Crowded with students, parents, couples affectionately holding hands, friends, parters some from the same work site and elderly citizens sitting across the balcony, the Springs theatre ran a good lucrative afternoon show. Pop corns, tickets, empty bottles, and plastic cups littered on the floor and one hardly could see each other's face. It was dark.The adjacent wall attached to rumbling fans reverberated with the bass of sound which flowed impalpably like the wind.Yet he comforted himself, sitting alone at the very corner like a solitary seal abandoned from family. It was dark, and except for his faint shadowy figure, one barely noticed his presence. And thats was that he wanted. It was the middle, in fact the climax of the scene when he sipped down his coke can, rose up from his seat looked around and walked for the exit. He didn't care if it was the end or the climax and hadn't even construed the theme of the movie. Unlike the others who alertly watched the movie, some who were on their first date holding hands, some with their friends celebrating their graduation and others who were just there attending this Saturday's afternoon movie like routine duty to attend, he paid to get rids of his thoughts, yet his head still vacillated with thoughts all the time, throughout the movie, that drowned him in his own hallucination, often referred to like living hell. Treading pass a couple, a group of stentorian college freshmen, he gleamed at the illuminated green lights that read 'EXIT' and paced off. Beyond the doors of the theatre embellished in red carpets and fabulous posters, laid the real world, that he dreaded to face for in theatre, there existed an ostensible world flourishing with fabulous looking Hollywood actors where the story happily ended.
Blinded for a moment with sheen of the mid afternoon blazing sun, his pupils gradually dilated and his eyebrows lessened in stretch. And yet as he walked towards the door in his executive suit, his face marked with a peculiar melancholy wrinkle, his eyes teemed with frustration and inside him, he bore a burning ball of fire, that he could only extinguish by drowning himself in screams and dried up tears.
His car lay across the street yet he kept on walking on the pavements, he didn't have a direction to follow, he didn't ponder of which path to walk on, but he kept on walking, walking everywhere his legs could carry him like a lost wearied traveler in the desert awaiting his death and alike vultures hovering over him, questions, myriads of questions for which he didn't have an answer, beleaguered him as he walked on. Inside, he was getting eaten up and felt like helpless dog, still alive and breathing, and enervated to an extent that he didn't even had the vigor to move and mourn, while maggots foraged through the sanguine wound, and all he would do was twitch a little, while laying under a bridge waiting to die. Yet the sun brightly shined and the air bloomed with the fragrance of flowering buds. The breeze merrily danced to the tunes of the birds and while the world beyond the theatre was as beautiful as portrayed on the screens, with people laughing and singing around, it was a hell for him as he was burned from inside. He swarmed across men cheerly calling their wives on cell phones, a group of dancers merrily celebrating and welcoming the summer festival, a flock of elderly retired faces eagerly enjoying the sun, jubilant couples holding hands, and cheerful mothers sitting across the street watching them kids play around the fountain. And then as he trended across the street burdening himself with horrifying thoughts vacillating through his head, he abruptly halted, glared back, looked around the merry crowd, gazed at his own reflection in the translucent glass on his right, and grimed for an ideal solution to end this hell he pondered, laid across the gas station, across the street. And the next the moment he ran.
"Hey! have you gone mad ?." screamed the driver moments after the tires shrieked halting the white hummer. The stentorian stereo played the metal music while the crowd clamored in shock. He had just ran across the traffic and now dodged through the crowd that stood aside in shock, panting and running like a mad man on lose. For all he cared now was to run across the street, pass through the petrol station, take a right there and get to the bridge. Yes, thats what all he cared.
He paid no heed to the traffic, jumped across on red lights,and ran as fast as he legs could pace. His heart started beating, and harder it pounded the the faster as he scurried.His throat started to dry and his heart convulsively pounded faster, harder and harder. He raced across the gas station and passed through the traffic as sweat pearled around his eyebrows and all his cared was to get to the bridge.
