English Literature – Stories ☆ Witful Warmth # 89 – Ramrajya… ☆ Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’ ☆

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra, known for his wit and wisdom, is a prolific writer, renowned satirist, children’s literature author, and poet. He has undertaken the monumental task of writing, editing, and coordinating a total of 55 books for the Telangana government at the primary school, college, and university levels. His editorial endeavors also include online editions of works by Acharya Ramchandra Shukla.

As a celebrated satirist, Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra has carved a niche for himself, with over eight million viewers, readers, and listeners tuning in to his literary musings on the demise of a teacher on the Sahitya AajTak channel. His contributions have earned him prestigious accolades such as the Telangana Hindi Academy’s Shreshtha Navyuva Rachnakaar Samman in 2021, presented by the honorable Chief Minister of Telangana, Mr. Chandrashekhar Rao. He has also been honored with the Vyangya Yatra Ravindranath Tyagi Stairway Award and the Sahitya Srijan Samman, alongside recognition from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and various other esteemed institutions.

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra’s journey is not merely one of literary accomplishments but also a testament to his unwavering dedication, creativity, and profound impact on society. His story inspires us to strive for excellence, to use our talents for the betterment of others, and to leave an indelible mark on the world.

Some precious moments of life

  1. Honoured with ‘Shrestha Navayuvva Rachnakar Samman’ by former Chief Minister of Telangana Government, Shri K. Chandrasekhar Rao.
  2. Honoured with Oscar, Grammy, Jnanpith, Sahitya Akademi, Dadasaheb Phalke, Padma Bhushan and many other awards by the most revered Gulzar sahab (Sampurn Singh Kalra), the lighthouse of the world of literature and cinema, during the Sahitya Suman Samman held in Mumbai.
  3. Meeting the famous litterateur Shri Vinod Kumar Shukla Ji, honoured with Jnanpith Award.
  4. Got the privilege of meeting Mr. Perfectionist of Bollywood, actor Aamir Khan.
  5. Meeting the powerful actor Vicky Kaushal on the occasion of being honoured by Vishva Katha Rangmanch.

Today we present his StoriesRamrajya 

☆ Witful Warmth# 89 ☆

Stories ☆ Ramrajya… ☆ Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’ ☆ 

Amidst the dim light and the swirling smoke of a mosquito coil, he sat reviewing files. Sitting continuously on that worn-out government office chair had made his back stiff. His name was Avinash. His designation was Senior Clerk, but his actual role was that of a spineless bonded laborer. Outside, it was raining heavily. The entire city was submerging under water. Floodwaters had breached the shantytowns. People were stranded on roofs, hungry and thirsty. The control room phones were ringing incessantly, and Avinash was mechanically repeating the same rehearsed sentence to every caller: “Relief material is being dispatched, please have patience.”

Just then, his old phone vibrated in his pocket. The screen flashed: MLA Ji (The Legislator).

Startled, Avinash answered the phone immediately. A heavy, commanding voice boomed from the other end, “Listen Avinash, come over to the mansion. There are some urgent documents to sign. And yes, bring that flood relief file along with you.”

Avinash looked outside. The water was knee-deep. There was no means of transport available. But an order was an order. He wrapped the file in a plastic bag, adjusted his torn slippers, and set out on foot. Hunger was causing sharp cramps in his stomach. His own neighborhood was on the verge of drowning. His elderly mother and younger sister were alone at home. He tried calling his mother, but the network was gone. A strange anxiety settled deep in his chest.

After half an hour of struggling through the water, he stood before the massive iron gates of the MLA’s residence. Police guards stood watch outside. The scene inside, however, belonged to an entirely different world—a luxurious lawn, gleaming cars, and the ambient glow of chandeliers.

Avinash was summoned straight into the grand hall.

The moment the door opened, the sight inside turned the hunger in Avinash’s stomach into a bitter knot. A chilly breeze from the air conditioner filled the room. On a massive sofa sat the MLA with a few of his close henchmen. On the central table lay plates of roasted cashews, and expensive whiskey floated in crystal glasses. The room echoed with bursts of laughter. It felt as though this room had absolutely nothing to do with the catastrophe unfolding outside. Truly, Ramrajya (the utopian ideal kingdom) had descended inside the MLA’s mansion.

The MLA looked at Avinash and smiled, “Come in, Avinash. Don’t sit, keep standing. We need to wrap up this work quickly. Hand over that relief fund file.”

