Once upon
a time, in a village in Bunglistan, there was a priest.
He was not much of a priest. He had a
temple which was old and beginning to crumble, and he had almost no money,
because an old, crumbling, temple brings in few worshippers and not much in the
way of donations. But his wants were few, and he would have been satisfied with
what he had, were it not for his wife.
She was a terrible wife. She weighed twice
as much as the priest did, and had a voice twice as loud as he could have
shouted, had he only enough daring to shout. When she walked the floor
trembled, and when she spoke, the priest looked fearfully at the ceiling,
hoping that it would not collapse on their heads. She was horrible beyond
description, but she was his wife. Her name was Monoroma.
Every day Monoroma would berate the priest,
on and on without end, over his poverty and his insignificance. “Other
priests,” she would boom, while flinging his breakfast down in front of him, so
that all appetite fled, “other priests have grand temples and lots of people
coming daily, and pouring coins at the idol’s feet. And their wives wear saris with golden thread and eat fish fried in
ghee at every meal. While I slave for you until I collapse and I’m starved to
skin and bone. Look!” She would stick her obese forearm in front of the
priest’s face, so close that he would flinch. “Look at how thin I am! My mother
was right all along, telling me not to marry a weak, snivelling excuse for a
man like you!”
With relief the priest would escape to his
temple, pausing at the small village pond to gather a few water lilies to offer
to the idol. Sometimes there would be a couple wanting him to bless a baby, or
a bereaved son wanting him to arrange the last rites of a deceased parent. The
priest was always happy with these, because funeral ceremonies were always
quite lucrative, right behind marriages. But marriages always reminded him of
his own, so despite the fee he could collect, he really didn’t enjoy them very
much.
One day it so happened that, when the
priest reached the pond, he found that the nearest water lily bloom was too far
for him to reach. Stretch as he might, kneeling on the bank, it was too far.
And he had too much of a fear of water to attempt to wade in to gather a few. Besides,
the pond was deep in places, and he might fall in over his head and drown. He
was convinced that if he ever fell into water over his head he would drown.
And yet he couldn’t possibly offer no
flowers to the deity’s idol at all. That would never do.
Just as, scratching his head, he began to
wonder if he could quietly raid someone’s garden and steal some flowers – or
was it too late in the morning already? – he heard a voice right behind him.
“Do you want some flowers? Don’t worry,
I’ll get you flowers.”
Before the priest could even look around to
see who had spoken, someone enormously tall stepped right over him and into the
water. So tall was this person that his knees were still above the kneeling
priest’s head. Stooping, he gathered up a huge bunch of water lilies in his
incredibly long arms and turned to give them to the priest. “Will that be
enough?” he asked anxiously. “If not, I can get more.”
It was a ghost, of course. The priest had
already realised that even before he looked up, and up, and up, to see the terrible
face staring down at him with red eyes the size of bullock cart wheels set
between ears the size of winnowing baskets. The ghost – it was surely a bhoot –
grinned diffidently at the priest with teeth the size of radishes.
“I’m so sorry for startling you,” it said. “Please
don’t be afraid. Don’t scream.”
The priest was not about to scream. The
priest couldn’t even utter a squeak of fear. He considered fainting, but was
too afraid even to do that.
“Here you are,” the bhoot said, handing the
priest the water lilies he had plucked. “Please give a few to the deity from me
as well.”
At this the priest found a semblance of a
voice. “You want to offer flowers to the deity? A bhoot?”
“Why not?” the bhoot answered equably.
Climbing out of the water, he sat beside the priest on the bank, his knees
poking up like mountain peaks. “I have prayers just like anyone else, don’t I?
I want to ask the deity for help as well.”
“What do you want to ask for?” the priest
asked. “I didn’t even know ghosts had any needs, especially ones they needed
help for.”
“If you only knew,” the bhoot muttered.
Looking quickly over his shoulder to make certain nobody was listening, he bent
his head towards the priest. “There’s a petni I’m in love with,” he whispered,
“and whom I want to marry. The thing is...”