" Th.. theee bridggee " he reiterated to himself. His tie flagged around his back, his shirt damped with sweat and his hair blew apart through the wind. The tires shrieked and the crowded clamored, yet all he heard was the pounding of his heart, like hoofs clanking against the lull of the silence that reverberated through his ears. The bridge was a block ahead, by the time the lights turned red, he suddenly he stood there, elevated more than a 100 meters, while the breeze blew through his trembling legs. His legs were shriveled as convulsively as his short breathes, and as he slowed, the cars roared passed him, the wind shattered on his face, and raising his trembling hands, he clenched the bars with his sweaty fingers, and before hauling himself down, he took a deep breathe and gazed down. The lull of silence reverberating through his ears were now replaced by the clashing of the stream against the cluttered boulders yet as his hands convulsively trembled, and he knew what wanted to do. He dimmed his eyes, raised his legs, stepped over the railing clanged on to the rail and inhaled a deep breathe and the next moment he was gone. A woman in a Grey Volvo suddenly drilled a shrill through air resulting in a abrupt halt in the traffic. "Mother he jumped from the bridge" screamed the 12 year old girl strapped to her seat belts behind the back of a black Land Rover. A group of college students flung from their cars and ran towards the bridge. Some petrified just held back in their cars, others shocked at what they witnessed just stood outside their cars with a horrified look, while few had the police on the way with the ambulance. "Is he dead " some one behind the small crowd hesitantly inquired for which no one answered. Jumping from a bridge elated more than hundred meters, below which laid pebbles, boulders, and a stream flowing through, only a miracle could have worked. And while he laid down there, sanguinely covered in blood, his hands and legs twitched a little, his head smacked on a boulder and a stream of blood pooled around his face, a constant indistinct murmuring took above the bridge. Parents had their hands on their little ones eyes, and horrified at what they witnessed, many just slowly walked towards the bridge, gasped and prayed. The red siren soon beeped through the traffic and it didn't take very long to realize for the cops to direct a chopper for "the spot where the accident took place". The crowd anxiously was told to settle down and continue on to move as few resistantly declared that it was not an accident. Those mothers, son, daughters, friends who witnessed the jump drove for their homes, and the talk of the evening at their dining table and in the KFCs were what they witnessed earlier that day. The chopper hovered around the spot and as soon as he lay across on a stretcher doctors checked for his pulses and heart beat and did everything to resuscitate him back, yet his heart, that moments ago pounded like the hoofs of horse, had calmed in a sea of silence and he was no more.
In the evening news highlight, he was identified as Mr. James Morgan, son of Andrea Morgan .And this story would have ended here with this way with late Mr. James Morgan, if he hadn't met Justin at the bridge.
Scrolling back to the part when James stood clung to the railings of the bridge. Yes, there he stood. He dimmed his eyes, raised his legs, stepped over the railing clanged on to the rail and inhaled a deep breathe and the next moment something splashed and ripples merged out in the stream.
"Hey, how cold do you think the water would be?" a voiced raised up from behind him on his left. While his hands still clung on the rail, he glanced to his left. Just few steps away, a man leaned his gnarled hands on the rail, puffed out a whirl of smoke that palpably glided through the breeze, and dropped in a second stone.
"You know, I think its freezing cold coming down the mountains." he murmured drawing in another an puff. A bag dropped his shoulders, he shirt loosely hanged, his Grey pants was soiled at the bottom, his snickers had worn out the Nike plate, yet he spoke with no diffidence. And as he step further towards him, he inquisitively spoke again "Are you planning to jump?"
"It.. it.. its non of your business" James stammered looking at him while he still clung on to the rail with his trembling hands.
"Ya, but may be you should jump off from there" he pointed his fingers towards a big rock. "From here, you will crack open your skull, fracture your bones and while the ambulance gets here, you will just be stranded off mourning in pain covered in blood. And its no fun watching someone morn. You know how helpless it feels" he carelessly said stepping one step closer. "Ma.. ma..may be you should listen and leave me alone." James hesitantly spoke while tightening his grip on the rail. The thought of bleeding, hitting the boulders, fracturing his arm and legs sent a slight shrivel down his spines. He didn't want to live, yet he wanted was a quick death.
