Skip to main content

Good People

Fiction

“The good people are utterly boring, aren’t they?” Joshua asked me as I was driving him to Vagamon, a popular tourist destination that is about 50 km from my home. Joshua was in Kerala on a short vacation from Mumbai where he did business.

I laughed looking at the winding road ahead. I was going to negotiate yet another hairpin bend. What makes driving an intoxication is the road. Straight and smooth roads like the national highways don’t fascinate me. Roads must have bends and slopes. And views on the sides. When it comes to people too, I guess the charm lies in their being not so good.

“Do you remember Peter?” Joshua asked as I manoeuvred my car against a truck that was crawling down the hairpin bend.

“The good-boy Peter, our classmate in high school?”

“Yup. Peter the pet of the teachers.”

Peter was good. Good at studies, good in behaviour, and good in every way as far as teachers and the society were concerned. Everybody liked him. No wonder he went on to become a priest. But I had no contact with him at all after we left school.

“Do you have contact with him?” I asked rather surprised. Joshua and Peter had as much in common as between a lion and a lamb. Joshua was a lion who led a whole gang of boys in school against everything that the school had forbidden. Not that the gang disobeyed the rules openly. That was impossible in those days. The social system was more stifling for children than Indira Gandhi’s Emergency was for citizens. Joshua had his own unique ways of circumventing the rules and regulations of the school as well as the society. The headmaster of the school was a Catholic priest who would never be seen without a cane in hand. “He’s as sadistic as his God,” Joshua once told me about the headmaster-priest. “He beats the hell out of us here and his God will throw us in hell when we reach there. Hell is their only business.”

I recalled the many lashes I had received from the headmaster. I couldn’t remember the reasons for them, however. That was how the system was. Cane-lashes were inevitable. If the cane is spared, the child will be spoilt – that was the maxim in schools as well as homes in those days. Did we all become good because of the cane? Well, Peter did, at least. He became a man who fitted neatly in the good box of the society. But he had never been caned. That’s one of the many ironies of life.

“Will he be using the cane in his school?” I wondered aloud. I had learnt from Joshua that Peter was the principal of a school somewhere in Chhattisgarh.

Joshua laughed. “The cane is out of fashion now, Tomichan. Pamper the child and make money – that’s the new maxim.”

“Why do you keep in touch with Peter anyway?” I asked.

“I had no contact with him at all. I got his phone number with much difficulty after contacting many people. I wanted to tell him that I was sorry before I die.”

“What!” The mention of death rattled me for a moment.

“What what?” Joshua asked calmly. “Is it the mention of death that bothers you or my seeking apology from Peter?”

I wasn’t quite sure which bothered me more. “Both, I guess,” I said.

“We’re growing old, aren’t we? Many of our contemporaries are no more. How many years have we left? So I thought I should erase certain things from memory.”

Joshua had insulted Peter when we were in class 10, the last year of school. There was some argument between them and Peter kept on spitting out platitudes which irritated Joshua. “Shove your hypocritical morality up your arse and get lost,” Joshua hollered.

“You are my arse,” Peter retorted.

That was unexpected. Unexpected from Peter the Good Boy.

Joshua stared at Peter for a moment, went near him, gripped his ears tightly in his hands, and spat on his head. Peter was stunned. Joshua walked away without uttering any word further. He thought he was a lion. But he had become a hyena in my mind. And Peter was a carcass.

Now half a century after that, Joshua wanted to erase that act of scavenging from his consciousness.

Joshua had undergone a lot of transformation. I knew that since I was in touch with him quite regularly. He had mellowed down. He was not a lion now but an elephant – majestic but vegetarian. So to say. Life had altered him. His wife had died of cancer a few years back and his only daughter had married an African Muslim in America where she was sent for higher studies.

We had reached Vagamon already and we were sitting on one of the many rolling knolls enjoying the cool breeze of the late afternoon. Vagamon’s knolls don’t have trees. They are just meadows. There’s nothing to block your vision on them. Sit on one of them and you can see so many others of them all around. It is like sitting on top of the world. You can see a whole world around you.

“If we can see everything so clearly as this, life would be much easier,” Joshua said.

“Did you apologise to Peter?” I asked.

Joshua looked at me. “No.”

I looked at him. The knolls looked at us both.

“When I introduced myself, Peter’s instinctive response was: ‘My arse?’”

Some memories never fade. Some wounds remain.

I imagined Peter in his priestly habit offering the holy Mass every morning and praying to his God: Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.

“Look at those mountains,” Joshua pointed out the distant mountain range beyond the knolls. “They look so nearby, but they are farther than they seem.”

Mountains are the earth’s undecaying monuments, as Nathaniel Hawthorne said. They stay and stay. And forgive too. Did I hear someone say that? I sat on my knees and bent down. And kissed the knoll of Vagamon. Those knolls had taught me something. The good people aren’t utterly boring!

