant. Even though our families had shunned us, we were happy together. But one day his boat capsized in a storm, drowning him, and with him, my happiness. His family took away our boy who was a little over two back then. Then they threw me out of the village. When I went running to my parents, they called me a bringer of doom and sent me away.

That’s when I moved to the city. After trying a thousand odd jobs I settled to being a rag picker.”

She shrugged nonchalantly and took a long drag of smoke.

“Never saw your child again?”

The rag picker turned towards her, startled.

“I meet him every month,” she clarified. “He turned out to be a handsome man like his father. He’s a big shot in his village. Verrry rich…verrry powerful!” She looked immensely proud.

“Does he not treat you well?” Sharmila asked.

The rag picker thought of the first time that she had ventured to see her son after decades. The village where she used to live with Abdul was now a small town. Crowds were thronging the broad, paved street, hailing their mighty leader. The rag picker peered though the cheering men to catch sight of a tall and broad man, attired in green kurta and white pants, marching by confidently. He was waving at all, sporting a trace of smile at the corners of his lip, lapping up the cheers contently. It was her son, Hanif Abdul.

After he vanished into his palatial residence, his men came and distributed free lunch packets to all. The rag picker had saved her packet; she meant to have lunch that day seated by her son, in the rightful place of a mother.

She never disclosed her identity to the security people and kept pleading with them for an appointment. But the brawny men first tried to ignore her and then they tried to shoo her away with threats.

That’s when she lost her cool and told them who she was. About a handful of men had heard the audacious statement and they immediately took her in to see Hanif Abdul. 

The men bowed down and saluted their leader first. Then one of them pointed at the hapless woman who had sat down on the floor.

“She claims to be your mother, janab,” he said.

Hanif Abdul hinged his legs a bit, rested his hands on the knees and bent forward to observe the woman with squinted eyes for a minute. And then he stood up to his full height to let out a billowing laughter. His men immediately joined in and echoed the laugh.

“You all may leave now,” Hanif ordered his men. “I’ll give her some money and send her away.”

As soon as the men scuffled out Hanif brought a chair and sat down facing the rag picker.

Seated at his feet, the woman looked at him with open wonder.

“I’ll give you a sumptuous dinner,” he said. “Eat and leave.”

He pointed towards the door with his raised right hand.

“I came to eat with you,” she started. Her eyes were moist.

“Don’t waste my time,” he began to walk away.

“Son, won’t you have a single morsel from my hands?” she had begged with folded hands.

“No, you’re dirty!” He smirked casually and showed her the door again.

For seven days the rag picker had waited outside the palace, hoping for Hanif Abdul to change his mind. On the eighth day, she was taken inside again.

Abdul was seated on an ornamental chair with two men stationed at each side.

“Since you called me your son, I’ll help you to set up a business,” started Hanif Abdul. He casually threw some small packets full of a white powder towards her.

“Sell these to the rich dads and their rich kids. And then we can share the profit.”

Then as Hanif Abdul spent the next 20 minutes focused on his smartphone, his men shared with the rag picker, their expertise on selling drugs.

She listened carefully and nodded along. Her son was asking something from her after years, she had to do it well.

“Now go back to the city,” Hanif Abdul smiled condescendingly when his men were done. The men walked out noisily, expecting her to follow them.

“Do you not believe that I am your mother?” she asked him one last time as she prepared to leave.

Hanif Abdul gazed into her eyes with a strange ferocity.

“I don’t want to,” he muttered.

The rag picker left for the city that very evening. She gradually settled into her role. It fetched her some money. More importantly it gave her a sense of purpose in life.

And now Sharmila's sudden question made all her memories alive.

“Did your son not accept you?” Sharmila asked again.

“Never told him who I was,” the rag picker quickly lied without turning her head. “I thought it doesn’t befit his status to have me as a mother.”

“What does your son do for a living?” Sharmila prodded.

“He is a business man,” gloated the rag picker. “He deals with a very rare powder, it’s an expensive medicine.”

“So, your son is a drug dealer,” Sharmila saw through the ruse immediately. “How unfortunate for you!”

“Stop calling my son names,” the rag picker hissed and stood up. “He doesn’t take drugs himself. My son is a very kind man who helps the poor.”