"Ya, but I am telling you, I don't have a cell phone that I carry. So it make take longer before the ambulance gets down there to relieve you from your agony." he replied puffing out another whirl of smoke.
A part of James was hesitant, yet he started speculating laying on rocks drench in blood mourning in pain, incapable of raising his voice and washed away by the stream before the ambulance showed up as the man said. The wind howled and the man kept dropping pebbles down the stream. The picture he portrayed in James head slowly dominated the ball of burning fire and just before he loosened his grip to turn back, "So are you going to jump down from the boulders " the stranger spoke as he cleared his throat. James utterly ignored him. "Well I could join you" the stranger continued puffing up his another smoke, while he churned the rest on the ground.James drew his legs back behind the rail. The sun shined above his head, the cars ubiquitously zoomed through, and a pair of crows settled next on his right. Neither did he know where to go, nor did he want to. He stepped aside and walked back towards the town. With every step, his heart weighed in his grief, and his breathe shriveled. His breathing though had calmed, and he sweat had gradually dried albeit his head still harbored intimidating thoughts, and questions he didn't have an answer . Transversing a few steps, he instinctively turned back, yet the man was gone, while the residue of his cigarette laid plastered on the ground. James walked on.
James Morgan, I repeat, James Morgan CEO of NPS, a multimillionaire telecom sector that had been receding its shares it held since two years ago now lived on 913 East Burlington . A year ago, his wife divorced him after three years withstanding an unsuccessful marriage, and two weeks ago, his company declared itself into a state of absolute bankruptcy. He still had a decent bank account, yet that wasn't what irked him. What corroded him from inside was his failure in life. Failure was the word that he had intimidated the most, failure. A Stanford graduate holding an MBA from Harvard, James had never tasted the brackishness of life. Growing up in an urbane family, his Dad was a prominent lawyer and his mother who had earned a revered position as the chief anesthesiologist in the state hospital, his family albeit not of noble stature,yet they were referred as one. Regarded as a prodigy in school and college, he trumped and excelled in very aspect. His room was embellished and inundated with medals and degrees he has achieved. He was his teacher's pet and his friends fancied his company. Others bestowed him as their role model and his professors applauded him for his dexterity. A kid who had never tasted failure, yet now stood at the very brink of his career, despised by his wife, deserted by his well wishers, and as his self esteem shrank, he witnessed his family fall apart,his company crumble, and the smile that once gleamed on his face, now not even left a trace on him. He was no longer the James Morgan he had once envisaged, for in his own eyes he was nothing but a looser.
James dragged his legs away from the bridge. Soon he was back in the crowd. The mid afternoon sun still dazzled through the skyscrapers, the cars zoomed across the streets and while people swarmed passed him, at the very end of the street next to the grey parking lot, Andy stood next to James prized Ford.
"I waited here for 45 minutes but I knew you would come back for the car even though you left your house keys in the office."Andy raised his voice while looking at his wrist watch.
He tilted his toppled glasses with his index figure and walked towards James. His black suit ostensibly looked similar to James yet it wasn't as wrinkled and blue checked tie flowed straight down from his collar instead of hanging behind on the back. His ebony hair was well combed and his face gleamed in the sun while he pursed his lips.
"Oh ya, Thanks Andy. I....I I...I was.. I was just going to get coffee and come back."James spoke while he stretched his hands to get the keys from Andy.
"Where is coffee then?" Andy inquired. James didn't have an answer. He hesitantly met Andy's eyes, took the keys from him and moved across to his car. "Well give me a ride back if you are going home." Andy continued while getting in. Andy lived with his wife, Anshu and his two kids on 712 North tower.
"Never mind. But ya, I was going to ask you if you could join us for dinner tonight." Andy spoke while strapping up his car seats.
"I would like but I wanted to spend some time alone this tonight. So ya" James passively spoke starting his car engine.
