Experiences of a common man!

Tag: Horror

I’m the Devil! (Revised)

(Warning: Contains scenes of drugs and violence)

‘Where is it?’ Juan whispers in his usual creepy manner.

It must be here. It’s dark due to regular power cuts. I have not carried my torch and mobile in accordance with our plan. I run my hands on the base of the kitchen cupboard. ‘You had kept it here before you went to bed, hadn’t you?’

I frown.

He continues teasing, ‘Have you forgotten where you kept it?’

‘No, I haven’t.’

I find it. I smile and grab the knife’s handle. I bring it closer to my lips and run my fingers along its blade. “Ah, here you are,” I say in a low voice, “you Devil’s friend! Where were you hiding?”

‘Why do you have to speak out? What if someone listens? You’ll foil our plan,’ Juan scolds me.

I get angry at him. He says he is psychic and never leaves me. He knows everything about me. When I ask him how, he does not answer. He had once said, ‘Only you can hear me.’ I like him when he suggests what I should do. When he becomes authoritative, like he is now, I absolutely hate him.

‘I’d not be awake at three in the morning if I didn’t know what I’m doing. I don’t want you to command me.’

‘I wasn’t commanding you,’ he says. ‘I was just expressing my concern. You need to be careful. We selected this time to carry out our plan because everyone would be asleep. What’ll happen if they wake up—if they see you’re playing with a knife in the kitchen? Please be careful.’

I am amused. He knows exactly what calms me down. I become a little more cautious as I hide the knife inside my jacket. The house is dark and silent, but I don’t want to stumble upon anyone. If such a thing happens, I don’t want to look suspicious.

I walk out into the dark corridor. Sticking to the wall on my right, I walk eight steps and reach a door.

‘You’re outside her room. Get in.’

I nod and grab the doorknob. “One, two, three… forty-five, forty-six,” counting each second under my breath, I rotate it slowly to the left. Click. The door unlocks at forty-eight. My heart leaps up. I look around. ‘Boy, that was loud,’ Juan whispers. 

I had not expected the door would open with such a big noise. But there is nothing to worry about. Nobody heard it in their sleep.

I grin.

I push the door and look into the room. It is dark except for the faint light coming from far off outside. She is asleep on her bed. She must be sleeping peacefully. Peace, however, is like a guest—never stays for long.

***

I fasten the door, grab a plastic chair resting on the left wall, and put it beside her bed. I dig my hands in the jacket and pull out my collection from the pockets. I look at each object and place them carefully on the bed. The faint light helps me look at them: a handkerchief, ropes, and a knife. Perfect.

‘Yeah,’ my friend whispers, ‘you cannot fail.’

‘I must not fail,’ I say back.

‘I doubt. You didn’t agree to use chloroform. With it, your task would’ve been easier.’

‘That’s why I didn’t use it. I don’t want it easy. I want her to feel the pain I have felt…’

She stirs in her sleep. I quickly grab the handkerchief and pounce upon her. I pin her hands under my knees and immobilise her. I tie the handkerchief around her mouth. Then I fetch the ropes and tie her hands and feet together.

I sit on the plastic chair again. I can’t see her face, but I can listen to her short breaths. I touch her wrinkled forehead. She is sweating. I can feel her tremble. I can feel her fear.

I lean towards her and whisper into her ears, “I wish I could see your face now, old lady.”

‘Tell her why you’re doing this. But be quick,’ Juan says.

***

“You’ve ruined my life,” I tell her in a low voice. “I was carefree and outgoing. I had a decent group of friends. Sujal, Dinesh, and Manoj were always good to me. We bunked schools together to play on the streets and smoke cigarettes on the grounds. We never disturbed anyone, but you, teachers, neighbours, and everyone else called us bad.

“Why did you call us bad?” I whisper into her ears, “You called me bad because I used to steal sometimes. But how dare you call my friends bad? They supported me when I was low and laughed with me when I was happy. They used to do things you or my parents would never do for me.”