“...that she doesn’t love you?” The priest thought
he saw where this was going. “I must tell you that the deity won’t take kindly
to prayers intended to make someone fall in love with you against her intentions.
The deity looks to everyone’s welfare, and...”
“No, no,” the bhoot hissed. “She loves me
too, and wants to marry me. That’s not the problem.”
“Then what is?” the priest asked,
befuddled. “Surely all you need to do is go to the nearest Brohmodottyi ghost
and get yourselves married, right?”
“There you have it,” the bhoot replied,
with a hollow moan. “The stupid fool of a Brohmodottyi refuses to marry us.
Says it’s because our horrorscopes don’t match, but I know the real reason. He
wants my petni for his own son!”
“He does?”
“Yes,” the bhoot replied. “His own son is a
horrible snivelling ghost whom not even the most desperate spinster petni or
shakchunni would touch. He’s ugly and stupid, and, what’s more, he thinks he
has a right to do whatever he wants.”
“That’s terrible,” the priest answered
mechanically. He got up and began walking towards the temple, the water lilies
in his arms. He had never got so many before. The bhoot walked beside him,
taking mincing little steps to match the priest’s gait. “What do you want the
deity to do about it?”
“Can’t he intercede to change the
Brohmoddtyi’s mind?” the bhoot asked. “That’s what I want. I’m sure the deity
can make a Brohomodottyi do anything he wants.”
“Yes, but...” The priest looked up quickly
at the bhoot from the corner of his eye. He was really a very large bhoot.
“Just suppose the Brohmodottyi disobeys the deity, though. You know what you
said about him claiming you and your petni’s horrorscopes aren't matching. So he’s
perfectly willing to lie.”
“Well, if that happens,” the bhoot said
gloomily. “The deity obviously wouldn’t have interceded strongly enough with
the Brohmodottyi. He wouldn’t have threatened the old ghost enough. If that
happens, there’s only one reason for that I can think of, and that is...”
“Wait, wait,” the priest said hurriedly,
already seeing the bhoot’s nostrils beginning to flare with anger. “Look, you
don’t actually need the Brohmodottyi, right? I mean, you need a priest to
conduct your marriage, but there’s no real requirement that it has to be a ghost priest?”
“Um, no,” the bhoot said. “But who except
for a Brohmodottyi would conduct our marriage?”
“I would, of course,” the priest said,
quickly glancing up again to make certain the bhoot’s nostrils had stopped
flaring. Another moment’s delay and the creature’s immense hands might have
wrung his neck. “I’d do it with pleasure.”
He wasn’t even lying, he told himself. Keeping his neck unwrung would be
pleasurable enough.
“You would?” The bhoot seemed unable to
believe his winnowing-basket-sized ears. “If you did that, I’d give you
anything your heart wanted. Anything at all!”
“That would be nice,” the priest replied
quickly. They had reached the temple. “Where do you want to conduct the ritual,
here?”
“No!” The bhoot cast a horrified glance at
the temple. “It’s all full of rats and things. No, we’ll get married in the
proper ghost style. You know the ruined old temple in the middle of the
tamarind grove in the forest?”
The priest gulped. Of course he knew the
ruined temple in the middle of the tamarind grove in the forest. Everyone in
all the villages nearby knew about the ruined temple in the middle of the
tamarind grove in the forest. What was more, they knew well enough to never go
anywhere near it, for any reason.
“All right,” he said, because he had no way
out. “If that’s where it’s got to be, there’s nothing for it. Let’s go there
and do it, then.”
“What, now?”
the bhoot responded, aghast. “Who ever heard of a ghost getting married in the
daytime! Not even a mamdo bhoot would think of such a thing. Besides, I need to
send out the invitations, and my fiancée needs to prepare. No, we’ll get
married in the proper ghost fashion – at midnight tonight.”
“Tonight?”
