During my assignment with the
Bank, I was posted as a Branch Manager at a rural Branch in Pratapgarh District
in the State of Uttar Pradesh (translated in English as “Northern Province”).
In December 1990, the Bank officers
of HAL Township Korwa Branch located in Amethi district, some 45 kms from my
Branch invited me to join them for a party in the HAL Club on New Year’s Eve and
to ring in the New Year.
As the road connecting my Branch
to Korwa (Amethi) was a single lane poorly maintained one, I decided to travel
to Korwa on my scooter while there was still daylight and to reach there well
in time before night fell, from a safety point of view.
I had gone but a short distance
from the Branch on the lonely road when I reached a small village, where a
little boy stood on the road blocking my path. I braked to a halt asking him
what he wanted. On first impression he looked far more mature for his age.
Without saying a word, he signalled to me that he wanted to hitch a ride on my
scooter. I told him to hop on on the pillion seat. He did so and we had but
travelled the length of the village when I felt a tap on my shoulder signalling
for me to stop. He got off the scooter without so much as a grateful smile or a
word of thanks for the short “joy-ride”, but kept looking at me with stern
eyes, which seemed to be assessing/evaluating me in some strange way,
thoroughly disconcerting me.
Putting the incident behind me I
concentrated on driving on the pot-holed road and had gone a good fifteen km.
or so when I spotted another person, who seemed to be in his mid-twenties
standing on one side of the road looking for a lift. He had a suitcase in one
hand and a shoulder bag, as if ready for a long distance travel or for a long
period. Both his suit case and shoulder bag
seemed to be from outdated styles , but then I thought that he was a village
person and may not be doing well in life to replace his bags with modern
styles. I asked him what was the matter and he spoke in laboured monosyllables
in Hindi “Maa” (mother) “beemar” (sick). Naturally, I assumed that he was
travelling to his home village to see his sick mother and like I had done for the
boy before, I offered to give him a ride to his mother’s village. What bothered
me was that he gave me the name of his mother’s village as one that I had not
heard of and enquired about it from him.
He kept silent, while he hopped onto my
scooter and parked his suitcase between me and the pillion seat. I had to edge
a little forward to accommodate the suitcase and felt its hard contours against
my back. Awkwardly balancing my scooter, I drove on. I offered to help him out
with his mother’s treatment because I knew some leading medical practitioners
in town, but he only grunted in affirmation without saying a word.
Suddenly, the lonely road bustled
with oncoming traffic and I saw a huge public transport bus hurtling down the
road at a fast pace forcing me to go off the road which did not have an apron,
disbalancing the scooter and I had a tough time to keep myself from any
physical injury.
I was livid with anger at this
reckless driving by a Roadways bus driver and spoke angrily “What a careless
fellow!! If I had not gone off the Road, he would have killed us.” I went into
a tirade against the driver’s “criminal mentality” in not caring about the
smaller vehicles on the road and I enquired from my pillion rider whether he
was alright. Given his propensity to
maintain a stoic silence and as I still felt the contours of the suitcase
against my back I presumed that he was alright. However, when I glanced to my
right hand side while driving the scooter, I saw only my shadow in the light of
the setting sun, and no shadow of my passenger which literally froze my blood!!
With apprehension I glanced back
and was shocked to see that the pillion seat was empty although I still felt
the suitcase propped behind me in my back. Perplexed, I stopped the scooter and
got off to examine what had happened to my passenger. I even drove back for
about a mile or so to find out whether he had fallen down when the hurtling bus
had pushed us off the road and injured himself in the process. But although
there were no trees on both side of the road and one could see without any
hindrance for a reasonably long distance, to my horror, I could not see him
anywhere.
I panicked and I drove my scooter
at top speed, without looking back even once, reaching Korwa without any
further incident. All the officers who
were waiting for me at Korwa were shocked to see me reach in a near panic
state, and I narrated the whole story, wondering how it would be received by
them, particularly, as I was considered to be a bold and fearless person. None
of them seemed surprised and quite a few of them mentioned that yes, there had
been similar experiences reported on several occasions on that road, and travellers
preferred not to go on that road after sun-set.
The next morning, I thought that
I would leave the HAL guest house only after the winter morning mist had lifted and the sun had come out,
because somehow I had a premonition that I would be meeting this “being” (as I
preferred to call him now) again. This time, I resolved to stay clear of him
and if need be to kick or push him off my path and drive on relentlessly. Even at 11.00 a.m. there was still a heavy wintery
mist in the air, but as I had already got late for my Branch, which would have
been opened by my junior officers, I decided to chance it and started the
journey back.