With trembling hands, Avinash extended the file forward.

Taking a sip from his glass, the MLA began flipping through the pages of the file. The document detailed exactly which areas of the city required an immediate dispatch of relief materials and food worth five lakh rupees each. The MLA pulled out a pen and began crossing out the names of the neighborhoods where the poor and laborers lived. Instead, he wrote down orders to transfer those funds directly into the bank accounts of his favored contractors.

Avinash could not restrain himself. Gathering his courage, he pleaded, “Sir, the situation in those areas is critical. The water has reached neck-level. If food and rescue boats don’t reach them tonight, many will not survive. My own neighborhood is…”

The MLA measured Avinash from head to toe. His eyes held a terrifying coldness. Slamming his glass down on the table, he said, “Politics is run by equations, Avinash Babu, not by emotions. Those people are not our voters. The government treasury does not open for those who are of no use to us. Leave your ‘clerk-mindset’ back at the office. When you are here, just stamp whatever you are told to.”

Just then, the phone of one of the MLA’s henchmen rang. He listened to the call and burst into laughter, “Bhai sahab, this is golden! The opposition leader who was touring the area on a boat—his boat capsized. The leader has drowned!”

The entire room erupted into roaring laughter. The plate of cashews was pushed forward. The whiskey glasses clinked once more.

Avinash felt darkness clouding his vision. This was no joke; it was a literal celebration of death being observed inside this luxurious room. He felt as though he was standing in a haunted mansion where people smiled after drinking human blood. A horrifying secret had unveiled itself before him: that in the face of the hunger for power, the worth of public life was less than that of a single roasted cashew.

The MLA signed the file and tossed it toward Avinash. “Go, log this into the computer right now so the funds are released by morning. Into our men’s accounts.”

With heavy steps, Avinash picked up the file. His heart was pounding violently. Tears had welled up at the corners of his eyes, but he swallowed them down. He silently walked out of the room.

As soon as he stepped outside, a blast of cold wind and torrential rain lashed against him. He immediately pulled his phone out of his pocket. The network was back. Ten missed calls from his mother’s number flashed on the screen.

Avinash’s hands began to shake. He instantly called back.

The crying voice of a neighborhood boy answered from the other side.

“Avinash bhai, where are you? Come quickly!”

Avinash’s throat went completely dry. “What happened, Rahul? Are Mother and Gudhiya okay?”

Rahul broke down sobbing. “Bhai… they suddenly released the dam water. The floodwater rushed into our colony with terrifying speed. There were no boats, no one to rescue them. Your house has completely collapsed. Aunty and Gudhiya… both of them were swept away by the raging current. We couldn’t save them, bhai. Everything is gone.”

The phone slipped from Avinash’s hand and splashed into the water.

Avinash sank to his knees right there in the mud. The rain falling from the heavens and the tears flowing from his eyes became one. The echoes of laughter from inside the MLA’s mansion were still ringing in his ears. He wanted to scream, but the sound died in his throat.

The very relief file he clutched in his lap carried a signature that had bargained away the lives of his own mother and sister. He sat there pressing against his chest the file that protected the very ‘Ramrajya’ that had ruined his entire world. The rain continued to pour, and lying there in the mud, he kept beating his chest, weeping in absolute silence.

****

© Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’

Contact : Mo. +91 73 8657 8657, Email : drskm786@gmail.com

≈ Blog Editor – Shri Hemant Bawankar/Editor (English) – Captain Pravin Raghuvanshi, NM ≈

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English Literature – Stories ☆ Witful Warmth # 88 – The Passenger… ☆ Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’ ☆

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra, known for his wit and wisdom, is a prolific writer, renowned satirist, children’s literature author, and poet. He has undertaken the monumental task of writing, editing, and coordinating a total of 55 books for the Telangana government at the primary school, college, and university levels. His editorial endeavors also include online editions of works by Acharya Ramchandra Shukla.

As a celebrated satirist, Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra has carved a niche for himself, with over eight million viewers, readers, and listeners tuning in to his literary musings on the demise of a teacher on the Sahitya AajTak channel. His contributions have earned him prestigious accolades such as the Telangana Hindi Academy’s Shreshtha Navyuva Rachnakaar Samman in 2021, presented by the honorable Chief Minister of Telangana, Mr. Chandrashekhar Rao. He has also been honored with the Vyangya Yatra Ravindranath Tyagi Stairway Award and the Sahitya Srijan Samman, alongside recognition from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and various other esteemed institutions.

Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra’s journey is not merely one of literary accomplishments but also a testament to his unwavering dedication, creativity, and profound impact on society. His story inspires us to strive for excellence, to use our talents for the betterment of others, and to leave an indelible mark on the world.

Some precious moments of life

  1. Honoured with ‘Shrestha Navayuvva Rachnakar Samman’ by former Chief Minister of Telangana Government, Shri K. Chandrasekhar Rao.
  2. Honoured with Oscar, Grammy, Jnanpith, Sahitya Akademi, Dadasaheb Phalke, Padma Bhushan and many other awards by the most revered Gulzar sahab (Sampurn Singh Kalra), the lighthouse of the world of literature and cinema, during the Sahitya Suman Samman held in Mumbai.
  3. Meeting the famous litterateur Shri Vinod Kumar Shukla Ji, honoured with Jnanpith Award.
  4. Got the privilege of meeting Mr. Perfectionist of Bollywood, actor Aamir Khan.
  5. Meeting the powerful actor Vicky Kaushal on the occasion of being honoured by Vishva Katha Rangmanch.

Today we present his StoriesThe Passenger 

☆ Witful Warmth# 88 ☆

Stories ☆ The Passenger… ☆ Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’ ☆ 

It was 7:30 in the evening at Delhi’s Sarai Kale Khan bus terminal. In that stifling June heat, the wind blew as if an old man were blowing into a clay stove.

Rajiv sat on his old suitcase, taking sips of his miserable tea. The taste of the tea was exactly like his life—bland, tasteless, yet something he had to force down his throat out of sheer necessity. Right then, a notification chimed on his phone. It was a ride-sharing request on the Safarnama app. The route was Delhi to Lucknow.

The car belonged to Rajiv an old WagonR that no longer ran just on petrol, but on Rajiv’s luck. He accepted the request. The co-passenger’s name was listed as ‘Musafir’ The Passenger.

When the passenger came and sat in the back seat, Rajiv caught a glimpse of her face in the rearview mirror under the car’s cabin light. A cold shiver ran down his spine.

It was Pallavi.

The very same Pallavi who, exactly seven years ago at this very Sarai Kale Khan terminal, had let go of Rajiv’s hand and left in a gleaming Audi in search of a better future. Today, that same Pallavi was sitting in the back seat of his junk WagonR.

Rajiv cleared his throat. “Madam, the route is long. We will stop at a dhaba at night.”

Looking out the window, Pallavi said in a cold voice, “Please get me there quickly, bhaiya. My mother is not well.”

Bhaiya. (Brother)

It felt as though someone had snuffed out a burning cigarette right on Rajiv’s heart. The journey from being his life to being called ‘bhaiya’ over those seven years wasn’t just a matter of three letters; it was steeped in a lifetime of helplessness. Look at the irony—the woman for whom Rajiv had once traversed all of Delhi was now being carried in his car for a fare of three hundred rupees per seat. It was the same caravan, the same roads, the same life… only the destinations had changed.

The car was tearing down the Yamuna Expressway at a speed of eighty. On the radio, Kishore Kumar was weeping, “Jeena kya ji ka janjal…” (What is life but a web of troubles…)

“Is the AC not working properly?” Pallavi interrupted from behind. There was a strange tremble in her voice.

Rajiv looked in the mirror. Pallavi’s face had turned pale. There were dark hollows under her eyes. She was continuously rubbing her hands together as if she were freezing, even though the temperature outside was well past forty degrees Celsius.

“It’s an old car, Madam. It runs only as much as it groans,” Rajiv said, hiding his bitterness behind sarcasm. “I heard your husband owns big cars? Then why this junker?”

Pallavi did not answer. She just kept staring into the void.

Suddenly, a violent jerk hit the steering wheel. In the glow of the headlights, a shadow appeared standing right in the middle of the road. Rajiv slammed on the brakes with all his might. The tires shrieked. The car screeched to a halt right in front of a large milestone by the roadside.

Rajiv was panting. He looked outside; there was no one there.

“What happened?” Pallavi asked. Her voice now sounded even heavier, echoing unnaturally.

“Someone… someone was standing there, I think,” Rajiv said, wiping the sweat from his forehead.

