Skip to main content

A Game of Fabricated Lies

Courtesy Copilot Designer

Fiction

At some point in K’s narrative, I became enlightened. He’s telling the truth pretending it to be a lie. No lie can have such emotional underpinning. That realisation was my enlightenment.

We were a group of nine men, all sexagenarians like me, gathered at Adithyan’s residence for an alumni get-together. We were meeting together after many years though a few of us met each other once in a while on some occasions like a wedding or a funeral.

While the third round of drinks was being poured, Dominic said, “Hey, why don’t we play a small game before dinner?”

Each one of us had to speak about himself for three-four minutes continuously and tell only lies. “Telling lies credibly is a political skill and a literary art,” Dominic added.

We all took the game with the characteristic enthusiasm of intoxicated nostalgia. Dominic started the game on everyone’s insistence and spoke about his sleeping through a landslide that had brought down to slush almost the entire neighbourhood, and his heroic contributions in the voluntary services that followed. He seemed to be retelling the story of a movie he had watched recently with himself replacing the protagonist.

RK (as Radhakrishnan was called) spoke about his expedition to Antarctica. Being an environmentalist, he knew how to embellish his lies with enough facts to make them more credible than political speeches in a post-truth world.

Yusuf spoke about his being detained in the Denver airport on a mistaken identity. What baffled us was his knowledge about the largest airport in the US though he was a grocer all his life in his nondescript hometown. Later we learnt that he was speaking about the experience of one of his distant relatives whom he had met recently.

When James mentioned his visit to a brothel, we all burst into a raucous laughter and Manoj reminded him that he was supposed to tell a “credible” lie. James was an incorrigible introvert. Even a whole year’s psychological counselling and countless retreats at Kerala Syrian Catholic Church’s eschatological centres (which I always hear as scatological centres) didn’t help him come out of his tortoise shell. He spoke as softly and cautiously as ever. But his visit to the supposed brothel turned credible to us when he touched upon the temporary sexual impotence he experienced as he saw the sex worker lie before him with her legs looking like a formidable M. When he concluded his story with a confession that his “thing” wouldn’t stand up even today because of that encounter with an imperious alphabet in a brothel, we didn’t know how to respond. There was utter silence which was broken by the host Adithyan who asked his Bengali manservant to bring in more “touchings” (bites).

It was K’s turn next.

“Let me tell you a fabricated autobiography,” he started and then swilled his third drink as if he was wreaking vengeance on someone. “Credible lies, okay?” He gave us a thumbs up.

“Hooray!” Dominic yelled and raised a toast with his glass of brandy.

“I chucked my job at the university because of my wife,” K started. It sounded quite natural in the context because Mathew had said something like “You know why I never play chess with women? Because I hate losing my queen” as part of his ‘credible lies’. Mathew’s misogyny was well-known in the group.

I smirked. I knew, like the others in the group, that K and his wife loved each other very much. Theirs was a love-marriage back in those days when arranged marriages were the only option for most aspiring Malayali brides and grooms. K was a newly appointed lecturer of English language and literature when he fell in love with a young clerk of his college. Their romance bloomed like Vrindavan throbbing to Lord Krishna’s flute renditions. A decade or so after their wedding, some discordant notes began to be heard in Vrindavan’s music. Rumours began to spread among the Malayalis in the little town of Itanagar and they reached me quickly because I was a part of the rumours. The others in the present gathering were not aware of this part of K’s life. K’s friendship with me was projected as one of the chief causes of his rift with his wife who reportedly asked him once whether he was gay. I wasn’t amused and I not only cut off the relationship with K but also left the place altogether. I was tired of the place anyway where I was teaching in a secondary school and was looking for an excuse to throw up my job at the age of 40 and take a leap of faith to Delhi all the way from Itanagar.

Now in K’s “fabricated autobiography,” his wife became a possessive siren, beckoning him not from afar, but from her anchor with him, playing a jealous tune in their Vrindavan whose Krishna and Radha had died long ago. The siren’s song drowned his freedom, K said, “in the tides of her love that clung to me like a massive barnacle. So I ran away in order to save me from her. I left my professor’s job at the university because there was too much love at home.”