“I didn’t mean to hurt you,” apologized Sharmila.

“You, in particular, have no right to pity me,” she angrily chewed out the words.

Sharmila wondered what she meant while the rag picker continued to grumble under her breath and began to limp away down the street. As soon as her hunched figure disappeared at a turn, Sharmila got up too.

She walked up to her car leisurely, with a thousand thoughts clouding her mind. She unlocked her car and turned on English country music. There are so many ways in which children hurt their parents, thought Sharmila as she drove back home. Perhaps her Priya was not that much of an aberration.

She parked her car in the basement and took the elevator to her apartment. As she unlocked the door, she was greeted by the assorted aroma of Indian spices. The kitchen was clean, the table had been set and warm lunch was waiting. The maid had come, transformed the house and left, much like a genie.

Sharmila threw the keys casually into the drawers and sat down on her sofa. The sound of running water from the behind the closed door of the bathroom told her that Priyami was up. She came out soon with her hair wrapped in a towel turban and her body covered in a matching bath robe. Priyami seemed happy to see her mother this time.

“I’m sorry mum,” she sat down and hugged her mother tightly. Sharmila hugged her back.

“Why do you let alcohol control you? Can’t you see it takes away your sweetness and turns you into a monster?”

“Please mum…don’t get started again,” Priyami sat back, her forehead lightly creased.

“Let’s eat now…I’m famished.”

As mother and daughter shared space over the familiar tinkling of the cutleries the tension in their bond melted away slowly.

“Tastes heavenly,” commented Priyami as she savoured the first mouthful.

Sharmila smiled in contentment. After chewing the first few morsels she spoke up.

“I confess that I took away your cigarettes last night,” Sharmila said with a wink. “Sorry dear…but you have to promise me that you will limit yourself to one cigarette per day!”

“Oh no…mum,” Priyami was annoyed. “Why do you do these things?”

“I smoked one or two,” her mother said with a grin.

“What? You took two?” Priyami stood up and clutched her hair.

“No, I was kidding,” Sharmila was taken aback. “Your packet is untouched.”

She got up and walked to the sofa. There she grabbed her purse with her left hand and tossed the packet back to Priyami who promptly took a head count of her stock and sighed a smile of relief.

“Thank goodness,” she smiled. “I’m sorry if you felt bad. But don’t take them ever again. These are special cigarettes.”

“In what way?”

“They have an exotic flavor,” Priyami tried to explain. “I buy them at half price from a rag picker who smuggles them from the ports.”

Sharmila felt herself losing balance. She sat down awkwardly with a grimace as the full weight of the rag picker’s comment finally sunk in.



Sunday, November 25, 2018

Changing Needs


The king is very worried today. He has four queens and no child. A fifth marriage will confirm what his subjects suspect and what he already knows. Yes, the king is impotent. He has not been like this always; but somehow he ended up losing his…well…his “virility”.

The royal attendant Suya enters the king’s chamber with a glass of green juice.

“Good morning, Your Highness,” she bows gently holding out the tray. The prime minister enters at the same moment and the king gulps down the juice at one go.

“A glorious morning; but alas, it is tainted with suspense,” says the diminutive man as he presents a golden envelope to the king.

The king scrutinizes the wax seal; the fine scratches tell him about the opening and resealing of the message within. Nevertheless he breaks it open and straightens out the enclosed piece of parchment. The prime minister quickly turns around, offering His Majesty a moment of ostensible privacy.

The king, however, is engrossed in the one liner content of the letter. He is being summoned to a secluded part of the dense woods adjoining his kingdom.

“I have some business to attend and will leave now,” says the king to the waiting minister.  “Meanwhile you should work on your tampering skills. Go home and practice a bit. ”

He throws the envelope at the minister, who manages to catch it with extremely agility and then remembers to contort his face in shock.

“Suya, the potion tasted really good today,” the king tells the royal attendant. “I feel invigorated. Convey my regards to the Kabiraj.”

Suya gives a measured smile and resumes her work.

The king walks out along the stately path that stretches amidst colourful gardens to mount his white horse. He acknowledges the stable boys with a kind nod and gallops away towards the woods. The fresh air and the stale memories combine in his mind to form a delightful interplay. He knows who has sent for him. After all, the letter is written in a code language that he has used with only one person in the past.

