All for the love of Biryani...
Disclaimer- This is a work of fiction
(science fiction) and no characters resemble living or ruling persons. That
said, it’s the unpleasant task of a writer to highlight things before it
happens, as it happens and after it happens. Before it happens- as a warning.
As it happens- as a chronicle. After it happens- as a memory. Some of the best
writers perished in the fascist concentration camps and the communist gulags,
because they did not write before it happened or even as it happened- all
around them, to others and themselves. A few survivors wrote after the events-
by then it was too late to save the millions who perished because of the
pusillanimity of the intellectuals who should have been at the forefront of the
resistance. Or that’s what history teaches us as it judges events (and persons)
dispassionately.
That morning he woke up at his usual
early morning hour without the assistance of the electro-assist alarm thus
saving a few volts of electricity and more importantly avoiding the painful
early morning electric shock which usually woke him up daily. Once up, he
wasted no time in heading to the bathroom to have the regulated two minute
shower and then dressed quickly in a white dhoti and long sleeved white shirt,
his usual office attire, before heading to the insta-coffee maker to grab his
early morning cuppa of fresh chicory brew, his only breakfast on working
mornings. As he gulped down the hot and bitter brew he waxed nostalgic on the
genuine coffee, from fresh roasted beans, he had enjoyed in his younger days.
But those days of luxurious life on earth were long past, the unsustainable
population explosion had put paid to luxuries like coffee long ago and only the
uber rich were thought to be able to sample such genuine luxuries nowadays. He
sighed and put down the mud pot in the recycler and picking up his jute bag,
plastics having been banned ages ago, he went off to the station to catch his
pod to work.
From his suburban house in the foothills off the chamundi hills to
the pod station at Mysore central was a 20 minute commute by uber and a vehicle
was automatically re-routed to pick him up by the action of locking his door
electronically using his Aadhar key-card. As he hung the card back on his neck
using the lanyard he reflected how his apartment was all safe now from
unauthorized access as the only two who could open the door without that key
were him and the government both with access to his fingerprints and iris
prints. In locking his door behind securely he was often considered an
anachronism and was made much fun of in the beginning but old habits die hard
and despite the government propaganda labelling those who locked their doors as
anti-national and paper money hoarders and colleagues questioning his patriotism
as “if you have nothing to hide in there then why do you lock the door when you
leave the house?” he still preferred to lock the doors in his absence.
This was
due to, thought he wouldn’t admit it, a fear that his ex-wife would move back
into the empty house in his absence if he left it unlocked. If she, god forbid
did that, he would have no recourse legally except to share the apartment again
with that treacherous woman who had made him the laughing stock of the
Hyderabad office by co-habiting with her supervisor openly and who he could not
divorce like in the old/bad times because according to the new constitution,
circa 2019, a man and his wife were supposed to stay married for seven
lifetimes with no option of divorce even after death and anyone who complained
his wife was cheating on him was labelled an anti-national and told to follow
the example of the soldiers on the border who lived a life of celibacy. That
was the prime reason he had shifted work to Chennai even though he hated to
visit the new Chennai, what was left over of the city post the 2020
mega-tsunami.
When he finally reached the pod station at Mysore junction, he
was lucky to find a pod just ready to leave for Chennai and so he crawled into
it and strapped himself in tightly for the twenty minute commute to Chennai
sriperumbudur hyper loop station. The pod whizzed away on its breakneck speed
and he felt a slight tinge of nostalgia for all the sights he was missing
outside the vacuum tube on which the hyper loop train ran. But then again he
remembered that it was all mostly an ugly industrial sprawl – a continuous
slum, right from Bangalore to Chennai and that’s why he had moved to live near
the chamundi hills rather than stay in some urban coop inside Bangalore city.
The extra twenty minutes of commute was worth it in his view. After he got out
of his pod at Chennai sriperumbudar station, he hopped into the company van
which was waiting to transport a few others like him who commuted daily form
Bangalore and soon he was working at his desk in his office.
Hunched over his
computer console he checked again the work which had accumulated in his
absence- but thankfully it had been a quiet night and the overnight alerts were
few. Not many people had made fun of or criticized the government last night so
he didn’t need to alert the special riot squad of the cbi to raid their homes
and taser them with a 1000 volts charge – to fry their brains and memories- before
transporting such anti-national culprits to the Andaman jail for life. He felt
dirty doing such work and remembered a time long back when he had done work as
a cyber-security consultant who hunted people for releasing torrents of new
film releases. But that was before the new constitution which made watching
unsanctioned films a crime worthy of being sent to jail for ten years without
bail. As most films, make that 90% of the films, didn’t get censor sanction for
one reason or the other and no one in their right mind wanted to risk watching
a film, any film and then go to jail for ten years the once thriving film
industry had gradually died down and been replaced by documentaries on nature
which easily passed the censors. Now all cyber security experts worked on
government contracts trying to trace anti-nationals who criticized the
legitimate government and the supreme leader.