“No one comes in front of anyone on this road, Rajiv. Everyone is left alone at their own destinations,” Pallavi said softly.

Rajiv gasped. Pallavi had called him Rajiv, not bhaiya. And her voice… why did it sound so hollow?

At two in the morning, the car stopped at a deserted roadside dhaba. A strange silence hung over the place. No truck drivers, no other vehicles. Just an old man sitting with a lantern.

Rajiv got out. Pallavi followed him. Both sat down on a woven cot.

“Will you have tea?” Rajiv asked.

“Yes, without sugar. I am afraid of sweetness now,” Pallavi said, looking down at her fingers, which bore no rings.

Rajiv noticed that Pallavi was barefoot. Her feet were caked in dust and covered in strange blue bruises.

“How did you end up in this state, Pallavi? Where did that Audi guy go? Your luxurious destination?” The resentment suppressed inside Rajiv erupted as sarcasm.

Pallavi let out a dry laugh. There was so much agony in that laugh that even the dhaba’s lantern flickered. “Destination? The only true destination is the crematorium, Rajiv. Everything else is just a transient inn. The Audi I ran after brought me to the streets in just two years. Daily beatings, abuse… and then one day…” She fell silent.

“And then one day what?” Rajiv asked, caught between curiosity and a mounting shudder.

“One day he threw me out of the moving car. Right onto this expressway.” Pallavi lifted her eyes. Her eyes had no pupils just a deep, terrifying blackness.

The clay cup of tea slipped from Rajiv’s hand and shattered, spilling onto the ground.

“What… what nonsense are you talking?” Rajiv’s throat went completely dry. Terrified, he stepped back.

“I am telling the truth, Rajiv. It has been exactly seven years today. Every day, I get into some car on this road, hoping someone will take me home. Today, I found your car.” Pallavi stood up. A strange odor of decay was now emanating from her body.

With trembling hands, Rajiv pulled out his phone. He opened the Safarnama app to check the passenger’s profile. There was no ride booked under the name Musafir. Instead, a news article was open on the screen, likely recommended by the internet based on his location.

The headline read: “Body of woman found on Yamuna Expressway seven years ago still unidentified.” Below it was a seven-year-old photograph of Pallavi.

The ground slipped from beneath Rajiv’s feet. He was about to scream when the old man from the dhaba placed a hand on his shoulder.

“Sir, who are you talking to? There is no one here. You have been sitting alone on this cot crying for the past half hour.”

Rajiv turned around. The cot was empty. Pallavi was not there. Only his broken clay cup lay shattered on the ground.

He ran back to his WagonR. He flung the door open. The back seat was empty. But lying on the seat was an old, dust-covered anklet. The very same anklet Rajiv had bought for Pallavi on their first Valentine’s Day by scraping together his pocket money.

Rajiv collapsed to his knees in the middle of the road. Rain suddenly began to pour heavily from the sky, as if nature itself were mocking his helplessness.

The woman Rajiv had hated for seven years, the one he had cursed for abandoning him… she wasn’t even in this world. She had perished long ago. And here he was, wandering around with his broken car and broken luck, thinking he was the one who was alive.

Rajiv pressed the anklet tightly against his chest. The rainwater and his tears merged, flowing down the asphalt. He began to wail agonizingly. His cries pierced through the silence of the expressway.

It was the same caravan, the same roads, the same life… and today, both stood at the exact same destination. Both were unclaimed, both were lost, and both were dead one in body, and the other in soul.

In the silence of that night, only one person (or perhaps a shadow) wept, while somewhere far away, a passenger wandered on, searching for their next destination.

****

© Dr. Suresh Kumar Mishra ‘Uratript’

Contact : Mo. +91 73 8657 8657, Email : drskm786@gmail.com

≈ Blog Editor – Shri Hemant Bawankar/Editor (English) – Captain Pravin Raghuvanshi, NM ≈

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English Literature – Stories ☆ Mystery of missing bank notes… ☆ Shri Vishwas Datye ☆

Shri Vishwas Datye

? ~ Mystery of missing bank notes… ? Shri Vishwas Datye?

“Yogesh, this time it is your turn to share some interesting and memorable experience”, Ganapati Chodankar said smilingly.

