Its been a while since I posted in this forum. Life has been kinda crazy this past year. So anyways, I just recently started watching KDMHMD again and I noticed that Preet and Meher storyline has been as good as dropped from the show. And then yesterday this song was playing on my itunes and suddenly inspiration struck and I ended up writing this piece, pulling an all nighter last night. Towards the end of the story, you can tell fatigue had crept into my creativity and I kinda made it an abrupt ending, so try not to be harsh on me :P But otherwise please R&R....
Three sides to their story'
Meher's Story'
Everyone crowded by the door. Ma was leading the pack, her puja thali weighing heavy in her arms. Bauji stood right beside her (his usual spot), tears in his eyes and that famous watery smile on his face. Heerdi and Kuldi were huddled around ma and bauji, excitement, anticipation and joy evident on their faces. This was a good day for the Juneja family, a day no one expected, a day most didn't even hope for. In fact there is an unspoken fear that it might just be too good to be true'or maybe it's not fear but an evil, selfish feeling of hope. Hope that maybe it is too good to be true. A hope that is evident in my silent tears and my phony put on smile.
As I looked past the crowd, I see you standing near the pillar, trying to put some space between you and the rest, hiding as if ashamed, ashamed because the same hope had crept into your thoughts as well. Hope that maybe today was just a dream.
"Meher you have finished setting up Harman's room right? He is finally coming home Meher and I just, I want everything to be perfect for him." And just like that Ma yanked me back to reality.
The put-on smile stretched wider as I reassuringly replied, "Of course Ma, everything is perfect just the way Harmanji left it."
I felt you staring, I could almost see the smirk on your face, my last words "just the way harmanji left it" echoing in the silence between us.
Harmanji, my fianc, my childhood sweetheart, the father of my child, was coming home today but instead of joy my unfaithful heart was full of sorrow, or maybe it was just numb overwhelmed by the emotional roller coast of separation from the one you love and reunion with the one who left you behind.
"Who would have thought that God would be so kind to us Meher? Finally this family will be complete, all the lost joy will return. Don't you feel it Meher that feeling of complete bliss?"
I smile and nod at Heerdi's words but then I can't help but look away. This pretense is starting to take its toll on me. My world is crumbling around me and my life has just become a series of unanswered questions. Subconsciously or in full consciousness, I can't tell anymore, but somehow I find myself looking into your eyes. Looking into your eyes are like seeing a mirror image of mine, I see the same questions and the same turmoil reflected in them.
I want to reach out and ease away that frown and I want to kiss away those tears but I don't know if it's appropriate anymore. I don't know if it's appropriate for me to miss you anymore, I don't even know if it's appropriate for me to love you anymore because my fianc is coming back. The fianc, who dressed in his freshly pressed army uniform and his badges of honor, walked out of these same doors one day with his bags and his goofy grin and just forgot to return for the next two years.
I was drying his laundry on the roof. I wanted to be the one to wash his clothes, I was afraid that if someone else washed it then they would wash away his scent, his presence from those clothes. Stupid I know, but you know what's sillier, before washing each of his clothing I held it close to my stomach, just so from the very beginning the baby was aware of it's father's essence.
I saw a car pulling into the driveway, a military car. He had just left less than a month ago, so it can't be him, can it? Maybe he was here to surprise me, the baby news I gave him last night could have had that effect. Without looking any closer, not wanting to ruin his surprise, I ran downstairs and towards the door. And just then, just as I reached the door, a scream, a gut wrenching scream, shattered the fairy tale reality I had imagined for myself.
He was missing in action, presumed dead. Right after he hung up on the phone with me, his base was attacked. No survivors were found. Some of the bodies were so badly burnt; there was no way of identifying them. However, a few bodies were missing. There was hope that maybe a few survived or were taken prisoners, but the brutality with which the base had been attacked, gave very little credence to that theory.
As I sat there listening to the facts, the details and the plans for their search and rescue, my hands subconsciously cradled my stomach, rubbing it in reassurance, of what, I still don't know but I guess that's what maternal instinct is, protecting your child from even your own grief.
That night I stood by the window staring at the stars and the moon looking for those eyes, that smile, his face, somewhere, anywhere in the sky. Hoping that maybe all those childhood fables and myths about people dying and becoming stars were somehow true. I heard a knock and when I turned towards the door, I found Ma standing there with a plate full of my favorite things to eat.
"Ma you didn't have to bring this up for me. I am not feeling very hungry."
"Then don't eat for yourself. Eat for my grandchild."
