Autumn Musings: A story by Riddhi Bhatti
As I see through
the window, everything looks so surreal. Nature adorned in hues of golden
and crimson like a new bride. The strewn netted leaves tinkling at her
slightest touch. The humming breeze filling the silence of autumnal dusk. And mild showers kissing the bare branches as they shrug.
You would remember.
Do you? When we married last year around this time. Our college crush had
finally blossomed into marriage. New aspirations, new horizons, a new life
beckoned us both.
From where I sit today,
I can still see that moor, a little uphill which we both would scamper like
little kids on misty September evenings. And like that young couple under the isolated
maple tree, we would stand for hours in the warmth of each other's breath.
People said sunsets
looked sublime from the moor. But only I know how many of them have I missed gazing
into your sunshine eyes.
And do you remember
that elderly couple whom I looked up to, to tell you how I wished to grow old
with you. They still sit on the same broken bench every evening, bird-watching.
As I narrate these
beautiful moments to my diary, a crimson rose falls off. It's the same rose with which you had once
adorned my hair. So much as I had wanted to preserve it, it has still grown flaky,
brown and withered. That's what time does to life. However much you may try to preserve
a moment, a day, a season, it changes. And
you keep gliding with it, sometimes reluctantly and sometimes readily.
Sometimes there is
a sense of Deja Vu. Like a lost moment is ushering us. Like a season-long gone is
coming back. But it never does, just a mind trick to beguile us. God is such an
adept artist. He knows how to create a different picture each time, with the
same old palette in hand.
This fall is also
giving me a sense of deja-vu. It is opening up an old chest of memories.
However hard I may try to beguile myself into believing, but the fact remains that
my life isn't the same.
Your romantic
greeting card, two kissing teddy bears and the erotic letter; are right beside my
desk on the mantle. Only this time they aren't addressed to me. This recent discovery
has turned my world upside-down. How, when and why did you do this, Who is this
other woman, all these questions are seemingly irrelevant now. The bitter truth
remains that the fall for me will never be the same as it once used to be. And however
hard it may be, I have to accept it and hold on till the time thaws into
another warmer season of life.
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