Wednesday, June 26, 2013
A Book Review On Doubt
Recently a blogspot titled The Perks Of Being Me (http://mynameisnazir.blogspot.com/2013/06/doubt-book-review.html?spref=tw) has recently review my book Doubt. I am just posting what he has written.....
Doubt A Book Review
Kalau korang nak tahu, aku ialah seorang lelaki yang berhati kulus, kudus, mulus (ada makna ke frasa tu semua?). Buktinya: Aku tak mampu nak tengok cerita kekejaman manusia waras terhadap manusia lain seperti dalam Saw, Hostel etc. Pernah satu hari kekawan aku perangkap bawak aku gi wayang yang tajuknya totally sangat aman damai tapi once lagak kejam tu bermula.., aku terus berpaling ke arah seat belakang sehingga cerita tu habis. Hmmm...
Apa novel tempatan yang paling best bagi korang..? Please jangan kata 'Sebenarnya Saya Isteri dia' or 'Suami Aku Ustaz' ialah pilihan korang. Dari tajuk je dah tahu yang cerita tu gila-gila mengarut. p/s: Sorry, aku tak layan novel-novel cintan cintun macam tu lagi yaa.
Minggu ni tadi aku dah meletekkan satu novel baru sebagai novel tempatan dan tak salah aku katakan kalau ia adalah novel terbaik yang pernah aku baca. Novel yang aku maksudkan ialah Doubt oleh Bissme S. Sebenarnya ia bukanlah novel sebaliknya antologi 45 buah cerita pendek. Dan buku ni sangat kecik dan nipis tapi effectnya sangat besar bagak.
Korang percaya pada penamat happy ending? Atau korang lahir dan membesar dalam persekitaran orang baik-baik? Setiap cerita ni berakhir dengan penamat happy ending tapi bukan dari perspektif yang kau mampu fikirkan. Dan membaca buku ni akan membuatkan kau mampu mempersoalkan sisi lain yang ada pada orang-orang baik disekitar kau. Buku ni sangat kejam. Ia sangat gila tapi cukup pasti ia mengghairahkan.
Macam mana aku nak gambarkan tentang buku ni ek? Kau selalu menonton drama Cerekarama di TV atau filem-filem Melayu di pawagam? Then buku ni totally tak akan menggambarkan 1 peratus pun tentang buku ni. Buku ni bergerak di luar norma yang normal. Ia tentang seorang ibu yang sangat benci dengan anaknya sendiri sehingga dia sanggup tatookan tangan anaknya since dari kecil lagi, tentang seorang pencinta yang sanggup upah orang bunuh anak si kekasih semata-mata mahu hidup berdua, tentang adik beradik kembar yang sanggup have a sex bersama semata-mata untuk duit, tentang lelaki yang sanggup bersenggama dengan mayat untuk membuktikan rasa cintanya dan etc.
Still aku tak dapat nak gambarkan sedikitpun tentang cerita ni. Ia ditulis dalam Bahasa Inggeris yang cukup mudah, sekadar kurang 5 muka surat tapi penggunaan ayatnya sangat detail, kejam, gila, berahi etc dan ia menghasilkan impak gramatis.
Aku baca buku ni di tempat yang ramai khalayak lalu lalang. Setiap kali aku tamat satu cerpen then aku toleh kiri-kanan dan aku perhatikan mereka semua. Sebab watak dalam cerita ni could be anyone. Walaupun cerita dalam buku ni terlalu gila tapi ia boleh berlaku kepada sesiapa sahaja. Sebab semua orang ada kegilaan dalam diri tapi ia bergantung kepada sejauh mana kita nak jayakan kegilaan tu or just simpan kemas-kemas dalam hati je. Dan mereka-mereka dalam buku ni merealisasikan kegilaan mereka dengan gila sekali.
Aku pun ada kegilaan yang aku boleh relate dengan cerita ni cuma aku tak nak share sebab nanti kau akan kata aku gila pulak. Btw buku ni sememangnya mesti dibaca dan dimilikki. Cuma nasihat aku pada orang yang berjiwa lemah, jangan terbawak-bawak sebab kau memang ada kebarangkalian untuk mencuba. Hmmm..