"Well James, the thing is me and Anshu are...ahh.., well Anshu just got a job offer and we moving back to New Orleans. So was wondering if you could catch up for dinner today. We were planning to move out this Thursday".Andy paused while James turned pale. An ineffable pain aroused in him which Andy himself vicariously suffered while he spoke. Since Nancy left James a year ago, Andy and his family of two kids were the ones James could talk. James and Andy went to the same grad school and while his parents now resided in Washington whom he occasionally visited during the Easter and Christmas holidays, Andy was more than a brother to James.
"I know I should have told you before,but you see, Anshu got notified a week ago and I thought I will tell you and ah well it.. it all happened all so fast."Andy ruefully spoke.
James didn't utter a word. His mouth had parched and he felt as if he was being stabbed, right in his chest. First it was his wife, then the company and now it was his brother like friend whom he shared everything. James gripped the steer, nailed his foot on the accelerator, and took off on the road.
They raced through the same bridge where James stood moments ago, clinging to the rail and reaching out to plunge down. James gleamed through his window as they passed by the spot where the stranger stood and started pondering who must he be. On the red he braked, and took off on the green. All the way, neither of them broke the spell of silence that creped up and they comported as if neither of them existed.
Andy dropped off on 712 tower. "So, I shall have you for tonight?" strapping himself lose, Andy asked
James had his hands on his steer wheels while nodded. Relieved in a way from the lull of silence that gagged him all the way. Andy smiled, closed the door, and watch James as he drove off. "7.30, be here at time!" Andy screamed and watch James take off, untill his car took the next right turn on Lafayette." James, James" Andy exclaimed with a sighed.
II
Amidst few who were retired officers and parents who strolled around this hour in the evening, James sat there all alone, on the wooden bench in Amherst Park. He took refuge under a mapple trees in park that harbored the birds and squirrels. This side of the park where he sat, it was quite, yet beautiful. As the breeze wafted by, the leaves quivered and the trees humbly bowed down their branches. The birds chirped, some brandishing their iridescent pupillage while other who narrated each other about their adventurous journey they took during the winter. James placidly sat there listening to the different life forms. The green lake that stretched across the rear end of the park slept still apart from the ripples that the ducklings formed. A small group of them inquisitively paddled around and around while the the two older ducks waded around scrutinizing every move James made. Dark necked, grey feathers with green strips, as if God mistakenly painted them green for the grass, they were James favorite animals as he grew up. On his left, three squirrels took shelter under the bench he sat. They sniffed around, foraging anything from crumples of cookies to left over from a picnic party and cautiously moved around dragging their bushy tails. The cricket wasn't far away too as James could hear him playing his fiddle. May be James thought, he is calling out for his beloved or may be he is lost,deserted by the rest and desperate just like him. Across this side of the park, it was reticently quiet, yet air bloomed with freshness and life. Besides for him, everything was the same, nothing has changed since his childhood.
"Can I share the bench with you ?"a voice called out suddenly for James. James knew that voice. He knew it well and where he had heard it. It bore the smell faint odor of cigarette that lingered in the air when James clung on the rails of the bridge. The same stranger stood behind him, still in his soiled Grey pants, the bag dropping from his shoulders, he blue shirt loosely hanged and he held a lit cigarette between his index and middle finger.
"Well we meet again." the stranger spoke sitting next to James. James didn't even get time to say no when the stranger continued on. A bum, James thought. "I am Justin Cook. But I go by Justin." The stranger sanguinely spoke stretching his hands out to James. "James, James Mor..ah...I go by James" James hesitated refraining from his surname while they shook hands. Justin's hands were rugged and gnarled. It felt more like palpating a coarse leather jacket. Justin gave it a tight shook and continued. "Where do u live? I come here every evening but I haven't seen you around here."
It was actually James first time in three years that he stepped in this park.The last time he was here was with Nancy, he remember like the smell of the fresh paint. It on their first date, arms over each other and walking past the lake. Coming back to the Lake actually triggered his old memories to flush. And that's why he stopped coming.
