Dec 19, 2017

LOST AND FOUND

Her baby feet sprang up and down across the veranda of a local hospital. Young Kuyili never knew why she was there. She circled, leaped and fumbled up there. Her mother had gone into a room and did not return for a few minutes. She was much piqued by the idea of solitude as she found nothing entertaining there. She could not restrain the transient idleness and the wait persuaded her to slowing creak the edge of the door. Her tiny eyes sneaked in and wandered around the room and eventually the cast was on the cadaverous person she had ever seen, hidden in a tattered saree. She was the only soul to love Kuyili and she dwelt in the comfortable shadow of her love. She had been her nest for seven years, and the chicken paid the hen with furious love on her.
“We’ve already aborted the first baby, then had a pre-term infant, and I have to check if I am pregnant again?” mom consulted the doctor.
Kuyili moved back in consternation, thoughts roughly bashed in the walls of her mind, with fervent iteration. She was captivated by the idea of having a little brother, whom she can adore and play with. She constructed loads of further happening memories, anticipating good times with him. She exclaimed at the bulging of her mom’s belly and caressed it. She celebrated her mother for having a baby inside of her. She cherished her with strings of flowers bought from savings. The exhilaration on the climax was escalating in her each day when mom was hospitalized a week ago.
Kuyili treaded home pondering over her baby brother, when her step-grandmother hindered her by the way.
“Your mother has delivered a female infant” she admitted and drove her to the hospital. Those words oozed out the grimaced face in Kuyili, though she kept mum with her. All her fragile desires were hammered into rubbles, and implanted frustration in her heart that later jeopardized herself. She was petrified and transfixed at the conclusion that her beloved brother never existed.  She had a frantic gait rushing into the hospital ward and paused quiet near her mom’s bed. She never wanted to meet her so called sister. All the frustration of not having a brother exploded into fierce rage on her sister.
She crept along the rim of the crib like a worm and struck at the cradle in which her sister was kept. She leaned up to the cradle to peep in the baby. It had a deep, sound slumber by the gentle rock of the cradle. It was the moment when the mismatch faces with infernal repine and tender innocence met. She loathed her charm.

“You like your little sister, don’t you?” the mother enquired.
“Very much” was Kuyili’s mild response with concealed frustration, flames of fury interred and gulped in.  
“See how beautifully she resembles your mother. You’ve got a rival, Kuyili” the step-granny continued “for everything”.
“Shut the hell up, you’re not my granny at all” Kuyili unfurled the fettered emotions hurling on her.

Right from the next day, Kuyili was given the bowl of rice to eat it by herself, while the mother’s lap was the delicate domicile of the new baby, solicitously fed in intervals.  People gathered in their home for the infant, she was cherished and celebrated. The corollary of accenting the infant was that the dwindle of Kuyli’s authoritative tone. The dictatorship castle was demolished at the inception of a little alienate creature. She could not conceive her defeat to her. Negligence of her own mother piloted her to the jag of solitude, fed up with envy rains. The spot light on the infant made Kuyili a dark shadow.
“Why do you stick with a blue face, Kuyili? Why is your hair tousled? Where are your ribbons?” the class teacher enquired when she was raised up in class for inattentiveness.
“My mother doesn’t want me anymore, for she has a new baby and busy with her. I was sent out to neighbor to dress up. All because of a new person in my home, ask her if you want anything!” shrieked staggered Kuyili with tears raining over her cheeks, shuddering and gasping.
Though Kuyili had fanatic rage, the remotest part of her heart was the provision of love on her sister. She was supposed to take care of her sister, at least for her mother’s sake. She never articulated her rage physically on her. She looked after the baby when mom went to work. The baby was with her almost all the time. She squeezed the milk out from the baby’s nibbles, fed her, dressed her up, clasped her on her chest and walked gently patting her, bedded her, guarded her all the night.
Kuyili was somehow inspirited by the presence of her, as days passed by. The little baby loved her sister. She spread her love with silent charming chuckles. She was so enchanted with Kuyili and waited for her to return from school each day. The giggle of the baby was resonating in the small room whenever she touched the docile baby. The radiance of the baby’s love breezed Kuyili. She grew inside her an acute sense of love on the baby, which she never realized until the climax.
The baby was often taken to the hospital for checkup. She was too feeble as a pre-mature infant. Her head was gradually bulging and she shivered sometime. Father, mother and Kuyili sat around the sleeping baby in a night. Kuyili was sweeping the air with hand fan for the baby when the parents discussed the illness of the baby. Doctors concluded that the baby was prone to jaundice. Kuyili did not make out exactly what they were talking, but somehow figured that the baby was sick. She was melted, and gazed at the baby. The knuckles and bodily crags glowed pinkish even in the pale yellow brightness of the lantern, lips leaked out a dreamily smile of satiety.
The next afternoon, Kuyili was in full-fledged consideration on the baby. Her pity on her illness revealed the pent up mercy and love in her. She was really excited to go to home to see her back, but with gallons of love this time. She purchased her a little orange frock and played in her mind again and again how pretty she would look in that frock. The evening sky seemed graciously beautiful for her that day. She inculcated tons of mirth in her and bashed into the home to adore her little sister.
She was puzzled to find no one at home. Hours later mom entered and told her that the baby was hospitalized and would be back in a few days. But her step-grandmother conveyed when she was drunk “Your sister is thrown to the hospital! She will not come back; she will be dead by now”. Kuyili went to her mother and wailed brutally. The love that had been ignited in her fumed out in the form of tears.  It was truly tough to realize that they had spent just fifteen days with the baby.
The condition of the baby had been worse and the doctor had terminated that the baby would die for sure and had suggested them to give the baby to the hospital so that they would not face her death in live, as it would affect the little girl at home.
Two days rolled on, the mother could not stand the loss of her child and ran to the hospital to get her baby back. But it was too late that they had rendered the baby for adoption to someone from Chennai.
Mom called Kuyili through phone, twelve years later, and hissed “You’ve got a sister, my child”; Kuyili had a reminiscent smile.  The mother was actually now taking about the new born nanny (infant goat) at their home.

#Jaye