eFiction India eFiction India Vol.02 Issue.09 | Page 26

25 STORIES RED WALKED BY     SHEENGINEE B                                    A S HE LOOKS closely, her onionlike skin appears more red in the morning light. The redness spreads over her back unevenly, like that of an angry painting where the artist dealt with the paintbrush like an old unkind love who always had his coffee black, did no laundry and barked at waiters who dared to give him anything lesser than a mediumrare steak. But when she poses for him, while he is groggy but ambitious, usually at 3 AM, and when her hair falls in large tufts down the same steely back, it is beautiful. The tip of his pencil becomes another man in the room. He joins with this other man and tries to pour something out on the naive, speechless canvas – quite like disgorging. But his pastels are never redder than her hair. He also refuses to understand the limitations of art over reality and devours more 3 AMs with the other man. Sheenginee B is mix of productive eccentricity and poetic imagination. Her undergraduate degree in Philosophy has contributed much to her understanding of literature and writing. She has also studied business management which has given her a diverse outlook. She has the eye for nuances, something that is often essential an attribute for a writer; to be able to observe, see and find poetry in daily motion, life and banality. Her first novella Itch has been recently published. eFiction India | June 2014 And, when he tries to touch her, she murmurs, “I want to know how Lazarus died later. If he was really happy with his second coming.” And every time he removes his hand and ponders on the question. Questions like these never come to him; all his life, he only had to deal with his troubling itchy fingers. “It does matter,” she goes on. “It does. It does matter how badly a man wants to live or not. If he was glad to taste broth again, to be able to squint his eyes at the sun.” *** She always arrives on winter mornings with her gray cowl pulled up to her nose. And says, “I walked on a lot of snow and they did nothing. There is absolutely nothing more defenceless than trampled snow.” When she strips, she says every time, “You will never get that ‘red’ on your paper. But I will always let you try.” He struggles hard with the other man. Forcing, pushing to get there where they cannot. The other man fails to spurt blood. And when the charcoal gray on paper starts to hurt his eyes, she sa