" I live close by" James murmured floating back into his old memories. His memories of his exuberant childhood, his jubilant school and college life, and his cherished moments from his love life were an intrinsic integral embedded within him, which was once his present and now his distant past.
"Well James, you did you want to jump from the bridge ?Do you mind if I possibly ask?" Justin spoke while taking another puff. A pint of smile stretched over his face.
"Yes I do " James replied with vexation.His eyes gleam at Mac with disdain while murmuring to him self "What a pest". Mac sat quite for a moment and then yet again spoke. But this time, a little slowly "Are you James, uhmm James Morgan". At this point, James had it. In the past, he gratifyingly declared him self as James Morgan. In school and college, it was a ubiquitous name people revered. But now it was the name he despised the most. "For God sake can you leave me alone !" James screamed. His infuriated tone reverberated through the park. The squirrels hastily took off for the nearest trees while the birds that placidly nestled in the trees abandoned it shelter. Even the crowd at the distance gazed where Mac and James sat. A little startled Mac swallowed down his saliva and slowly spoke. "Sorry, I didn't mean to infuriate you, James. I was just curious." In retaliation to James acrimonious tone, he bore a sympathetic one. "Yes, and please, please leave me, leave me alone."James replied without even looking at him. Mac was by then on his foot. He still held the cigarette in his hands and within the next moments , his foot steps, faded away against the green lush grass. Soon it was all quite again, James sat alone, yet the birds had flown away, the ducks were gone and the squirrels stayed back in the trees. It was all quite again.
It was past 7.30 when Andy called. James answered his call, and his infuriated tone was replace by a placid one. "I will be there in five minutes" James spoke as he stood up from the bench and reluctantly drove towards Andy.
At ten past 8 Andy, James and his wife Anshu finally sat down at the dinner table. At the corner sat Rahul, their three year old son. Andy and Anshu's were both ethnically Indians as parents migrated from India. Andy was born in Dheradun, a small town nestled in valley. His real name was Anand Yashpal. Yet in school, he ostensibly presented himself as Andy.Only during the exams and debates, students would glare at him enigamatically when teachers would call out his cognomen. Andy also spoke with a faint accentuated english. Anshu was born and brought up in the U.S. She met Andy during her first year in grad school when Anshu taught Economics in Michigan. Having only been to India four times, yet her parents rooted her with Indian tradition and culture.While she was at home she would always wear a scintillating Sari.
The dinner table was inundated with different Indian dishes and kitchen permeated with was aroma of the dishes.
"Have some more chicken and rice."Anshu breached the spell of silence that momentarily crept up after they sat down to eat. Since the first thanks giving break when James visited Andy;s home, James acquired a savory for Indian dishes. His favorite was 'Chicken Tandoori', marinated and roasted chickens. And off course he would call it "tenduri" in his American accent. Yet when it came down to eating, he would far beat any other Indian. But this evening, he ate even less that Rahul who was drooling and brandishing a chicken leg in his hands.
"That enough Anshu"James replied holding back Anshu who scoop the second bowl of rice in his plate. Although he hid his remorse, pain and frustration with his life with presenting an ostensible sanguine look, yet all three of them ominously knew what was going on in his head.
And yet again they ate in silence while the forks and knives clanked.