Everyone except me laughed. They all knew about K’s romance and his personal Vrindavan. None of them was aware of what had happened in his personal life. They believed that K had left Itanagar because he wanted to go and work abroad which was what he did. They clapped hands and raised a toast to K’s lies which were the most credible in their judgment. They were too drunk to notice the quiver in K’s voice as he said the last line of his story.

 

Comments

  1. Hari Om
    Ah... And now I wonder at how much written here is truly fictional... YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The actual get-together is next Sunday 😊

      Delete
    2. But I didn't get any invitation!!

      Delete
  2. Often lies are more real than reality, like for the prisoners in the allegory of the cave, which you might still remember.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I remember Fr Joachim teaching that Platonic allegory rather dramatically.

      Delete
  3. You are a wonderful story teller indeed!

    ReplyDelete
  4. The trick to a credible lie is to tell most of the truth.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, partial truths are often the most dangerous lies.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

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

The Little Girl

The Little Girl is a short story by Katherine Mansfield given in the class 9 English course of NCERT. Maggie gave an assignment to her students based on the story and one of her students, Athena Baby Sabu, presented a brilliant job. She converted the story into a delightful comic strip. Mansfield tells the story of Kezia who is the eponymous little girl. Kezia is scared of her father who wields a lot of control on the entire family. She is punished severely for an unwitting mistake which makes her even more scared of her father. Her grandmother is fond of her and is her emotional succour. The grandmother is away from home one day with Kezia's mother who is hospitalised. Kezia gets her usual nightmare and is terrified. There is no one at home to console her except her father from whom she does not expect any consolation. But the father rises to the occasion and lets the little girl sleep beside him that night. She rests her head on her father's chest and can feel his heart...

The Vegetarian

Book Review Title: The Vegetarian Author: Han Kang Translator: Deborah Smith [from Korean] Publisher: Granta, London, 2018 Pages: 183 Insanity can provide infinite opportunities to a novelist. The protagonist of Nobel laureate Han Kang’s Booker-winner novel, The Vegetarian , thinks of herself as a tree. One can argue with ample logic and conviction that trees are far better than humans. “Trees are like brothers and sisters,” Yeong-hye, the protagonist, says. She identifies herself with the trees and turns vegetarian one day. Worse, she gives up all food eventually. Of course, she ends up in a mental hospital. The Vegetarian tells Yeong-hye’s tragic story on the surface. Below that surface, it raises too many questions that leave us pondering deeply. What does it mean to be human? Must humanity always entail violence? Is madness a form of truth, a more profound truth than sanity’s wisdom? In the disturbing world of this novel, trees represent peace, stillness, and nonviol...

The RSS does not exist

An organisation that has 80,000 branches in India does not exist legally in any document. This is the cover story of The Caravan this month. By the way, The Caravan is one of the very few publications that still continues to exist in spite of being overtly critical of Narendra Modi and his Sangh Parivar. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is not registered as an organisation under any of the usual Indian registration laws such as the Societies Registration Act or as a trust or company. It functions as an unregistered voluntary organisation, though it is arguably the largest public organisation in the country. This situation makes the organisation absolutely unaccountable to anyone, argues The Caravan . The RSS is not legally required to file annual returns to the Tax department or disclose its financial details publicly though it deals with thousands of crores of rupees every year especially after Modi became the Prime Minister of the country. The membership of the organisat...

No Problems Only Opportunities

You’ve probably heard this joke. A young man walked into his office one morning and found a beautiful young lady sitting in his chair. He called the MD and said, “Sir, I have a problem.” The MD replied, “Don’t you know our company’s motto, young man? No Problems, Only Opportunities .” When Suchita of The Blogchatter sent me a mail with the topic of this week’s blog hop –  - the first thing that came to my mind was the above joke. I know many people – too many, in fact – who went through terrible problems. My own life was a series of problems in none of which was there the consolation of any beautiful woman. One essential lesson I learnt from life is that life is a series of problems. You solve one and then arises the next one. Now I have reached an age when problems are no more problems: they are life itself. If you ask me what was the biggest problem I ever dealt with, it was my last years in Shillong. I was a lecturer in a college drawing a fat salary stipulated by the U...