The priest’s teeth began to chatter at the thought. He would do almost anything
rather than go to the ruined temple in the middle of the tamarind grove in the
forest at midnight. Anything except, of course, getting his neck wrung,
something that, with those hands, the
bhoot could do before he could draw breath to scream. “You mean to get married
at midnight...in the tamarind grove?”
“Well, of course,” the bhoot said,
astonished. “When else would a ghost get married except at midnight? Most of us
aren’t even awake during the day.”
“And you have to do it tonight?” the priest repeated.”Can’t it wait a day or two?” In a
day or two the bhoot might have forgotten the whole affair. Some bhoots were
notorious for their short memories.
But not this one, apparently. “Tonight’s omoboshya, the night of the new moon,’
he replied. “You know as well as I do that that’s the most suspicious occasion
for a ghostly wedding. When would we ever get a better time than that?”
“All right,” the priest said, pressing his
knees together so they wouldn’t give way. “I suppose it’ll have to be tonight.”
“So mind you get there at midnight
tonight,” the bhoot said, waving cheerily. “We’re going to be waiting for you,
and if you aren’t there, I’m afraid there are going to be a lot of unhappy
ghosts.”
The priest swallowed. “There are?”
“Of course. And there won’t be any more
unhappy than I am. Except my fiancée, of course.” The bhoot looked pensive for
a moment. “Now you haven’t really seen anyone unhappy unless you’ve seen her
unhappy.”
“Ah,
well, then, I’ll be at the ruined temple at midnight,” the priest said
hurriedly, fleeing into his temple.
“You don’t have to bring anything,” the
bhoot called out cheerfully. “I’ll arrange everything. Well, then, have a good
day. I’ve got to go and tell my fiancée the great news.”
Alone at last, the priest began quaking
with fear. So terrified was he, so busy trying to stop his teeth from
chattering, that he didn’t even notice that not a single worshipper turned up
at the temple the whole day.
Monoroma noticed, though, of course. When
he returned empty-handed that evening to the house, her anger was something to
behold.
“Useless!” she screamed, looking for
something to hit him with, but not finding anything handy. “You’re absolutely
useless! If I hadn’t got sixteen fish from the jeweller’s wife in exchange for
that bundle of firewood I’ve been asking you to chop up for weeks, I’d starve to death. Here.” And
she threw down half a fish on the banana leaf on which she served him dinner.
The priest knew better than to ask where the other fifteen and a half fishes
were, and he didn’t have any appetite anyway.
“No, you eat it,” he said, pushing it away.
His wife paused, the half-fish already
halfway to her mouth. “Who’s been feeding you?” she demanded. “Admit it, you’ve
eaten all the things the worshippers brought you! No wonder you’re getting as
fat as a buffalo while I’m...” she stuffed the entire half-fish into her mouth
and spoke around it. “While I’m thin as a stick and fading away by the day. The
cheek!”
The priest didn’t say anything. At least, he
thought, when the ghosts wrung his neck tonight, as they were certain to do, he
wouldn’t have to listen to her anymore. With a sigh, he unrolled his sleeping
mat and lay down, gazing up at the ceiling of the hut.
Now, of course – and this was something that
the priest and his wife ought to have known, and it is to their discredit that
they’d never thought of it – their own house had a ghost as well, who lived in
the space between the thatched roof and the sheet of cloth that served for a
ceiling. He was a very small ghost, a little pret, totally harmless, and far
too timid to make himself known to a priest who might call down the wrath of
his deity, not to mention his roaring monster of a wife. The pret was, however,
rather fond of them, because as long as they were there no other ghost came
around to bully him. Also, he had, of course, learnt by the ghostvine of the
bhoot’s marriage that night, though he had not been invited. He had not
expected to be invited, and was not therefore disappointed.
When the priest’s wife finally stopped
shouting, belched satisfactorily and fish-redolently, and lay down on her own
sleeping mat, the pret thought he might go for a short walk outside. He rarely
did such a thing, because he was far too scared of the other ghosts. But
tonight they were likely to all be at the wedding, and the pret thought he
would probably be safe enough.
