The Final Verdict
The
Final Verdict
‘O
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‘Yeah
well,’ the guy sitting in front of her said, ‘I guess all your love for me is defined
by the gifts that you get on our marriage anniversary.’
‘Umm,’
Sakshi tried to defend herself, sheepishly, ‘I never said that. But any girl
would go wow at the very thought of getting a diamond ring. And what else do
you expect from me, when you have actually gifted me one?’
So
yeah, Sakshi was with her husband Vedant
Shrivastava – a well known defense lawyer of the country, at the Starbucks café and he had just gifted her
with a diamond ring as a present of their wedding anniversary. He had proposed
her 5 years ago, at the same place: The
Starbucks Café and the place had been a golden memory for both of them ever
since. They often visited the café and cherished all their golden time, spent
together.
‘Oh,
I see,’ Vedant chuckled, as he placed his palm over hers. ‘Maybe I should get
you a necklace next time to get something more exciting than a mere I love you.’
‘You
won’t get that excitement that you are looking for, so easily, Mr.
Shrivastava,’ she said, winking. ‘All men are dogs, I tell you.’
‘Yeah,
whatever,’ Vedant retorted, a bit pissed off and then they both laughed hard.
They
talked for a few hours, savoring the hot espresso, laced with their memories
and undying love for each other. They were about to leave, when a shocking
piece of news broke out on a national news channel, on television sets at the café.
‘A
young girl in her early twenties was brutally gang raped yesterday night in a
local state transport bus,’ the news anchor said, exasperated. ‘She is said to
have suffered brutal internal injuries and the culprits are on the run.’
It
turned out that a young lady was brutally raped the night before, by a bunch of
local men. The media termed it as the most barbaric display of misogynistic attitude,
in the history of Indian civilization. The girl, as the reports said, was
thrown out of the moving bus after the heinous act, stripped naked. She was
said to be already unconscious, when admitted to hospital.
‘Let’s
go,’ Vedant said, holding Sakshi’s hand as soon as he saw Sakshi’s expressions
after she heard the news. He knew that she possessed the weakest of hearts that
he had known. She would easily break down at the smallest of tragedies with
unknown people and this event seemed no different. Sakshi almost became
awestruck with dread and he somehow pulled her towards their car, and they left
the spot.
‘Vedant,’
she spoke after a few minutes of dead silence, amid the drive. ‘What will
happen to her?’
‘What
do you mean Sakshi?’ Vedant asked, sensing the impending trouble. ‘Everyday,
many girls are raped in India and so was she. She will face whatever her
destiny has in store for her.’
Sakshi
couldn’t comprehend what she had just heard. She couldn’t believe the
inhumanness and apathy, that her husband just showed, but she couldn’t
comprehend anything anyway at that particular moment, so she remained silent. They
reached their home and a day shrouded in complete doom, followed. Seeing her in
such a miserable condition, Vedant just left for the court and let her heal
herself.
A
few days followed but Sakshi hardly came out of the shock. She was so deeply
affected, that it felt it wasn’t an unknown girl but a piece of her that was
brutally raped. Being a woman, she could connect with the plight of the girl
who was being referred to as Anamika,
by the electronic and social media. ‘The
plight of Anamika’ as they called it, had become a national issue,
beyond anyone’s expectations. The city
police was pressurized to nab the culprits and so was the state government.
Daily protests against the national government became the new trend and
everyone was empathizing with Anamika,
without even knowing her. Twitter handles, public rallies, social media rants,
and news channel debates followed soon.
Sakshi
however, was amazed with the response of the country at this tragedy. Social,
electronic and print media was on fire, and so was her inner-self – her
conscience.
Why is it every time that a brutal
tragedy is all it takes for the people to join their voices against anything
that is unfair in the society?
However, the culprits were nabbed soon and
were taken on trial. The nation became more furious with each passing day and
the issue of women safety picked up priority everywhere, from news room debates
to local tea stall chatters. The nation was furious and the government knew it,
so all the parliament members started encashing the tragedy shamelessly by
offering Anamika’s family
compensation in terms of a few lacs
or new government schemes named after her.
But
nobody bothered to come up with some stringent actions for the crime against
women. Needless to say, like many women, Sakshi felt miserable.
