“Sundaram, our uncles have decided to put up the Ramanathapuram (RNP) house
for sale, and request us to empty our household items stored in the attic
before the house changes hands. Can you travel to South and handle it
please?” asked my elder brother. There were the items with which we
migrated to our maternal grandfather's house in RNP when our father's
flourishing textile business collapsed.



Chudamani, my friend in the village, accompanied me to the house. He
checked the rooms on the ground floor while I surveyed the attic. I went
upstairs and tried to climb the attic with a jump-start. It was too high. I
found the table and chair that stood by me in my school days still there. I
placed the chair on top of the table and just managed to climb.



The attic was poorly lit, and the twilight added to the darkness. I felt
the dust-ridden items one by one, unfettered by bats, lizards, centipedes,
and scorpions around. First I chanced upon the set of ten king-size Tanjore
paintings (kept one on top of the other upside down so that the glasses
were safe). I knew they were embossed with gold. *A solid few lakhs*, to
begin with.



Still groping, I touched a large utensil with ‘ears’ to hold by. It was
used in the bathroom for the maidservant to fill water from the well for
all of us to bathe. Suddenly my paternal grandfather, attired in *
pancha-gachham* and *uttareeyam*, bright *vibhooti* on forehead, presented
himself from out of the utensil, smiling at me. My father wasn’t even
married when he passed away. So when he addressed me, “So you are Sundaram,
aren’t you, my child,” I was both stuck with fear and drawn in by his
affection. “Yes, I am. And from the photo I have seen at home, you are my
Kunjanna Thatha, aren’t you?” “Yes, I am my child. I used regularly this
and a host of other utensils that you see around here for poor-feeding,
until in your father’s time this particular one found its way to the
bathroom. Promise me you will donate all these utensils to the RNP Grama
Samooham for use at Saastha Preeti and Thiruvathirai feasts.” “I shall,
Thatha,” I reassured him. He vanished into the thin air.



With pimple-like sweat all over my forehead, I looked up through the
solitary glass-tile on the roof for light. The branches of the mango tree
above were dancing gently to the late evening breeze. As I tried to enjoy
more of it, I saw Krishnan Kutty, the handyman of the village sitting on a
branch plucking mangoes. Every season he plucked from all the five tress at
the backyard. In return Patti gave him a basketful of mangoes and a
four-anna coin. He never grumbled, but he was hard-pressed for money. His
eyes fell on me casually. Instead of extending the customary smile at
meeting someone after ages, he stared at me, followed by a volcanic
eruption. “Did you know why I had to commit suicide, Sundaram?” I was ill
at ease at his calling me by name. I wished he didn’t place me after ages.
But he did. “But you are alive, plucking mangoes,” I retorted. “No, I am
his ghost. You villagers gave me a raw deal for my work, and I could hardly
subsist, let alone get married. That is why I had to take that extreme
step.”  “Sorry friend, I didn’t know it. You know I have been away for many
years. Anyway, tell me what can I do for you,” I asked him off-guard not
realizing that there is very little I could do to a dead.  “I have borrowed
several times from your grandmother *koduval, vettu kathi, *spade, axe, the
entwined rope for climbing the coconut tree, the multi-hooked trap to dig
out *kodams* from the well-bed. Look around the attic. You might stumble on
them. Hand those over to the President of the Grama Samooham, and instruct
him to…No, he might change his mind and keep them for the Samooham. Better
still, give them to Chudamani and ask him to donate these to Velu who
visits the village regularly looking for odd jobs. He can hardly afford to
buy these.” “I shall, Sir,” I added the salutation unwittingly. But then
they say the dead are to be treated with more respect.



Enough of it. From top to toe I was now wet with sweat. Let me get down;
let the buyer of the house take it all, I said to myself, and headed down
but found the chair missing. “Oh my God, what elemental force is loitering
around here? Is it the neglect of daily puja in the house for years that is
causing this?



No sooner did I utter the word *puja* than I heard the drumbeat of Chendai
from beyond our backyard. It was Friday, and the time 7. I guessed Ponnu
Thai, the midget, maidservant for many houses in the morning, and an ardent
Devi devotee otherwise, is still kicking and continuing with her Friday
pujas. Yes, as children, we dreaded most Friday evenings with the drumbeat,
sound of the oracle wielding his sword, and occasional screams.



With a full-blown bright red *sindhoor*, Ponnu Thai confronted me, fully in
trance and wielding the oracle-sword.  She smeared Vibhooti on me, and
asked me how on earth could we think of selling the house. I clarified that
it was not mine; it was our grandfather’s. “You... telling *me*?’ she asked
me feeling rather offended. I pacified her saying that it would in all
probability be sold to someone from within the village. “Well that is
somewhat heartening,” she said a little pleased, and asked me to continue
the *good work* I was doing. I reassured her. I am still figuring out what
that is.



Hardly had I got over another bout when I saw a chair all by itself
climbing its way up the stairs in slow motion. This terrified me to the
hilt till I saw Chudamani’s head underneath - struggling to balance the
chair. “Where did you take the chair to?” I asked him in desperation.  “I
wanted to check something in the small cellar in the kitchen store-room.
The opening was at four feet high. Why? Anything happened?” he asked. “No
nothing, just like that,” I said regaining my composure. With utmost care
we brought down the ten Tanjore paintings and took them to his house. On
checking them we found all the gold pieces having been removed, and the
hapless paintings staring at us toothless.



I shared disposal instructions with Chudamani exactly the way I received,
but as though my own. If I had left out some items in that state of mind, I
asked him to feel free to decide.



V.V. Sundaram

www.vvsundaram.blogspot.com

31 January 2012

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