On reaching the agreed spot the king finds an open chest and a sumptuous breakfast spread waiting for him. He caresses the bevy of silken clothes in the trunk and spots a diamond ring concealed among the layers. He stands up and looks around. There is no one.

“Shakuntala!!! I’m here to see you,” the king begins to shout. “Shakuntala…where’re you?”

There is a slight rustle amidst the thick foliage and she glides out of a bush.

20 years later, Shakuntala’s beauty mesmerizes the king again.

“Dushyant, I called you here to return your gifts; take back the chest,” Shakuntala starts.

“Dear…let’s not be so sour today. Why don’t we sit down and eat first?”

“Breakfast is set for three. Did you see that?”

“Three?” The king scratches his head.

“Our son Bharat will join us too. I named him after Bharat of Ramayana. He too is deprived in life due to his mother’s folly. Today I’ll return all that you have given me, including Bharat.”

“Don’t do this dear…you know I love you. But our child was born out of wedlock. My subjects will shun me if I admit the truth.”

“So, who’s getting the kingdom after you pass away?” Shakuntala smirks as she picks out a succulent wild berry and sinks her teeth into it.

Suddenly the king feels something waking up in his loins. He looks down to get a surprise. His manhood is ready to break the long fast.  

The king nervously walks up to Shakunkala and enfolds her from behind.

“Dear, I have always loved you.”

Shakuntala slips out of his grip lithely and laughs.

“Please don’t deny me today,” the king urges.

“I want my son as the next king; and the huge country you rule, to be named after him!” Shakuntala holds out her palm asking for the word of the king.

“Ok…so be it,” the king clasps her hand, pulls her closer and tries to kiss her.

“Bharat! Show yourself,” Shakuntala raises her voice.

A tall boy with a sculpted body comes out. He is fully armed.

“So he has listened to everything,” thinks Dushyant as he loosens his grip on Shakuntala. His manhood takes the cue and wilts away immediately.

Bharat steps ahead, bends down and touches the feet of his father.

The king smiles...in relief.

“You have inherited our best,” he tells Bharat.

“Shakuntala, I can officially adopt him as my son,” offers the king. “I’ll pass him off as the orphaned child of a learned Brahmin couple.”

A pleased Shakuntala bows her head.

“Thank you, that’d suffice,” she replies.

And without furthering the conversation the trio sits down to eat together for the first and last time.
When it is time to leave, the king takes Bharat by hand and looks longingly at Shakuntala.

“Can’t you come?” he asks.

“To be your whore?” Shakuntala laughs out scornfully. “Your impotency is cured. I’ve lifted the curse.”

The king stares at Shakuntala in disbelief but she only waves once at her son and then disappears into the forest.

Back in her cosy hut Shakuntala finds Suya waiting. She throws her slender arms around Suya’s neck and snuggles up.

“Anasuya, do you know where Priyambada is?” she asks.

“She went to collect more of the impotency herb,” Suya hugs her back.

“We don’t need more of it. Continue with the revitalizing concoction you gave Dushyant today…as long as he treats Bharat well.”

Suya nods with a smile.

Shakuntala looks deep into Suya’s eyes and begins to untie her upper garment.

“We can’t start without Priyambada…she’ll be so angry,” Suya protests meekly.

“Angry and wild…just the way I like it,” explains Shakuntala and plants a kiss on Suya’s lips.

Suya gets up once to set the door ajar and then lets her aroused body sink into the warmth of Shakuntala’s bare arms.


Thursday, September 27, 2018

No Man's Land


Raya feels a weird sensation curling up from her gut as she reads the messages popping up in the WhatElseIsUp group. Sheena, Minks and Copper are all bowing out of their imminent Friday night party with apologies. Raya is done with her facial make-up and is about to straighten her hair when the entire plan stands cancelled. Sheena and Minks are both married and have small kids. Raya has no way to veto their excuses. Copper is not married and yes, he used to be Raya’ back-up since the school days. They had a pact to get married if they both remained single at 45. But Copper has been presented with a hand-picked fiancé by his parents recently and as Raya could guess, he already prefers the new girl over his old friends.

