eFiction India eFiction India Vol.02 Issue.09 | Page 38

37 STORIES *** As she mopped the floor, Rati’s ears played its second duties. “We will get the money, sweetheart. Don’t worry, no, Uma will never know,” she could hear Sujay whispering over the phone. As she tried harder to listen to what he said, his voice faded away with the distance. She drifted away as his footsteps seemed to approach the door. Then there was a slam. Rati hung her head down with her hands arduously wiping the floor, but her ears were doing more than what they were expected to do. There was a sudden grunt of Sujay’s car starting and then the sound of it speeding away; and that signalled to her it was time to rush into his room. Her hands raced at the speed of her agitated heart as she looked through the items of the cupboard. There, wrapped in a cloth was the knife that the whole of the department had been probably searching for – the clean, shiny blade that might have found its way through Dinesh’s kidneys. The next few minutes sped so fast into the future that Rati was in the station before the officers, handing them over the crucial piece of evidence she had found, safe in a plastic zip lock bag. “We will definitely find out if this is the knife used on Dinesh. Thank you, madam,” the inspector reassured her. *** “Mrs. Uma, you are under arrest; we found your fingerprints on the knife you used to murder Dinesh,” said the inspector as the remaining Kumar stood bewildered, as still as stone. “We have your arrest warrant, and you are accused of the cold-blooded murder of your brother.” Uma shook her head in denial. Her face had the ghastliness of a vampire and her hands trembled. Rati looked at Uma in disbelief. The very sight of Uma made her speak. “No, officer, I found the knife in Sujay’s…” she was interrupted by the officer, who continued to talk to Uma though she was at a loss for words. The handcuffs took their place and Uma walked miserably with no tears in her eyes towards the gate. Rati followed them till eFiction India | June 2014 the door but as the chronology played back in her head, she stopped and turned back. Her eyes saw something she couldn’t fathom. Sujay stood there with an asymmetrical smile on his face; he then took a deep breath and walked inside with ease. *** Hours became days and days became weeks. The warmth of Keshav’s arms wiped out the pain of the arrow-like words Uma had shot at her when Keshav was in jail, yet something lingered in Rati’s mind. The menace had been lurking through her head right from the time Uma had been handcuffed. Her instinct told her that the real killer was out there somewhere. When she closed her eyes, she could see Sujay’s face and his expressions when Uma was arrested. A sphinx-like smile had taken the place of the void that Uma had left behind. Sujay would leave the house in the morning, come back in the afternoon for lunch, have his power nap and then wake up and watch television. He frequently made phone calls to a mysterious person and chuckled as he spoke over the phone. He seemed to be in seventh heaven. Rati often observed him carefully as she cleaned Uma’s closet. “Poor lady,” she said to herself. “She definitely was framed,” as she gorged on a few of Uma’s favourite chocolates. Sujay chuckled and giggled over the phone. A jolt ran down Rati’s spine as she heard the chortles growing louder. She grit her teeth and clawed into the soft cushion of Uma’s that lay in the cupboard. As the cotton from it started to ooze out, the sound of laugher and the canoodling over the phone grew deeper, a bottle of perfume flew through the air, crashed the wall and reached its final destination as pieces. For the first time in the past month Sujay’s vacuous expression had bid adieu to his countenance. His hands trembled, and the phone he clutched was on the ground. Rati’s red eyes met his; his face lost its colour. He raised his eyebrows and frowned when he saw Rati’s face contorting. “You jerk, you framed your wife. You killed Dinesh for money and hid the money in my house to make my husband the scapegoat. All you want is money,” she screamed, pointing at him. Her shrill voice seemed to have distracted Keshav, whose feet rushed him inside from the backyard, as if they were set on fire. “Rati, stop! We have been working for this family for the last twenty years,” he said, pulling her away. “You stay out of this, Keshav,” retorted Rati with eyes that grew redder by the minute. A tirade of abuse followed. Within seconds Keshav found himself on the ground and Rati was clutching onto Sujay’s lapels. “I have nothing to do with Dinesh’s death, and I knew that Uma killed him. I burnt the clothes that had blood on them and tried to destroy the evidence. Who are you to say anything,” Sujay went on murmuring things that neither Keshav nor Rati could hear, in a low trembling voice. The next thing that Keshav saw was Rati on the ground. Her hair had spilled out from the bun it was in and she was motionless. The delirious storm had given way to calm. Both the men knelt down on either side of her dilapidated self, trying to renew the spark of life that had burnt out in her. *** “Her blood reports suggest that she was on a dose of methamphetamines and psilocybin,” the doctor told Keshav. “Do you know how long she has been on drugs?” “No, she could have never been on drugs. We are not that type... hmm…kind of people. We are lowbrow people living from hand to mouth. We cannot even afford such things,” stuttered Keshav as a streak of fear unfolded in his eyes. “Well, that is the reason for her behaviour. The drugs made her extrapolate the feelings she had in her mind. People take e