‘How
was the day?’ Sakshi asked, as soon as Vedant sprawled on the sofa after coming
home from the court. ‘You’ve been keeping really busy these days. What’s the
matter?’
‘Ah
nothing in particular dear,’ Vedant said, hugging her tightly. ‘There is just
this new case that I am working on. It’s exhausting me, but there is nothing to
worry about.’
Sakshi
wasn’t convinced with the explanation but before she could say anything, Vedant
went to the bathroom, probably dodging her questions. She was already very much
disturbed, so maybe he didn’t want to stress her anymore with the pressure at
work. But, the truth then shocked her.
Vedant was the chief defense lawyer for those 4 rape culprits!
‘How
could you do this Vedant?’ she asked, exasperated. ‘How can you defend those
barbarians who you very well know are the culprits behind that girl, struggling
for her life at the hospital today?’
‘Easy
Sakshi,’ he said, casually. ‘There is no need to get hyper over this. Hundreds
of girls and women are raped everyday and no one gives a shit. I don’t know why
people are going crazy over her, this
time around.’
‘Are
you insane Vedant?’ Sakshi asked, broken. ‘Are you even a human anymore? You
know that they did it and still, you are defending them?’
‘Oh
yeah miss Sakshi I know they did this,’ he said, irked. ‘But I am a defense
lawyer and that’s what I do, that’s what my job is: to defend the guilty. You
know what? After the media blew this matter out of proportion, nobody was
willing to accept this case. So they approached me with a hefty sum of money
and I had to take it. How couldn’t I?’
‘You
will defend a bastard, just because he is offering you great money?’ she asked.
‘I don’t believe you. What if I was the one who was raped and you were to
defend them? Would you still defend them?’
‘Stop
acting weird, uselessly now Sakshi,’ he retorted back. ‘Be practical. I am not
taking these apparently heinous cases
for my own self alone dear, you know this. Whatever money comes in is for the
betterment of both of us. I’ve defended many culprits before and you never
objected. What’s so special with this one?’
She
couldn’t say anything and so, remained silent. She just wept inside and offered
her sincere apologies to countless Anamkias and
their families. She now noticed that how for years people were being crushed by
the society with injustice, with the help from the people like her and her husband. She felt terribly sorry for all of them, but still was
helpless.
As
it turned out, Anamika succumbed to her injuries and left the world forever.
The media telecasted and ran the discussions for some days and all the celebrities
tweeted their heartfelt sorrow at this loss for some more days. And then, as it
happens every time, everyone forgot who Anamika
was, except for her family, friends and Sakshi. The next time media bothered to
check on Anamika was when the
culprits were released on bail and speculations were rife that they will soon
win the case and might even be exonerated, due to the lack of evidences.
It
was on the same day, that Vedant brought all his clients (yes those rapists)
home, along with his paralegal for the case. They planned to celebrate their
victory with some drinks and other stuff. Sakshi was so furious that she sent
their maid on leave. But she later made peace with the fact that this was after
all a reality and she could not skip it, let alone change it. She served drinks to the men and came upwards.
Then after sometime, she started yelling ferociously, forcing Vedant to run
upstairs, to see what was wrong.
‘They
are the same monsters who killed Anmaika, aren’t they?’ Sakshi yelled, as soon
as Vedant entered the room upstairs.
‘Oh,
not again Sakshi,’ he said, very much irritated. ‘We’ve had discussion on this
before. I’ve been saving the criminals for years now and I’ll keep doing that
no matter what. That’s what I get paid for and that’s what I’m good at. You
understand that?’
‘But
don’t you ever think for once, what the victim and his family have to go
through, when they are deprived of their rightful justice?’ she asked, glaring
him in his eyes.
‘You’ve
completely lost it! The court delivered a verdict today and you, by any means,
aren’t above this country’s law and order,’ he retorted and was about to leave
the room when Sakshi said something, that froze him.
‘Who
cares about the rigged verdict of the courts?’ she murmured to herself. ‘The
almighty too delivered a verdict today. They’ve got what they deserved: death.’
‘W
– What did you just say?’ he asked, trembling.
‘They
are dead by now Vedant,’ she said, glaring at him like a maniac. ‘I laced their
alcohol with a crap load of sleeping pills, when I served them an hour ago. The
verdict is delivered, by the almighty.’
