Note: First, I am not a writer and this is not a fiction. There
are bound to be grammatical mistakes and amateurish writing skills but I
reassert that I am not a writer. What prompted this story was my terrible
review on another writer’s story and the requests on Sajha ShoutBox that
followed from discontented readers of my comment. Only when writing this story
did I realize how difficult it can be to actually write one and my sincere
apologies to whomever I have offended, including the writer of the story I
mentioned.
Lastly, please feel free to put comments and I am open to
any sincere feedback from the readers.
The girl with whom I
caught dragonflies
Fortune fades. Relationships fade, and so do memories. It’s
hard to describe what I felt when I arrived at Rampur Campus. I am six years
old and tired due to the six-hour trip from Kathmandu. My calves are aching and
I tell my sister and she teases me for having weak calves. Tired, I sit down on
the veranda of our new house in the sweltering heat. The view is peculiar.
There are mango trees on the garden, a papaya tree near the tap-water
fountain, and empty fields surrounding us—which mom would later use to plant potatoes,
tomatoes and vegetables I am not fond of at that point in my life. I also
notice other houses in my neighborhood, probably 200 feet apart from each other,
forming the peculiar corners of a rectangle. It’s getting dark and from the sounds
of children playing hide-and-seek, the croaking of the frogs and the chirping
of the crickets, I can discern a buzzing noise of wings flapping coming from a
distance.
Oh yes, the dragonflies! I notice the dragonflies hovering
over the grasses in the dusk and they look beautiful. My calves are hurting and
I am tempted to grab hold of one of those dragonflies. Never a fan of insects, I do not know why I
want to catch the dragonflies but I start hatching a sadistic plan. Sitting on
that veranda, my mind has come across the idea of catching the dragonflies.
After a while, my mind has developed a devilish scheme of first catching the dragonflies
and then tying their tails with a thread from my mom’s sewing kit and letting
them fly. “That’s exactly what I am
going to do,†I think to myself. The dragonfly will be like a kite I have so
dreamed of flying. The idea prints itself to my memory. (Little did I realize before
writing this story what an excruciating pain it must be when someone is pinning
your butt).
Fortune fades. Let me first explain why we are at Rampur. Dad
recently transferred as a lecturer to Rampur campus. He taught Agricultural sciences
at Lamjung Campus before that. I miss the house in Lamjung, the ones built with
stones, and the black tar-like lining bordering the stones—giving the house a quasi-castle-esque
architecture. The houses in Rampur are built with bricks and I do not like
brick houses. (My longing to live in a stone house still makes me nostalgic today.)
Now, let me digress a bit about my calves. It’s during my
first trip to Rampur I realize that my calves are my weaknesses, congruous to Achilles’
heel. Dad loves to walk and having traveled almost all over the country, has grown
really strong calves. I envy them as I ruminate about catching dragonflies sitting
in the veranda. One day I want to travel like dad and grow strong calves, I
think to myself. That night, my calves are aching and I tell my parents and
they also tease me for having weak calves. After a while, I soundly fall asleep.
Next morning, I start hunting down on the dragonflies. Mom
calls me over to tag along with her to pay a visit to Radha aunty, one of our
neighbors and mom tells me she’s known her before but I do not care and I tell
my sister that I want to catch dragonflies. We visit Radha aunty and she
introduces me to her daughter. Then, there she is!! I am looking at the most intriguing
girl I have ever met. She was not the most beautiful of girls I had seen, but suffice
to say, the pulchritude of innocence radiating from her face fulfilled what she
seemed to be lacking from her beauty. I tell myself this is the girl I want to
catch dragonflies with. We smile, awkward silence follows later to be broken by
mom and Radha aunty’s jabbering. Breaking the ice, I muster enough courage to
ask her if she wants to catch dragonflies with me. “Do you want to catch dragonflies?†She smiles
and runs away. Sadly enough, I am back in the grass fields hunting dragonflies.
Now, there are certain rules about catching dragonflies that
you have to understand. Catching a dragonfly is an art in itself. It requires a
great deal of patience and finesse that are both inherent and acquired. You never
want to catch it by its tail, which, first of all is impossible due to the
needle-like thickness of the tail. Second, grabbing the tail prompts the
dragonfly to bend forward and kick in its survival instincts to nibble on your skin.
The best way to catch a dragonfly is by
its wings. You sneak up from somewhere, hoping it does not see you with its
compound eyes and forming a small gap between your thumb and forefinger, clasp
onto one of the wings as fast as possible. Then, you grab the other wing and
prevent it from biting.
Days have passed by and I haven’t caught a single fly.
Watching me beat myself to death in the sun, one day the girl comes and offers
to help. “Can I join you?†I nod, wondering if she’s realized what she is putting
herself into. Within minutes and to my horror, my masculinity is questioned.
She catches one dragonfly and in joy starts jumping, taunting, “I got one, I got
one.†This girl is very skillful at catching dragonflies. “She’s an artist,†I
think to myself. “We need a string†I tell her and run back to my house and
bring a long thread from my mom’s sewing kit. We tie the string to the dragonfly’s
tail and let it free and run after it. We catch the string and let go and run
after the string to catch it again. (Apparently, such an exercise seemed to be
very enjoyable when you are six.) We catch more flies and repeat the process
for hours and my calves start hurting. My calves are hurting and I tell her and
she teases me for having weak calves.
The good thing about summer in Rampur is that schools open
early in the morning and we get to leave by noon. Summer passes by catching
dragonflies of different sizes and colors. Towards the end, we learn to catch
what she’s dubbed the ‘Rani,’ huge red dragonflies with thick tails and mouth
so big that their bite leaves a painful mark on you. Rani(s) are very rare
to be seen in the grass fields and are swift and usually fly high, making them almost
impossible to catch. To my astonishment, one day she finally catches one. My
masculinity is questioned again, but the joy has overshadowed my pride. The
summer has culminated into something worth remembering. We tie the Rani’s
tail with a stronger string and I run and the girl with whom I catch
dragonflies follows. Eventually my calves hurt and I tell her and we stop.
Dashain is around the corner and we go to Kathmandu for the
holidays. I learn to fly a kite during Dashain and I enjoy it very much, but
miss the dragonflies. We return to Rampur. Summer fades away and so do the
dragonflies. The early-morning to noon school has turned into a torturous nine
to four schedule as usual and we do not catch dragonflies anymore. In fact, we,
I and the girl with whom I caught dragonflies, become distant. She wants to
play this hopping game with a stone and lines on the floor. I resist, priding
my masculinity. Things have started to change and I can feel it. I want to play
table tennis in our porch, jump off mango trees and steal watermelons from the neighbors.
She doesn’t enjoy that. I learn to play football and she learns to do more
tricks on that hopping game with the lines and the stone. She’s mastered
another one, with sweeping different number of pebbles from the ground while
tossing one in the air. I play the game a few times but again my masculinity is
questioned and I run back to stealing watermelons from the neighbors.
Fortune fades. We are leaving Rampur. I am very excited. Dad
is going to graduate school in the US and we are going to follow. I do not
remember saying goodbye. I do not remember my farewell to the girl with whom I
caught dragonflies. What I do remember is as follows…I am nine years old and
the trip back to Kathmandu is six hours long and my calves are aching. The pain
is unbearable and that night I cannot sleep. It is midnight and my calves are
aching and I do not tell anyone. Instead, I weep, silently.
…The
End…
Thank you for reading. Peace.
Last edited: 18-May-08 02:18 AM