Sure enough, as I had apprehended, at about
the same distance on the road, there was a fellow standing with a shoulder bag and
a suitcase on one side of the road, who on my approach swiftly moved to the
middle of the road trying to flag me down in order to give him a lift. I drove in a wide arc from where he was
standing and he pursued me trying to force me to stop and give him a lift, but
I was all the more determined not to give any stranger a lift ever again and
drove past him at top speed.
For a split second, I glanced
back to see whether he was following me, but again to my utter surprise, there
was no one on the road behind me and I wondered whether I had imagined the
being’s presence.
When I looked ahead, I suddenly
panicked. Through the mist I saw that there was a sharp bend in the road and I
was headed straight towards a sharp drop of about ten feet or so, off the road.
I pressed on the Brakes with all my skills and the scooter came to a halt just
inches from the sheer drop, saving myself from a terrible accident, perhaps a fatal
one. Somehow, terribly shaken again, I made it back to the Branch.
At my Branch, after the usual New
Year’s greetings were exchanged between the customers and all the officers and staff
and business was going on as usual, one of my officers came to me and mentioned
that he sensed that there was something wrong and I told him about my two strange
experiences. His immediate reaction was that my scooter bore the registration
numerals “7816” which included the numerals “786” which Muslims considered to
be the numerical equivalent of the name of God and which in his opinion had
saved me from a bad accident.
Nevertheless, despite his
repeated assurances, that the worst was behind me and that no harm could come
to me now, the slightest sound unnerved me and for the most part of the next
two months, I kept all the lights in my house on, so that I would be prepared
for any untoward happening or encounter with another such being, but, nothing
happened after that.
I may add that I travelled on the
road to Korwa several times thereafter but never encountered any such being again
and slowly my fear of encountering otherworldly beings again on that road also
went away. But, I was very intrigued with what I had experienced on that road
and was looking for plausible answers.
The best possible explanation
came from a Branch Manager who was also a “tantric” (dabbling with the occult
sciences). He could sense that I had had an experience like this and requested
me to narrate my experience. He listened to my narration and told me that he
could visualise the whole incident through his occult extra-sensory perception.
His explanation was as follows:
A few decades ago, a young man
was travelling to his village alongside the road to see his mother who was not
well (This explained my passenger’s old fashioned baggage). That little village
had lost its identity as over a period of time it had merged with a bigger
village (hence, I had not heard of its name). The vehicle in which this man was
travelling had met with a terrible accident which proved fatal for him. Since
then he had entered a warp through which his spirit was perpetually searching
for a way to reach his mother’s village and in desperation wanted others to ‘join
him’ in his search, hence it had made two efforts to make me meet fatal
accidents like himself. The spirit had assessed me as a potential victim by
taking a short ride with me in the form of a little boy (the one whom I had
offered a joy-ride and who had got off my scooter without thanking me. As I was
familiar with Celtic Literature on “shape-shifting”, I took this as a plausible
explanation). Also, he said that he visualised that I was saved by my guardian
Spirits and Gods and by my strong-willed efforts. He also mentioned that he had
set into motion through his occult sciences, processes through which this
spirit would never harm any other person again and also get his salvation.
Whatever may be the explanation, this
encounter with an otherworldly being is as live for me today as when I had
experienced it the first time and every
time I narrate this story I feel a chill pass down my spine and I hastily
glance over my shoulder, just to ensure that my passenger is not standing
behind me!!
Links to some other short stories on this Blog by Rajeev Prasad:
1) A short story: Friends at the Cross-Roads
2) A short story: Arvind Dada and the street-dogs
3) An Otherworldly Encounter: A personal experience
4) A short story: A tour of Pune's Blind School (or as I prefer to call it the "School for visually challenged students")
5) Remembering Uncle Paul Haegar: The German Army Officer during World War II who became an exemplary Horticulturist and who gave the Aligarh Muslim University beautiful landscaped gardens as his legacy
6) Connecting through several life-times: The story of the "Panditji" (priest) of the Hanuman Temple at the CSA University, Kanpur
Links to some other short stories on this Blog by Rajeev Prasad:
1) A short story: Friends at the Cross-Roads
2) A short story: Arvind Dada and the street-dogs
3) An Otherworldly Encounter: A personal experience
4) A short story: A tour of Pune's Blind School (or as I prefer to call it the "School for visually challenged students")
5) Remembering Uncle Paul Haegar: The German Army Officer during World War II who became an exemplary Horticulturist and who gave the Aligarh Muslim University beautiful landscaped gardens as his legacy
6) Connecting through several life-times: The story of the "Panditji" (priest) of the Hanuman Temple at the CSA University, Kanpur