Missing Pages
By Baland Iqbal
()
About this ebook
When Fatima comes across a few pages out of her late mother's diary, she finds her way to Zosia Kasanova, an old woman living in Karachi. Together, they live through her experiences as a victim of the brutal war crimes from the second World War before she came to Pakistan. At the same time, Fatima's lover, Asad, moves to Kashmir to join the esca
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Missing Pages - Baland Iqbal
Copyright by Dr. Baland Iqbal
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.
Missing Pages by Baland Iqbal
Published in 2022 by Meraj Publishing House, Canada
Translated by Anjum Baba
Cover design & formatting by Nabin Karna
Edited by Ken Darrow & Jozair Bland
Dedicated to those who live beyond race,
religion, color or nationality.
‘It is just that within our power lies quill and tablet,
But what of our power to write the heart’s truths?’
Himayat Ali Shair
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 1
T
he moment I looked into the eyes of that frail white woman, the silence and isolation of the room seemed to channel themselves into her silent eyes. Her eyes were as void as a bottomless abyss. There was simply nothing left in that lonely pair of eyes. Her aging eyes were devoid of any hope or longing, desire or wish; neither was there any love or indifference left. Those eyes were so devoid of color that they were not even fit to be called colorless. The bleakness in them had extinguished both light and darkness. Those eyes, without any trace of feelings or emotions, carried just a moment, a moment caught in the wheel of time, a thing of the past. And carrying this particular moment of a day long lost, she continued to exist.
Before I could untangle myself from the labyrinth of such intense thoughts her voice reached my ears and pulled me out of my trance. Listen, would you like to drink something?
My palpitating heart surfaced from the isolated ocean of her eyes and blabbered something of its own. Yes, of course, tea would be fine.
I felt the thick air of the room was unable to bear my casual tone. Suddenly, the whole atmosphere appeared very light. This light environment resembled the moment when tiny cracks are formed before the shattering of glass. The way skin feels slight chills before the arrival of a cold breeze or eyes moisten before welling up with tears.
I will get it,
she said, rising from her nineteenth-century Victorian couch, but before she could rise completely, I stretched out my hands and stopped her.
Please leave it, don’t bother.
Looking at my wrist, I said, Guess I should be leaving now, else I will be late.
The old woman stared at me and uttered very softly, I would have felt better had you stayed a little longer.
I exhaled a cold sigh. Removing my eyes from my wrist I looked at her; there was a faint flicker of pale colors in her eyes and her lips trembled to say something, but before she could start her sentence all the light began to diminish.
I know you people from India and Pakistan are ever so formal in expressing your wishes. ‘He’ too was no different.
The same old isolation began to seep back into her eyes once again.
Sit, I will get tea for you. I too want a cup at the moment.
She rose from her chair and went towards the other end of the room slowly. There on the shelf, an electric kettle, teabags, sugar, milk, and teacups were placed in perfect order.
I shouldn’t move, I thought and coalesced with the lush couch. The sofa exuded a damp smell indicating its dilapidated state; however, the fragrance of freshly starched covers succeeded in expelling that odor to a great extent. When I raised my eyes, I couldn’t help taking into view my whole surroundings—furniture, wallpaper, curtains hanging against the windows, and the carpet under my feet. The sturdy furniture made from the Indian rosewood had paled over the years, just like her. Purple-colored bright curtains, standing still against the window, had lost all their color and now they looked as bland and colorless as the murky carpet underneath. The crystal vase on the table was dried up of all water and its salt had severely affected its sheen. The lifeless plant had nothing but was hanging on to a few dead petals on top.
The sound of boiling water broke my trance and the steam evaporating from the kettle blurred whatever faint color the room housed. Once again, my eyes, against their accord, moved towards the corner and fixed on the old woman brewing tea for me. Placing the teabags into two cups, she poured boiling water from the kettle. The warm aroma of the tea brought back the feeling of life into the cold room. Placing the sugar and milk on the tray along with the two cups, she walked slowly towards me carrying the tea. I hurried from my place and went to her; taking the tray from her, I said very softly, Please, give it to me, I will carry it.
Alright.
Walking towards the sofa she mumbled, I know what you are thinking.
Taking the cup from her, I sat on the sofa and looked at her again.
The place where we stay long enough, we are bound to become a part of it. Its belongings start to look like us and in turn we also start to look like our belongings. While I was brewing tea, you were talking to my belongings because I am existent in this furniture, the windows, doors, curtains, and this carpet.
I felt I had been caught red-handed. Taking a small sip, I said, The tea is very good.
So, you are here to take the pictures?
the old woman asked, ignoring my compliment altogether.
Yes. I believe, with the help of those pictures, I can connect the pieces of lost history,
I said, looking at her while placing my cup on the table.
Is it really necessary?
she said after a pause, stressing each word.
"Maybe? I instantly gulped down my mouthful of tea and replaced it with
Certainly."
And what would you gain out of all this?
Her voice still held the same strength.
"Satisfaction. There, I once again faltered. Shutting my eyes tightly, I said,
Completion."
But this is an extremely lengthy and confusing journey. Will you be able to hold on?
There was curiosity in her eyes.
Yes.
I sounded confident now.
