The morning was beautiful. It had
rained last night. The raindrops hanging from the leaves sparkled like
diamonds in the sunlit morning. Trisha had just sat down to have her morning
coffee when her phone rang. It was Sudhir.
‘Okay, I’ll be there at five in
the evening’, she said as she kept down the phone.
Sudhir had been Trisha’s friend
for a long time. He had felt a certain interest in Trisha from the very first
day he had seen her, his new neighbour. Crushes at such young ages were nothing
new. Trisha and her family had shifted to Bangalore when she was in class six.
Trisha was admitted in the same school that Sudhir attended and now, they were
now in the same college too. Though Sudhir was shy in nature, yet they had
bonded well.
Sudhir had been pacing up and
down the room when Randhir arrived.
‘What’s the matter?’ he asked.
‘Nothing. Just a little nervous’,
answered Sudhir.
‘About what?’
‘I was thinking about confessing
my love for Trisha to her.’
Randhir reminded him that she
already had a boyfriend.
‘I know. It’s just that he is not
the right choice for her’, said Sudhir.
Sudhir came back home early that
night. As he opened the door, he was surprised to find Randhir seated on the
couch. He was skipping through the pages of his favourite magazine, as the
light from the lamp fell across his face.
‘How did you get in here?’ asked
Sudhir surprised.
‘That is not important. Tell me
how did it go, what did she say?’
‘She did not turn up’, said
Sudhir rather sadly, trying to force a smile.
Sudhir had been waiting for
Trisha at the Café for an hour. Seeing that she was late, he had tried calling
her. Trilok, Trisha’s boyfriend had picked up his call. Sensing something
fishy, Trilok had warned Sudhir and had made it clear that he did not want
‘losers’ like Sudhir to be around Trisha.
‘I can help you with it, if you
want’ said Randhir. Sudhir hesitated but later agreed on Randhir’s repeated
pestering. From then on, various tricks had been applied to lure Trisha, right
from sending flowers and gifts to sending letters, in which he promised his
love for her. But nothing helped. Trisha chose Trilok over Sudhir every time
and Sudhir had thus almost resigned to the thought of considering himself as a
loser. ‘Loser’ - such an abusing term for a boy of his age. He felt ashamed, anger
seething in his veins.
It was the evening of their
farewell party. Sudhir sat in a corner, watching Trisha, dressed in a red gown,
enjoying a dance with Trilok. Her hair fell loose over her shoulder, making her
look even prettier. Sudhir felt angry. What if Trisha had never met Trilok, he
thought. It would have been Sudhir dancing with Trisha today then.
‘You’ve got to do something about
it, haven’t you?’ asked Randhir. Sudhir was taken aback by surprise. He had not
noticed Randhir’s presence.
‘Come on, follow me’, ordered
Randhir.
Sudhir did not quite understand
what was happening but nevertheless he followed Randhir, who led him to the
backyard of the college. They were following Trilok, who had gone to dig out
the hidden bottles of alcohol from underneath the piles of hay and dead leaves.
‘Go on, kill him’, suggested
Randhir catching Trilok off guard.
Sudhir did not agree.
‘Come on, do it and show him that
you’re not a loser’, insisted Randhir.
‘I can’t’, said Sudhir nervously.
‘Okay, fine. I’ll do it for you.’
Even before Sudhir could say
something, Randhir walked straight to Trilok, grabbed a bottle of alcohol from
his hands and broke it on Trilok’s head. He fell on the ground unconscious.
‘Stop it!’ cried Sudhir, as he
watched Randhir stab Trilok to death with the broken glass bottle.
‘We’ll get caught’ panicked
Sudhir.
‘No, we won’t. Just act normal.’
Randhir sounded quite calm. Sudhir was terrified. He ran back to his room.
Images of the gruesome crime committed flashed in his mind as he stood staring
helplessly at his reflection in the mirror. Just then he noticed blood stains
on his T-shirt. It was Randhir who had killed Trilok, yet there were blood
stains on his T-shirt. Sudhir was puzzled. Sudhir could not go off to sleep
that night. He kept tossing and turning in his bed restlessly. He called up
Randhir to tell him that he thought it wise to surrender before the police. But
Randhir warned him not to do so.
With the dawn of the next
morning, Sudhir went to the police station to confess about the crime
committed. Guilt had kept him awake the whole night. He gave the police all
details about Randhir and the murder committed.
Next morning, he was called to
the police station.
‘Whose phone number is this?’
asked the police inspector.
‘Randhir’s, Sir. I have got his
number saved in my phone’, answered Sudhir.
The inspector dialed the number.
Sudhir’s phone started to ring. Before Sudhir could say a word, the inspector
slapped him across his face and threw him into the prison cell.
The cell was dark, with a dim
bulb hanging loose from the ceiling. Sudhir sat in a corner, with folded legs,
staring into the ceiling, still confused and unable to figure out what was
happening.
‘Were you trying to get me caught
by the police? I warned you not to’ said a familiar voice from the dark corner,
‘You’ll always be a loser. Yes, that’s what you are’. It was Randhir.
‘How did you get in here?’ asked
puzzled Sudhir. He was supposed to be the only inmate of that cell. ‘You’ll now
be hanged for the crime you committed’, said Sudhir nervously as he saw Randhir
advance towards him.
‘I’ll kill you before that
happens’, said Randhir fiercely, as he leapt upon Sudhir, whom he had caught by
the neck and was trying to throttle him to death.
‘Help! He is trying to kill me’,
begged Sudhir.
The police stood helplessly and
watched Sudhir. They seemed confused as they could not understand why Sudir was
trying to throttle himself to death!