PS. Vagamon is a popular tourist destination in central Kerala – 100 km from Kochi, 60 km from Kottayam. Here are some pics from the place. 

A lake amid the knolls of Vagamon
Thangal Para, a Muslim pilgrimage centre
Pine Forest

On one of the knolls


PPS. There are many other tourist attractions in Vagamon. My visit was not in the garb of a tourist. 









Comments

  1. Hari OM
    Ah, the word 'sorry'. So easy to ponder, so difficult to say! Golly, those hills look gorgeous... and the land forbears much from us. YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  2. Would love to visit Vagamon someday!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's worth a visit. You can spend hours in the lap of breathtaking natural beauty.

      Delete
  3. There was so much to smile about and nod to in agreement in this post. The post read like a short story. Gripping. Intriguing. And so revelatory of human shortcomings.
    My husband has many 'cane' stories from his school days. Luckily, they'd be assigned a day to receive their punishment so he and his friends would wear extra pairs of underwear to soften the blow!
    And the photographs look utterly divine. Must visit Vagamon next time we are in Kerala.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice to have you here again.

      Our school days were so very different from today's! It's so good of your husband's school to assign a particular day for punishment 😄

      Vagamon is waiting for you 👍

      Delete
  4. I liked the way you have woven ths story around this green place.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I liked the concept of introspective reflection as we gain wisdom. I had many take aways from this post. Beautiful captures.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Yesterday

With students of Carmel Margaret, are you grieving / Over Goldengrove unleaving…? It was one of my first days in the eleventh class of Carmel Public School in Kerala, the last school of my teaching career. One girl, whose name was not Margaret, was in the class looking extremely melancholy. I had noticed her for a few days. I didn’t know how to put the matter over to her. I had already told the students that a smiling face was a rule in the English class. Since Margaret didn’t comply, I chose to drag Hopkins in. I replaced the name of Margaret with the girl’s actual name, however, when I quoted the lines. Margaret is a little girl in the Hopkins poem. Looking at autumn’s falling leaves, Margaret is saddened by the fact of life’s inevitable degeneration. The leaves have to turn yellow and eventually fall. And decay. The poet tells her that she has no choice but accept certain inevitabilities of life. Sorrow is our legacy, Margaret , I said to Margaret’s alter ego in my class. Let

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

William and the autumn of life

William and I were together only for one year, but our friendship has grown stronger year after year. The duration of that friendship is going to hit half a century. In the meanwhile both he and I changed many places. William was in Kerala when I was in Shillong. He was in Ireland when I was in Delhi. Now I am in Kerala where William is planning to migrate back. We were both novices of a religious congregation for one year at Kotagiri in Tamil Nadu. He was older than me by a few years and far more mature too. But we shared a cordial rapport which kept us in touch though we went in unexpected directions later. William’s conversations had the same pattern back then and now too. I’d call it Socratic. He questions a lot of things that you say with the intention of getting to the depth of the matter. The last conversation I had with him was when I decided to stop teaching. I mention this as an example of my conversations with William. “You are a good teacher. Why do you want to stop

X the variable

X is the most versatile and hence a very precious entity in mathematics. Whenever there is an unknown quantity whose value has to be discovered, the mathematician begins with: Let the unknown quantity be x . This A2Z series presented a few personalities who played certain prominent roles in my life. They are not the only ones who touched my life, however. There are so many others, especially relatives, who left indelible marks on my psyche in many ways. I chose not to bring relatives into this series. Dealing with relatives is one of the most difficult jobs for me. I have failed in that task time and again. Miserably sometimes. When I think of relatives, O V Vijayan’s parable leaps to my mind. Father and little son are on a walk. “Be careful lest you fall,” father warns the boy. “What will happen if I fall?” The boy asks. The father’s answer is: “Relatives will laugh.” One of the harsh truths I have noticed as a teacher is that it is nearly impossible to teach your relatives – nephews

Zorba’s Wisdom

Zorba is the protagonist of Nikos Kazantzakis’s novel Zorba the Greek . I fell in love with Zorba the very first time I read the novel. That must have been in my late 20s. I read the novel again after many years. And again a few years ago. I loved listening to Zorba play his santuri . I danced with him on the Cretan beaches. I loved the devil inside Zorba. I called that devil Tomichan. Zorba tells us the story of a monk who lived on Mount Athos. Father Lavrentio. This monk believed that a devil named Hodja resided in him making him do all wrong things. Hodja wants to eat meet on Good Friday, Hodja wants to sleep with a woman, Hodja wants to kill the Abbot… The monk put the blame for all his evil thoughts and deeds on Hodja. “I’ve a kind of devil inside me, too, boss, and I call him Zorba!” Zorba says. I met my devil in Zorba. And I learnt to call it Tomichan. I was as passionate as Zorba was. I enjoyed life exuberantly. As much as I was allowed to, at least. The plain truth is