She put down the plate and came around to the window. The tears, I didn't even know I was holding back, came pouring down. She gathered me in her arms and gently rubbed my back, her tears now one with mine.
A few weeks went by and eventually the entire family had become aware of my condition. The morning sickness had gotten worse and weirdly enough so had the insatiable appetite. The joy of birth had somewhat lessened the grief of death. But a certain gloom still hung in the air. A child born out of wedlock, no matter how welcomed it may be, was still considered a major societal taboo. And finding a groom for an unwed, un-rich, pregnant, plain looking 25 year old was a herculean task most would fail to complete.
"What about Preet?" Kuldi asked suddenly asked one day while we were baking Bauji's birthday cake.
Confused by the randomness of the question, I asked the same myself, "What about Preet?"
"You can marry Preet," came the triumphant reply.
Later, in more happier times, I remember how all of us had laughed about the coincidence of it all but literally as soon as Kuldi mentioned my marrying Preet, ma walked into the kitchen, a smile that I had not seen on her since Harmanji's news, lighting up her face.
"That's a brilliant idea Kul. What do you think Meher? That way the baby will still have it's father's name and you will still be part of this family."
"What do I think?" was a rhetorical question on Ma's part, one that she had obviously already answered for me. Before I knew it, wedding plans had already begun forming. After all the wedding had to be quick, I was starting to show and all said and done none of us wanted the legitimacy of my child, Harmanji's child, questioned.
I remember you entering my room, forbidden though it was, merely an hour before our wedding. Considering the fact that only a week had passed since the first moment the idea of me marrying you had been mentioned, this was the first time you and I truly got a chance to speak or even think about what lay ahead in the future for us.
I was standing at my usual spot by the window, staring at the sky, looking for a sign. You came and stood beside me. Your warm hand gently covered my freezing ones. I remember you turned to the sky and smiled that cheeky smile of yours.
"Guess what Bhai, today your favorite Bandar is being given your favorite set of pearls. Thanks for the gift Bhai. You know how I am Bhai, careless with most things but always careful with the expensive stuff and this I can tell is very expensive. So rest assured your pearls will be very well taken care of."
I felt myself smiling, my first genuine smile in a very long time and I felt your fingertips brushing away tears I didn't realize had fallen.
"Enough of those don't you think? I know Meher, you and I, we were never meant to be but here we are, you, me and Juneja Jr. So as they say, when the sky rains eggs, you make a kickass omelet out of it."
"And who says that?"
You shrugged, that annoying, nonchalant shrug of yours, "Someone, somewhere must be saying that I am sure."
I nod my head in amusement, of course eggs and omelet surely, someone, somewhere thinks of these things.
"Anyways the point is that even though circumstances have forced us here today, I don't think we should compromise. After all it's the rest of our lives and neither of us should live a lifetime thinking we are second best. So let's just say we are having a reverse relationship. First comes baby, then marriage and maybe after all that comes love."
The smile that started on my lips, finally spread all the way to my eyes. A hope, that maybe my fairy tale has not been completely shattered, flickered through my heart. I squeezed your hands in agreement and we parted with a friendly, warm hug. And to top it all off, the baby kicked, as if in agreement with the deal you and I had just made.
A car honked from the driveway, the long lost prodigal son had returned. You finally came out of the shadow and stood behind, a quiet, comforting presence. I reached out for your hand and you took mine in yours, gently squeezing them as if transferring your strength to me. My other hand searched for the familiar sign of my love for you, the necklace that you had tied around my neck less than two years ago. But my hand came up empty, I panicked, what happened, where did it go. And then suddenly, an unfamiliar ring on my finger caught my eye. It felt heavy. I remember. This is the ring, Harmanji had left behind. The ring Meher, from two years ago, had worn so proudly.
"Everything is perfect, just the way Harmanji had left it." I reminded myself. This is how Ma wanted it to be, for how long she didn't specify. She just didn't want her war returned son to be shocked by the fact that life had moved on without him in the past two years.
"Harman, thank god son you are finally home."
I hear Bauji crying out with happiness but I am too afraid to look, afraid of shattering my fairy tale once again. I feel your hand leaving mine, your comforting warmth drifting away from me. I turn to call out to you and then suddenly another rough, callused hand grabs mine and pulls me into his arms.
"God Meher you have no idea, how much I have looked forward to this day. I survived through prison only for this, to be able to hold you in my arms again."
Sochti hoon main
choop rahoon kaise
dard dil kaa yeh main sahoon kaise
kashmakash mein hoon
yeh kahoon kaise
meraa humasafar bas ek tu
naheen doosaraa koee aaur hain