'They are your journals, you read them,
'I said to him.
He shook his head.
'Listen, I don't have the time or patience for this,
'I said, getting
irritated. Being a writer on a book tour doesn't allow for much sleep—
I had not slept more than four hours a night for a week. I checked my
watch. 'It's midnight. I gave you my view. It's time for me to sleep
now.'
'I want yon to read them,
' he said.
We were in my room at the Chanakya Hotel,Patna.This morning,
he had tried to stop me on my way out.Then he had waited for me all
day; I had returned late at night to find him sitting in the hotel lobby.
'Just give me five minutes, sir,
' he had said, following me into the
lift. And now here we were in my room as he pulled out three tattered
notebooks from his backpack.
The spines of the notebooks came apart as he plonked them on the
table.The yellowing pages fanned out between us.The pages had
handwritten text, mostly illegible as the ink had smudged. Many pages
had holes, rats having snacked on them.
An aspiring writer, I thought.
'If this is a manuscript, please submit it to a publisher. However,
do not send it in this state,
'I said.
'I am not a writer.This is not a book.'
'It's not?'I said, lightly touching a crumbling page. I looked up at
him. Even seated, he was tall. Over six feet in height, he had a
sunburnt, outdoor ruggedness about him. Black hair, black eyes and a
particularly intense gaze. He wore a shirt two sizes too big for his lean
frame. He had large hands. He reassembled the notebooks, gentle with
bis fingers, almost caressing the pages.
'What are these?'I said.
'I had a friend.These are her journals,
' he said.
'Her journals. Ah. A girlfriend?'