At the tiffin break they surrounded him all wanted to have a look He held it tight in the dim class light in his hand the hidden book The boy was proud for the gathered crowd each wanted to win his trust Went on to plead made frantic bid reading the book was a must.
With no option he started auction the boy saw in the deal a chance For the mystery book seemed worth more than a mere cursory glance I stole a look at the tempting book leapt my heart of a curious child On the cover glowed bright in dripping blood the title ‘Mysteries of the Wild’.
In childish imbalance I lost all sense was gripped with one mad desire Come what may at whatever cost from the boy the book I must hire The boy having got a whiff of my plan and gauged the urge on my face Said ‘ten full rupees is what you must part I would settle for nothing less’.
Ten full rupees was real big money no way could be arranged by a child Knowing it was absurd still I pondered at stake was ‘Mysteries of the Wild’ That day I ran home with just one thought haunting the mind of a child Ten full rupees is no big deal for an access to the mysteries of the wild.
On that evening of ceaseless haunting I gave all my lessons a miss For there was with me a note of ten rupee given by dad as school fees It needed a tough will to strike devil’s deal put the money to misuse But possessed as I was to know the mystery I needed no reason’s excuse.
Next day in the class without a fuss I paid him the sum of school fees, ‘Give me the book as you promised for I’ve brought your ten rupees’. ‘I’m so sorry’ said the cunning lad ‘the book is taken by someone, so stand by for the time be in the queue like the other boys in the run’.
Hell on me broke loose tightened the noose I could hardly stand on my feet Heard my dad shout when the truth was found out the result couldn’t be sweet The thrashings I got scolding and what not the bitter memories of a child Sank all passions drowned the obsession to unravel the ‘Mysteries of the Wild’.
Years rolling by buried the child’s sigh lay hidden in the lost mind’s nook The momentary thrill that remained unfulfilled forgotten was that prized book Then one afternoon as I was passing by an almost antique bookstore It peeped through a timeworn glass that book of mystery from the yore.
I felt an inexplicable yearning to own for once that book To retrieve from its breast my childhood dream it took ‘What price’ I asked the man ‘I want to have it please’ ‘Never mind it’s unsold long not worth ten rupees’.
I got the book with a heavy heart came sat in a corner of the park Caressed soft held its bound cover that at last got my finger mark In that twilight hour under evening star I wept like an inconsolable child Knowing no more I had need of it I would never open the ‘Mysteries of the wild’.