* *

In today's post "Rubbing Bull", Mr Gopalakrishnan gives a gist of his visit
to the bank.


If I may, I shall share mine, except that in my case that visit marked the
luck of my life. Here it is. (Published in Hindustan Times in 1983, to keep
records straight.)



Some people strike it rich in a lottery, others in a jackpot, and yet a few
in matrimony. But I made it via a treasure box. Here is the true account of
it.



I earmark Saturdays for doing errands – going to Karol Bagh to buy coffee
powder, to avail myself of any ‘clearance sale’ that is on - or to fix the
wall-clock glass broken by my son attempting a Kapil shot.



That particular Saturday, I had three jobs in hand. First, to take out the
jewellery from locker in a Karol Bagh bank (my wife wanted to wear it for a
marriage the next day). Second, to meet the share-broker in Connaught
Place, to see if the shares he had me buy in bulk a few months ago with
great promises were quoted anywhere near par. Third, to collect the colour
photos I had taken of my sister-in-law’s marriage, making my debut at
photography.



Since the bank would be open only up to 12 noon on Saturdays, I listed the
bank job first, and headed towards Karol Bagh. I opened the locker and
slipped my hand in. What little things we had kept were all safe there. But
as I dug deep into it, I chanced upon an antique jewel-box that was
definitely not ours. I took it out, It was locked. It was heavy, and when I
shook it, I could hear the rumblings of pearls and diamonds.



Hitherto I had heard of items removed from one’s lockers, but never of a
thing being added. Anyway, this is not the time to waste on self
cross-examination. *I must hurry home to see the contents in the box*.
Telling myself so, I cancelled the other jobs and drove home straight, at a
speed I had never ventured earlier.



On the way I estimated the worth by its heaviness, and decided on my plans.
‘Come what may, I must go for a house in a posh locality. A car comes
second. Then a colour TV (a few inches bigger than those of both my
neighbours), and a VCR. If I am still left with sufficient money, maybe I
could buy four identical necklaces for my two sisters and two
sisters-in-law, and a slightly costlier one for my wife.’



‘Anyway, God is great. If he denied me promotion the other day, he has more
than compensated for it in another way.’ “After all’, I asked myself, ‘how
could the good deed that my grandfather had done years ago in feeding 1000
Brahmins (Sahasra Bhojanam) in a row go unrewarded? Surely not.’



I reached home, and sent the maidservant to a far off shop in the locality
to fetch a difficult-to-get item.  My wife was at a loss. I asked my wife
to close all doors and windows and to draw the curtains. She got
suspicious. Then I unfurled the straw mat on the floor. That left her with
no doubt. She shouted, “No nonsense during day time.”



“Calm down dear, can’t you think of anything better? See what I have
brought for you. I didn’t want the precious items to spill on the floor.
Hence I spread the mat. You get it?” I told her.



Then I showed her the treasure that had found its way in our locker. Seeing
it, she began to laugh uncontrollably. I had known of people falling
unconscious at such a windfall, but never of getting a laughing-gas effect.



‘Maybe, it is a little too much for her to bear, being of a tender mind,’ I
suggested to myself, and began to calm her down, as her laughter might
attract the attention of neighbours, and they might see us with a treasure
box in hand, if not the mat spread wide, curtains drawn, laughing merrily...



A few minutes later she regained normalcy, and said: ‘I forgot to tell you.
The other day, before leaving for Madras on vacation, Leela (my sister)
gave me that jewel-box for safe-keeping in our locker.’



‘Be that so, but you don’t have to laugh like that.’ I told her, trying to
retrieve my supremacy. ‘Anyway, don’t broadcast this to Sonu or Babbu’s
mothers (neighbours), okay?” Ordering her so, I rushed to the bank to take
out my wife's jewellery for the marriage, only to find the bank already
closed.



V.V. Sundaram

Phoenix

30 October 2011

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