Not many passengers accepted
chocolates from the weird heart- broken stranger. As a result, when he got out
of the bus, Rohan still had many chocolates left in his Ferrero Roche box. He
so wanted to kick that box on NH 17. Instead, he offered it to his hostel
security guard, who accepted it with a big grin. The money borrowed from his
friends seemed worth it and he managed a smile that had escaped him through the
ugly turn of events of the fateful day.
Trying to sleep that night, a
zillion questions hijacked his mind. ‘Why
so abrupt? Was holding Nisha’s hand made her think he was going too fast?
Didn’t he deserve a chance to clarify himself? Could she actually be involved
with some other guy? Was it a just a trick played by one of her friends?’ Being an optimist, he still thought that Nisha
might realize her mistake and contact him. Anxiously waiting for a week, he
finally started to come to terms with the harsh reality.
Of course, it wasn’t going to be
easy coming back to his normal self. Plus, his fourth semester exams were
approaching and like a typical engineer, he had to be ready enough to study for
at least the duration of the exams. He had to make peace with himself and move
on. If only he had a picture of Nisha, flushing the same might have helped. So,
a different strategy was needed.
After a lot of deliberation,
venting out his angst, disappointment, frustration and melancholy through an
email seemed to be the best option. And the process of drafting ‘The Email’
commenced. After two days and three nights, the email was finally complete. It
was the longest email he had ever composed or received till date. Sitting in
the computer lab at midnight, as he was about to hit the send button, an unseen
power stopped him. ‘Golmaal hai bhai sab
golmaal hai’, he could hear the tune playing somewhere in the background. So,
discarding the original long email, all he could send was, ‘Don’t do this to anyone else, it really
hurts’.
That night, he felt much lighter
and finally managed to get some sound sleep. A dream took over shortly, in
which he was still ‘The Romeo’ walking
with Nisha across a scenic landscape in Manipal, and singing ‘Teri yaadein mehfooz hai, baaki sab fizool
hai’. It was a song they had composed impromptu in real life while
strolling on their second date. Rohan did not realize that he was singing that
song at the top of his voice in his sleep. Mohit, his roommate woke up with a
jolt. All polite ways to stop Rohan from singing at 3 AM in the night had
failed. Slap on the face was the only option left with Mohit. ‘Nisha, what happened now?’ Rohan blurted
as he woke up startled from the slap. ‘Nothing
my dear, I was hoping that you would kiss me good night’, Mohit said with a
mocking feminine voice. Both of them had a good 3 AM laughter and crashed to
bed again.
The following days saw Rohan
studying as never before. His internal test scores had already taken a hit,
thanks to the ‘Love Fever’. So, he
needed to do well in the main semester exams to cover up. This was a chance to
prove to himself and specially his friend Jai Dhawan who had mockingly drawn
the declining graph of his marks from the time he had met Nisha.
He fared well in most of the
subjects except Engineering Drawing II. In response to one of the questions to
draw the projection of a Hexagonal nut, he drew something that was beyond the
comprehension of any mechanical engineering professor. On closer inspection, it
turned out to be the side view of a girl’s face. Of course, he got his share of
mock from all stakeholders for his piece of art in the semester exam. So much
for the final withdrawal symptoms of love.
The much awaited inter college
festival ‘Incident- 2002’ was
scheduled just few days post the start of next semester. So, this time, as an
exception, he decided against going home for vacation after the exams. Instead,
the thought of practicing for the music competition captured his mind. This
year the fest was happening in PES Bangalore. And he was more than excited to
visit a new place and interact with musically inclined folks. Nisha’s college,
KMC Manipal was also participating in the fest. A thought crossed his mind, ‘What if she is a part of her college band or
just planning to visit to support her team’? He feared any encounter with
her.
Meanwhile, Rohan was experiencing
changes he never anticipated. Earlier, music for him mostly meant Kishore Kumar
songs. Before he knew, Pink Floyd and Metallica took control. Outings to pocket-friendly
Beer serving pubs graduated to hostel rooms stuffed with Old Monk. He could
experience for himself what peace lay in a grass joint with Pink Floyd playing
in a dark room with a revolving lamp and why this was a considered a cult
experience in engineering hostels. The solace from rock music couldn’t have
come at a better time.
Time was ticking, and it was just
two weeks left for the fest. Rohan was convinced that instead of participating
in the Eastern musical genre that was his forte until then, he would give
western music a shot. ‘Nothing else
matters’ from Metallica was chosen as the track his team would perform. This
time he also got engaged in a fusion song along with two colleges from Manipal-
KMC and MIT. This was to be a non-competitive song and some seniors from the
participating colleges thought this would be a novel idea. Rohan along with his
band had to travel to MIT Manipal for practice sessions for the fusion song. Sandra,
an easy going girl, was one of the lead vocalists in the song with Rohan. She was
from KMC, and during a casual chit chat had mentioned about Nisha, her
classmate. ‘She has been performing in
the fest for the last two years, but this time she doesn’t seem interested’,
Sandra remarked. There was an immediate uneasiness
that showed on Rohan’s face. It was a girl’s natural talent in perceiving
emotions that made Sandra understand much more than what was revealed. They never
talked about Nisha in the subsequent practice sessions.
The D-day had arrived. Rohan,
along with his band members was all set to rock the stage. It was a typical pleasant
and windy Bangalore evening. The western musical competition had gathered heat
as popular numbers from Pink Floyd, Nirvana, Black Sabbath and Iron Maiden set
the stage ablaze. There was a huge round of applause when the KREC team
performed ‘Nothing else matters’. ‘Once more, once more….’ , as the crowd
roared, Rohan felt a kind of high never experienced before.
It was now the turn of the fusion
number that the crowd was anxiously waiting to listen. Three colleges, three versatile
teams, collaborating for a fusion of Sufi and Rock was a first of its kind
performance in an inter-college fest. As the members occupied their places on
the stage, sound check commenced. Surprisingly, there was no microphone on the
stand which Rohan occupied. And worse, Sandra, his co- vocalist disappeared all of a
sudden. By the time Rohan could sense something fishy, his ears strained to
hear, ‘Teri yaadein mehfooz hai, baaki
sab fizool hai’. The lights focused on the two girls standing across the
stage with a microphone between them. Sandra, one of those two girls, gave a
wink to Rohan who was struggling to hide his emotions. The season of surprises
was back again with a bang!!
Nicely written, facts meeting fiction;) manipal-mangalore-bangalore, am assuming next in line is Goa :)
ReplyDeleteGoa is a good idea .waise bhi open car main krec se goa ka dream tha :-)
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