eFiction India eFiction India Vol.02 Issue.09 | Page 39

STORIES away from a worried Keshav, she sat up. Her eyebrows were raised and she moved her eyeballs round and round. “Keshav, I had those chocolates. The ones that Uma had in her cupboard,” she caught onto his shoulder and shook it. Keshav turned his serious visage away from her. “Listen, it’s enough! We work for them, we can’t…” he said, much to her chagrin. “Don’t you get it,” Rati said in a clear voice as the hazy dust in her head began to settle. “Uma was framed. Sujay fed her these drugs so that she would go out of control and he would be able to get rid of her. She instead killed her brother in a fit of rage. She isn’t a murderer, she was provoked and I can vouch for that. Let’s rush to the police station.” *** “Mr Sujay, tell me the truth, why did you give your wife those drugged chocolates?” asked the inspector as the light above them oscillated to and fro between the men at the table. “I didn’t. I would never buy chocolates for either her or myself. You see, I’m diabetic. I don’t even know how and where from she got those chocolates. All I know was that Uma was upset about her brother handling her inheritance in secrecy. She wouldn’t tell me anything because neither she nor her brother ever trusted me when it came to money. I have no part to play in the murder; in fact, she is my wife, why would I give her drugs?” Sujay said firmly. “I do remember that on the night before the murder Uma said something like she had begun to doubt her brother’s intentions and his attitude towards the property. She wouldn’t tell me more if I asked.” There was no pulsation in his larynx as he spoke. The inspector ran his index finger over his chin as he looked Sujay straight in the eye. “Alright, you can leave for now.” *** Uma lay in her cell with watery eyes often looking at her hands with a wrinkled look on her face. Her smile had left her far behind and her action that brewed a storm in the little tea cup like heart of hers translated into self-contempt. As the police woman entered her cell, she sat up adjusting the drapes across her shoulder. An investigator entered the cell. “Mrs. Uma, do you remember these chocolates?” she said showing Uma one of the chocolates in the purple wrap. Uma stood up and fidgeted with her hands. “My favourite chocolates,” she sighed. “Dinesh loved me so much and got these for me from someone who went abroad just because I liked them; and I killed him with these hands,” she wailed as she looked at her hands. Then she beat her chest and howled; her eyes were dry. The tears had probably frozen along the path to her eyes. “Calm down, we will leave you alone,” said the investigator as he left the cell. “Had Dinesh been alive, he would have been a hard nut to crack,” he said to the police woman. *** Sujay’s eyes skimmed through the headlines of the newspaper: Murder case busted: Brother drugs sibling to acquire property with not-so-sweet chocolates! 38 The High Court has sentenced Uma to two years’ imprisonment, taking into consideration that she was a victim of the dark web woven by her sibling and did not plan to murder him. As Keshav entered the room where Sujay was seated, Sujay told him, “We could have never thought that Dinesh would do that to Uma. It would have been impossible to connect the dots if Rati hadn’t eaten those chocolates.” Keshav nodded his head and gave him a plastic smile. He then walked into the room where Dinesh had heaved his last breath. The only sign of Dinesh’s presence was his photograph with a garland hung on it. Keshav could visualise him with a boomerang in his hands. “The only piece of the puzzle they missed out was the trunk of money, Kumarji. You are always my God, Kumarji. Karma is such a nightmare, I cannot even use the money you gave me for helping you chalk out our plan all through your saga and today you are no more. The fire we started charred you and I am the only Trojan horse left in your land. I wish you could rise like a phoenix from your ashes,” Keshav said to himself. It is finally time to say omega to the suspense in the sibling rivalry case of Dinesh Kumar which was opened once again this Monday. In a bizarre twist of the unfolding drama during the investigation, it has been brought to light that a week prior to the murder, the victim – Dinesh gave Uma chocolates that contained methamphetamines and psilocybin. His plan was that if she were proven to be mentally unstable, she wouldn’t be entitled to her share of their forefathers’ property as per the will of their parents. The act proved fatal to him when they got into a tiff, the bone of contention being the division of finances, and Uma, whose temperament was drastically affected by the drugs she had unwittingly consumed, drove a knife through Dinesh in a fit of rage. Uma’s husband, Sujay Kumar, confirmed that Uma had been hyperactive for over a week before the murder and experienced extreme mood swings which could be possibly attributed to the drugs. eFiction India | June 2014