As he was sitting there mulling
over the changes in society over the past decade, his co-worker from the next
terminal leant over and said “happy
birthday sirji, just now saw the alert for your birthday on social media platforms,
how come you kept it so quiet?”. He smiled outwards at that greeting but
inwardly cringing he said “aww, shucks, we are not kids are we? to be
celebrating birthdays?”. His colleague was persistent if anything and said “but
sirji you can’t escape so easily, you have to give us all a party next pay day”
before turning back to his terminal to continue working. He was suddenly
captivated by the word party and started reminiscing on past birthdays, how
they had been filled with friends, booze and biryani. Ever since the supreme
leader and the party of the pure had come to power he had forgotten the
pleasures of both, like all the rest of the citizens and had turned into model
subjects- vegetarian and teetotalers. But the reminder of biryani suddenly
triggered long dormant memories and cravings inside him.
He thought over his
life in those days and compared it with now- a meaningless, routine existence
where the government ruled over everything you did, including what you ate and suddenly
felt within himself a small spark of defiance. It had been ages since he had
eaten biryani, so why not try today? His work as a cyber-security consultant
had its advantages, occasionally he came across online posts on contraband
availability. He had recently seen one such post on biryani being available at a
nearby city called Ambur, clandestinely. The thought of tasting biryani after
ten years made him light headed reckless and strangely rebellious. He decided
to head out to Ambur in his lunch break and see if it was authentic biriyani
made of non-vegetarian mutton.
Once he had made up his mind, he surreptitiously
opened up the old post he had flagged with the number of the biryani shop and
noting it down walked down to the rest room and made the call. A voice on the other
end gave him his instructions to take a cab and be in ambur central by 30 mins.
So he went back to his cubicle to wind down his work and filled out the form
for his lunch break and forwarded it to his superior who Okayed it and allowed
him to go out and eat. Once outside his workplace he flagged down a cab for the
ten minute ride to ambur. Once there he stood looking around for five minutes
till a shady looking character sidled up to him and said “are you the one who
called for the biryani?” when he affirmed that it was indeed him, the shady guy
asked “do you have any identification to show you are not from the anti-non veg
squad ”? when he had shown the man his aadhar card and had assured him that he
was indeed a legitimate customer if a bit kinky who just craved meat suddenly,
the tout invited him into a vehicle and said “we will go in this vehicle to the
actual place, it’s just a few minutes away in vaniyambadi nearby, we don’t
advertise the actual locations for obvious reasons”. Fine, he said and went
along with him till they reached what looked like a prosperous little eatery
advertising “pure-veg food prepared exclusively by Brahmin hands” as he
hesitated on the steps, his contact smiled and said “don’t worry saar, we have
a special section upstairs” and hustled him into the eatery and up a small
flight of stairs to a dingy little hall upstairs where a small group of people
were looking around furtively as they ate the banned biriyani.
As the smell of well-made
ambur mutton biryani wafted through his nostrils he leant back his head and
sniffed it to his heart’s content. And then a plate of it was placed before him
and he rolled up a morsel and popped it into his mouth. It was just the right
taste, hot, spicy and a little bit tangy as a proper biryani should be. The
accompanying side dish- again a banned item- chicken 65 – was crispy and fresh
and he took the time to savour a piece chewing it softly. It was while he was
in the midst of satisfying his long suppressed desires and on the way to
achieving food-nirvana that the police raided the small hotel and burst into
the hitherto secret room upstairs serving non veg food. A few patrons tried to
escape but they found that an entire platoon from the anti-non veg squad had
surrounded the place with orders to shoot on sight those trying to escape after
committing this heinous crime of eating non-vegetarian food in swaach bharat
country. The next day all those arrested for the crime of eating meat, a
hundred or so daily, were produced before a fast track court especially set up
to deal with such capital crimes and were summarily sentenced to death.
As he
was strapped to the latest model koodankulam mark-4 type electric chair and the
electrodes placed on his chest to transmit the 10, 000 plus volts needed to fry
his heart to death instantaneously , he looked up and out at the cameras live
telecasting his death to the cowed millions watching the daily death show of
anti-nationals who defy the dictates of the supreme leader (and his storm
troopers) and smilingly said “tyranny comes in many forms and it’s not easy to
recognize it in its initial avatar. I should have protested when they banned
rupee notes, I should have protested when they made identity card carrying
compulsory, I should have protested when they banned my local language, I
should have protested when they made me, an individual, responsible for
everything the government should do. But I didn’t, not even when they told me
what to do, what to speak, how to live and even what to think. Well, it ends
today, one way or the other for me. For, it’s a far far better place I go to, a
place where no one will dictate what we should eat and as I go there with the
still lingering taste of biryani in my memory, i think my death is worth it” as
the lever was pulled and he was fried to death for desiring a biryani.
P.S. if you think this is a bit
far-fetched, wait till the election results of the 2019 general elections. A
fair warning to all of you- please voluntarily convert yourselves to pure
vegetarians by then.
No comments:
Post a Comment