Stretching out her hands, she picked up a gray-colored diary from the table. The diary appeared swollen by the loose pages and pictures stuffed in between its pages. With shivering hands, she opened it at the exact location where black-and-white photographs were placed. Pulling out the pictures from the diary, she kept it back in its place and stared at the pictures with blank eyes. She gazed at the pictures one after the other until she reached the final one, and then she handed me a few pictures. These photographs were more than fifty or sixty years old and had discolored so much that, instead of black and white, they looked more of a sepia tone. They appeared both aged and damp. It was quite evident that both years and tears had worn them out.
I will return these pictures very soon, I promise.
I stuffed the pictures inside my handbag, but then I suddenly realized there was suffering hidden behind her silence. Extending my hands, I held both of her trembling hands gently.
These are your trust in my custody; I know how important they are to you.
No, maybe you have no idea at all,
she grumbled.
I could not fully understand the underlying meaning of her sentence. Silently, I looked at her eyes; her gaze was fixed on the floor.
Okay, I will take my leave now else I will be actually late.
I hurried out of the room and into the porch and straight out of the house. I felt I could no longer endure the silence and isolation of the old woman and her house; the isolation that stood on the dark abyss of never-ending pain and suffering.
The moment she shut the door, I felt a slight cry was also stifled by the sound of the closing doors. This gave rise to a silence behind me that got lost in the loud noise of the moving truck that passed by.
The bright light of the evening coined with long black hair doubled the depression. The chill lost between the final days of September and October was trying to find its place. Who knows whether it was destined for the cold long lonely nights or it was to face the lost memories of noon in the near future? The words of the old woman clung to my soul like a creeper around the branches of an olive tree.… I felt the uneasiness within me trying to get hold of the calmness outside.
Even the distance from the door to my car was restricted to just a few steps but it seemed to have got stretched over an entire century. My legs felt both light and heavy at the same time and I took one step and missed the next in a hurry. I opened the driver’s seat, turned on the engine, gave a long lingering look at the old woman’s house, and put all my weight on the accelerator.
Initially, I felt the house of the old woman float on the clouds instead of being tied to the ground, but in no time I shifted my attention towards the rows and rows of vehicles that sped away.
Chapter 2
In no time, all hell broke loose.
T
he dark clouds filled with water clashed and collided together creating explosive sounds. A kind of flood descended upon the earth from the sky in the form of innumerable tributaries. My heart felt benumbed by the constant explosion in the sky and my eyes were blinded by sporadic lightning. The wind cried and lamented in a fearful voice, it so felt as if it was mourning the cracking of the sky. There was chaos all around me. Sounds of climatic cries paired with my own sobs created great pandemonium. I was shivering and shaking with intense fear, it was certain that the sky would fall upon me at any moment. With trembling feet I tried to press the accelerator but my car appeared to have left the storm-leaden grounds and was floating in the air. It tossed and turned vehemently pulling me off my seat again and again. I was swaying left and right, and then suddenly I got a severe jolt that made me bolt from the vehicle and land outside. Without thinking anything, I rose and started to run frantically, covering my head and ears. I was running for my life.
There was smoke all around me. There was fire everywhere and then, suddenly, sinking deep inside the fat belly of the sky, smoke rose from all directions. It was difficult to breathe normally. Raising my head, I tried to gulp in smoky air and breathe normally and when there was no oxygen I gripped my neck with both hands and tried to breathe deeply looking up at the sky. Suddenly, I felt the entire sky had cracked open and was about to fall on me and I was sinking inside the earth unable to budge an inch from my location; my body sank deeper and deeper inside the ground.
My eyes snapped open. My hands held my neck as I sobbed bitterly. When I realized how tightly I had gripped my neck, my hands slackened and I took a deep breath, but this resulted in a convoluting fit of bone-shattering coughs.
Slowly and steadily, I regained composure and realized I was drenched in sweat and my clothes, which clung to my body, had turned frighteningly cold. Anxiously, my hands held my head, which was slowly becoming numb. For a while, I stayed on the bed breathing heavily, and then things became a little normal. It was then that I realized that all this was just a nightmare—a nightmare that benumbed me mentally and physically. After some time, when I was totally calm, I turned on the night lamp and sat on the edge of the bed staring at the wall and windows blankly. The alarm clock on the side table indicated the time, 03:25. The ticking clock screamed the silence of the room with every tick.
Gosh! What a terrifying nightmare, my body shuddered with fear.
Was it a dream or prophecy of some impending threat? My sinking heart gave rise to doubt.
I yawned. A small voice stirred within me unconsciously and escaped my lips without fear or stress.
For a moment, I tried to close my eyes once more, but then suddenly they snapped open.
I sat on the bed bolt upright, looked around and stared at the ceiling. The ceiling was wrapped in light and the shadow of the fan was thrown by the lamp in the room. A tall shadow of my figure hovered against the wall and moved every time I stirred. I thought to turn on the fan so that the room would feel less dense but dropped the idea looking at my sweat-soaked garment. The stickiness of my clothes replaced my fear with unease. I looked down and touched my clinging top and turned towards the wardrobe and rose to change into something dry and fresh. I had taken two steps towards the