Resting my back on the chair, I continue, “You know about eighteen months ago I had been selected for the school football team, right? To register, each player had to deposit five hundred rupees. I seriously wanted to play for my school, but the lack of money was in the way of my dreams. You didn’t have the money and when I asked my parents, they said they would never spend on my sports activities. After all, they just want to earn money. Did you know how dejected I was?

“When I felt that I had lost, my pals gave me a glimpse of hope. They said they would help me raise the money to join the team, and they meant it. By the next morning, they collected the required amount and gave it to me. I don’t see any “badness” in them, and I absolutely hate you calling them bad.

“The interschool football competition went on well for my school. I could not make anyone feel my presence in the team, however. They were probably ignoring me, for I had been the last to register my name in the competition. I was a substitute for Manish—the coach’s nephew, who was not impressive in the field. His uncle was the only reason for his inclusion in the team as a forward. He had scored mere two goals in three matches. If I had spent nearly as much time on the field, I would have scored more. I’m sure.

“When I told you my problems, you suggested talking to the coach. Before the quarterfinal match, I did. Do you know what he said? He said, “You have skills, but you lack stamina.”

“I suggested that if he would let me play at the start, I could score rapidly and we would have an early dominance in the game. When he asked which player I would like to replace, I immediately said, “Manish.”.

“His eyes narrowed. He pointed his finger at me and shouted, “If you say that again, I’LL DROP YOU OFF THE TEAM. He’s the best player we have. Who do you think you are? Because you have scored in easy times, you think you can handle the pressure, huh?” He continued on and on, supporting his beloved nephew.

“Words got stuck in my throat. I felt like crying. I only suggested a possibility to the coach, and he sent me off rudely. I first cursed him and then cursed myself. How could I have been so stupid? Why did I ever think that he would prefer me over his own nephew? I went to the junction where I often met with my friends. There was no one there. I couldn’t keep my tears any longer. When they came, they found me wiping off my tears and asked what had happened. At first, I did not want to speak about any of it. But they wanted to know the truth. So, I told them everything the coach had said.

“Sujal—you know him—the tallest guy among my friends? Well, he asked, “Where do they live?”

“I hesitated, but I had to surrender to their continuous pestering. I gave them the coach’s address. Their expressionless faces hid their intentions, but I felt they would do something wrong. Before they left, I said, “Please don’t do anything that causes trouble.”

“The next day, the coach came up to me. He looked worried. “Manish is hospitalised because of an accident,” he said. “You’ll play as forward in the starting eleven tomorrow.”

“I could not believe my ears. How did he think I could endure longer in that match? I didn’t care. I had a chance to prove myself. And I did it. I practiced hard that day, and the next day I scored a goal early in the first half. I also created three opportunities. In the second half, I scored one more goal and missed a chance before the coach decided to play a defensive game. He took me off. Once outside the field, he patted me on the shoulder and said, “Come with me.”

“He took me some distance away from the rest of the team. I thought he was going to congratulate me on my performance, but he said, “You did it, didn’t you?”

“I didn’t understand what he was saying. I just gave him a questioning glance. He said again, “You got your friends to attack Manish, didn’t you?”

“I was surprised by the accusation. I told him, “I don’t know what has happened to him. You told me earlier that he is in the hospital due to some accident. I know nothing else.”

“Learn your manners, boy. I got a call from my brother. When Manish gained consciousness this noon, he took your name. And because you were insisting on me keeping you in the starting eleven, I have very little doubt that he is lying. You would get a chance if anything happened to him.” He paused for a moment and said, “Now tell me the truth.”

“Excuse me, sir,” I said, “but I haven’t done anything to him.”

“But you asked your friends to beat him up.”

“No, sir, I haven’t seen them again since the day of the quarterfinals.”” In a flash, I remembered that I had given their address to my friends. My heart raced—faster than it had during the game. ‘Did they do anything wrong?’ I felt extremely nervous when that thought came into my mind. The coach saw me trembling and didn’t say another word. He had won. I sat on the player’s bench, burning within.

