A beautiful picture of a a father's love, his resolution and the bondage of reality--
FORTY-FIVE A MONTH
---- R K Narayan
---- R K Narayan
SHANTA could not stay in her class any longer.
She had done clay-modelling, music, drill, a bit of alphabets and numbers, and
was now cutting coloured paper. She would have to cut till the bell rang and
the
teacher said, " Now, you may all go home," or " Put away the scissors
and take up your alphabets " Shanta was impatient to know the time. She
asked her friend sitting next, " Is it five now ? "
"
Maybe," she replied.
"
Or is it six ? "
"
I don't think so," her friend replied, " because night comes at
six."
"
Do you think it is five ? "
"
Yes."
"
Oh, I must go. My father will be back at home now. He has asked me to be ready
at five. He is taking me to the cinema this evening. I must go
home."
She threw down her scissors and ran up to the teacher. " Madam,I must go
home."
"
Why, Shanta Bai ? "
"
Because it is five o'clock now."
"
Who told you it was five ? "
"
Kamala."
"
It is not five now. It is do you see the clock there? Tell me what the time is.
I taught you to read the clock the other day." Shanta stood gazing at the
clock in the hall, counted the figures laboriously
and
declared, " It is nine o'clock."
The teacher called the other girls and
said, " Who will tell me the time from that clock ? " Several of them
concurred with Shanta and said it was nine o'clock, till the teacher said,
" You are only seeing the long hand. See the short one, where is it ?
"
"
Two and a half."
"
So what is the time ? "
"
Two and a half."
"
It is two forty-five, understand ? Now you may all go to your seats "
Shanta returned to the teacher in about ten minutes and asked, " Is it
five, Madam, because I have to be ready at five ? Otherwise my father will be
very angry with me. He asked me to return home early."
"
At what time ? "
"
Now." The teacher gave her permission to leave, and Shanta picked up her
books and dashed out of the class with a cry of joy. She ran home, threw her books
on the floor, and shouted, " Mother, Mother," and
Mother
came running from the next house where she had gone to chat with her friends.
Mother
asked, " Why are you back so early ? "
"
Has father come home ? " Shanta asked. She would not take her coffee or
tiffin, but insisted on being dressed first. She opened the trunk and insisted on
wearing the thinnest frock and knickers, while her
mother
wanted to dress her in a long skirt and thick coat for the evening. Shanta
picked out a gorgeous ribbon from a cardboard soap box in which she kept pencils,
ribbons and chalk bits. There was a heated
argument
between mother and daughter over the dress, and finally mother had to give in.
Shanta put on her favourite pink frock, braided her hair, and flaunted a green
ribbon on her pigtail. She
powdered
her face and pressed a vermilion mark on
her
forehead. She said, " Now father will say what
a
nice girl I am because I'm ready. Aren't you also
coming,
mother ? "
"
Not today."
Shanta
stood at the little gate looking down the street.
Mother
said : " Father will come only after five ; don't stand in the sun. It is
only four o'clock."
The sun was disappearing behind the
house on the opposite row, and Shanta knew that presently it would be dark. She
ran in to her mother and asked, " Why hasn't father come home yet, mother
? "
"
How can I know ? He is perhaps held up in the office."
Shanta
made a wry face : " I don't like these people in the office. They are bad
people-- "
She went back to the gate and stood
looking out. Her mother shouted from inside : " Come in, Shanta. It is
getting dark, don't stand there." But Shanta would not go in. She stood at
the gate and a wild idea came to her head. Why should she not go to the office and
call out father and then go to the cinema? She wondered where his office might
be. She had no notion. She had seen her father take the turn at the end of the
street every day. If one went there, one perhaps went automatically to father's
office. She threw a glance about to see if mother was anywhere and moved down
the street.
It was twilight. Everyone going about
looked gigantic, walls of houses appeared very high, and cycles and carriages
looked as though they would bear down on her. She walked on the very edge of
the road. Soon the lamps were twinkling : and the passers-by looked like
shadows. She had taken two turns and did
not know where she was. She sat down
on
the edge of the road biting her nails. She wondered how she was to reach home.
A servant employed in the next house was passing along, and she picked herself
up and stood before him.
" Oh, what are you doing here all
alone ? " he asked. She replied, " I don't know. I came here. Will
you take me to our house ?
"
She followed him and was soon back in her house.
Venkat Rao, Shanta's father, was about
to start for his office that morning when a jutka passed along the street
distributing cinema handbills. Shanta dashed to the street and picked up a
handbill. She held it up and asked : " Father, will you take me to the cinema
today ? " He felt unhappy at the question. Here was the child growing up
without having any of the amenities and the simple pleasures of life. He had
hardly taken her twice to the cinema. He had no time for the child. While
children of her age in other houses had all the dolls, dresses, and outings that
they wanted, this child was growing up all alone and like a barbarian more or
less. He felt furious with his office. For forty rupees a month they seemed to
have purchased him outright.
He reproached himself for neglecting his
wife and child even the wife could have her own circle of friends and so on :
she was after all a grown-up, but what about the child ? What a drab,
colourless existence was hers ! Every day they kept him at the office till
seven or eight in the evening and when he came home the child was asleep. Even
on Sundays they wanted him at the office. Why did they think
he
had no personal life, a life of his own ? They gave him hardly any time to take
the child to the park or the pictures. He was going to show them that they
weren't to toy with him. Yes, he was
prepared
even to quarrel with his manager if necessary.