Monday, May 13, 2013
Doubt & Other Short Stories Anthologies
This year I have just published my first book Doubt that highlights a collection of my short stories. In the past my short stories had appeared in several short stories anthologies. In today post I will be highlighting the covers of the books where short stories had appeared
In 2007 my short story titled To Be His Lover was translated in Bahasa Malaysia and was published in this Bahasa Malaysia anthology published By Stormkitchen . I believe this is the first time my short stories ever got published in anthology. Some writers whose short stories had appeared in this anthology are Alia Zul, Wan Ahmad Kahar Wan Jasni, Zurahanim Fasha Anuar, Taf Teh, Sidah Salleh, Seribulan, Ricardo , Raymond Sekhon,Muhammad Azwan Ismail, Dianadirani, Dina Zaman, Farah Alina Abd Aziz, Fatemeh Zargar, HatiKasih, Kenishiro, Marilyn Dorothea King and Uncle Trick
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In 2007 My short story titled Dad appeared in this short story anthology. Some writers who had their works published in the same anthology have been Lydia Teh, John Ling, Jennifer Wan, Tunku Halim, Xeus and Chua Kok Yee.
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In 2010, edited by Azwan Ismail and Diana Dirani, my short story titled A Woman of Two Faces was translated in Bahasa Malaysia and appeared in this anthology . Some writers who had their short stories published in this anthologies are Nizam Zakaria, Dina Zaman. Bernice Chauly, Ridhwan Saidi, Chuah Guat Eng Ajami Hashim & Fadli al-Akiti
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Finaly this year, in 2013, I finally had a book published where it featured 45 of my short stories. To find out more please log to : http://tokobuku.fotopages.com/?entry=6483554
Monday, April 1, 2013
Abandoned
Abandoned By Bissme S
I was in pain. I was in tears. I was on the floor, begging him not to
abandon me. Whatever I said made no difference. Whatever I did made no
difference. He was determined to break my heart.
*****
“If you want your man to stop loving you, then marry him.”
My mother constantly told me that when I was young
“Marriage gives men license to stop loving you,” she said.
“They will stop pampering you. They will stop caring about you. They
will stop telling you that they love you.”
My mother was a bitter woman trapped in a miserable relationship. My
parents were always quarreling. And sometimes their argument got violent. My
father hit her. And my mother hit him back. They would be covered in bruises.
“When your father was courting me, he never beats me, no matter how bad
we quarreled,” my mother said.
“Marriage changed that.”
My mother could have left my dad. My mother could have a better life.
Strangely enough she did not walk that road.
“A woman without a husband is treated like a pariah dog in this society and
I have no intention to be a pariah dog,” she said
*****
My marriage was carbon copy of my parent’s marriage. It has no love. It
has no passion. My husband too busy building his business empire. I was
invisible character in his life. Each time I brought up the subject of him not
giving me enough attention, our conversation turned into a fierce argument
The only difference between my marriage and my parent’s marriage is that
my husband and I are more civil. There was no violence in our relationship.
There were no bruises on our body.
In many occasions I wanted leave my husband and find happiness out
there. But I never found guts to pursue my dreams. My mother’s word kept
haunting me - A woman without husband is treated like a pariah dog in this society.
And like my mother, I have no intention to be a pariah dog.
*****
I do not know exactly when our affair began. He flirted with me and
shamelessly, I flirted with him, too. There were a lot of erotic moments
between us. Then, one raining cold night, our bodies met, sexually. We kept
each other warm.
He was much younger to me. But that did not stop him from loving me…
from desiring me. He worshipped the ground I walked on. He wrote poems about
me. He painted me. He was a well known photographer and I was his favourite
subject. I never felt so loved in my life.
We took extreme measures to make sure my husband and the world never
know about our love story. We have so much to lose if our affair was not a
secret.
****
My happiness with him did not last. One of his assignments drove us
apart. A publisher wanted to create a coffee table book that captures the
beauty of Thailand. It was the first time we had to be separated. It was the
first time we had not seen each other for months.
