There
was a gang of robbers in a forest. Its leader was a bloodthirsty soul. He took
pleasure in robbing people of their wealth and possessions. It gave him strange,
paranormal pleasure. He relished that look of fear in the victims’ eyes for
losing the valuables. But he needed more pleasures from the victims. More than
the fear of losing valuables, he was addicted to the fear in their eyes as his
people hurt them, tortured them before the final kill. This fear of injury and
blood in the victims’ eyes gave him even more satisfaction. His pleasure
reached its peak when he saw the ultimate fear in their eyes, the fear of death
as he went for the kill.
One
day his band came across an old ascetic. The brigands hadn’t robbed and killed
anyone for the past one week. They were thus thirsty for money and blood. A
mendicant though won’t give them any valuable but the fear in his eyes while
facing death was no less a possession for the gang leader’s evil soul. They
tied the ascetic and a huge bandit raised his sword to behead him. Death was
imminent. The outlaws expected an outpour of fear from the bearded old man.
Their ears were ready to receive the very same plight of crying words, asking
to be spared alive.
The
head-bandit was looking at the old man’s face. His bloodthirsty soul was waiting
water-mouthed at the spectacle of fear and cries in the face of death. But the
old man was as serene as before. Totally unaffected. To break his calmness the
leader even brought death an inch closer by ordering to count till ten. The
beheader was to strike at the count of ten. The head bandit thought now it was
impossible to escape fear as death approached in just ten steps.
One
of the bandits started the count. With each count a smile surfaced on the old
man’s lips. Before the final count the bandit leader stopped his striker. The
old man kept on smiling.
“You
are smiling. You have no fear of death!” the head-robber asked.
“I
have experienced death and its pain. It’s not as scary as we make it. To stay
alive can be more painful,” the ascetic replied.
“But
the experience of death makes it even more fearsome,” the bandit frowned.
His
ego had been puffed up over the years; swelling on peoples’ fears for their
possessions, injuries and finally the life itself. It had been his driving
force: a bloody calculation of his progress in life; a measurement of his devilish
desire; the scale of his monstrosity which he took as excellence and
superiority over fellow human beings.
Now
the foundations of his treasure were breaking down. There was a challenge to
his bloody conviction.
“I
was a warrior one time. Was renowned for the power of my sword. I had enemies
and unable to defeat me and inflict wounds on my body, they killed my family. I
cried in pain over their death. Then I slaughtered them to the farthest known
links of even distant most relatives,” smile had gone from his sagely face.
The
bandits listened in rapt attention.
“I
bathed in their blood. Laughed to the capacity of my lungs over their painful
cries. I was trying to bury my pain under the pile of their bodies. Though I increased
the number of my revenge killings, the pain inside but won’t go. I was thinking
that I am removing my pain, I was but making it mountainous. Then I came across
the wife of someone who had himself beheaded my wife and children. Killing her
would have given me the maximum pleasure. I raised my sword to kill her. She
was pregnant. Just a week or so from delivery,” he closed his eyes.
The
bandits sat down. Laying their weapons by their side. It was an audience now.
“She
was imploring me to kill her after she delivered the baby. She said she would consider
it the kindest act done to her if I spared her life till the baby was born. She
was in a way asking me to spare the baby. I told her that it won’t serve any
purpose because in any case I will kill the newborn as well after her. But not
in her womb or before her eyes, she asked this much favor. She was holding my
legs. I was trying to shake her off but something stopped me. She was a mother.
I remembered my own mother, the way she must have been killed. That left me
shaking. I was ready to kill an enemy’s wife for revenge. But my hands were
shaking to kill a mother,” tears were rolling down his bearded cheeks.
The
bandits were listening as if to a sermonizing seer.
“I
decided to postpone my revenge for a week, thinking t will add to the pleasure
in killing two lives. She gave birth to a girl after a week. The momentum of
killings was still on my head. It still possessed me. I killed the mother. When
I stabbed her I was shaken by the look in her eyes. She still carried the look
of acknowledging my kindness in postponing my revenge. She had it all through the
week. I had thought she was trying to save herself with that look. Trying to increase
my pity to spare her and the child’s life. But I was wrong. She had fulfilled
her promise that if I spared her life for a week she will consider it the
kindest act done to her by anybody. That look on her face while dying showed it
clearly. It robbed me of my hate. It killed the devil in me. And it condemned
me to die each moment till I really die,” the old man looked into the sky.
There
was pin-drop silence. One of the bandits even felt like offering some water to
the old man. But he checked himself.
“The
baby girl was my punishment for the revenge killings. I tried to kill it but my
hands gave in. The game of death had possessed me. It had gripped me with such
force that I was not living. I was already dead. I was roaming around as a dark
agent of death. I was not living, I was already dead. I died long before my
body will die. I went mad with repulsion. I hated my bloodied hands. Leaving
the girl under the care of a friend and paying him for her upkeep till her marriage
I ran away. I was running after my death. But even death seemed to have
discarded me. It laughed sinisterly from a distance. I tried to kill myself.
But I was so weak that even self-injury won’t come. So I roamed around. Neither
accepted by death, nor by life. A ghost. Years of roaming around have left me detached
both from life and death. As I take a step forward I don’t know if it is meant
for life or death. This melting of difference between life and death has at
least removed the scars of blood from my soul. I can sleep for a few hours.
Peacefully. And I can smile. Death thus has lost any meaning to me. So has
life. Nobody can restore life for me. That’s impossible. With so much blood on
my soul. But if you give me death, I will consider it as a favor,” the old man
seemed to implore the bandits to come and strike.
What
was there for the bandit-head to feast on? This old man didn’t possess any
valuable. More importantly he did not even have the fear of death. What will he
take away from this killing? The food, this game of death, appeared stale, meaningless.
He asked his group to throw their weapons. He had tears in eyes. He knew it was
easier to continue the life like before and some day die at the hands of some
more ferocious robbers or soldiers. That would be the fine end to it. And
exciting. But to live differently to die another way was almost impossible. In
fact that would be the real punishment. This old man had meted out the
punishment to himself by dying every moment, dying while life thrived
abundantly in the forest around him, leaving him alone, not touching him in any
manner. So he decided to change. Not for a better life. Not for lesser punishment
either. But for a prolonged death, recalling all his sins. Drawing sips of death
instead of life for years before death claimed a body whose soul had escaped
long time back.
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