In the morning of August 29, 2011, we
had the Hyderabad Marathon and a dear friend of mine, Bhasker Sharma, from
Bangalore, was participating in it. He had asked me to come to the Gachibowli
Sports ground at 9 a.m., by which time he would have finished the race. I went
there at about 9 a.m. and was very excited as I was meeting Bhasker after many
moons.
At the gate, I was flagged down by an
officious police official who prevented me from going to a spot closer to the
stadium. I told him that I was there to receive the marathoner who had come in
first in the event. He looked at me and flagged me off with a big smile on his
face. I had lied, as I had no idea if Bhasker came first or not. I did not feel
good about it. It was playing on my conscience, even as I alighted from my car.
I met Bhasker on the track and
realized he was a celebrity! He had done some 31 marathons and everyone seemed
to know him. I was in great company. I was basking in his glory and was holding
his bib, his small eats, anything for somebody to know that I was Bhasker’s
friend! I managed to catch up on old times but after a marathon, it is a bit
hard, and Bhasker was patient with me.
The Prize distribution was on and we
were heading toward the podium. Then came the vote of thanks. No, Bhasker’s
name was not called out. Dutifully, I got Bhasker and his brother into my car
to the nearest auto-rickshaw and he left. I felt guilty on two counts — I had
not spoken to Bhasker long enough or taken him home, and I had lied to the
police guy at the gate.
About 4 p.m., I called Bhasker and
caught up with some quick chat on the phone as he was heading out to the
airport. He said that it was a great marathon, his personal best timing of
sub-4 hours, and added that it was a bitter-sweet one for him. He had been
called out by the organizers for being the first in his category (above 50
years), and at that time we were out of earshot. He missed receiving his trophy
from the Governor. His prize would be sent to Bangalore.
And I remembered the conversation with
the policeman and smiled. It was a prophetic lie, indeed!
Sometimes in life, if there is an
universal truth out there, even a lie turns true...
Reading your blogs are always a must! Highly interesting post, from start to finish!
ReplyDeleteIt was a suspense till the end ... engrossed in reading ... Prophetic Lie, Indeed ... Icing on the cake :)
ReplyDeleteThe angels must have said "thadaastu" on hearing the lie...Strange but true, I blv such things happen for good or bad. In this case, its certainly GOOD! :) Conscience must be clear now, sir :)
ReplyDeleteI really liked it, The end was amazing
ReplyDelete