Mama and my maternal aunty bought two pairs of identical
white sandals in the shoe store on the slope in Darjeeling town ; Christmas that
year was approaching and Priscilla and I were preparing for our First Holy
Communion. Our Winter vacation started on a ‘holy’ note when our old Catechist
announced on the first day of catechism class that we were the chosen ones! We went
about the Advent weeks reciting prayers and practicing mock ‘penitential and
confessional’ rites. On Christmas day we
were inducted into the Church yet once more – privileged to receive the Holy Communion.
Priscilla and I in our pure white dresses and veils sat in the lace lined pew in the church .Aunty
had exchanged the white sandals for a pair of white ballerinas for Priscilla ( said the heels were a bit too high for
her)while I strutted in those heels bought at that shop on the slope. That day was
a beautiful day indeed! We were indeed the ‘chosen ones’ – Today I look back in question.
Off and on Priscilla
came to live with us in St. Mary’s Hill . The school was closer for her and she
could be with us and that was a delightful thing. We lived a guarded life under
the hawk eyes of my parents! Priscilla was my first cousin , my senior in
school and my friend. The beautiful Spring and the few Summer days gives way to the rolling dark South- West Monsoon
that blankets the hills of Darjeeling for the next four months. One of those wet
cold Monsoons days in the early 80’s
crippled Priscilla in school – she was in pain, her joints were hurting and she
could barely walk. As we three walked home tears rolled down her cheeks and we rested on a wet green parapet. Mabel then carried her piggy back while I
shouldered three school bags and we managed to get home. She was down with a rheumatoid condition. She was a braveheart and still is - kept that
indomitable spirit and the incessant
smile on her beautiful face. Children that we were – we had a club of
our own Thrilling Three ( influenced deeply by Enid Blyton whose books we
devoured turn by turn ) we three sang in the parish hall , went for picnics,
played house- house, teacher- teacher,( holy mass- holy mass too!) and ran through the parish vegetable garden to
pluck carrots and corn. One Christmas we collected money for the less
privileged and handed it to Fr. Leonard to do the needful. Life
could not get better when Priscilla shared her brown buttery 'suji halwa’, I
could have it all. Our ‘suji’ at home was always squishy and white and I wondered why!
Days and years rolled by – she went on to Loreto College. While in
school one weekend I visited her - I was mersmerised by her college life
and her friends. I told her I would follow her into college and so I did. Met
her ever so often in college and in the hostel- admired her soft sweet ways,
her obsession with cleanliness and her ever growing love for financial
independence and freedom. She was inspiring me in her own quiet way. In the mid
90s she married her high-school sweetheart. She made this
beautiful bride and the entire life was for her to live – the way she had
dreamt all this while. This was not to be – So started her journey of heart
break and pain and dreams coming
crashing down on her. She tried , she tried her best and I believed her and I
still do. She worked hard , moved places and kept her head held high always. We
lost touch for a while here and there- there was no Facebook and cell phones
were just trickling in. In a faraway land in the Middle East, in Jordan when I
was flying for their national carrier, one night I dreamt of Priscilla. Moved
and mind in rewind, that morning I sat at my table and wrote a long letter to
her – telling her how I cherished my childhood days with her, reminding her
that we need to keep in touch and how much I loved her for what she was. I
never posted that letter – I tore it and dropped it in the bin a few days later. I wish I had not done that. Thankfully I
did have many many more opportunities to convey my message to her - but I still
regret not having posted that letter. She kissed me on my forehead and hugged
me tight and wished me the ‘bestest’ life on my wedding day. She is the only
cousin I look up to for reasons beyond words.
Life moved on and the new millennium greeted us . The
children of the family now all grown up and taking up responsibilities to newer
heights. One day I heard that she would be joining her brother in Brunei, in
the Far East. By then Mark Zuckerburg had followed his dream and Facebook was a
reality so that I could keep in touch with
my beloved cousin ! Priscilla was just a
click away. We updated, chit chatted,
exchanged notes on life, shared jokes and howlers, and exchanged tongue-popping emoticons at midnight :P . We
skyped – I made my children peer at the
screen to say hello to their aunty far away. She loved Maggi noodles – I told
her that is not food it is trash ! Sisterly affection and chiding was a done
thing. She enjoyed her teacher’s job and on her vacation home we got to sample
anchovies and preserved fruits and what not from the island nation that brought
her happiness and satisfaction.
