THE ABORTED ISLAND
Abu Rushd
Translated by: The Author
Published by: Bangla Academy, Dhaka-1000
First Edition: November 1985
As the
news was published in the dailies and broadcast through
the radio and TV, a new animation was noticeable
throughout the metropolitan city. Twenty-eight miles off
the north-east port-city, an island had risen out of the
sea and become habitable. The area of the island was
about 700 square miles. Already flora had begun to grow
on the island and fauna was getting visible. Some of the
foremost scientists and geologists of the country had
conducted a three-month long detailed survey of the
island and declared that it was not only fit for human
habitation but that there was also a distinct
possibility of a variety of mineral resources being
found there.
The government had accordingly decided to settle, in the
first phase, one thousand inhabitants on the newly
emerged island. All expenses of settling the first batch
of inhabitants would be borne by government. The
selected candidates would only be required to collect at
the new central railway station at their own expense.
Thenceforth, all arrangements necessary to carry the
settlers to their destination would be made by
government. Every selected adult would be given a
one-time grant of 500 taka and allotted half-a-bigha of
land on the new settlement. The selected person, of
course, would be required to carry all suitable
implements for the profession chosen by him. At the time
of applying for selection, each candidate must collect a
copy of the questionnaire from the particular ministry,
fill it up together with his or her attested signature
or thumb-impression and then send it on to the relevant
authority. October 30 of the current year was the last
date for submitting the application.
When the announcement was broadcast by T.V. in the seven
o'clock news, it produced more or less the same reaction
in different circles of the city. Curiosity and
excitement. The quality of curiosity did not vary, but
the excitement was most noticeable among the deprived
and disadvantaged. Those who had nothing further to lose
or nothing to gain in the existing system. Those who did
not even toy with the idea of going to the island felt,
too, a thrill of excitement at the announcement, at
least momentarily. Perveen, for instance. Her
attractively filled-out body suited her name rather
well. Her long flowing hair, extending up to her thigh,
was a bit matted through lack of adequate care. Her nose
was very elegant. A nose-gay of white pearl-a
wedding-gift from her mother-enhanced the brightness of
her ivory skin. Her buttock and waist were, for the male
beholder, clearly inflammatory sights. Among these
beholders, one was lucky with her. Her left eye had a
somewhat stony stare, though, apparently discouraging
all erotic thoughts. Decidedly, an attractive woman.
She lived alone with her husband, in a one-room house,
in a reasonably decent neighbourhood. She had to carry
water from a well-stocked underground tank about two
hundred yards from her house. When, with the empty
earthen vessel expertly placed at the left corner of her
waist, she proceeded towards the tank, clad in a blue or
green or red-black saree, to fetch water for her
household needs, the movement started a rhythm in her
buttock that would be worthy of the poet's pen or the
painter's brush, despite the discouraging stony stare.
She looked well-preserved, partly because she still had
not gone through the tribulations of a child-birth. But
her once-erect bosom now exhibited the signs of decline
suffered owing to excessive handling of it on her
husband's part and had ceased to be competitive with the
other parts of her anatomy. Nevertheless, a cheap
brassier was able to conceal the actual loss sustained
by that particular protuberance from the gaze of many an
inquisitive male.
Her husband had often to be away from home for business
reasons. Sometimes a deal in pulse, occasionally a whole
boat-load of earthen-vessels, once or twice a modest
hosiery transaction. Mostly, he was able to make a
satisfactory profit, enough in fact to defray all
household expenses in these days of economic depression.
It was because of her husband's long stays outside and
the fact that they were still without an issue that she
had not entirely discouraged the attentions paid to her
by a neighbouring middle-aged male, still looking rather
handsome. He was very courteous and soft-spoken.
Especially ingratiating was his smile. The longing
expressed in the slightly twisted way he looked at her
somehow made her intimate parts moist with expectation.
One midnight, this led to an unexpected encounter with
him, the fervid recollection of which would take away
all uncertainties which her stony stare symbolized.
When she found the humid heat of a May mid-night
dissolved into hot drops of sweat all over her body,
including the region below her petticoat, she had come
out of the furnace-like interior of her one-room house
and at that very moment, Maqbul had emerged-returning
home from a mid-night appointment.
Finding Pervin standing by the door-step of her house at
that odd hour of the night, Maqbul's eyes suddenly
looked suitably lubricated and his lips convoluted a bit
owing to a sharp escalation of desire. These changes, of
course, were noticed by Pervin, as Maqbul himself was
not discriminating enough to be aware of the changes
wrought in the body by a mind charged with lust. He was
only dimly aware of the fact that he smiled while
looking at Pervin in that particular posture and that
she had made a shy response to that tentative
invitation, lowering her face under the mauve head-gear
made by the upper part of her saree.
No one was awake at that time in the vicinity of
Pervin's house. The cat which was habituated to some
brisk walking punctuated by mewing when it approached
mid-night was nowhere to be seen - twenty yards away in
the corrugated-iron structure, where lived the
mini-merchant Salamat, an electric bulb was giving forth
some eerie light which made weird patterns on the
blackish-green long leaves of a nearby coconut tree.
That created an atmosphere which seemed to be related to
some other world.
Pervin heard Maqbul saying: Can I come in?
The question was a torrid expression of desire.
Grasping the significance of the question, pervin gave a
decisive reply: No.
- Would only talk for a while, noting else.
- What are you saying? If the neighbours hear, there
would be a scandal.
