He looked at her in a
crowded subway, brushing every inch of her with his eyes. The woman became
aware of his intense gaze. She thought, “Damned lecher.”
He threw one last look
at her, he liked her hands, soft yet firm. He had his fill for the day. He got
down at a station and made his journey upwards into the real world. He reached
home, all the while thinking about the woman in the subway.
He sat down on his stool
and holding a paint brush in his right hand. The colour drenched brush moved on
the canvas like raindrops on a eucalyptus leaf. Unbeknownst to the ‘woman in
the subway’, the lecher captured her on his canvas.
She was the eleventh
woman who had fallen prey to his gaze. He took time to choose his women, after
having realised that real women travel on the subway and don’t come in
chauffeur driven cars to exhibitions, to have a glass of wine and indulge in a
little bit of art. Twenty-years and a broken marriage had made him a good judge
of women; he felt that he knew more about them then they could imagine.
The painting was done, a couple of days and the wetness on the
canvas would evaporate.
One
month later
He needed just one
woman. He was again standing on a subway station. He saw the train approaching.
But as it neared he could make out two compartments on the front which had the
word ‘Ladies’ painted boldly.
He got on one of the general
coaches. There were no women. He got down on the next station, with an uncanny feeling
in the pit of his stomach. He felt betrayed by the women whom he had possessed
for all the 11 months. He owned them. He took a deep breath, and waited for the
next train to rightfully claim what was his.
This time he got on a ‘Ladies
Coach’. They looked at him with disgust. But he was oblivious to their stern
gaze. He began his search for his final muse. He looked around intensely.
Suddenly he felt a heavy hand on his shoulder.
“This is a ladies
compartment.”
A fierce looking female
police constable was staring at him; more vicious was her red bindi between her
eyebrows. Somehow he stood transfixed in the face of her fierceness.
She shouted, “Hey
what’s in my face. Get going or I will…”
Her next words were
drowned by the rush of the wheels, as the train entered a station.
As
the story nears its end
“Rage, Love,
Indifference…you have elegant names for your works”, said a middle aged woman
holding a glass of cheap wine. He smiled; he was tired of ‘connoisseurs’ like
her who seemed to know more about a creation, than the creator himself. The
evening progressed and at 9PM he was at the subway station again. The train
rushed in ruffling his pepper salt hair. He went inside one of the ‘Ladies’
coaches. Some of them gave him puzzled looks and some were lost in thought or in sleep.
He looked at them cheerfully
and gave a smile to the ones who were staring at him.He gave a gentlemanly bow
and said, “Thank You for making it possible.” Hearing this the ‘connoisseurs’
clapped their hands and the curtains fell; as the show got over the lecher let
go of his ‘Subway Women’.
Disclaimer: Nothing in this story bears
resemblance to anything (including the glass of cheap wine or the fiery red
bindi). Only the nameless subway women bear resemblance and can be found on any
train between 7-10.30 (Monday –Saturday).
Image: The Lecher,
Oil Miniature by Jindřich (Henry) Ulrich, Prague.
this is so lovely !!
ReplyDeleteI Like Super Duper
ReplyDeleteI can relate to that, if you had told me the lecher was a woman I would not have got surprised. I have seen many such characters in daily commute who look from your nail polish to 'futo' under the juto. Good stuff..
ReplyDelete