“The victory in the semi-finals encouraged the team. I don’t remember how I reacted to that situation. While everyone was congratulating me, I had something else on my mind. I had made a mistake—one that I had not committed myself but had still happened because of my wrong decision. I hated myself; I hated my friends.”

***

Grabbing her shoulders and shaking her violently, I say, “Are you happy knowing I had hated them at least once?” I throw her down and smile. “I didn’t hate them for long, though. They had helped me play in the starting eleven. They might have done wrong to Manish, but only for me.”

I stretch my legs, walk a few paces, and say to her, “Do you still want to call them bad, old lady?”

‘I would not if I were her,’ Juan says. I grin and dismiss him.

I sit on the chair and continue, “That evening, when we reached school, the coach informed the team that I was suspended. Everyone was surprised. They all asked the coach what wrong I had done. I didn’t wait to hear what he said. I just slipped off and went to the junction where I had met my best companions three days ago.

“When they saw me, they ran towards me and asked if I played the match well. I don’t know why they had not come to watch the match; I never asked. I said, “I did what I could do today.” I sighed loudly. “But I have been suspended from the team. I can’t play in the final.”

“Sujal quickly apologised. “I spoke out your name by mistake while beating up the boy. You’d not have been suspended if we had been a little careful.”

““It’s all right, Sujal,” I said. “You have done nothing wrong. You did it for me. I can’t be angry with you. I got a chance to play because of you. I can never think ill of you.”

“The boys could not believe I had forgiven them. “We’re friends, aren’t we? And I’m not sad I can’t play the final,” I said.

““Let’s smoke a different stuff today,” Dinesh said and produced a cigarette. He tore it up and threw away the tobacco. As I looked, he took out some green leaves from his pocket and prepared a cigarette. Other boys did the same. I asked them what it was. They said, “Weed.”

“Dinesh passed it to me. I took the weed-stuffed cigarette between my fingers, lit it with a lighter, and took in a puff of smoke. It immediately reached my mind and gave me a pleasing sensation. Everything around me looked beautiful. I felt I was in heaven. My friends turned into angels. I looked at the birds, and I was also flying with them among the clouds. For the first time in my life, I realised that I was not meant to stay on earth but to fly. I was the happiest man alive!”

***

“Knock, knock. Somebody knocked on my heaven’s door that day. Do you know who he is?” I don’t need light to know that she shakes her head. “His name is Juan. He’s talking to me right now. But you can’t hear him.”

‘You shouldn’t have told her about me,’ Juan says.

‘She won’t be alive to tell anyone about you anyway.’

‘But I wanted you to keep my presence a secret.’

‘Who cares?’

“See? I was talking to him.” I pause and think about the words I had chosen to speak. I grin at myself, shake my head, and then say, “Can you even see me in this darkness?”

I pause for a moment and continue, “Darkness. Night. Dream. You dream when you’re asleep. The drugs I took helped me dream with my eyes open. It helped me dream of flying high with the birds and of creating a society of equality. I gained confidence even to rule the world. To make those dreams true, I needed money. My pals had been generous enough to provide weed free of charge, but they had started bringing some new stuff. They said the stuff was expensive and I had to make contributions as well.

“You know how difficult it is to ask for money for my parents. The amount you used to give me was not sufficient. I asked them to help at times, which only left me feeling guilty. “Necessity is the mother of invention,” wise people have said. I sought out a solution to my problems of money and guilt. I started stealing little amounts from my classmates. But that was still less than what was required. Also, I could not steal every day. Otherwise, they would suspect me.

“So I started searching drawers and cupboards at home. I used to discover wads of notes hidden under the bedding, inside coat pockets, and between some clothes. I wondered why my parents had hidden money like that and then hated them even more. Anyway, I had the money that was all needed. I did not bother to listen to any of their dumb explanations. I started making full payment, surprising my friends.