When he returned from Thailand, he was different man. He kept his distance
from me. I thought a woman in Thailand has won his heart and I have become a
forgotten chapter in his life. But the truth was worst. He found religion. He
found god. It all began with a photo shoot in a monastery.
“The moment I step into monastery, I feel a certain kind of peace that I
have never felt in my entire life,” he told.
“God have entered my heart and wants me to be a better man. What we have
been doing is sinful. I want to dedicate my life to God. I want to be monk. I
want to wash away my sins. I want to go to heaven.”
I was shocked beyond words. Never in million years, I dreamt that God
would become the obstacle that end our relationship. I hated God. I hated
religion, I hated monasteries. He was the only happiness. I would never forgive
god.
He became the monk in the same monastery where he found god. I had
written countless letters, begging him to see me. He did not reply any of the
letters. Then I decided, not to write to him, any more.
*****
Two years later, I wrote to him again. And immediately he returned
home.
“I thought you will not come to see me,” I said.
I thought you hated me. I thought you hate everything about our
relationship. I thought you hated for seducing you.”
Holding my hand affectionately, he said: “I can never hate you… You are
my mother … You did not force me to do anything that I do not want to do. You
are ill. You need me.”
I lied to him. I told him that I had terminal illness and my last wish
was to see my only child. I knew my lies would drag him to me. But I also know
he would not stay with me forever. He would want to go back to monastery where
he can serve God … where he can washed away the sin he had committed with
me… where God would forgive him and give him the heaven he desired so desperately
.
But he belongs in my arms. He belongs in my heart. God doesn’t deserve
him. God did not carry him for nine months. God could not love him the way I
love him. No one could love him the way I love him.
I had devised a plan where God would not come between us anymore.
Nothing should separate us now. We are meant to be together.
My plan began with a pleasant dinner between us. The moment he finished
eating his dinner, he felt dizzy. It did not take him long to close his eyes. I
put him in a wheel chair.
Then, slowly, I moved to wheel chair, heading towards the ocean that was
near our house. As we were drowning in the sea, I hugged him tight and
whispered into his ears: “All I ever wanted was to love you. But you would not
let me….”
The End
PS: I have just recently released a collection of my
short stories in book titled Doubt. Abandoned is one of the stories featured in
this book. If you are interested to get
a copy of doubt please go to this link.
Friday, February 8, 2013
The Great Lie
The Great Lie By Bissme S
I didn’t want her to play this game of madness. I couldn’t stop her. I
was helpless. The moment he opened his eyes, she told him lies. She convinced
him that she was his wife ...they were happily married... their new home was in
New York. Naively,
he trusted every word she told him.
******
When I was young, my mother always told me that relationships build on the foundation of lies will never last. Well, my daughter is a walking example that my mother is not always right.
When I was young, my mother always told me that relationships build on the foundation of lies will never last. Well, my daughter is a walking example that my mother is not always right.
He has no clue that the woman he hugged every night for the last two
years is not his wife. And my daughter has no plans to tell him the truth.
Her relationship with him was built on one lie after another. Yet, I had
not seen a happier couple than them. They laughed a lot. She knew exactly the
right things to say to make him laugh. From my daughter, I learned lies can
make you happy and sometimes, the truth is over- rated.
******
”I believe I am
destined to love him and no one else.”
In the past, I would have respected my daughter’s privacy and not read
her dairy. Not any more. I wanted to know everything about her love for him and
nobody lies to their dairy.
He was the first man she loved and she wanted him to be the last man she
loved. She had a hard time accepting the fact that he was not her lover… he was
not her husband …he was calling another woman as his wife. She was obsessed to be his lover.
She wrote in her dairy: “I have
tried to love other men. But all the relationships failed to work out. The more
I dissect my failed relationships, the clearer the picture became - at any
circumstances and at any price, I had to be his lover. There was no two ways
about it. As long as, I am not his lover, I will never find any peace.
Sadness will always
hang over my life like dark clouds. I am tired of dark clouds. I yearn for a
rainbow. Only he can give me the rainbow that I want so desperately.”