- No one is awake, let's get inside. Maqbul knew
Pervin's husband was out of town on a business tour.
- What trouble are you creating at mid-night, why don't
you go home?
- Who is there to whom I can go? Maqbul's reply was no
surprise to Pervin, as she already knew Maqbul was a
widower and both his sons were living abroad. She also
knew, Maqbul was now passing quiet days in anew and
gleaming three-room flat, looked after by an old aunt of
his.
She had also heard that, now and again, Maqbul also
managed to coax some teen-aged girls into some kind of
physical relationship with him. Despite all this, Pervin
had once accepted a gift from Maqbul - a pleasantly
perfumed toilet soap, after a long dialogue with him
through eyes.
The encounter seemed to have been planned by an
invisible authority. Pervin's husband was out of town,
Pervin had suddenly come out of the unbearably heated
interior of her unventilated house precisely at the
moment when Maqbul was returning from his mid-night
errand, not a cat mewing in the neighbourhood, the house
at the other end of the lane looked so innocuous, and
the coconut tree, too, with an enviable feel of the
moment, was making invitingly murmurous noises. And
there was, at this particular moment, something in the
look of Maqbul which effectively melted all her physical
and mental resistance.
Once inside the room and as the door was being shut, the
whole body of Pervin began shaking in explosive
expectation and the drops of sweat accumulating on her
passion-reddened face fell on her shoulders and hands.
Pervin was not quite prepared for what Maqbul did after
putting off the light but she found herself in a state
of passivity. In the complete darkness of the room,
Maqbul started sucking the drops of sweat off her face
and shoulders and tried to reach at the folds of her
saree when he met with sudden resistance. But he was
past all restraint and with a forceful jerk pulled
Pervin to his broad muscular chest and then began
kissing her with an intensity indicative of a desperate
search in a bottomless pit.
As she was finding breathing difficult, Pervin somehow
succeeded in partly loosening Maqbul's animal grab and
said in a plaintive tone: It hurts.
Ion response, Maqbul pushed her body a bit and then drew
her closer to his chest with the full might of his
strong body and began lunatically squeezing her breasts.
This time Pervin found her body growing deliciously limp
and her whole being trembling in piercing ecstasy, so
she surrendered to Maqbul's second effort at disrobing
her, and in the process felt a wordless affection for
him.
- Slowly. A bit startled as the word slipped out of her
mouth, Pervin in some surprise heard herself adding:
Where does all this strength come from?
When the cardinal moment came, after frantic exploration
of Pervin's anatomy, Maqbul said effusively : Enjoying
it?
After a few mement's silence, Pervin's reply was so
welcome to Maqbul : Why all this madness? If you stay so
long, which woman would say that she did not like the
experience?
With the spluttering moment deliriously coming to an
end, both real-realized that all their taut nerves had
become agreeably relaxed and there was no feeling of
guilt at all in their minds. The actual felling was of
strong mutual need, both physically and mentally.
- Please go away now, if anyone gets to know what has
happened there would be no end of trouble. Pervin said
in a tone that suggested that she was a bit reluctant to
take the initiative in terminating this highly
pleasurable experience of her life.
- Who would know? The next house is at the other end and
all people there must be fast asleep. Can I tell you
something, Pervin?
- What?
- Did you hear on the radio about the new island?
Government have decided to allot land there to the
intending settlers. Every selected adult would get half
a bigah of land there. I intend to apply.
- You will apply! Whatever for? You have everything
here. Even in the darkness Maqbul could guess that
Pervin's left eye-brow had been raised as an exclamation
mark, familiar as he was with this trait of hers. Maqbul
avoided a direct reply and made a counter query: If I'm
selected, will you come with me to the island? The query
carried a longing and dream long nurtured by Maqbul.
At first Pervin grew speechless at the suddenness of the
question, then she trembled like a timid bird and said
in a voice of surprise that seemed to emanate from her
very heart: Why should I ever go with you, don't I have
a household of my own?
- Of course you've, but I got you, too.
Pervin became silent again.
- You know Pervin, how I got so emboldened?
Pervin still said nothing.
- I've been watching you for many days now. I could
never muster up courage to speak to you, although I had
felt encouraged by the smile you sometimes gave me while
by-passing me when our ways met together. That smile
bore some enchantment, so I got emboldened to day. I
felt you wouldn't say 'no' to me.
The formality of his speech conveyed Maqbul's inner
agitation.
Pervin heard everything in silence. Maqbul's voice once
again assumed a throbbing note in the intense agitation
which he felt: When I see you I'm reminded of the
star-spangled blue sky. Everything there looks so lovely
and clean. Many a day I had fantasied about cloping with
you there. Let my dried-up heart and lonely life once
again know what it is to be happy. Eventually Pervin
flared up : Never speak such words again. What a
dangerous man you are, no compunction about breaking up
another man's household.
- I'm thinking of my own right to happiness, and not
anything else.
Pervin's reaction this time was unexpectedly sharp: Why
do you've to tell all these things to me? Please go away
now. If I raise my voice, the whole neighbourhood would
wake up.
Maqbul did not relish such a possibility and was ready
to leave, after Pervin cautiously opened the door to let
him go. But as he silently went out of the room, he gave
Pervin a quiet kiss driven by a tenderness that had
swelled up within him. And Pervin felt a cardinal change
sweeping through her inmost being. On his way back home,
Maqbul met a man, in the middle of the lane, proceeding
towards the main street. But this conveyed no
significance to him, as his mind was still under
enchantment of the time he had spent with Pervin....