“To support our finances further, we took trips to Pokhara, Dharan, and other major cities. We traded different types of drugs. It was a risky business. We had to evade people like you and my parents. We could never use what we’re supplying. Sometimes we would get caught. Bribing police officers worked most of the time. But if they could not be corrupted, we used political power. Sujal’s brother helped me get out twice. Luckily, on both occasions, I only had weed with me.

“I thought I never left a trace of my drug use. But I was wrong. You noticed carelessly throwing cigarette butts and started following me. You told my parents, and they caught me red-handed last week.”

I whisper into her ears, “How long had you been spying on me, huh? Why did you convince my parents to send me to the rehab? You killed all my dreams; I’m going to kill you now.”

                                                       ***

Juan and I had agreed not to bring a torchlight, but now I wish I had brought one. I want to see in her eyes the fear of death. “Aha!” I exclaim. “You always keep a torch under your pillow.”

I run my hands under her pillow and find it. I focus it on her face. She has closed her eyes to prevent the glare. The wrinkles on her face seem to have increased. She is sweating. A little later, when she opens her eyes, she has tears on them. “Do you want to tell me something before you die?” I ask.

‘Of course she wants to,’ Juan says. ‘But don’t let her scream.’

I pull down the handkerchief from her mouth a little and shut her mouth with my hands. Surprisingly, she does not even try to scream. Her tears fall on her pillow as she sobs. “I didn’t know I had raised a devil,” she says. “You’ve gone crazy. If killing me makes you happy, then just kill me.”

I stuff the handkerchief back into her mouth, but I forget what I should do next. I had never thought that she would beg me to kill her. Juan immediately whispers, ‘That’s exactly what you want. Remember the dream she has tried to steal from you? You must kill her. You’re the Devil.’

‘Am I the Devil?’

‘Yes, you are.’

‘Indeed, I’m the devil!’

I smile, stretch, grab the knife on the bedside table, and take an aim at her heart. She is breathing heavily.    ‘Lub-dub-lub-dub,’ I can hear her heart pounding hard. I remember her calling my friends bad. I recall the day she had busted me and had talked about sending me to rehab. I shut my eyes and stab her. One, two, three,… I lose count. When I’m tired, I stop and look at her. She does not move. She is dead.

Killing her should have made me happy, but I’m not. There is a sort of emptiness. I look at her dead body, not knowing what to do next. ‘Get out and take a shower,’ Juan scared me.

My hands shiver as I open the door. I run towards the bathroom. The door opens all of a sudden, and my uncle’s son comes out and holds his torch at me. He had come here to stay for a few days. He gazes at me, laughs, and says, “Hey, what’ve you been doing? Did you kill the chicken I had brought yesterday? Isn’t it too early?”

He had teased me the other day, saying that I could not even kill a fly. He had then challenged me to kill the fowl he had brought. Juan says, ‘You’ve killed a woman. You’ve won the challenge.’

‘Cock-a-doodle-do,’ the cock he had brought screams on the top of its voice outside.

My cousin looks baffled. “Haven’t you killed it?” He asks. “Then where did all the blood come from?”

He then gasps, pushes me aside, runs down the corridor, and dashes in to her room. He knew we had a strained relationship. My head spins. I shiver. ‘Kill him before he knows you killed her,’ Juan says.

I want to kill him, but I can’t move a muscle. As I stand still in the middle of the dark corridor, he rushes out of the room, points at me, and says, “You killed her?”

Before I say anything, he shouts out, “Oh my God! Uncle, aunt, call the police! Your son’s gone crazy. He killed Grandma!”

Were they humans?

Were they humans when

          they dragged me to the streets?

Were they humans when

          they tore my clothes to tatters?

Were they humans when

          they fed me their excreta?

Were they humans when

          they scalped me and kicked me and punched me?

What had they become when

          they called me a witch?

***

Had i been a witch

           wouldn’t i have pushed them away?

Had i been a witch

           wouldn’t I have stolen their riches?

Had i been a witch

           wouldn’t i have inflicted terror upon them?

