Feeble sunlight streamed through the windows as soon as she retired to bed. Murmuring the tasks she had set upon herself for the day, she
snuggled down with her blanket; in the hopes that she falls asleep before her
dog comes gamboling into her bedroom, or of course her mother.
She fell asleep in minutes, entering a world entirely her own. And how
bizarre a world she enters; just like a puzzle whose pieces are hastily
put together. All of her thoughts during the day, misunderstood by her own
conscience. You see, she's not a good Quidditch player.
The strong smell of Jasmine and Rose agarbati woke her up. Shocked to
see 11 am on the clock, she rolled out of her bed instantly, and fell down. Her
mother who now stood in the doorway, laughed.
"This smell gets up my nose." Kaya complained as she lay down
on the cold floor, not bothering to pull herself up.
"Here, have a Jasmine, fresh from the garden." And her mother dropped
a bunch of Jasmines near Kaya's face. She got up, seeing her dog come running
towards her to eat up all the Jasmine flowers.
Kaya sat back down on her bed, and told her mother of her night's
adventures.
"Get some sleep! Only warlocks work at 5 am!" Her mother
billowed as she looked down at her daughter.
"I'd prefer witch." Kaya mumbled.
"Well, you do look like a witch. Look at you, you've become so
gaunt!" Her mother said, frowning,
"Ma, I was reading a book on Mata Hari." Kaya said, her eyes
now accustoming to the brightly lit room.
"What about her?" She asked, sounding interested.
Kaya sat up straight on her bed, and recited the story of the lascivious
Mata Hari, cogently. Her mother gasped as Kaya told the tales of Mata Haris'
dances, her libidinousness, her freedom, and her unfair execution.
"What freedom is there in being lascivious?" Kaya's mother
asked disparagingly.
"Mother, it is more about our choices, and them being respected.
People fear women who are free, in every sense of the word. People fear women
who are just human, so much so that they retaliate with assault." Kaya
replied tritely, fearing her mother won't understand otherwise.
"What kind of freedom do you want?" Her mother asked,
inquisitively.
Remembering the dream she'd had just hours before, Kaya smiled her widest, and said, "Freedom to be whoever I want to be, Ma, without being
put on a pedestal."
"You want to be average at everything?" Her mother inquired.
Kaya knew her mother would say that, because that was the truth. We tend
to move from one thing to the other, paving our way to what we believe is the much
cleaner and greener pasture, because we see everything that's within our reach,
forgoing happiness and satisfaction, as doable. But for Kaya, these weren't
entirely her choices; rather they were handed down to her, in pity when she
wasn't even drowning. Her choices weren’t respected.
Yet Kaya knew that it ill behooved her to drop the baggage of blame,
which in actuality kept her afloat, it attested to her an important mission- to
save herself.
"I'll be on the cusp of everything, until the day I decide to let
go of the person I'm not. But you see then it will be my decision, since I'd
have gained my freedom." Kaya articulated, feeling a sense of pride in
living an ambiguous life, led by the dictum of the sun shining on the
righteous.
"You have the freedom." Her mother said dismissively.
Kaya laughed, almost derisively, and said, "Not yet, Ma. When I'll
have it, you'll know. Because then, I'll glow, I'll laugh more, I'll love more,
and I won't be gaunt anymore!" She threw her hands up in the air and fell
back on the bed, closing her eyes to the upsurge of emotions that made her
heart beat fast.
Her mother never understood. Maybe the subtle derision to her freedom
was too subtle and recondite for her mother to understand. Or maybe, ignorance
is bliss. Any which way, Kaya couldn’t help but respect Mata Hari, for her
boldness and her pride.
"Be whoever you want to be" and with that, her mother left the
room, chanting “Om” as she went to offer the few left Jasmines to the deity.
Kaya opened her eyes as soon as her mother left the room, and once
again, she was dreaming. If only it was that simple, she thought. She wondered
what price she will have to pay for her freedom. And soon, her thoughts were
swimming, in the uncharted vastness of her mind. Whereas, dreams, real and
unreal, danced upon the ship that remained painfully still.
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