He shouted irritatingly counting money over his desk. “Make
it fast. They are waiting.” It was Sunday and as usual he has estimated a three
times more business on his shop. He looked at the crowd of customers around the
small desk. Their eyes shone with greed and impatience. He counted in mind how
much they are going to pay today, each individual and then again he summed them
up. His face brightened up with the answer. Today I will get than tiny train
set for my son, he thought to himself.
Just then the helper of his shop brought out the black
plastic carry bag and handed to him before returning to his work.
“Here sir.” He held it with big smile. “Wait!” He interrupted
suddenly before that carry bag was touched by the customer. He took out a small
soiled white cloth behind his desk and wiped the small trail of blood on the
carry bag. “Here sir, you chicken.” He brightly handed it to the eager
customer.
The customer was very happy and in return awarded him the
exact price without any bargain. The customer left and the next customer get to
that place. He again shouted the same lines at the helper slaughtering hens
back there. Just then the tiny phone over his desk rang loudly.
He picked up the cradle and replied. “Hello.”
From other side a broken female voice came. It was his wife
and she was saying something unmanageable over the phone. “our son…so much..in
hospital..alone…don’t know..what to do…please come soon.” The sentence was
broken in places with inconsolable sobbing.
“What happened? Where is my son?” He cried over the phone. “Where
are you now?”
“At..hospital” His wife sobbed again.
He didn’t answer instead he left everything there, barged
through the crowd to his bike. On the bike he raced to the hospital nearby his
home. He was sure they must have taken his son to that hospital. That was the
only piece of sensible thought he could think all the way. Except that all that
came to his mind was the beautiful face of his son. He loved him too
much. Perhaps he loved him the most in world. A scratch on his
body was unbearable for him.
It took him half the time it usually takes. He blindly swerved
through the traffic. The time he reached, everything was messed up in his mind.
He didn’t know what to ask his son for. He bumbled through varieties of patients
waiting on the tiny corridor of hospital. He even didn’t know what happened to
his son. He ran past the wards and all of sudden stopped near the emergency
ward. His wife was sitting there.
He went to them, shivering on his own gait with dread. His wife started
to cry louder on seeing him.
“What happened to him?” He asked his wife. A nurse came and politely
asked them to have both patience and silence as it’s a hospital.
“what the fuck happened, will you tell me?”
His wife managed herself to speak. “He was playing outside
and I was cooking..and I heard his shout and came out and saw he had slipped
from the terrace of unfinished building in the construction site. I had told
him not to go there. I had even scolded him. But he again went to there and
now..” Her tears rolled down again.
He went to the small bed where his boy was lying. There were
bandages rolled over his forehead, a patch tapped over his cheek, covered his
both legs and the left hand at different places. He was sleeping there.
He looked into his face where there bandage wrapped
up. Fresh blood was oozing from the place. As he put a hand lightly over his
head, he strangely got a vision of the chickens slaughtered in the shop. He
tried to shake away the thought but it was so powerful and gripping that it didn’t
leave him. The more his looked into the blood soaked bandage the more was
reminded of the strain of blood in his shop.
He cried there, thinking crying
would save him from comparing his child with those mere chickens but it didn’t
too. He stood there alone, forgotten of the difference between the streak of
blood he had wiped from the carry bag and the one he was witnessing now. There were
now more similarities in them than just being equally red.