He said with resolve : " I will
take you to the cinema this evening. Be ready at five."
"
Really ! Mother ! " Shanta shouted. Mother came out of the kitchen.
"
Father is taking me to a cinema in the evening."
Shanta's
mother smiled cynically. " Don't make false promises to the child "
Venkat Rao glared at her. " Don't talk nonsense. You think you are the
only person who keeps promises "
He told Shanta : " Be ready at
five, and I will come and take you positively. If you are not ready, I will be
very angry with you."
He walked to his office full of resolve.
He would do his normal work and get out at five. If they started any old tricks
of theirs, he was going to tell the boss : " Here is my resignation. My
child's happiness is more important to me than these horrible papers of
yours."
All day the usual stream of papers
flowed on to his table and out of it. He scrutinized, signed, and drafted. He
was corrected, admonished, and insulted. He had a break of only five minutes in
the afternoon for his coffee.
When the office clock struck five and
the other clerks were leaving, he went up to the manager and said : " May
I go, sir ? " The manager looked up from his paper : " You ! "
It was unthinkable that
the
cash and account section should be closing at five. " How can you go ?
"
" I have some urgent, private
business, sir," he said, smothering the lines he had been rehearsing since
the morning : " Herewith my resignation." He visualized Shanta
standing at the door, dressed, and palpitating with eagerness.
" There shouldn't be anything more
urgent than the office work ; go back to your seat. You know how many hours I
work ? " asked the manager. The manager came to the office three hours before
the opening time and stayed nearly three hours after closing, even on Sundays.
The clerks commented among themselves : " His wife must be whipping him
whenever
he is seen at home ; that is why the old owl seems so fond of his office."
" Did you trace the source of that
Ten-Eight difference ? " asked the manager.
" I shall have to examine two
hundred vouchers. I thought we might do it tomorrow."
" No, no, this won't do. You must
rectify it immediately." Venkat Rao mumbled, " Yes, sir," and
slunk back to his seat. The clock showed five-thirty. Now it meant two hours of
excruciating search among vouchers. All the rest of the office had gone. Only
he and another clerk in his section were working, and, of course, the manager
was there. Venkat Rao was furious. His mind was made up. He wasn't a slave who
had sold himself for forty rupees outright. He could make that money easily ;
and if he couldn't it would be more honourable to die of starvation.
He took a sheet of paper and wrote :
" Herewith my resignation. If you people think you have bought me body and
soul for forty rupees, you are mistaken. I think it would be far better for me
and my family
to
die of starvation than slave for this petty forty rupees on which you have kept
me for years and years. I suppose you have not the slightest notion of giving me
an increment. You give yourselves heavy slices frequently, and I don't see why
you shouldn't think of us occasionally. In any case it doesn't interest me now,
since this is my resignation. If I and my family perish of starvation, may our
ghosts come and haunt you all your life " He folded the letter, put it in an
envelope, sealed the flap and addressed it to the manager. He left his seat and
stood before the manager. The manager mechanically received the letter and put
it on his pad.
" Venkat Rao," said the
manager. " I'm sure you will be glad to hear this news. Our officer discussed
the question of increments today, and I've recommended you for an increment of
five rupees. Orders are not yet passed and so keep this to yourself for the
present." Venkat Rao put out his hand, snatched the envelope from the pad
and hastily slipped it in his pocket.
"What
is that letter?"
"
I have applied for a little casual leave, sir, but I think. . . ."
"
You can't get any leave at least for a fortnight to come."
"
Yes, sir. I realize that. That is why I am withdrawing my application,
sir."
"
Very well. Have you traced that mistake ? "
"
I'm scrutinizing the vouchers, sir. I will find it out within an hour. . .
."
It was nine o'clock when he went home.
Shanta had already slept. Her mother said, " She wouldn't even change her
frock, thinking that any moment you might be coming and taking her out. She
hardly ate any food ; and wouldn't lie down for fear of crumpling her dress. .
. ."
Venkat Rao's heart bled when he saw his
child sleeping in her pink frock, hair combed, and face powdered, dressed and
ready to be taken out. " Why should I not take her to the night show ?
" He shook her gently and called, " Shanta, Shanta." Shanta
kicked her legs and cried, irritated at being disturbed. Mother whispered,
" Don't wake her," and patted her back to sleep.
Venkat Rao watched the child for a
moment. " I don't know if it is going to be possible for me to take her
out at all you see they are giving me an increment-- " he wailed.
thnxz for posting the link of the story...revived my spirit in the morning
ReplyDeleteIt touched me the very first time I read it . And in fact had to do quite a work - almost typing it to a great extent.
See, the magic of the story, it has not touched the side of the child....she is slept when Father comes back....Promise commitment...a word from Parents makes so much to one's life.......as a parent smtm we say casually just to get rid f that moment when children becomes demanding on TIME
It makes a hole in the heart...each such fake promises make a child grow with a vacuum.
Despite the fact, the story focuses on willingness of father to make his family happier, the ultimate result is "A promise going fake" to a child.
Wow Skand... Speechless... Thanks for sharing
ReplyDelete