Raya sighs as she puts back the red hot dress back in her wardrobe. She fiddles through a few dinner options online and then books a regular box meal through Flash. Now that dinner will be home delivered in about 10 minutes, she has nothing to do but fix herself a strong drink at her mini bar. She sits there trying to think of something fun to do as she sips slowly from her long sparkling glass. Raya understands after 4 consecutive pegs that the strange feeling engulfing her was nothing but all-consuming loneliness.

Raya is 36. And accomplished. And quite pretty. Yet, when it came to men she has had only heartbreaks. She makes a firm decision that night, before alcohol induces her to slump into her couch and fall asleep.

The next morning a hung-over Raya registers on the famous matrimonial portal Right One. It guarantees everyone life-long happiness. She has to answer a number of questionnaires truthfully and upload various documents to authenticate her identity before they accept the challenge.

This is year 3018. Online arranged marriage has evolved to a whole new level and one cannot just swoop in and casually look at other prospective brides or grooms like commodities. There are formalities to be done and then you wait; you wait for the Right One algorithm to calculate and present to you the groom tailor-made to fit your requirements.

Raya cups her head in her right hand biting her left hand nails after submitting her details. Within 10 seconds the screen flashes a message that promise to carry on a search on her behalf.
Raya types out a customary thank-you note but there is no smile in her face. She feels defeated. Despite the assurance of Right One, she thinks that it cannot know what exactly she wanted in her ideal man.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Dr Saoni, a renowned scientist in her sixties, is sitting in her office, leaning back on her chair, looking up at the ceiling.  Cleanliness and minimal presence of furniture make the room exude the vibe of sophisticated austerity. Saoni’s head rests on the gentle cushion of her connected palms while her thrown apart legs make a silent vibratory rhythm. Despite the apparent masculinity of her pose, she looks graceful.

Her work for the morning is already done. She had some routine patches and upgrades to approve which were urgent for the stability of families across the world. And now she is treating herself to a break. She is wondering like she has wondered at many of her breaks, if the decision taken by her ancestors was at all a correct or logical one.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Raya goes to work and spends a sombre morning avoiding her nosy colleagues. She feels a tad desperate about signing up for arranged marriage. At lunch break she heads to the office library to calm herself down. Raya walks into in the spacious hall and looks around the stately and almost empty alleys. She caresses a few books lovingly before she makes her way towards the store attendant. A guy is already there, having a hard time trying to get a book by Oscar Wilde. The errant store attendant that he is negotiating with is, of course, a machine with pre-fed information.

Feeling frustrated the guy turns around only to be melted down into an obsequious mush as his eyes meet those of Raya’s. Raya has an oval face outlined by distinct black-brown curls. Her eyes are not much but her long lashes and slightly off-set teeth adds a quaint charm to her looks. For 10 seconds the guy sports a half smile and a smitten look. A spontaneous giggle from Raya breaks him out of the trance.

“Hi! I’m Vivaan.”

“You looking for something?”

“No longer!”

“What?”

“I was looking for the missing piece of my heart…but I no longer am.”

Vivaan winks his deep set pair of grayish-blue eyes.

“Very flattered…but you’re kind of veering into the creepy zone now.”

“Oh?! I thought I was hot enough to pull off such corny lines! What am I gonna do?” Vivaan starts to run his fingers through his thick hair in mock anguish. His sculpted arms contrast the innocence of his face and Raya lets out a small, involuntary gasp.

“I’ve the book you want,” she quickly says to cover it up.

“You seem to have all that I want!”

Raya blushes and breaks off eye contact for a while. But she looks up confidently in two seconds and pointing to an empty table, says, “Why don’t we three sit over there and talk?”

“Three?”

“You, me and Oscar Wilde.”

Vivaan and Raya both laugh as they walked together towards the cosy corner.

And just like that Raya and Vivaan start going out casually. It is the first time since leaving college that Raya is seeing someone sans future expectations. The Right One matrimonial algorithm is at work looking for her future mate. Meanwhile she can certainly have some fun.

Vivaan turns out to be a wonderful man. He is perfect in looks and wit and yet he is equipped with servile instincts. A complete man with low self-esteem; that had always been the dream combination for Raya. But she resolutely puts away such thoughts and checks the Right One website daily for updates. The Right One portal jokes a bit, teases a bit before telling Raya that the search is still on.