Had i been a witch

           would i have prayed the Lord

                      to make them humans again?


Leave Me Alone-6

Previously on Leave Me Alone:

Ajay and Sasha go Sasha’s house to celebrate her birthday. Ajay sees a portrait of a woman on red saree. Coincidentally, a woman similar to that on the portrait attacks him and he runs to the police station. There he meets Dr. Shrestha, who tells him something about Sasha’s past. Ajay does not believe him. So he calls Parmila, Sasha’s maid to confirm his story.

In this last chapter of the story, we explore through the dreams of Sasha and find out the one responsible for everything the couple has faced.

Sasha was in a dream. She was in the study of Dr. Shrestha looking for something when she saw a small brown notebook with a leather jacket on his table. She thought she had seen it earlier but could not say where. ‘I am sure this is not uncle’s notebook. Whose is it?’ she said to herself and lifted it up. She turned on the first page and saw the name of the owner written in bold capital letters: RESHMA.

Sasha was shocked. ‘What’s my mom’s diary doing in uncle’s office? He had said that this diary was taken up by the court as an evidence of her insanity. Has he been hiding things from me?’ As she was busy contemplating, she heard someone coming into the study. She immediately managed to hide the diary. Dr. Shrestha came in and looked around. He looked confused. Sasha asked, “What are you searching, uncle?”

The doctor hesitated at first, but when Sasha asked again, he replied, “Have you seen a diary? It has brown-leather jacket. I thought I had taken it to my bedroom. I couldn’t find it there. I must have left it here.”

“No, I haven’t seen such a diary,” Sasha said calmly. The doctor was an expert in catching lies. She felt he had caught her. However, she was relieved when he said, “It’s all right, Sasha. I must have kept it somewhere else.”

Dr. Shrestha’s office faded. She was now in her hostel reading the notebook. As she read the accounts of her mother’s life, she felt she was getting closer with her mother. She came to know the details of her life Dr. Shrestha could never have given her. She was shocked the most when she read that Reshma had been sexually assaulted. She developed hatred against the manager and the lawyer when she knew that their acts had changed the fate of her mother and her own.

The girl had a feeling that the distance with her mother was decreasing. She could feel her mother’s presence around her. One evening before she went to sleep, she actually saw her mother. Sasha looked at her with awe and despair. She wanted to cry in her mother arms but she could not touch her. The woman told, “You can’t touch me because of those evil men. Avenge me, my child.”

“I will, Mom,” Sasha said though she was not sure how.

“Find them out and destroy their lives,” Reshma said.

Sasha knew the stories but she had not seen the manager and the lawyer. As she thought so, Reshma said, “You must find a clue that helps you find them.”

“Where is the clue?” Sasha asked but her mother had gone. She wiped the tears in her eyes, washed her face and came back to her room. She thought she had understood the clue. She picked up the diary and turned its pages. On the bottom of the pages in which Reshma’s tormentors were mentioned, Sasha noticed that Reshma had repeatedly written these words: ‘One stitch in time saves nine.’

Sasha had thought Reshma had written that because she had failed to understand the true nature of the manager and his lawyer. That she had to be cautious when her boss was offering her own auctioned house; that she had to understand the ploy he had made during the pay rise. This time Sasha had discovered the pattern of the appearance of the proverb. She took the words literally and looked at the jacket of the diary. She looked at the odd stitch which she had previously thought was a production defect. She looked at it carefully. ‘It must be a manual work.’ She took a blade and cut the stitch. She ripped the jacket to discover an old picnic photo encircling two faces at the centre.

On a closer inspection, she saw that Reshma had written an ‘M’ above the head of the one on the right and an ‘L’ above that on the left. She saw her mother on the extreme right. She also noticed a bespectacled man. ‘Dr. Shrestha,’ she smiled. Sasha looked at the man marked L again. She thought she had seen him somewhere, though she could not place exactly where. As she kept staring at the photo, her phone beeped. As she looked at the face of the caller, she remembered where she had seen him. ‘Ajay?’ she thought. ‘How is that possible?’

