The smell of aperitif was making
Checki tizzy in his head. The appetizer ‘Edmame dimsum with truffle oil’ was
not helping either. The ‘Double Zombie’ in the footed pilsner glass only sent
his masseters into spasm. All the fancy names were no good on the taste buds. After all
a book cannot be judged by its cover. On
the other hand, there was Annie who was enjoying her sparkling white wine, veg
spring rolls and chicken lollypop. More so she was enjoying Checki’s embarrassment.
“A rose by any other name will still smell as sweet” Annie poked with a silly
grin.
It was only seven months ago when both
Checki and Annie had swiped each other right on Tinder. Since then the digital
dating had begun but due to geographical barrier this was the first time they
were actually meeting in person. Annie was a dynamic IT professional. She was
about 2 inches taller to Checki and at least 2 years elder to him. She was dusky,
slender and her black hair falling just below the shoulder were stunning. The
short blue dress ended just above the knee. The chain with amber pendant fell
gently on her collar bones which complimented her deep brown eyes. She actually
looked young and enthusiastic as compared to Checki who was more lethargic and
laid back.
Checki was in his mid-thirties, round
face, shabby stubble, slope cut but great smile. The eyes were dark black,
cunning but caring. Checki was sceptical as all his pics on the social media
were close ups in order to hide his subtle flabbiness and paunch. He had long
stopped saying ‘cheese’ while taking a pic; now a days he just tried tucking
his abdominal muscles in. The tailor makes the man, was the
proverb never heard by him. Today also in front of this elegant lady he had
come in olive green polo, jade blue denim and chappals.
They had met in a hot spot buzzing
club in down town Elphinstone. It was a claustrophobic pub. The decibels were
so high that no one realized when the music became noise. The dance floor was
dense; equivalent to the Mumbai local trains during peak hours. The crowd on
the dance floor swayed and swung pretty much like the pivoted grab handles in
the trains do; each time when the train is set in motion. The ambiance was dim
and filled with nicotinic smoke. To add on to it Checki ordered a ‘Hookah- coconut
mint flavor.'
The
in drawing of the air from the mouth tip of the hookah pipe made crepitus
sounds. With the tongs Checki poked the smouldering coal on the hookah bowl
covered with silver foil. The meaningless head bobbing of Checki was not even
synchronous with the ambient hard rock beats. Just for the sake of it he
intermittently bit his lower lip and grimaced as if he was enjoying the
unrecognizable melody. After each puff, he exhaled through nostrils the smokey
waterfalls. The milieu of the place was electrifying but the conversations were
lost in the iridescent haze.
Annie
was now becoming unsettled by this pompous extravaganza. So far whenever they
used to chat Checki used to have a verbal diarrhea. Some witty flirts mixed
with few facts and lots of philosophy. It was the conversations which had got
them e- close. But in persona Checki seemed inward and shallow. All they had
discussed for the past 40 minutes was the menu, especially the bar menu. There
was a certain arrogance and show off in his demeanour; the kind of flamboyance
neither she liked nor which suited Checki.
Holding
Checki’s hand she genuinely asked “Are you trying to impress me?”
“If
at all I knew how to do that I would have done that long before.” Checki had to
literally scream to convey.
“You
know how to, but this is not the way.” Annie rolled her eyes around while
saying this.
Uprolling
his sleeves Checki asked “Do you want to go some other place?”
“Can
we please.” Annie replied with more gestures and less words.
It
was nine- ish in the evening. On the streets it was still noisy, but the cacophony
was more genuine. The bus passing by. Someone talking on the phone. Horn
honking to alert the pedestrians. Closing of the shutters. The street was about
to sleep after the day’s work.
Checki
held Annie’s hand, interlaced his fingers into hers and said “I really don’t know
how beautiful you are. I haven’t yet passed your eyes.”
Annie
melted to this and blushed like a sunshine. There was a moment of sweetest
silence. Checki blushed too. His ears turned pink. Before Annie could say anything
Checki asked “Tea at the tea stall?” Annie simply followed.
Two
cuttings of chai, that’s what they ordered. In the semi- clean small glasses the
boiling special tea was poured. Checki grabbed the glasses with a pincer grip.
He could feel the warm vapors on his palms. He gave one glass to Annie and at
that time, he realized the magnitude of her prettiness. He started fumbling and
became fidgety. In his clumsiness he almost spilled some tea on his sleeves. He
started making grammatical mistakes and that was cute. There was unplayed music
mingling among the ambient idle talks and the intermittent cluttering of the
cutlery. “Hey, can I make a quick call?”
saying this he went aside.
Annie
exchanged awkward glances with the chaiwalla while continuing to sip on her tea.
He giggled shyly. He continued with his chores. It suddenly started to rain.
Annie just thought how few fancies come true. The chaiwalla called her and returned
the change. Checki was still on the phone. With the change the chaiwalla also gave
a small plastic carry bag to her and pointed towards Checki. She opened it and
there was a red tulip in it with a note. She smiled in amazement, happiness. She
pivoted sideways so that the light from the street lamp was a shade better and opened the note. Now she realized what Checki meant when he said that she makes
him skip a heart beat or two. Now she understood what he meant by butterflies
in the tummy. The note read….
‘I
want to love you like, No one has done it ever so fine.
In
my heart I want to write, Your name with sparkling shine.
Just
to prove that you are mine and only for you I am dying.
All
I would do is all you say, Without you I cannot stay.
Never ever go away, As I need you every day,
every time and everywhere.
And
the only question is, Would you always be there?’
Checki
was only a handful of steps away pretending to be on the phone. The corner of
his eye was constantly following her. He was grasping each and every expression
of her like a sponge. Imbibing each and every moment. Annie on the other hand was
trying to maintain a poker face. She removed her cell phone from the clutch and
called Checki. His phone rang when he was still miming to be on the phone. His
bluff was called off. He sheepishly looked at Annie. She was pacing towards
him. She came close to him and without caring about the world her lips said yes to his lips.
‘It
drizzled a bit, sky grizzled a bit
The
happy gloom, got closely knit.’ Checki
thought.
Good one....keep writing buddy!!
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