Posts Tagged ‘edacheri’

Young cop and the missing body

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

This story was narrated to me by an eye-witness.

I have to give you a background sketch. We have a large quarry of black granite in our village. It is now a difficult terrain with large water bodies and steep high rocksl due to extensive quarrying. There is a ‘colony’ nearby, of houses meted out by the government to the underprivileged of the place. Almost all of the colony dwellers use these large manmade lakes to wash and bathe.

People say it all started when Laxmi came and took the clothes she had spread to dry on the rocks. Some say it started when Paru kept hers to dry next to Laxmi’s. There are some who says it all really started months before, but they wouldnt tell me their reasons. Anyway, the available history states that Paru came from work, collected and clothes, and announced, “my body is missing”.

People heard her; she knew how to be heard.
“My body is missing.”
“Laxmi’s clothes were next to mine.”
“It must be with her.”
“She stole my body.”

The conclusion was fast, and the people followed her as she went to Laxmi’s house and demanded her body back. Laxmi vehemently denied having to do anything with Paru’s body. No , she doesn’t steal like some people.

Alas! Poor girl. You don’t talk back to people like Paru. By then everyone around knew about the body and the theft. Paru has a loud voice, and she doesnt mind using it. My narrator tells me she cannot repeat the words to me, as it would hurt my innocent ears. In the end Paru stomped out, threatening to get her body back, and Laxmi tearful and broken.

Noone guessed how affected Laxmi was. Being called a thief is bad in itself, and to be branded a body thief! We cannot judge her for what she was going to do. Majid heard someone walking in the yard at four in the morning, and the thief he was going to catch turned out to be Laxmi in a bid to throw herself into the neighbor’s well!

The colony was shocked. Noone actually believed Laxmi pinched the body. And she has proved herself innocent for their eyes by her unsuccessful bid on her life. People assembled. They discussed. They cussed. They heated up. They vented. And unanimously decided to ‘talk’ to her. But our heroine was nowhere to be seen. She had gone to Calicut in the early morning to visit a doctor. Well, she will come back.

My source tells me the scoundrel who gave away the plan was Nanu, Paru’s nephew. He has gone to Vatakara in the afternoon, apparently to tip off Paru when she came back. This occured to the people later. At that time they were just badly surprised by Paru coming with a policeman in tow. It is never a good idea to beat someone up when there is the eye of the law present. People began to melt away slowly. But there are always some brave souls left to save the day and the poor maidens! Thank god for them.

“So you are home with a policeman, eh? So you sacred for almost killing that girl”
“She stole my body”
“She didn’t steal anything. Maybe you have hidden it. We know why… ”
“Sir,last month Paru… ” “SHE STOLE MY BODY”
“You &^*..” “She …”
“Sir,….”and so on..

They tell me it was impoosible to discern anything except that somebody stole a body. Even when a dozen people are talking simultaneoulsy, Paru can drill her voice home. It was being continued in this vein for around half an hour when the young cop, with a bewildered expression in his boyish eyes asked a silent group member.

“What is a body?”

She tells me every single person stopped talking for an entire minute, before the explanations began.

* Where I come from, some old women still refer to the piece of clothing now we know as bra or brassiere, bodice, or less ceremonially body*

8
Tags: ,
Posted in Stories |

Snakes, communists and falling coconuts

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

The last post was about snakes. Which reminded me of more snake stories. My my.. I know snakes have a bad reputation, but whatever…

One of my uncles has a land in which there is an old abandoned temple. When I was a kid, those bricks were a mystery. Every other kid was afraid of going there. It was Koyampatta Bhagawati, and you shouldn’t step into her land. Except when you picked coconuts. And did the other work in the land. As luck would have it, I had a mother who sneered at all those.

Those were the old times. Young men were embarrassed to be religious. It was what women and old people did. Have we not all heard about the thing about opiate of the masses? Have we not heard Vayalar sing about how man created the religion? Those times were as hardheadedly communist as now. People believed in atheism, processions, fights, and giving the best fowl yearly to Kakkannur for the sacrifice. And not stepping into Devi’s land. They also believed that temples were against the spirit of communism. You tolerate them because people are used to it, but no supporter of the communist party could openly profess to be a believer.