James was taking his second bite on the his tiendoori when Anshu spoke out to him. "James, me and Andy were going to visit our grandparents in India next month. And India is really beautiful during the summer." She spoke and paused when Andy diffidently interrupted. James looked at his while he held the of the tandoori between his teeth. Andy continued " So we were wondering if you would, like to come with us. You could stay with your family who would merrily welcome you."Andy finished saying when Anshu continued hastily "Its a really beautiful place. People are extremly friendly, and it isn't as dirty as it is portrayed here. The last time I went was when Rahul turning a year. You should definitely come with us". Anshu paused and the silence creped back in. It was just like a soccer commentary, only on one side of the team. James wiped and mouth and got ready to speak when Anshu broke in the next moment. "So its a yes. Good, see, I told you Anshu, James would never deny it." she jubilantly clanked her fork on her plate and stood on." Alright, I just call Chacha ji and tell him to book three flights from New Jersey" and she flung back her chair and got hold of the phone. James who even didn't say a word or beckoned a nod, completely appalled by Anju reaction suddenly passively called out "Anshu, Anshu, Listen to me" But Anshu infallibly wasn't listening as she hastily spoke on the phone in hindi and kept on. Andy drawing a stern smile" James, it OK. She will manage to get us all tickets. you don;t have to worry" . James went on "Anshu, Anshu, listen to me" yet neither Andy nor Anshu were paying any heed to James. And then he abruptly raised his voice and screamed "For christ sake Anshu listen to me !" Suddenly, there was a pin drop silence, and the next moment, Rahul starting wailing. .Andy walking towards Rahul " shhh, beta, its Ok, its Ok," Anshu gasped and paused while her Uncle spoke on in Hindi on the phone.
Non of them spoke as James placed his fork down on the table and left the house without a word. Rahul kept on wailing.
. The iridescent discotic lights flashed across the floor and reverberated with the blaring Jazz music behind him. His car lay parked outside the bar while James sat on a bar stool, his back curved onto the table, hie sanguine eyes half shut like a dichotomous leaf, his head held propped up with his rickety arm and his other arm held an glass of Martini.
Its was just a hour after he started drinking, by now this was his fifth shot, yet he was literally ruined. The bar attender poured him another drink when he stumbled, stood up and waded his away across the table.
"that makes 27 dollars 75 cents" she cried out making sure his ear drums heard it against the impalpable music flowing through. "27 dollars 75 cents," he murmured, and went on repeating 27 dollars 75 cents .
"Sir, you need to pay 27 dollars 75 cents" she cried out another time.
This time he gleamed at her, twitched a smile and drew out his wallet. "27 dollars 75 cents" he murmured, taking out a 20 dollar bill and handed it to her. "SIR , 27 dollars 75 cents" she cried out again with a frustrating tone. James meticulously snapped out another green bill from his wallet and handed over to her. The left over change, she placed it back in his hands . Stoned and drunk like fish, he went murmuring, 27 dollars 75 cents..27 dollars 75 cents, as he walked out from the bar and headed on for his car. Right on road, he stumbled a little and suddenly fell down . Yet arm stretched out grabbing him firmly ."Wow...wow, are you doing OK" a faint voice called out to James and while saliva drooled from mouth he says" Mr James Morgan, CEO NPS NPS," His last words lacked consistency and sobbingly, these words drained into silence.
Back in the his room, the sun shined right on his face yet he was utterly bothered to move. The curtains were wide opened and James like log laid on his bed, his tie still knotted, his shoes, all over the place as the clock hand rested on 11. On the right to his bed, aligned with a picture of him and his parents during his graduation from Harvard, laid a note that read "Mr. James Morgan Stanford Law,..........." It was 1.30 in the mid afternoon when James slowly dilated his slumberous eyes, his head felt like a rock and he astonishingly looked around, and wondered about the other night. Only thing he recalled, was getting to the bar, and 27 dollars 75 cents. "Ah, my head" he mourned while he moved his arms to get up. His looked into the mirror laying next to his bed to himself in the worst state he had ever been. His hair was glued up while his breath stank of foul alcohol. Across the table under a bunch of keys laid a note for him. He sluggishly stretched his hands, reached out the note and fumblingly read with a short yawn "Mr. James Morgan, Stanford Law, MBA from Harvard. CEO of NPS. Those were the very last words I heard before you directed me your address. I found you on the street right outside the bar. Justin Cook"
III
James sat on the same bench watching the ducks quack as they vigorously paddled across the lake. The afternoon rain have cooled down the weather, yet the ground was damp and every where around him, debris of maple leaves lay clustered. In his hand, he held the same note that laid on the table, and waited to catch a glimp of Justin. Hours past since he sat on th damp bench. The hour hand went on from 3 till5 . Yet, still no sign or presence of Justin. At around 5.30, he walked off. All the time James pondered Justin and his abrupt change in his behaviour while he was at Andy's place. Inside, he did repent upon actually screaming at Anshu and leaving the place. He constantly fiddled with his cell, read Andy's name but didn't dare to call. Ashamed was he, yet he missed his brother.