***

Sasha leaped space and time in her dream. She was at the hospital in Dr. Shrestha’s cabin a few days later. He was in his desk writing something while she said, “I have a problem, uncle.”

The old doctor stopped writing and gestured at her to sit down. Then he looked curiously at her. After a moment of hesitation, Sasha said, “I’ve been seeing my mom recently.”

“In your dreams?”

“I see her ghost.”

“Ghost?” Dr. Shrestha stroked his chin and said, “Tell me more about your mother’s ghost.”

“She comes in a red sari and looks like that on the portrait. She wants me to avenge her death.”

“Do you want to do it?”

“No.”

“You’ve lied.”

Sasha’s mind raced back to the incident a few days ago when she had lied that she had not seen the diary. ‘How could he not catch that?’

“Do you want to avenge your mother?” the doctor asked again.

“Yes,” Sasha replied in an angrier tone. “Those who killed her must be punished. I can’t let them roam around.”

“Do you know who they are? How do you find them?”

“Yes uncle. I know about the two that are directly involved. The bank manager has disappeared. So I don’t need to look for him.” Sasha clenched her fist as she said, “The other is a lawyer. I know him.”

“Where did you get all these information?”

“I used different sources.” Sasha did not want to tell him about the diary.

“Alright,” the doctor said. “I think I know your sources.”

‘He knows.’ Sasha’s heart paced. She said to herself. ‘He knows I have read that diary.’

Dr. Shrestha, however said, “You got that information from Parmila, didn’t you?”

Sasha was relieved but she could not convince herself that the old doctor had not caught her lies. The doctor thought for a while and scribbled something on his prescription form. He stood up and walked towards Sasha. Handling the paper, he said, “I think you’re getting hallucinations again. I don’t know what triggered it. But I guess it’s your source of information. I’ve written some medicines. They’ll help you get rid of your hallucinations.”

Sasha nodded, thanked him and went towards the door. The doctor called out, “Sasha.” As she turned towards him, he said, “Don’t tell anyone that you’re experiencing hallucinations. And don’t tell anyone about the medicines I have given you.”

Sasha nodded again and walked out.

***

Sasha was in her room. She saw two coffee mugs on the table. ‘I am not alone,’ she thought in her dream.

She heard a clatter in the bathroom attached to her room. She was scared. She slowly walked towards the bathroom. All of a sudden, someone came out. She looked like her mother on the portrait. But she was puzzled. She had said that her mother was a ghost. ‘Ghosts don’t use bathrooms.’

For a moment, Sasha looked puzzled at the woman who had gone her. The woman did not see her. Sasha cried out, “Hey …”

Before she said anything else she realized that the woman would not listen to her either.  Sasha’s courage increased. She then went closer to examine. She looked at her for a moment and then looked back at her reflection on the wardrobe mirror. A young lady stood on a red sari.

In a flash, Sasha realized in her dream that the woman on the red sari was not her mother’s ghost but herself. “Stop,” she shouted as her other self walked to the door. “Don’t go. You can’t kill Ajay. He has not done anything wrong.”

The woman turned back. Sasha thought that her other self had listened but she picked up the coffee mug and went away. She ran downstairs. She looked for Ajay in the living room. He was staring at her mother’s portrait.

Her other self was in the kitchen. She put down the coffee mugs and looked at her own reflection in the mirror. She ordered herself to kill Ajay. “I won’t,” Sasha shouted. The other self seemed to listen. She got furious. Sasha saw a steel rod in the kitchen she had brought for some purpose she did not remember. She picked up the rod and smashed hard into the mirror. She fell down. She had won. The other self remained no more.

But she was wrong. Her aggressive self woke up and attacked Ajay with a broken piece of mirror. Ajay ran away. Sasha ran after him for a while and collapsed on the road.