One afternoon she called me – she told me she is
coming to India and heading to Chennai the same day. Her life was back on track
and here she gets another blow. She was diagnosed with uterine cancer. Cancer
is a b****! How I hate it! She fought like a braveheart. Her spirit and her
faith leading her everyday till she was given an all clear. She was among us
yet again – we met and spent some meaningful and beautiful days
together. Took a tonga ride to the Taj Mahal, forgot our worries and stress as
we whiled away hours in the spa and came out rejuvenated and refreshed. We started our day with
yoga….she giggled and laughed at her stiff muscles .We knew we were in the
right path -healthy holistic approach was the answer to her new life . This
ordeal of hers brought us closer- we shared and talked our hearts out. We were
healing and Living in the true sense of the term. Older and wiser we both were.
I was ecstatic that she was happy and healthy – we all dream to be that. Little
did I know that she would be fighting a
losing battle when that forgotten cancer came back with a vengeance with a
tumour in the brain.
Today she waits for death to take her away. I do not
want her to go , yet she is slipping away . If there is a Heaven,that is where she
belongs. I want her to be free – free from the pain, free from the feeble body
tired of fighting the dreadful onslaught of the disease. It is her
spirit leading her on to live , don’t
know why ! I see my cousins and my uncle and aunty share her pain. I wonder how
they bear it all. In all this Priscilla is loved dearly and she knows that. How
I want to be with Priscilla just to be
able to hold her hand . Angelina told me that she is losing her sense of sight
and hearing, she is hallucinating . I
have nothing to tell her- no words.
I sit here numb
and write like a brain dead woman. See Priscilla we both are the same- your brain is taken away by the
tumour and the surgery and mine by the
helplessness and the uselessness that I am feeling now ( I do not know if there is Jesus sitting among
the clouds and listening to our hearts talking ). In all this helplessness, I
know you will keep that smile on your angelic face, that you will feel for your
family that you are leaving behind, remember your loved ones, make peace with
yourself and that you will leave behind very many precious memories – like the one when Mabel,
you and I sang ‘If I were a butterfly’ on that little wooden stage and many
many more. Memories that I will carry
close to my heart for ever.
Your sister in Heart and Soul, in living and in dying.
29, Feb 2016
P.S : I visited Darjeeling in April and I literally ran up her house once I reached St. Mary's Hill. I held her close - all frail and eaten away by the deadly disease.She felt my hands and cupped my face in the palms of her hands. She kissed me ( I will never forget the love I felt...the love that I will keep alive in me). I shouted in her ears ' Prisci do you remember the song "If I were a Butterfly?" That brought a smile on her face that was looking into nowhere as we sang the beautiful song of promise together -
.....for You gave me a Heart , You gave me a soul, You gave me Jesus and you made me His Child but I just Thank you Father for making me me...'
Tears rolled down my cheeks.
I held onto her hand. I gave her drops of water to moisten her parched throat, massaged her back and tried to make her confortable.This was all I could do - nothing more ! Days rolled by amidst prayers and visitors - in hope of a miracle! The short lived Summer gave way to the cold Monsoon once again
On 2, June Priscilla breathed her last in the comforting presence of my maternal aunty ( her mother) and mama. The clouds gave way to blue skies and the sun shone down on her funeral procession.
Priscilla is gone- gone forever. I did get to hold her hand and give a 'closure and continuity' to our familial friendship that goes back to our toddler days. I am thankful that she is free from her pain and look forward to meeting her someday sometimes somewhere.
Until we meet again....
19, August 2016
P.S : I visited Darjeeling in April and I literally ran up her house once I reached St. Mary's Hill. I held her close - all frail and eaten away by the deadly disease.She felt my hands and cupped my face in the palms of her hands. She kissed me ( I will never forget the love I felt...the love that I will keep alive in me). I shouted in her ears ' Prisci do you remember the song "If I were a Butterfly?" That brought a smile on her face that was looking into nowhere as we sang the beautiful song of promise together - .....for You gave me a Heart , You gave me a soul, You gave me Jesus and you made me His Child but I just Thank you Father for making me me...'
Tears rolled down my cheeks.
I held onto her hand. I gave her drops of water to moisten her parched throat, massaged her back and tried to make her confortable.This was all I could do - nothing more ! Days rolled by amidst prayers and visitors - in hope of a miracle! The short lived Summer gave way to the cold Monsoon once again
On 2, June Priscilla breathed her last in the comforting presence of my maternal aunty ( her mother) and mama. The clouds gave way to blue skies and the sun shone down on her funeral procession.
Priscilla is gone- gone forever. I did get to hold her hand and give a 'closure and continuity' to our familial friendship that goes back to our toddler days. I am thankful that she is free from her pain and look forward to meeting her someday sometimes somewhere.
Until we meet again....
19, August 2016