A part of Raya panics wondering if the algorithm is about to fail for her. And another part of her prays for some more time with Vivaan. And another very small part of her starts to hope that Vivaan can save her from an arranged marriage just in the nick of time.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dr Saoni is having her dinner alone in her home. Her domestic help Jessica has set the table for her and has quietly retreated to her segment of the house. Jessica knows better not to disturb madam at this time. This is the hour when Saoni enjoys her meal while playing with the various wild ideas in her head. This is the hour that has given some of the ingenious inventions of the last few decades to mankind. But today Saoni is analyzing the past about which she had heard from her beloved granny.

Saoni can almost hear her granny’s throaty voice repeat again and again, after concluding the story, almost rhetorically, “What else could they have done?”

Saoni’s great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother Dahlia was the one who had taken the strange decision.

It was a late afternoon, a long time ago, when Dahlia went into her daughter Juhi’s room with a glass of flavoured milk. Juhi was supposed to be napping with her two month old daughter. Any other mother would have crashed the glass of milk if they had to witness the scene that Dahlia saw as she pushed open the door. Her baby grand daughter was lying awake on the bed, playfully reaching out for the toes of her mother, whose lifeless body was hanging from the ceiling right above her. Dahlia had placed the glass down on the bed side table, had covered it carefully and then she had scooped up the infant in her right arm. As she gently rocked the happy child, she read from her left hand, the suicide note left behind by Juhi.

Dahlia found out that her daughter’s fiancé had taken off with another girl, leaving Juhi on her own. Their marriage was scheduled in less than a month and a sudden break up at this juncture had made Juhi take her own life.

Incidentally her elder sister Ruhi used to be a doctor who had gone to work abroad for the betterment of kids in underprivileged countries. Unfortunately she had died a lonely and excruciating death 4 years back, far away from home, due to injuries from a brutal gang-rape.

Dahlia was now a childless mother who had lost the two people she had cared about the most. She could have slipped into a trauma but instead she chose to fight back. And she ran to the last good man she knew to be alive, her brother Divyang, for help.

Over the next few years Dahlia and Divyang formed a team and systematically brought about long term social corrections. They vowed to not raise Juhi’s little daughter to a future of abandonment or dominance.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Raya knows that she has fallen for Vivaan. The small joys, the big goals, the unexplained high are all back in her life. She no longer wants the guy Right One is supposed to scour out for her. She decides to place a service suspension request while she sees where it goes with Vivaan. She immediately runs to her laptop and powers it up. Soon she would be guilt-free about everything. Her impatient fingers make her login fast to the Right One interface but a surprise is waiting there for her.

Instead of the usual “searching” status, her profile now displays “match found”! Raya wonders what to do as she sieves through the terms and conditions. She finds that her “match” is on the way to meet her at her residence in about half an hour. She starts to panic at this point. An unknown man is coming to her at her behest and she wants to turn him down. And that is not all!

The Right One portal does not really select a classical human being. They only program and genetically groom a robo-man for the subscriber. And Raya now needs a plan to break up smoothly with her pre-coded robo-man.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The solution that Dahlia and Divyang had devised a long time ago was to create robo-men. The project was lengthy and needed the rest of their living years but they made it a grand success. The robo-men have synthetic and programmable y chromosome while their x chromosome is inherited from their human mothers making them a new breed. Over the years they have evolved to a new level of perfection. Most women now preferred to marry the robo-men as they made perfect husbands.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For years Raya has refused to get into the game and has waited for the unbiased love of a real man. And now that she has seemingly found it in Vivaan, a robo-man rings her door bell.

Raya steadies her nerve and decides to request him to reassess and postpone the deal. She opens the door with a formal smile.

There is an arch made of exotic flowers installed at her doorstep, a beautiful scent is in the air and a long lost song from the by-gone era is playing out for her, "Nothing's gonna change my love for you..."

And under the arch, down on his knees, is Vivaan. He is holding out an embellished key ring to Raya.

“All this while, all that you did, was fake?” Raya thinks sadly.

But aloud she decides to be civil, since she is anyway, out of options.

“A key ring?” Raya asks Vivaan.