***

An hour later, her dream took her to the police station. She was walking towards Ajay and Dr. Shrestha. The old doctor looked at her as if he had never seen her before. She was about to ask why he was doing so when he walked up to her. The doctor produced a syringe and in a flash it penetrated her skin. At that small moment before she passed out, she realized that the doctor was not as good as he seemed. She shouted in her dream, “Leave me alone.”

Sasha woke up on a bed. The brightness of the room dazzled her for a while. A machine beeped on her right. On her left was a boy with a familiar smile. “Ajay?”

Ajay helped her sit. He looked at her with compassion and said, “You’ve been asleep here for months. Our lives have changed so much, Sasha.”

“What happened?”

He told her about his meeting with Dr. Shrestha and Parmila, his annoyance with his father and his father’s suicide. “Dr. Shrestha turned out to be your biological father.”

Sasha was shocked. She had always felt orphaned after the death of her parents. Ajay continued, “He was your father’s friend. He had seen your mother once when he had gone to their house. The doctor liked your mother, so much that it turned into an obsession. In his madness, he went to his friend’s one evening, put sleeping pills on his friend’s drink and assaulted your mother. You were born as a result.”

Sasha bowed her head. She could not look at Ajay. He put his hand on hers and said, “You don’t need to be ashamed. You’ve done nothing wrong. No one will judge you for your birth.”

“But why didn’t my mother write anything about your birth in her diary?”

“The diary you read was not your mother’s. It was the doctor’s doing. He said he copied your mother’s handwriting and produced another diary. He then gave it to you. He made you think you had hidden it from him. The doctor also confessed that he had killed the bank manager. He had pushed him over a cliff one day. His body has not been found, however. He also killed your father when he knew what the doctor had done.”

“But he said I had killed my father.”

Tears fell down Sasha’s eyes. Ajay consoled her saying, “No, you did not. The doctor killed him and fed into your mind that you had done it. That way he could give you medicines for mental disorder you never had. He kept track of everything you did. The medicines he gave you enforced hallucinations. Your mother’s ghost turned into your alternate personality and it attacked me. It’s amazing how he could have guessed you would attack me that night. He was an evil wizard.”

Sasha cried harder. “I can’t believe how anyone can be such an evil.”

“He was evil but he did one thing right. He kept his word by treating you before the police took him in their custody.”

Sasha wondered about the changes she had gone through in her life. But Ajay was beside her. There was nothing to worry about.

THE END

← Read Chapter 5

Leave Me Alone-3

Previously on Leave Me Alone:

Ajay and Sasha go to Sasha’s home to celebrate Sasha’s birthday. Ajay sees portrait of a woman on red sari who looks like Sasha. Ajay is attacked by a woman on red sari and he flees. He goes to a police station and tells what had happened. Let’s look at Sasha in this chapter.

Sasha felt cold. She had been lying face down on the frozen floor for she did not know how long. The cold hit her heart. She opened her eyes and sat up immediately. She was surrounded by darkness. She was stunned because she was not on the kitchen floor where she had fallen unconscious. She was on a street- cold, pitch-black street.

‘How did I reach here?’ she tried hard to recall but in vain. She had been attacked by her mother in the kitchen and had no idea what had happened to her after she fell down. She wanted to cry. She covered her face with her palms. They were sticky and smelt of rust. She peeked hard at her hand in the darkness. ‘Blood,’ she thought looking around. ‘But how did blood come up in my hands?’

Her hands went through her face. ‘There are some bruises on the corner of right eyebrow,’ she came to know and she formulated a hypothesis. ‘That wound wouldn’t have flowed much. My hands must have touched something bloody or smeared with someone’s blood.’ She feared, ‘Whose blood could it be upon my palms? Is it my mother’s or Ajay’s?’

She jumped up abruptly. What could have happened to Ajay? Her mother had wanted him dead. She hoped she had not been able to do anything to him but she was scared. ‘My mother can do anything,’ she said to herself. Her mother could have made a plan to murder Ajay and put the blame upon her. Sasha gasped, looked around through the darkness and realized that she was not too far from her house. She had to get back to her house immediately to protect Ajay from her crazy mother.