So, rubbing his twisted little horns, he
slipped down from the roof and wandered off into the village. It had been a
long time since he’d been out at night, and the cool breeze, the croaking of
frogs in the pond, and the hum of mosquitoes was soothing to him, so that he
went a lot further than he’d intended to. All of a sudden he remembered the
bhoot’s marriage, and that if he went too far he might run into some of the
guests. Just the thought of it made his tail curl up with terror.
Turning quickly, he found he had lost his
way. This would not normally be a problem, because the village was not large,
but the pret panicked and confused himself even more by wandering in circles
through back lanes. By the time he’d found the proper path again, it was almost
midnight. Hurrying back to the priest’s hut, he was just in time to see a
shadowy figure slip out of the door and into the forest.
The pret decided instantly that it must be
a thief. Only a thief would sneak around at night like that, and, having
burgled a house, go straight to the nearest patch of forest to hide and gloat
over his spoils. Not pausing a moment to wonder whether any thief would bother
to come to the priest’s house, knowing that he hadn’t two cowries to rub
together, the pret decided to follow the shadowy figure.
There were two reasons for this piece of
almost unimaginable boldness. The first was that the pret had real affection
for his unwitting host and hostess, and their distress at losing what little
they had to a burglar would cause him pain as well. The second?
The second was even simpler. If they met
some of the ghosts going to the bhoot’s marriage, they’d wring the thief’s neck
first. The pret would have plenty of time to get away.
Feeling secure for the first time since
he’d realised how far he’d wandered, the pret slipped into the forest, treading
as close to the thief as he dared.
To say the priest was terrified would be
wrong. For certain, he’d been terrified earlier, but the fear had given way to
a dull resignation that now numbed him like a drink of the mohua liquor his
wife permitted him to touch once a year, on Kali Puja. He wished he had some
mohua liquor now, so that he wouldn’t even feel it when the ghosts wrung his
neck. Well, he might as well go and get it over with.
Meanwhile, the bhoot had gathered his
guests, and his bride, and all the ingredients of the feast at the temple, and
was just waiting for the priest to turn up. Some of the guests were already
getting impatient.
“Hey, Shurjonoroyon Mitomojumdar,” one of
the shakchunnis shouted, for that was the bhoot’s name, “where is this priest
of yours? The suspicious time of the marriage is almost here!”
“Ha ha,” another ghost, a mere headless
Skondhokata ghost of all things, dared to respond. “He called a living priest
to come and perform the marriage. Can you imagine a human being coming here, and at this time of night? Ha ha!”
“It’s not yet midnight,” the bhoot
muttered, but he was growing increasingly anxious. “There’s still a little time
left. I’m sure he’ll arrive any moment.” The only affirmation he got was the
howls of the jackals and the croaks of the frogs that shared the forest with
the ghosts.
But the priest was not about to arrive any
moment, and for an excellent reason. The Brohmodottyi who had refused to
conduct the marriage of the bhoot and the petni had heard of the planned
wedding, and, of course, was incensed. The petni in question was the prettiest
female ghost in the district, and the Brohmodottyi had long since resolved to
marry her to his son. That his son was the ugliest, stupidest, most
ill-mannered ghost of any description in all of Bunglistan mattered not at all.
“Come with me,” he snapped to the junior
Brohmodottyi, who was poking around in a hollow tree in hopes of finding a
luscious caterpillar or beetle grub to devour. “We will find this priest and
stop him before he can get to this marriage. Then not only will the marriage
fall through, the bhoot will be so discredited that no self-respecting ghost
will ever care to be seen with him again.”
“In a minute,” the junior Brohmodottyi
whined. “I’m sure there’s a grub in here somewh...ouch!”
Dragging his progeny by one flapping ear,
the Brohmodottyi stalked off through the forest towards the village, looking
for the priest. And as he stomped heavily along, his immense paunch heaving, he
berated his son at every step for making his poor father do all the work, and
the junior Brohmodottyi muttered about grubs and snivelled about not wanting to
marry anyone.