‘The
final verdict has been delivered,’ she kept murmuring to herself as she looked,
completely imbalamced, both mentally and physically.
She
looked like a real maniac when she uttered those words. Vedant froze for a
moment, trying to comprehend what he had just heard. He then rushed downstairs
to find the 5 culprits lifeless, with foam covering their mouths. Trembling
with fear, he rushed upstairs to find Sakshi, whimpering in fear. She hugged
him tightly when he reached there.
‘I’ll
be hanged now Vedant, for their murder,’ she said, as she burst into terrible
wails. ‘But I don’t want to die Vedant, I don’t.’
She
just burst into louder wails and cries, her body trembling with sudden
convulsions. And kept murmuring indistinct stuff, that clearly made no sense to
a sane person. And Vedant, after a moment of contemplation knew what exactly
needed to be done.
‘Don’t
worry Sakshi,’ he said, ruffling her long hairs. ‘Nobody will do anything to
you as long as I am alive. We’ll figure out a way out of this.’
‘There
is no way out of it, I’m a cold blooded killer!’
‘Shhh,
don’t say that aloud. There always is a way, my love.’
‘Will
you save me too?’
‘I’ll
Sakshi, I’ll. How can’t I?’ He said, and a long cry escaped his mouth soon
after. ‘What are you doing?’
Sakshi
had stabbed him in his abdomen with a knife that she was hiding in her Kurti’s sleeves, when he hugged her.
When Vedant lost hold of her in writhing pain, she stabbed him again and again,
until he couldn’t cry anymore, and thumped on the floor.
‘I
am sorry Vedant,’ she said, her eyes dilating with insanity as she saw him
gasping for air and his life. ‘I’ll always love you but you need to die Vedant! Everybody like you needs to die, who smother the victims with
injustice. Poor Anamika didn’t deserve
to die, but she had to, owing to people like you and me Vedant. People
like you and me!’
As
she said that, she stabbed him more, twice. Oblivious to whatever was happening
around her, she then took out her handbag from the closet and covered the blood
stained knife with her blue scarf and put it in it and left the house, locking
it. She then went to the same Starbucks Café, for one last time, to relive her
memories with Vedant.
After
she reached the café, she ordered their favorite coffee and just sat there,
allowing the happenings around her to finally sink in. Once she came to her
senses, she did one last thing and then waited for the police to come and
arrest her for the murder of her husband and 5 other people, as was evident
with the confession note that she had just left at the murder site by the same
sms that she had just sent to Vedant’s coworkers, confessing her crime.
She sat in the Starbucks cafe, sipping her coffee and staring out of the window. The blood stained knife lay next to her handbag, covered with her blue silk scarf. She thought if her actions could do justice to millions of victims who fall prey to people like her and Vedant, who guard the criminals.
But if Vedant was guilty, wasn’t she his accomplice too? Hadn’t she supported him in all those years that he had defended the guilty? In fact, she was an accomplice and she too needed to be punished for that, she thought. So, she took the blood stained knife and slit her wrist repeatedly until she had no vision or energy to slit those poor veins anymore and as she passed away into an interminable trance.
Who
knew that Vedant would face such a fate at the hands of his own life – his wife?
And who knew that Sakshi would do something like this to herself and her
husband? One thing is evident for sure, the almighty delivers the justified
verdict for any action by anyone of us. Howsoever we think we are above all, one
can’t escape the justice decided by the creator. After all, his is the
final verdict, isn’t it?
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It really had me in the end..
ReplyDeletegreat work, keep up!
Thanks Mr/Miss/Mrs "Someone" for your feedback.
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Simple, effective and engaging story.
ReplyDeleteAmazing work Shan!!!
Keep it up.
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This really means a lot to me dear "Miss X" and I hope to see your regular feedback(s) in future too.
Thanks for being a hell of a regular reader, and may god bless you!
Meanwhile, Stay blessed and Happy reading...!! :):)
It was grt,and interesting too keep working looking forward for the next one
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DeleteMeanwhile, Stay blessed and Happy reading...!! :):)
Great work ,keep it up....
ReplyDeleteThanks Prakhar! I hope you'll keep commenting your feedback in future too.
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Good one bro! Keep up the good work! :)
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DeleteSo, till then Stay blessed, and Happy reading...!! :):)