As she began running to her house, she noticed that she was wearing a sari. She clearly remembered that she had worn a different dress before her mother had hit her with a steel rod. She knew she had not chosen to wear a sari. She did not even know how to wear it properly. Her mother must have put it on her while she had been unconscious. ‘How did she manage to do that?’ Sasha could not understand. Nevertheless, she understood that her mother wanted to kill Sasha as well. A flimsy cotton sari would not have protected her from cold on a frosty night. ‘She really planned it well,’ Sasha thought. She also had several questions in her mind. ‘Why did she want Ajay dead? Was it really because of the revenge she wanted to have?’ However, she should have understood that he could not have harmed her at all. He had not even met her once. Sasha felt her mother had really gone crazy. Her mother had to answer Sasha’s questions honestly.

With an impeccable sense of direction, Sasha reached her house quickly. She was shocked by the fact that the gate and the main door were open. ‘My Mom must have fled already. She would have acted behind shut doors and windows. The lights are not yet turned off.’ A cold chill ran up her spines. Had she already taken Ajay’s life? ‘I should not think of such things,’ Sasha controlled her thoughts and ran in. Her hope that nothing had happened to Ajay increased when she saw a police van in front of the porch. There was a sound of people speaking and creaking of boots everywhere in the house. Sasha rushed into the kitchen, where the sound was bigger. The room was in a mess. Broken glasses lay here and there. The police officers were taking notes of what they saw in the crime scene. Sasha also saw a clean-shaven police officer giving instructions to his juniors. He noticed Sasha and stopped giving directions. Everyone started looking at her. The officer walked forward and asked her, “You’re Sasha, aren’t you?”

“Yes, I am,” Sasha answered abruptly.

“Thank God,” the officer exclaimed. “Your boyfriend had told that you might be in danger. Do you know what he meant by danger?”

“My mother,” Sasha said, relieved that Ajay was safe,” she wanted him dead.”

“What? Why did he want to kill him? When did you know of that?”

“She did not tell me until this evening,” Sasha replied. She said that I did not understand; that I had been blinded by my love to Ajay. “She had even attacked me with a steel rod. I had fallen unconscious over there.”

She pointed to the floor before the sink. The officer looked at the rod with grimace. He did not seem to understand something. He asked her promptly, “If you had been attacked here, why weren’t you here when we had come here? Where were you?”

“I don’t know,” Sasha said plainly. “Even I don’t understand. I think she dragged me to the street and left me to die in the cold.”

The officer looked at her with distrust. He thought over for a while and said, “That’s very unlikely for a woman. But if she had someone to work for her or if she is strong, nothing is impossible.”

The officer’s phone buzzed. He seemed to receive some orders from the other side. When he cut the call off, he turned to Sasha and said, “I’ve been ordered to take you to the police station.”

Sasha trembled. “B . . . But I’ve not done anything. I swear it was my Mom. I can’t even think of harming Ajay.”

“You don’t understand, Sasha,” the officer said. “You’re not being arrested. This place is not safe for you right now. What if your mother attacks you the moment we leave? You’ll go with us for your own safety.”

Sasha nodded slowly. The officer was right. Besides, she could also meet Ajay and ask him what her mother had done to him. When the record taking was completed, the officer told everyone, including Sasha to move out. Within minutes, they were at the police station.

The officer led Sasha into the office of the Inspector. She saw three men talking with each other in one corner of the room. They were speaking in low voices. Sasha could not listen to anything but she thought they were talking about her. The officer who had brought Sasha with him said something to the trio. As Sasha went towards them, Ajay looked towards her. His eyes widened with fear. “You’ve been tricked, officer,” Ajay shouted out. “This is not Sasha, officer. This is the woman who attacked me.”

Sasha covered her ears with her hands. She could bear no more. Ajay did not believe him. Who would help her? Sasha had always loved her mother but she had got pain instead. Her pulse increased. She felt her temples were being seared. She clutched her head with her hands; howled out in pain and collapsed.

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