There are many nights she cried herself to sleep, knowing the fact that
they can never share a bed together. She
was tired of crying. She wanted so badly to be happy. And only he can give her
the happiness she searched for.
*******
When my daughter wanted to move to New York, I was not thrilled. I didn’t want my only child to be so far away from me. She convinced me that New York was the best place for her to grow as an artist and reluctantly, I had to let her go.
When my daughter wanted to move to New York, I was not thrilled. I didn’t want my only child to be so far away from me. She convinced me that New York was the best place for her to grow as an artist and reluctantly, I had to let her go.
Of course, the truth was a different story. She wanted to be far away
from him. But distance did not make her forget him. Sometimes, it is
difficult to tell your mind to stop loving someone when your heart still does.
*****
Nine months later, I made a trip to New York. I wanted to surprise her. I didn’t want my daughter celebrate her birthday all alone. Instead, life surprised me. The plane didn’t land safely at the airport. I died instantly. I didn’t want to leave my daughter alone in her moment of sadness. I want to keep her company, spiritually.
Nine months later, I made a trip to New York. I wanted to surprise her. I didn’t want my daughter celebrate her birthday all alone. Instead, life surprised me. The plane didn’t land safely at the airport. I died instantly. I didn’t want to leave my daughter alone in her moment of sadness. I want to keep her company, spiritually.
It was the biggest mistake I did in my life. Truly, I wished I had
not visited her. I wanted to be ignorant of her madness. I wanted to
be ignorant of her obsession.
*****
Unlike me, he didn’t die in the plane accident. He went into a coma. After six months in hospital, she brought him home. Constantly, she was at his bed side… reading to him…talking to him… crying for him ….praying for him.
Unlike me, he didn’t die in the plane accident. He went into a coma. After six months in hospital, she brought him home. Constantly, she was at his bed side… reading to him…talking to him… crying for him ….praying for him.
There were times she got intimate with him. She hugged him. She kissed
him. She whispered words of love into his ears. Then, two years later, out of the
blue, a miracle took place. He woke up from his coma. He did not remember who
he was. He didn’t remember who she was. She took the opportunity to manipulate
her way into his heart. It was manipulation at the highest degree.
I hope that he never finds out the truth. He would have hard time
digesting the truth. As for my daughter, she is not bothered about what is
right and what is wrong. She was tired of living a life of misery. She desperately
wanted her love story to have a happy ending.
She wrote in her diary: “I know
what I have done is madness. But when love is not madness, it is not love. When
the time comes, I will be ready to face God's wrath, his punishment and his
hell.”
Initially, I was furious with my daughter, but slowly, I learned to
forgive her. All mothers forgive their children, eventually. I justified to
myself that what took place was not entirely her fault. She never asked to be
born as his daughter. More than his daughter, she wanted to be his lover.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Wet
Wet By Bissme S
There was a knock on my
door. My visitor was a stranger, who was wet from head to toe.
“My car broke down,” he
said.
“Can I please use your
telephone to call my mechanic?”
Out of pity, I allowed
him into my house. The moment my door was closed, he grabbed me. He pinned me
down on the floor. Fear danced in my bones. I wanted to shout. But he covered
my mouth.
“Don’t shout,” the
stranger said.
“Don’t be afraid. I will
not kill you. Believe me, you will enjoy every moment of it. Nobody will want
you the way I want you.”
He undressed me, violently. He kissed me, passionately. He fucked me, vigorously. It was lust at the highest degree. And he was right…I enjoyed every moment of it.
When we finished making
love, he wore his clothes and left. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t use my
telephone. His car was not broken down. I really believed that would be the
last time I would see him.
But I was wrong. The
following night, he was at my door step, again. It was not raining and he was
not wet.
“My car broke down,” he
said.
“Can I please use your
telephone to call my mechanic?”
This time around, I
allowed him in my house, not out of pity. I wanted him inside me…. I wanted him
to make me feel wanted.
******
Every night, we would
have the similar routine. He would be at my doorstep, asking to use my phone to
call the mechanic for his broken down car. We would end up making love.