I have been away for so long, and things have definitely changed. People have turned to religion. Temples and churches and mosques are coming up in every corner. People go to temples everyday, not just those 10 days of Navratri. There are renovations of old religious places with any trace of mysticism. Even people’s tombs get renovated lamps are lighted. My mother tells me there is a massive Karthika-vilakku in Koyampatta today, with thousands being served meals at noon. Those old-abandoned pieces of bricks I know is now a proper place of worship, with pujas being done, lamps lit every evening and a collection of offerings that will make a poor worker-bee wish she had instead gone in for the spirituality business.

Did I mention it was all being run by the communist party? The young blood which wanted it to be a proper temple are being supported by the party which says it is godless. Of course there were other people too, but nothing works in my place without the mighty Party. It so happened that along with the worship rights(?) and making sure the land in which the temple sites is common to the good people also wanted a piece of land surrounding it to be the temple’s. My uncle did not like the idea. That’s when the blockades began. No one would work in that piece of land. The fallen coconuts were aptly picked up by the neighbours and the grasses were soon taller than your head. Then there were the rounds of talk about finding a solution to the problem, mediated by the Party. It all came down to the same thing. Give some land/produce of a number of trees to the temple. The Party helpfully suggested they are ready to handle the finances from it. I have no idea why, but my uncle did not seem very keen on giving away his land for the common good of the people. The bourgeoisie.

Then somebody went to the Court. This being a medieval temple belonging to somebody or something. The Judge in turn said whoever steps into the land can be prosecuted. (The following story is going around about it. Coach Nambiar, who was rooting for the other team went to the judge before the judgment. Because you know, he is The Coach, and his protege got four gold medals in Asiad. It incensed the Judge so much that he made sure there were no loopholes in his judgment.) But don’t you think the bourgeoisie won. He cannot climb a coconut tree or lift a shovel. So it is.

So, in this long story where do the snakes come, you might ask. A viper bit our dog Tintu and she died. Sometime later there was a ‘Swarnaprasnam’ by the people, where the Tantri detailed the bad things that will happen to the people who were not willing to give Bhagawati her due. Santha, who works for us sometimes came and told my mother that the Tantri said Tintu was dead. (We are family, so) A four-legged animal will die, he said. My mother asked if he also said two four legged animals were obtained later on.

Apparently not. Maybe he didn’t know about the puppies.

6
Tags: , ,
Posted in Stories |

Curse of the Snakes

Monday, August 11th, 2008

I have the habit of making up ‘untruths’ when talking to babies. Like the throne in which the Lion sits in the jungle. Then I think they really do not understand it is a silly story. Which reminded me of my grandfather. The grandfather of the tall tales.

He has always had some allergic reaction in his hands. The skin would peel off, and it was quite painful. After all medicines failed, he even changed to cigarettes from beedis at his doctor’s insistence, as the beedis were wrapped in tobacco leaves. It was not so small a thing for him as it was easy to roll up opium pills into beedis. Not so easy in cigarettes. But ty it he did, and still nothing happened. Then one of those days when I was sympathizing with his hands, he let me into his secret.

:The doctors won’t be able to cure it, because they don’t know the root cause.”

But they are doctors. They know everything.

“No. This is the curse of the Nagas. I did not tell them.”

Why did they curse you?

“Once I was walking near the Kaliyamvelli temple, and a group of people were trying to kill a poor snake. So I told them it was the Devi’s snake, and you shouldn’t kill it. And we released it back to the woods.”

So?

“I got this after that incident. See, how my skin peels off now. Like that of a serpent. ”

But you were the good guy. You saved that snake. So others should be getting it, not you.

“But I got the sapam. (the curse). That’s how it is sometimes.”

I thought the snakes were silly to curse the person who saved them, but left it at that. Then after a couple of months, my grandfather came to visit us, and his hands were more or less healed. He told my mother he has stopped using the matches and was using cigarette lighters now.

So it was an allergy to matches? I asked him.

“No. I had tried not using the matches earlier, and it made no difference.”

Then how did it work now?

“Sri Krishna came to me in my dream and told me not to use matches anymore. That’s why it worked.”

I admit I had my doubts. I was not so small a baby. I knew it was an allergy of the match box. Then, I also knew he had a dream of Sri Krishna.

But now, I am not so sure.

3
Tags: , ,
Posted in Stories |