eFiction India eFiction India Vol.02 Issue.09 | Page 12

11 STORIES was absolutely brilliant. Tragic, but brilliant. Supposedly, she had died of carbon-monoxide poisoning as she had put her head in the oven and blocked the rooms between her and her kids with wet towels. Her end was as absorbing as her name, and surely as unfathomable. It was a complete mystery. Did she commit suicide? If so, why? Or did she want to be saved? What in the world was she trying to do as she stuck her head in the oven, with the gas turned on? If she didn’t mean to die, why did she go through the trouble of sealing the rooms between her and her kids? Whoa, this is mind-boggling! I thought, as I suddenly found myself empathising with and completely enamoured of her. She must have been so sad, so desperate to have done this to herself. Just like me. Anyway, as sad as I felt, I also felt excited (and guilty about feeling so) about playing Sylvia Plath; about being Sylvia Plath. The entire week before the carnival, I shocked everyone (and myself ) with my cheerful disposition and unusually high spirits in anticipation of the carnival. I enacted the scene a million times in my head, even drawing on my love for Maths cleverly to time the whole thing right, so that I didn’t end up being Sylvia literally, if you know what I mean. I triple checked the time everyone was expected to arrive, the time we were supposed to have dinner, my position in the lineup of performances, how much time I had for prep, and the myriads of details that would make the Act perfect. The performances were not supposed to start until after dinner, and my performance was right after my sister’s who was playing everyone’s favourite Virginia Woolf, so people would be too engrossed to come barging in on me as I prepped. Moreover, our kitchen was at a considerable distance from the living room and the rest room, so once dinner was through, no one ever really went there anyway until it was time to put the leftovers away and load the dishwasher after everybody had left. During the last minutes of my sister’s performance, I would politely excuse myself. I would let my mother know I was going into the kitchen to rehearse, so once my sister’s performance was through, and I didn’t appear on stage, she would know where to come looking for me. My plan was flawless. Finally, after seven nights of endless doubts, extreme anxiety and a stinging rush of adrenaline apropos its execution, the day of the carnival arrived. eFiction India | June 2014 My nerves were on edge the whole day, and in the evening, I was the first one to get ready. I greeted everyone with a smile, and for the first time in the history of The Bloomsbury Group, received compliments for my costume. The rest of the evening passed through in a daze, as I hopped between the living room and the kitchen, mentally replaying the particulars over and over again. Finally, my moment of truth stared me in the face. My sister started performing. I rushed to the kitchen nervously when I felt she was about to conclude. I carefully shut all the doors to the kitchen and sealed them with wet kitchen towels. I gently turned the gas on, and placed my head in the oven. Just as I was beginning to get comfortable in the position, it struck me that I forgot to tell my mother where I was going. Shoot! What do I do? It was too late to go back and rectify my mistake. It would ruin the impact of my performance. I couldn’t risk that. This was the first time I was so genuinely involved in something that it made me feel alive. I couldn’t let one tiny error jeopardise it. I’m sure everyone would figure out where I am... Eventually. Well, they would come looking for me when my name is called out and I don’t appear, wouldn’t they? At least, my parents would... But what if they didn’t? What if they asked my sister for an encore performance, like they always do? What if they asked someone else to perform, mistaking my disappearance for one of the many tantrums I was notorious for throwing? All of a sudden, amidst the panic at the mere thought of not being discovered till it was too late, and the dizziness of having my head inside the oven for too long, setting in simultaneously, I found myself thinking about Sylvia again. Was this how she felt, as she placed her head inside the oven on the portentous morning of February 11, 1963 – scared, lonely, and unloved? Did she believe someone would come and rescue her in time? Did she even care if someone did? What were her last thoughts before she passed on? And so, all of a sudden, without warning, I stopped worrying. I just continued to sit there, with my head lying motionless in the oven, as my mind crept out to wander freely in a vast limbo, finally choosing