The moment we finished
making love, he would leave. There were no conversations between us. I had
tried asking him questions but he never answered them.
Three years later, one
night, the knocking on my door stopped. He disappeared from my life. I was
totally miserable. Slowly, I realized that my relationship with him was not
based on lust. I tried to look for him. But I do not where to begin my search.
I know nothing of him. I don’t even know his name.
I told my close friends
about him. They had a hard time believing my story. They believed he was a
figment of my imagination.
******
Two years later, I saw
him, again. He was in the news. He was a lawyer who was slowly building a
career in politics. The prime minister had given him some ministerial post.
Now, I could guess his reasons to stop seeing me….his reasons to
forget me. Most people will rather have this country burn to ashes than
have a minister who is a gay, running this country.
*****
His political career did
not have a smooth ride. He and the prime minister did not see eye to eye on
many issues. He had bravely opposed with some of the decisions that the prime
minister had taken. The media had a field day covering their hostile
relationship. Out of anger, the prime minister sacked him.
He became the first
minister in this country to be sacked. His wife was furious. She left him. She
had a dream to be first lady of this country. Her dreams had been shattered.
And she would not forgive him.
******
Loneliness can be a
terrifying experience. All his friends
and families kept their distance from him. He desperately wanted some
companion. He was at my door steps,
again. He was wet from head to toe.
“My car broke down,” he
said.
“Can I please use your
telephone to call my mechanic?”
I allowed him inside my
house. He was crying. I took out his wet clothes. I hugged him. I planted kisses all over his faces.
“Stay here tonight,” I
said.
“Nobody will want you the
way I want you.”
That was the first night
he didn’t disappear after we made love.
******
He likes spending time
with me. I made him laugh and he made me smile. He was a stranger to me. But I
was not a stranger to him. We had met before. I had no memory of our meeting
but he remembered everything. We were school mates.
“I wanted to talk to you
whenever I see you in school,” he said.
“You were handsome…You
were gorgeous….You were so beautiful. But I was afraid to do so. I was so
afraid that you would snub me. You looked snobbish. You were a loner.”
I had to become a
snobbish. I had to become a loner. I didn’t have a choice. My school mates were
always teasing me because I was effeminate. I kept my distance from everyone. I
avoided crowd. I was tired of people laughing at me. School was not a place
where I went to make friends.
*****
There was a change in our
political climate. We had a different party ruling our government. We had a
different prime minister.
“Before the election, I
promised you that there will be change,” says the new prime minister in his
first fiery speech after winning the election.
“I intend to keep my
word. Nothing will remain the same. You will see a difference. Change is here.”
Like the country, there
was a change in our relationship. The new prime minister wanted him back in the
cabinet as his deputy prime minister. The new prime minister was a strategist.
Hiring the sacked minister from the previous prime minister was a great way for
the new prime minister to gain more popularity and admiration.
He could no longer stay
with me. He did not want people to speculating about our relationship.
“I will not disappear
like the last time,” he assured me.
“I will call you. I want
you in my life. No one will want you the way I want you.”
I trusted him completely.
But I should have known politicians are fond of breaking their promises. His
ambitious wife returned to his side and I have become a forgotten character in
his life.
*****
Eight years later, his
political career ended, abruptly. His wife, a business woman, had given bribes
to get some government contract. He had no choice but forced to resign. He was
furious with his wife. His dream to be the prime minister of the country was
shattered. And he could not forgive his wife. He ended his marriage.
When I first read his
tragic news, I was jumping with joy. Whenever he is in trouble, the first
person he looked for is me. I waited for him. I wanted to see him. I wanted him
inside me. I wanted us to be lovers, again. But there was no knock on my door.
What stopped him from
knocking my door? I wondered. Then I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror
and I wondered no more. I was no longer handsome. I was no longer gorgeous. I
was no longer beautiful.