“Be silent!” the Brohmodottyi roared, and
gave his spawn such a shake the young ghost squealed and rubbed his ear, which
he’d imagined had been torn right off. “Be silent! We’re going to meet the
priest any moment, and we don’t want to scare him off.”
But, meanwhile, the priest had long since
lost his way. This was not at all surprising, and the bhoot should have thought
of it. The priest, like all the other villagers, hardly dared to set foot in
the forest even in the light of noon; to expect him to be able to find the
ruined temple in the middle of the tamarind grove, at midnight, was to expect
far too much. At the moment he was walking in a direction that might bring him
to the next village, on the far side of the forest, by midmorning the next day
or thereabouts. And then, trying to find the path, he blundered into a little
pond and fell right in, with an almighty splash.
It has been mentioned that the priest was
terrified of water. This was true even in daylight, within easy reach of the
village and rescue. In the middle of the night, lost in the forest, suddenly
finding himself up to his chin in the slimy, cold liquid, all he could do was
scream.
It was a most impressive scream. It started
somewhere around his midsection, bounced around his lungs and throat while
gathering strength, and then emerged from his mouth in a bubbling howl that sent
the frogs diving into the mud for safety and the jackals running for their
lives.
It sent the pret running, too. In the
darkness of the forest, he’d thought himself safe enough from discovery to
close almost within touching distance of his quarry, and so had received the
full effect of the scream at point blank range. With a startled yip that was totally lost within the
tail-end of the priest’s howl, he fell over on his tail, pushed himself
backwards as far as he could with his elbows, and then jumped up and ran for
home as quickly as though a thousand bhoots were at his back.
The scream echoed, faintly, in the ears of
the Brohmodottyi, too, as he dragged his reluctant son towards the village. At
first he was inclined to dismiss it, for it had come from behind him and well
to one side, far away from where the priest should be, if he were coming. But
it was a human scream, and the
Brohmodottyi was well aware that no human would dare come to the forest at
night, and most of all not on a new moon night. Except, of course, the one
human he was looking for.
“Let’s go and see what that’s about,” he muttered
to himself, and giving his son another hard tug on an agonised ear, he turned
in the direction of the sound.
The scream had reached, even more faintly,
the winnowing-basket-sized ears of the bhoot as well. “Did you hear that?” he
asked. “There was a scream.”
“Hear what, Shurjonoroyon Mitromojumdar?”
the same shakchunni who had mocked him earlier called. “All I hear are the
calls of jackals. If you’re planning to create a diversion from your priest not
arriving, it won’t work.”
“What calls of jackals?” the bride petni said. “Listen, Shorothkumari Shutrodhor. Shut that mouth of yours for once and listen. The jackals have fallen silent.”
“So have the frogs,” another ghost said. It
was true. The jungle was still as a crematorium at midday.
“I suppose it was a scream after all,” the
shakchunni admitted reluctantly. “But I still don’t see what that means.”
“It means,” the bhoot said, “that we have
to go and see what’s happened to my priest.”
At the head of a shambling line of ghosts
of all descriptions, he set off through the forest.
Meanwhile, the pret had managed to somehow
find his way out of the forest, more by luck than judgement. At first he had
run only in pure, undiluted panic. But the further he had got, the more a
suspicion had grown in his mind. That scream...the voice that made that scream
had sounded awfully familiar. If he hadn’t been certain that he’d been
following a thief, he’d have sworn that it was the voice of his host, the priest.
He tended to scream in that kind of timbre when his wife twisted his ear for
not bringing home enough food and money.
He was just telling himself that he was
mistaken when he ran, full tilt, into the not inconsiderable paunch of the
priest’s wife herself.
Monoroma had woken a short while before,
troubled by the bites of mosquitoes. Usually, mosquitoes did not trouble her.