Ours is a group of school friends. Yogesh Jadhav, Ganapati Chodankar, Rakesh Gupta, K. Shridharan and myself Kali Gogoi. All are retired now. All from different professional carriers. Our friendship stemmed from our days at public school at Dehradun. A friendship that has survived over 5 decades and we still meet over an evening, once a month, at our common sports club, over a glass of beer. Barring some exceptions, this ritual has become part of our life. All of us look forward to these evenings for a wonderful time together.

Yogesh retired from the Investigative branch of the police department. Ganapati retired as senior doctor from government hospital. Rakesh has handed over his small business to his son. KS [ K Shridharan ] worked with a large multinational company. I myself has been a senior officer in central government.

Apart from catching up with the developments during the last months, we enjoy sharing our interesting experiences emanating from our mutually exclusive fields of operation.

In this small group, Yogesh always needed some nudging to speak and Rakesh had to be stopped once his flow of words started. Responding to the request from Ganapati, Yogesh gave a Buddha style smile and looking into the beer glass went into some sort of reverie. “Come on Yogesh”, I prodded.

After a gap of some pregnant silence, Yogesh said, “friends, I was thinking of a case which we could never crack. You may also find it intriguing.”

He took few more seconds to collect his thoughts and started.

“Those days, I was placed in Jabalpur. A young girl had registered a case of some missing cash from her possession. She was very distressed but did not suspect anybody. On preliminary enquiry and investigations our police on the routine jobs had no clue. As such, this case was reported to me for further investigations” 

As was my normal practice, I asked for the FIR to get some idea of the complaint. It mentioned that she had kept a sealed envelope containing cash in the drawer of her table. After few months, she noticed that the envelope felt very thin and light. Obviously, the thick wad of currency notes had reduced to very few notes.

She suspected that something was wrong because the seal was intact. She did not open the envelope for fear that nobody would believe her once the envelope was opened. She reported the theft to the police and handed over the envelope to the police for investigation.

After thorough inspection of the seal of the envelope, I too was completely intrigued. A close inspection of the envelope indicated that it was handled often. Like it happens for any used envelope the edges were somewhat worn out and at one end the paper had worn out so much as to show a tiny slit. All seals and signatures were intact. We concluded that this slit on the edge must have occurred due to the wearing out of the envelope during handling and friction inside the drawer of the table. It was so tiny that no one could imagine to remove anything through it from inside the envelope. Prima facie, the whole case was quite inexplicable.

I visited the home of the girl. To my trained eyes, she did not look the crook type. Still, I had to check for the authenticity of her claim. I requested her to share with me the full development right from start.

“Sir, myself and my younger sister live in Jabalpur. We hail from the village Bamhori. Our family is not very well to do. I am Sheetal and my sister is Narmada. We both moved to Jabalpur so that I can do some job for earning and also for supporting my sister who is pursuing her higher education. I am doing a job of a receptionist in the hospital of Dr Chandawar.

Knowing that we two sisters will be on our own in this large city,  our uncle Damodar lovingly offered us help in case of any emergency. He handed over to us a wad of Rs 500 currency notes as a loan. We were very nervous to accept such large help. We had never seen such large sum in our life time.

Then he suggested that this amount is only for emergency. He counted the notes to 100 in front of us, put those into a brown paper envelope and sealed the same with staples and gum tape on all four sides. He signed on those tapes to secure the amount properly. He told us clearly that this amount is not for spending but was to be used only if some emergency arose. We were supposed to return the envelope to him after we felt adequately settled in Jabalpur. We gratefully accepted this help in the form of a somewhat bulky envelope. Our father helped us with some cash to start the life in Jabalpur. All this happened about a year back.

After moving to Jabalpur, we rented a room, I found the job. Narmada got herself admitted to a college for higher education. We kept this envelope hidden in the drawer of the table in our room. We settled happily into a new routine without much problem.

Soon, we almost forgot about this envelope. Recently, when I was tidying our room, I happened to come across the envelope. To my surprise, it looked less bulky. To my horror, on lifting it I noticed it to be very flat and light. At the same time it looked totally undisturbed and the seal and the signatures were intact. I was aghast.

On showing this development with Narmada, she too was astonished. We had no face to show to our uncle. How could we ever return the large missing amount to him? After spending a sleepless night, we reported this situation to the local police station. Sir, please help us or we are ruined.” She started pitifully crying.

Looking at our curious faces, Yogesh continued, “I had no clue as to how such a thing could happen. After offering her some words of superficial solace and before returning to my office, I told her to send Narmada to my office next day, for meeting me.