Two blocks south of the park, sandwiched between the Apple store and City Bank, a Chinese family ran a lucrative Restaurant business, under the name of Shanghai Chopsticks. James often resorted for it ever since Nancy left him. Shanghai Chopsticks was one of the most popular restaurants down town given for its savory dishes at a decent price. The waiters there were extremely servile which sometimes did turn out to be a little too much. They served you with both hands, spoke as gently as possible and bowed down everytime elating their customers from American proletarians to almost the same locus that of Emperors in the Ming Dynasty. And whether it rained or snowed, the restaurant was open seven days a week from 10 in the morning till 9 in evening ." Welcome to Shaghai Chopsticks" a diminutive little Chinese girl, with sparking small eyes, a little sharp little lips, standing at the door cried out while she bowed down with a huge smile carved around her face. James had been seeing this girl at the door for a couple of times. Inside, a faint Orienta string music played which seldom also played well known American country music. The wall were embellished with pictures of Shanghai gorgeous night views, Chinese rustic paintings and the main attraction of the restaurant was the orange Dragon with green tail which hanged loose from the ceiling. The restaurant was also commonly referred as dragon hut because of its presence. Plus, kids fancied the dragon and the lions outside the restaurant more than the food.
James sat down at the right side where the dragon's tail faced and ordered a Kung Pao Chicken and Shrimp along with a glass of red wine. His fancy for Chinese cuisines ranked equally high as his delight for Tenduri and other savory Indian dishes. Around him, the vociferous evening crowd clamored. Kids ran around the tables, their faces smeared with sauce whilst their parents cuisined on their dishes. Waiters precociously walked past them with a craved smile around their faces, while the men who sat across the far end in the corner clanked their chopstickes and started singing a birthday song. James solitarily sat next to the window. His glass of red wine shortly arrived followed by his his Kungpao Chicken and Shrimp. It wasn't untill twenty minutes before the waiteress in the pink top brought him his bill along with the fortune cookie. Just then Andy called on his cell. He held it in his hands and hesitated to press the talk key. The ringing ceased but rang again. This time James answered and the next moment Andy hastily spoke "Hey James, James, terribly sorry about last night. Anshu and I both felt we acted rather crude and stupid." In his faint Indian accent, he spoke so fast that James didn't catch half of it, yet picked up his lines and replied with remorse. "No Andy, I am ashamed off how preposterously I behaved." After all he pondered, they want me to go so that I get a break from my life.His heart heaved yet was relieved to have finally spoken to them. Anshu grabbed the phone after Andy and reiterated exactly what Andy said. In the end, it was Rahul's turn. He took the phone, comfortly placed it on his ears and in his puerile voice he spoke " James, are you coming with us to India." His voice glided through James ears and left him being choked. How could I say no, he pondered. Andy and Anshu's attentively awaited for James to say "yes" to their ingenious plan of using Rahul. A moment after James reluctantly reminded quiet, "James are you there". Little Rahul inquisitively asked on being bekoned by Anshu to ask again. James wetted his lips, and as he sighed and spoke "yes Rahul I am coming with you"and that was it. Rahul was the bait that fished James to India. Andy exubulantly snatched the phone from little startled Rahul while Anshu cheeringly lifted Rahul up in the air. "James don't worry about the tickets as we have already got three of them through Anshu's Chacha Ji."Andy exclaimed. "Ya, I knew that" James said to himself whilst glancing at the paper he found in the fortune cookie which read "You need a break to start over". After all he knew that it was Andy and Anshu's plan yet he thought, may be I do need a break.
IV