They tended to avoid her leathery skin and the terrifically thick layer of
blubber beneath, preferring to concentrate their attentions on her husband,
whose watery, anaemic blood was more than compensated for by how easy it was to
feed from him. Tonight, though, they had had to make the best of a bad
situation. And the itch of a particularly savage bite – the poor mosquito had
had to jab her ear in the desperate hope of finding a blood vessel – had driven
her from out of the depths of slumber.
“Are you listening?” she’d bawled, even
before opening her eyes. “You lie snoring all night while I get devoured by
insects. If I weren’t a weak woman, I would...” Then she’d suddenly realised
that the door of the hut was open, and that it was empty.
Grunting, she’d heaved herself up from the
mat, and stalked outside, ready to find her husband and wring an explanation
from him. That he might be meeting a floozy from the village never even
occurred to her; she had enough of an accurate estimation of her husband’s
charms to realise that not even the most wanton of hussies would ever waste a
come-hither glance on him. It had to be something else, and when she found him,
she would...
It was at this precise moment that a small
pret butted her in the stomach, hard. It might have hurt her, but for all the
fat. As it was, the impact didn’t even knock her a step back.
Monoroma had many faults, but physical
cowardice had never been one of them. She snatched up the pret and held him
wriggling at eye level. “Well?” she demanded. “Where is my husband, and what
have you done with him?”
At the question, the poor pret’s misgivings
overcame the squalling terror that had gripped him along with the priest’s
wife. “Was it your husband?” he gibbered. “He’s in the forest, and fell into a
pond.”
“He did, eh?” Monoroma said. She gave the
pret a shake that made his horns rattle. “Well, then, take me to him.”
The pret gave out a squeak. He could do no
better, with her hand squeezing his throat. But that was enough evidence of
acquiescence to Monoroma. She had long ago become an expert at interpreting
squeaks.
“Right,” she said, dropping him. “Now, move.”
The pret moved. Of course the pret moved. Wouldn’t you?
You would.
Meanwhile...
Meanwhile, the priest, once he had stopped screaming, had realised that he
hadn’t actually drowned. Thrashing around in the darkness, he had finally found
some half-submerged roots and branches, and used these to drag himself out of
the water. Scarcely had he stumbled on to dry land, though, he found himself
seized by the back of the neck, where it met his shoulder.
“There
you are,” the Brohmodottyi bellowed. “Planning to give us a slip by coming the
long way round, were you?”
The priest said nothing. He said nothing
because his voice had correctly analysed that the effort necessary for another
scream was out of the question, and gone on strike for the moment. All he
managed was another squeak.
The Brohmodottyi lacked Monoroma’s ability
to interpret squeaks. “You refuse to answer me, do you? I’ve a good mind to
wring your neck. I was thinking I’d only keep you captive till morning and then
let you go, but you’ve caused me enough trouble. Yes, I think I’ll wring your
neck.”
And right then the Brohmodottyi realised
something awkward. He needed two hands
to wring the priest’s neck, emaciated though it might be; but one hand was busy
holding the wretch by the back of the neck, and the other had his spawn clutched tight
by the ear. If he let the junior Brohmodottyi go, the dissolute boy would
certainly take the opportunity to escape and look for insects to feed his maw,
hiding away at the same time from the threat of marriage. He paused, baffled.
He was still cogitating on what to do when
the bhoot, wedding party in tow, arrived on the scene.
“What on earth are you doing,
Shubhodrolochon Bondopadhayay?” the bhoot demanded. “That’s my priest. He came here to conduct my wedding. You’ve no right to do a
thing to him.”
“I don’t, is that so?” the Brohmodottyi
sneered. “Don’t push your luck, Shurjonoroyon Mitromojumdar. Who knows more
about religious law and horrorscopes, I or you? Well?”
There was a brief pause. “He’s got a point,”
some of the ghosts began muttering to each other. “Shubhodrolochon
Bondopadhayay is right. He does know
more about religious law and horrorscopes than Shurjonoroyon Mitromojumdar does.”
