Read The 3 Mistakes Of My Life Online
Authors: Chetan Bhagat
'Forget it, sons. You faced a calamity. Pay when you can. And now you are
members of our party, right?'
Mama stood up to hug us. I half-heartedly hugged him back, I felt sick owing
people money. 'Mama, I am sorry. 1 was arrogant, rude and disrespectful. I
realise my destiny is this shop. Maybe God intended it this way and I accept it,' 1
said.
'We are all like that when young. But you have started believing in God?' Mama
said and beamed.
'I'm just less agnostic now.'
'Son, this is the best news I've heard today,' Mama said. 'Something good has
come out of all this loss.'
A man dragged a heavy wooden trunk into our shop. 'Who's that? Oh, Pandit-
ji?' I said.
Pandit-ji panted, his white face a rosy red. He arranged the trunk on the floor.
'A sports shop closed down. The guy could not pay. He paid me with trunks full of
goods. I need cash, so I thought I will bring this to you.'
'I have no cash either,' I said as I offered him a samosa. 'Pandit-ji, business is
terrible.'
'Who's asking you for cash now? Just keep it in your shop. I'll send one more
trunk. Whatever sells, you keep half and give me half. Just this one trunk is
worth ten thousand. I have six more at home. What say?'
I took in the trunks as I had no risk. We needed a miracle to move that many
goods. Of course, I wasn't aware that the second test match of the India Australia
series would be one.
Mama introduced himself to Pandit-ji. They started talking like grown-ups do,
exchanging hometowns, castes and sub-castes.
'We are late,' Ish whispered, but loud enough for Mama and Pandit-ji to hear.
'You have to go somewhere?' Mama said.
'Yes, to a cricket match. One of the students we coach is playing,' Ish said,
avoiding Ali's name.
Omi downed the shutters of the shop. Omi signalled and all of us bent to touch
Mama's feet.
'My sons,' Mama said as he held a palm over our heads and blessed us.
Don't worry about that idiot from that stupid team. You creamed them,' Ish
said to Ali.
We returned from a neighbourhood match. Ali's side had won with him scoring
the highest. Ali lasted eight overs. Ish looked pleased that the training was finally
showing results. However, our celebratory mood dampened as the opposing
team's captain kicked Ali in the knee before running away.
'Will they hurt me again?' Ali said.
'No, because I will hurt them before anyone touches you,' Ish said, kissing Ali's
forehead, Ish would make a good father. Not like his own father who never said
one pleasant sentence.
Omi picked up a limping Ali. 'I'll take him to the shop,' Omi said. 'And ask ma
to make him some turmeric milk. You guys get dinner, whatever he wants.'
'I want kebabs,' Ali said promptly.
'Kebabs? In the shop?' I hesitated.
'Fine, just don't tell anyone,' Omi said.
'He's ready,' Ish said. His face glowed behind the smoke of roasting kebabs at
Qazi dhaba. 'Did you see him play? He can wait, run and support others. He plays
along until time comes for the big hits. Fielding sucks, but other than that, he is
perfect. He is ready, man.' The smell of chicken tikka filled my nostrils. Omi was
really missing a lot in life. 'For what?' I asked.
'Australia is touring India at present, right?' Ish said as the waiter packed our
order of rumali rotis, lamb skewers and chicken tikka with onions and green
chutney. 'So?' I said.
'He is ready to meet the Australians.'
Ten
India vs Australia Test Match Kolkata, 11-15 March 2001
Day 1
Most of the time crap happens in life. However, sometimes miracles do too. To
us, the second test match of the India-Australia series was the magic cure for the
quake. I remember every day of that match. Ish continued with his weird and
highly improbable ideas of making Ali meet the Australian team.
'Meet the Australians?' Omi said as he dusted the counter. Ish and I sat on the
floor in front of the TV.
'They are in India,' Ish said. He pointed to the Australian team batting on the
screen. 'When are we ever going to get a chance like this?'
'Is he mad?' Omi asked me.
'Of course, he is. What will you do by meeting them? Really?' I joined in.
'I want to get their opinion on Ali.' 'How?' Omi said as he sat down with us.
'We will go see a match. Maybe a one-day,' Ish said.
'There is no money for trips,' I said.
'The one-day series will continue for the next two months. If business picks up,
then we could,' Ish said.
'They are raping us again. Fuck, business is never going to pick up,' I said as I
saw the score. On the first day at tea, Australia's score was 193/1.
'If it does. I said
if,
Ish said, upset at the score more than
me.
'So we go see a match. Then what? Knock on Hayden's door and say, "Hey,
check this kid out." How do you intend to meet them?' I mocked.
'I don't know,' Ish turned to the screen, scowling. 'Bowl better, guys.'
'Excuse me, are you watching the India-Australia match?' a lady's voice
interrupted us.
An elderly woman stood at the counter with a puja thali in her hand.
'Yes?'
'Can my grandson watch it with you for a while?' she said.
I stood up from the floor. A small boy accompanied the lady. I was never keen
on random people coming into our shop to spend their time. She sensed my
hesitation. 'We'll buy something. I want to attend the bhajans inside and Babloo
wants to see the match.'
'Of course, he can come in.' Ish opened the door wider. The boy came in and
sat before the TV. Ish and I exchanged a round of dirty looks.
'Don't watch from so close Babloo. Hello, I am Mrs Ganguly by the way. I also
need advice on buying cricket equipment for my school, if you can visit me
sometime.'
'School?' I said.
'Yes, I am the principal of the Kendriya Vidyalaya on Ellisbridge. We never had
good suppliers for sports. Everybody thinks we are government so they try and
rip us off. You supply to schools, no?'
The answer was no. We did not supply to schools.
'Yes,' I said. 'In fact, we have our inhouse advisor Ishaan. He is an ex-district
level player.'