Next day, a younger version of Sheetal came to my office. So I had no difficulty in recognizing Narmada. Yet the appearance was quite different. She was smartly dressed, with some makeup, a pair of stylish dark goggles, high heal sandals and oozing confidence.

On asking for the details of this case, she repeated exactly same story. But she appeared to be emotionally less disturbed.   

Next, without informing the girls, I drove down to their village to cross check the authenticity of the envelope with the cash, with Damodar uncle and their father. Both were shocked but confirmed the story about the sealed envelope. To me both appeared simple villagers and not some kind of bad elements. I pacified them that we will get to the truth and requested them that they should not raise too much noise about this case. Both showed confidence in my abilities and promised to cooperate.

Assuming the claim of lost currency notes to be true, myself and my colleagues raked our brains a lot to look for possibilities of how anybody could have effected this theft. In the meanwhile, we received the fingerprints report. The envelope had only the clear fingerprints of Sheetal and Narmada with some faint fingerprints of Damodar uncle. So involvement of any forth party became somewhat out of the question.

Finally, my suspicion centered on Narmada. We repeatedly interviewed her without success, to see if she breaks down and somehow explains to us as to how the theft was committed.

At one stage, despite repeated appeals from the girls, we concluded that the whole case was a fake report. This must be some kind of family drama. In truth, there must not have been any theft. Every passing day, this case became colder and soon forgotten due to pressures of routine work.”

Yogesh went silent again. The others in the room were looking at him with some expectation. KS broke the silence, “Is that all?”

“No friends ! Once in a while, the honest face of Sheetal used to haunt me. I came to knew that Sheetal had to work a lot for next few years to payback her uncle. I watched helplessly. In due course, I retired from the department.”

“After a few years, I came across Narmada again. By now she must have completed her education. By the looks, she looked settled and well to do. She too recognized me immediately. Without showing any malice or offense to her, I politely requested her for a meeting over lunch. To my surprise, she agreed. “

“Narmada, I am now retired. Your case too is closed long back. We had no evidence against you. But somehow, I am convinced that only you were involved in that theft. I am just curious about how anybody could beat our investigations. Let the past bury itself. Would you now share your secret to put my mind at peace? I will be obliged.”

“Sir, your guess is right! I will not tell you as to why I needed the money. But since you request me so sincerely without a threat, I will share my secret with you only. May be I too will feel a bit relieved by sharing.

Right from childhood, I have always been interested in reading detective stories. These detectives always solved the mystery at the end. They were always too smart for the criminal. My young mind decided that I will one day prove to be smarter than the detectives.  After the envelope with large cash came into our possession, my mind started working feverishly. And one day, an idea struck me.

When alone in our room, I used to rub the edges of the envelope so that they started looking worn out. After that, on the top edge on one side of the envelope, I made a small slit with the help of a razor blade. It was less than half an inch. For opening the mouth of the slit a bit more I applied lateral pressure. Then I applied small quantity of fast drying glue to a long needle. I carefully inserted the needle through the slit to rest it over one end of the uppermost note in the stack. Let it dry. Then very carefully, I rolled the needle such that that note wound around the needle to form a tight roll. Rest was easy. Carefully I withdrew the tight bundle through the opened up slit and the note was mine. Once I had this confidence, all I had to do was to often repeat this performance. I used to feel guilty but the kick I got from this daring act was too strong for my young mind.

Sir, I knew that Sheetal didi suffered for few years due to my foolhardy act. But I could not collect the courage to confide in her. In due course, I completed my education and started earning well. My guilt finally became unbearable. I confided the truth with Sheetal, returned the entire money plus something more and asked for her forgiveness. She too lovingly forgave me for my youthful blunder. Now the whole issues has become our sisterly secret.”

She smilingly added, “Sir, but you will agree that I fulfilled my foolish desire to beat a detective at his game. After sharing this truth with you, I am feeling really relieved. Thank you for asking.”

Yogesh finally added, “Friends, I am now convinced that for the sake of showing off his cunning, a criminal is not at peace till he shares his daring act with somebody.”

 © Shri Vishwas Datye

Chinmay Apartment, 54, Mayur Colony, Kothrud, Pune 411038 Mo 985 0035362   vishwasdatye@gmail.com

≈ Editor – Shri Hemant Bawankar/Editor (English) – Captain Pravin Raghuvanshi, NM ≈

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