“But do you know more about them than my
priest?” the bhoot demanded. “That’s the question. He’s as qualified in
religion as you are, and, moreover, I have every right to call him in. There’s
not a single ghostly law that says I can’t call whom I want.”
“I can vouch for that,” a mullah Mamdo bhoot
spoke up. “I’m a Muslim, so I can’t conduct this marriage, but I can stand
witness that Shurjonoroyon Mitromojumdar is perfectly correct. He can call in
whoever he wants, and that’s all there is to it. The only criterion is that the
person has to be religiously qualified to conduct the wedding.”
“Well then,” the Brohmodottyi said, giving
the priest another shake, and eliciting another squeak reminiscent of a baby
rat. “Well, then, ask him and see.
Let’s see what he has to say for himself, if anything. Let him prove what his
qualifications are.”
“Whatever his qualifications are,” a
charging elephant trumpeted, “you have no right to hold him like that. If there’s
anyone who has a right to squeeze his throat, it’s I. Now let him go.”
Once the ghosts had managed to shake off
some of the effects of the blast of sound, they discovered that it was not a
trumpeting elephant, but something far more intimidating. A human woman had
waddled into their midst. Or was it a monster disguised as a woman? The ghosts
suddenly decided that they would rather not find out.
“Did you not hear what I said?” she
thundered, stomping up to the Brohmodottyi. “Drop my husband right now.”
“But...but I was just about to wring his
neck,” the Brohmodottyi whined. “You must understand, I was trying to do
everyone a service. I was...”
“Drop him,” Monoroma replied, “or it’s your neck I’ll wring. And don’t think I
can’t do it, too.”
The Brohmodottyi looked at her brawny arms,
and at her face, which somewhat resembled a crudely shaped mass of dough. He
saw the look in her eyes, as bleak and glittering as a cobra’s, and suddenly
decided that discretion was the better part of valour. And there would be other
petnis for his son. “I didn’t mean any harm,” he said, dropping his captive. “Come
on, you,” he added, with a vicious tug at junior’s ear. “Let’s go.”
Monoroma didn’t even wait until he’d
disappeared before substituting his grip on her husband’s neck with hers. “Now,”
she said. “Sneaking off at the dead of night, are we? Hobnobbing with ghosts,
are we? Just wait till I get you home.”
“But,” the bhoot protested, seeing his
victory slipping from his grip. “But, he came here to conduct my marriage.”
“And the suspicious time is almost past,”
the bride petni put in.
“He promised me anything I wanted if I
would do it,” the priest, who had finally managed to gather enough voice to
speak, said. “Isn’t that right?” he appealed to the bhoot. “Anything at all.”
“He did?” Monoroma replied, before the bhoot
could say anything. Her eyes glittered with avarice as brightly as the
fireflies that flitted through the forest around them. “Anything at all? Gold
and silver as well?”
The bhoot cleared his throat. “I don’t see
why not,” he said. “There’s enough loot stashed by bandits in this forest for
us to supply your requirements. But first – ”
“Why didn’t you say so?” Monoroma said, grinning. “Of course my husband will conduct your wedding. He’ll conduct the
wedding of every ghost in the forest if you want. Did you say the suspicious
time for the marriage is passing?”
“It is,” the bride petni said. “We’ve got
to get going if we’re going to do it at all.”
“Get moving,” Monoroma ordered. “My gold
and silver are at stake. Move!”
They moved.
The wedding was a great success.
Afterwards, as the bhoot plied the priest
with sweets and delicacies, Monoroma drew the petni bride aside. “My dear,” she
said. “Listen to me carefully. You must break in your husband at once. Train him properly from the
start, so that he never gives you trouble. Let me explain to you how.”
She explained.
And, in the middle of the celebrations, one
tiny voice went unanswered. It was the little pret, asking one plaintive
question.
“Please, can I go home now?”
Copyright
B
Purkayastha 2018