Shekhar would call me ustad. Later he proved it that he meant it and as a sincere chela got a snakebite by, probably, standing proxy for me by sheer chance or mischance. Our group of friends was young and conjured up the meaning of life through persistent, relentless, regular walks into the dark countryside every day without fail. Four or five of we friends would loiter around, sharing our disillusionment and anguish with a creeping openness, talking about our youthful follies in the dark on the field pathways crisscrossing the cropped fields around the village.
Once
on a dark night, on the way back, me in the lead like a genuine ustad, followed by four friends
including Shekhar and my younger brother Amit. It had rained heavily. It was a
narrow submerged passage of hardened cement sacks and stones, standing as a
sort of fording point in a low-lying area around the pond. The rains had
partially submerged the rudimentary step bridge. It was a world of brattish,
tentative jigsaw puzzles, beyond the claustrophobic set of care and caution,
torches or mobiles. A free world decided by the crucibles of dark and deep
vicissitudes of fate, beyond the security and systematized steps as we have
presently. Now even a rope would seem a snake in the dark and during those days
even a snake would be taken as a mere rope.
As
the leader of the party walking in a file, I would have stepped upon a snake
fitted in a hollow among the partially submerged stepping-stones. But then
chance denied it an opportunity to dig its fangs into my foot. As I took the
step that would have trampled the snake, my forward foot in the air, the other
foot slipped over the edge of a stone. In order to avoid a fall I took a long
stride, almost jumped in fact. It meant I leapt over the snake hiding in the
submerged crevice among the sacks and stones. Sometimes destiny extenuates you,
quite surprisingly, despite all your hypocrisy, brazenness and indolence, and
puts the share of the consequences of your very own step in the platter of
someone else.
Shekhar,
following immediately after me, walking behind step-in-step like a true
comrade, completed the job pretty firmly. The snake bit him hard and repeatedly
on his calf muscles. He gave a long and loud shriek and went hopping over the
water like a misfired rocket. The pond-keeper arrived with a torch. Shekhar’s
calf bore many bleeding bite marks because the reptile was trodden over very
comprehensively. In this manner, my friend stood proxy for me for the dreaded
experience of a snakebite.
My
brother is a strong man. He being the strongest of the group took the
responsibility of carrying Shekhar on his back, running over the pond’s earthen
embankment to reach the road. We ran ahead to stop some vehicle to take him to
the venom-curing doctor. Shekhar thought he was dying and supposing dizziness,
which was in fact his acceptance of the fact that one turns dizzy by degrees
after getting bitten by a snake, to be the call of his end of innings on earth
whispered his death-bed wisdom in the ears of my brother. ‘See Sufi is a soft
and kind guy. Take care of him after I’m no more!’ Well, I’m sure he didn’t
know that he had stood proxy for me for the bite otherwise he would have spared
this kind departing-time injunction.
In
any case, we took him to the countryside snake venom doctor, famous for
treating snakebites with his secret herbal concoctions. He prepared a bucketful
of horribly smelly and terribly bad tasting brew and force-fed Shekhar the
entire lot. It included some cuss words and raptor-sharp nape-grazing palm
attacks on the patient’s stooping figure as he protested against the atrocious
concoction. There were mammoth rolling waves of revulsion inside his innards
and he vomited like a tube-well. It was the countryside method of
detoxification. Shekhar survived the episode. Either the concoction was
effective or the snake wasn’t too poisonous. But the incident left a spurious
shadow of fear of reptiles on his psyche and he felt its direct effects on his
physical health for almost six months. He would be justified in claiming that
his snakebite treatment lasted for six months. In the meantime, he gulped down
all the horrendous venom-antidote preparations, whose ingredients were family
secrets, made by the vaidyas in the
entire state. Thankfully he recovered to a position to claim full health. But
he says he feels sleepy if he eats stale, cold kheer in the morning.
However,
now he won’t stand proxy for me for a snakebite anymore. It’s a well-wrought
lesson. Almost twenty years after the mishap he suffers from reptile phobia,
and rightly so. Recently, on a balmy winter noon we were strolling by the canal.
The canal had been desilted so a smooth silvery bed of shining sand was layered
over the embankment. Usually dozens of harmless water snakes can be seen
basking under the sun on winter noons. The soft, silvery canal sand was etched
with slithery, crawling marks as the reminders of the reptilian sunbathing. As
we neared the crawling lines, his phobia flashed live snakes in his brain as he
saw the snakes drawn on the sand. He swears to this day that he saw real
snakes. I am but equally sure to have seen only lines and no live snakes as it
was broad daylight. He yelled in panic, jumped as if the crawling marks under
his feet were live, writhing snakes and this time, playing safe and no longer
willing to stand proxy for me for a snakebite, jumped up and got onto my back,
drawing his legs as much above as he could manage.
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