“Yes…I bought an apartment…will you make it a home for me?” Vivaan looks at her with his perfect eyes which now seem to be slightly weird. Raya runs her finger along the key ring as she nods in assent.

Vivaan gets up and says, “Just so that you know, I’ve spent my entire budget on the apartment, the wedding ring you have to buy on your own.”

Raya laughs out this time as she grips and twists Vivaan’s shirt to pull him closer. As she stares into Vivaan’s handsome face, she feels her heart race again. Maybe marrying a  robo-man would not be that bad. Raya gently places her lips on Vivaan’s and whispers, “Let’s skip the wedding and plan for the honeymoon first!”

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Raya and Vivaan go on to live 10 glorious years of a happy marriage before the first sign of trouble occurs.

Vivaan has been an exceptional husband, fulfilling every need of his wife in the past decade. Raya just has one duty towards him; she needs to take him for his biennial maintenance and upgrades. They are also parents to a 2 year old girl, Viya. Viya is not biologically Vivaan’s daughter. Though Vivaan is a man of unquestionable virility, yet when it came to becoming a mother, Raya had opted to be inseminated by an anonymous real man. Vivaan had been terribly upset at first but a timely software patching ensured that he fell in line with the decision.

And now Raya is bored. She is bored of living the lie that she had started.  She often wonders what it would be like to be with a real man and she knows that there is one real man out there with whom she is connected, Viya’s genetic father.

So one night while Vivaan is putting Viya to sleep, Raya types out a secret mail to the concerned authorities, requesting to know the identity of her daughter’s father.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

After passing through the various automated rounds of verification Raya’s mail manages to reach the inbox of Dr Saoni, for her approval. She reads the mail two times and then sits with her head hanging for a while. She then pushes back her rolling chair and paces in the room restlessly for a few minutes before going back to the email and approving it.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Raya is not the only woman who sought Saoni’s approval in this regard. Everyday several women, happily married to perfect robo-men write to Saoni, hoping for her help. And every time Saoni decides to play along.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The next day Raya reads the reply mail with tense anticipation while Vivaan is making breakfast in the kitchen. She finds out that the man who had sired Viya is now married. But his contact details had also been sent as an attachment.

“Raya, come dear, I made your favourite breakfast,” Vivaan calls out lovingly.

Raya nervously closes her browser and rushes to the table to see spinach, eggs and toast served with freshly brewed coffee. Vivaan is waiting for her with a smile. Raya looks around her home as Vivaan pulls out a chair for her and suddenly the spotless perfection of her home seems to be a pathetic charade to her. She resolutely saves the unknown man’s number before she starts to eat.

Meeting the man turns out to be easy. Mihir, as he is called, is another middle aged man, tired and bored in a loveless marriage. The call from Raya acts like a sudden splatter of spice in his bland days.

The first meeting between Raya and Mihir is simply electrifying. Mihir is not particularly handsome but he is masculine and his eyes seem to shine with wisdom and erudition. Even though Raya and Mihir try to fool themselves by being friends for two weeks, eventually passion takes over and they confess about their illicit desires of the flesh to each other.

They write to the authorities together, explaining their predicament. This is a simple problem for Saoni's team and one junior scientist draws out the simple plan of spousal swap to solve it.

Convincing Mihir’s wife turns out to be too easy. She is already frustrated with her husband and is happy to trade him off for a much better looking Vivaan. Vivaan is not given a chance to express his opinion and is instead genetically manipulated into happily accepting the swap. Mihir is overjoyed to fit into the ready-made family of a new wife and cute daughter.

Viya is a little sour about the sudden changes but Mihir is very patient with her and things are improving. To Raya, everything in life is finally real.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Meanwhile Dr Saoni and her super secret all-women team are in a meeting room planning an upcoming project. They are only ones who know that real men have gone extinct around 2 centuries back. The launch of the robo-men had been catastrophic to them and within a few generations, they got wiped out from the earth.

So at present when a woman requests for a real man, she is just given a robo-man whose upgrades have been frozen. Protecting this secret is also a part of the team’s duty.

However, everyone in the room, including Saoni, herself is voluntarily celibate. Now that men are finally complying with the wishes of women, they all feel a strong need for the extinct species. You see, there is no joy in taming a lion that was never wild.