The End
P.S. I have just recently released a collection of my short stories in book titled Doubt. Wet is one of the stories featured in this book. if you are interested to get Doubt please log to Doubt link
P.S. I have just recently released a collection of my short stories in book titled Doubt. Wet is one of the stories featured in this book. if you are interested to get Doubt please log to Doubt link
Monday, January 14, 2013
My First Book
I am happy to announce that my book, Doubt, a collection of my short stories has been published recently. It is my first book. Thank you Merpati Jingga and Faisal Mustaffa for having tremendous faith in publishing my work !
Some of the stories that are in this blog are featured in Doubt. I am also attaching two reviews from friends who have been reading my short stories for some time now.
* The first review is from N. Shashi Kala, news editor fz.com a vibrant website that offers news and views across a wide spectrum of subjects. :
“ I have been a fan of Bissme's short stories ever since he sent me one - albiet reluctantly - back in the late 90s. The themes - incest, infidelity, revenge (of the most twisted kind), murder - are all rooted in relationships gone wrong. Whether it is a girl who takes extreme measures to get her father to fall in love with her, or the tale of two brothers who become porn stars to make ends meet, Bissme excels in drawing out the essence of the characters and the twisting perceptions. There is no subject that is taboo in his eyes - we are all flawed creations of God and Bissme is keen to make us realise this through his stories. He takes us into the dark recesses of the human soul and shows us the creatures we've become. It takes an insane mind to dwell here and that Bissme has chosen to build his home here speaks volumes. But his gift is in making these characters relatable and in some ways symphatetic despite the compact nature of his stories.
I hope he eventually moves on to novellas and novels - his short fiction always leaves me wanting more.”
* The second review is from Roslan Jomel the author for Namaku Epal Kuning & Selamat Datang Ke Malaywood
“Saya sebenarnya tertarik pada beberapa cerpen Bissme kerana saya dapat merasai kehalusan emosi. dia menulis cerita manusia-manusia biasa yang melalui kehidupan pada zaman moden. hero-hero untuk ceritanya hanyalah manusia tulen yang bergelut dengan teka-teki kehidupan itu sendiri. temanya biasa tetapi ditekan dengan penuh nilai humanis. sejujurnya, cerpen-cerpen Bissme sangat memikat kerana kesederhanaan penyampaiannya. lingkaran kehidupan domestik dan liku-liku perasaan pada setiap perwatakan, dilukis dengan telus dan unik. sangat mengejutkan kerana cerpen-cerpennya pendek, namun kesan yang diperolehi pembaca membawa jauh ke dalam naluri.
jika kita ingin mendekati gambaran permasalahan manusia urban, cerpen-cerpen Bissme menawarkan perspektif yang sungguh berbeza. bakat Bissme sangat besar ertinya untuk kesusasteraan Malaysia. keluasan kasih sayang, batasan perasaan dan apakah yang lebih bermakna pada kebahagiaan seandainya ia tidak memenuhi hati seseorang manusia? dengan begitu pintar dan teliti, Bissme berjaya menulis cerita-cerita yang sangat memukau kepada pembaca. tiada cerita yang lebih mengasyikkan berbanding tentang keanehan manusia itu sendiri. pendekatan sebegini mengingatkan saya kepada gaya penulisan Haruki Murakami dan Etgar Keret.”
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
DOUBT
Doubt By Bissme S
I did not believe her. No one did. Except him. I remembered asking him: "How could you choose to believe her? Don't you want to know the truth?"
I did not believe her. No one did. Except him. I remembered asking him: "How could you choose to believe her? Don't you want to know the truth?"
Without
any trace of emotion, he answered: "I do not want the truth. I
am not interested in the truth. The truth is not important. I just
want to be happy."
*****
I
disliked all the men she had dated. I never stopped finding faults in
them. No one was good enough for her. But he was different.
"Marry
him,” I told her.
“I
can see in his eyes that he is madly in love with you. He will keep
you very happy. Trust me! A mother’s instinct is never wrong. The
greatest happiness in life is to love and be loved."
Foolishly,
she trusted every word I told her. Both of us learned the hard way
that love is not enough to make us happy and mothers are not always
right.
*****
I
was eager to be a grandmother. He was eager to be a father. She
was eager to be a mother. But God should not have been so eager to
fulfill our dreams…. God should have known some dreams are not
meant to come true…. God should have known some women are not born
to be mothers.