'Great. I will see you then,' Mrs Ganguly said and left us to ponder over her
business proposition.
'You want candy, Babloo?' Omi said as we tried our best to impress anyone
related to Mrs Ganguly.
'But we are not suppliers,' Ish said later.
'So what? You have to swing this for me, Ish. This is a regular income
business.'
'If I get you this, will you come to Goa?'
'Goa?' I raised my eyebrows.
'It's the last one-day. I am stretching it out as far as I can. If we save enough,
let's go with Ali.' 'But...' 'Say yes.'
'Yes,' I said. After the mall fiasco, I wanted to make Ish happy. I stood up to
check the day's accounts.
'Cool. Hey, see the match?' Ish said. Tt has totally turned.'
I looked at the TV. Perhaps God listened to Mrs Ganguly's prayers inside. A
little known Surd called Harbhajan Singh had howled after tea. Wickets crumbled
and from 193/1, Australia ended the day at 291/8.
'Bhajji, you are great,' Ish bent forward to kiss the TV.
'Don't watch the TV from so close,' Babloo said.
'Don't listen to grown-ups all the time. Nobody went blind watching TV from
close. Don't people work on computers?' Ish was jumping up and down in
excitement.
Mrs Ganguly came in two hours later to pick up Babloo. She bought him two
tennis balls. I was tempted to throw them in for free, but she might take it the
wrong way.
'Here,' she said, giving me her card. 'We have a board meeting every Monday.
Why don't you come and tell us how you can help?'
We had four days to prepare. The board would be in a better mood if India won
this match.
'Sure, we will see you then,' I said and slipped a candy to Babloo.
Day 2
The only way to describe the second day of the match was 'depressing'. From
291/8, Australia dragged on their first innings to end at a healthy 445 all out.
The Indians came out to bat and opener Ramesh got out for no score.
'Who the fuck is this Ramesh? Connection quota,' Ish said.
But it wasn't only Ramesh who sucked. Tendulkar scored ten, others even less.
Dravid scored the highest at twenty-five. The second day ended with India at
128/8.
Ish tore his chapattis with anger over dinner. 'These Australians must be
thinking - why even bother to come and play with India.'
'Pray for a draw. With a draw there is hope of sales. Else we should change our
business. Sports is the wrong choice in our country.' I passed the daal to Omi.
'They have twenty million people. We have one billion, growing at two per cent
a year. Heck, we create an Australia every year. Still, they cream us. Something is
wrong about this.'
'Should we open another flower shop? There will always be a demand for that in
a temple,' I said.
Ish ignored me. He mumbled something about avoiding a follow-on, which
looked pretty difficult.
Day 3
The next morning I don't know why we even bothered to switch on the TV.
India struggled to stretch their first innings, but packed up before lunch at 171
all out. 'And the Australians have asked India to follow on,' the commentator said
and I slapped my forehead. A defeat in a test match was one thing, but an
innings defeat meant empty parks for weeks. Kids would rather read textbooks
than play cricket and be reminded of India's humiliation.
Why on earth had I
started this business? What an idiot I am? Why couldn't I open a sweet shop
instead? Indians would always eat sweets. Why sports? Why cricket?
'That's fucking-follow-on-fantastic,' Ish said, inventing his own phrases for the
moment. He clenched his fist and came dangerously 1 lose to the TV. 'We had
them by their balls at 291/8, and now l hey ask us to follow on?'
'Should we turn off the TV?' I said. Should we close the shop for good? I
thought.
'Wait, I want to see this. I want to see how our team makes eye contact when
they lose so badly,' Ish said.
'They are not making eye contact. You are just watching them on TV,' Omi
said.
'If this match is a draw, I will treat you all to dinner. Ok, two dinners,' Ish said.
For its second innings, India made one change. It replaced the opener Ramesh
with another new guy called Laxman.
'The team is full of people with contacts. Everyone is getting their turn today,'
Ish said as the Indian openers took the crease for the second follow-on innings.
But Laxman connected with the ball and bat. He slammed four after four. At
the end of the third day, India stood at a respectable 254/4. Adding that to the
first innings score of 171, India needed only 20 runs to match Australia's first
innings of 445. An innings defeat looked unlikely, and, yes, we could even draw
now.
'See, that's what the Indian team does. Right when you give up hope, they get
you involved again,' Ish said at dinner.
'You were going to see all days anyway. Please think about our Monday
meeting,' I said.
'Laxman's job is not done. He needs to be around if we wan a draw,' Ish said.
I sighed. I would have to prepare for the school meeting by myself.
Day 4
If there was a day that India dominated world cricket, it was on the fourth day
of the match. Yes, India won the World Cup on 25 June 1983 and so that
counted, too. But the day I'm talking about was when two Indian batsmen made
eleven Australian cricketers dance to their tune. They did it in public and they
did it the whole day. That's right. On the fourth day of the Test, Ish didn't leave
the TV even to pee.
Here is what happened. Laxman and Dravid continued to play and added 357
runs for the fifth wicket. Day 4 started at 274/4 and ended at 589/4. Nine of the
eleven members of the Australian team took turns bowling, but none of them
succeeded in getting a wicket. The crowd at Eden Gardens became possessed.
They chanted Laxman's name enough times to make Steve Waugh visibly grumpy.
The team that had given us a follow-on could not bowl one batsman out.
Laxman ended the day at 275 not out, scoring more than what the entire
Indian team did in their first innings. Dravid made 155 not out. We had lots of
wickets left, had 337 runs more than Australia and only one day left in the
match.
'I can finally sleep in peace. I'll buy the draw dinners,' Ish said as we downed
the shutters of the shop.
'Hope we have some kids back in the park again,' I said.
Day 5
Human expectations have no limit. While we were praying only for a draw two