My
daughter hated every aspect of pregnancy. She hated being big. She
hated the morning sickness. She hated her feet was always swollen.
She hated having strange cravings. She was constantly irritated. She
was constantly losing her temper. She was constantly in tears.
"I
can't wait for the baby to be out of me," she screamed many
times.
When
Mohsin was finally out of her womb, I thought her misery would end.
But I was wrong. Her misery was just beginning. My daughter hated
motherhood as much as she hated pregnancy.
Mohsin
was not an easy baby to look after. He was always crying. His wailing
was driving her up the walls.
"My
son hates me,” she cried.
“I
wish I never had him.”
*****
Then,
one day, out of the blue, Mohsin went missing. The police was called.
My daughter told them that an ape had entered the apartment through
the balcony, grabbed Mohsin in his arms and left.
“I
was so scared,” she said.
“I
froze. I didn’t know how to stop the beast.”
Her
story was outrageous. Her story was ridiculous. Her story made no
sense. Our home was no where near a forest. It is impossible to
believe that an ape would be roaming freely in a street that is
congested with cars and buildings.
My
instinct immediately told me that Mohsin was no longer alive. His
body could be buried in some bushes. His body could be under a river.
His body could be anywhere.
The
only person who refused to doubt her was her husband. “The
woman I love is not a heartless monster,” he said.
*****
The
judge felt the evidence against my daughter was circumstantial. The
police made every attempt to find my grandson’s body. But they
could not find Mohsin. Their failure had given my daughter her
freedom.
But
the society was not kind to us. They were furious with the verdict.
They desperately wanted a child killer to be punished. They
desperately wanted justice for the poor helpless Mohsin.
They
treated us worst than a pariah. Almost every day, red paints to eggs
were thrown in-front of our door. On many occasions, people spat on
our faces.
Our
neighbors stopped talking to us. Our relatives no longer visited us.
Our friends ignored us. We were totally isolated. The hostility was
too much for us to bear.
We
had no choice, but to move away from the neighborhood that
we had stayed for more than 10 years. Ironically, the new house
that my son-in- law had found for us was near a forest.
“Here,
nobody will disturb us,” he said.
“Nobody
will harass us. Finally, we can have some peace. Finally, we
can have some happiness.”
But
happiness was not written in our fate. Tragedy strikes when my
daughter was alone in the house. When we returned home, she was no
longer alive. She was tortured. Her throat was cut. “A monster like
her should not be allowed to breath” was written in our wall, in a
red paint.
The
police was called. But they showed no interest in catching my
daughter’s murderer. They felt the murderer was a hero, for getting
rid of a child killer.
“May
be an ape from the forest had entered your home and killed her,”
said one of the policemen, sarcastically.
Her
murderer was never found.
*****
Her
death took a toll on him. My son-in-law was depressed. He could not
believe the God had been cruel to him…. first taking away the child
he loves, then the woman he loves.
Then,
one morning, he went missing. He left a rambling note that he wanted
some time alone to deal with his tragedy.
Three
months later, he returned home, with a long beard, happiness shinning
all over his face and a baby boy in his arms.
“When
I was in the forest, a strange thing happened,” he said.
“The
ape who took my baby approached me. The ape had Mohsin in his arms.
He put Mohsin into my arms and simply disappeared into the bushes.
“I
cried. I could not believe Mohsin is alive. I could not believe
Mohsin is in my arms again. The moment I got Mohsin, I rushed home.”
The
story he told me was more outrageous than the story that my daughter
had told. Deep in my heart, I knew, the baby in his arms was not
Mohsin. He had made someone's son as his own. He must have abducted
the poor child. Some parents out there are in agony, worried sick
about their missing son. He desperately wanted some happiness
and the child in his arms played the part, perfectly.
So
many questions were dancing in my mind. But I asked him, nothing. I
didn't want the truth. The truth is not important. I am not
interested in the truth. I just want to be happy.
I
simply put on my apron, and said: "I will make us, a delicious
dinner. We have something to celebrate. My grandson has
returned home."
The
End
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