A stab at Neurofiction
Below is the winning entry that was submitted to the Neurofiction contest held by Monsoon Brain meeting 2020.
The
Imposter
By Samatha
Mathew
Even
before I open my eyes, I know it is going to be one of my favorite days. There
is a rhythmic tap tap of water
outside the window. It is raining. I lay there listening to the breeze and the
swaying rain sheets along with it. I’m smiling, instinctively.
I
reluctantly push the blankets away and get up. I walk onto the balcony and feel
the moisture in the air. All of the greenery around is so much more vibrant
with the rain drops glistening on them. The breeze is blowing gently. Life is
good.
Amma
calls out from the ground floor. I find her in the kitchen few minutes later,
humming a tune. “Nice weather, no?” she asks with a smile. I smile back at her,
nodding. One of the many tastes we share. After all I’m told that I am her
mirror image.
Normally
I would immediately open my laptop and set to work after breakfast, but today I
decide to climb up to the terrace, wanting to have a wider view of the soaked terrain.
My mind wanders while my eyes feast upon the scenery and my ears listen to the
calling of the birds. Memories both good and bad, with a backdrop of rain, teem
up my brain. I sigh deeply after half an hour of brooding, and half-heartedly
turn away. Rainwater has seeped on to the stairs. The last thought before I
tumble all the way down through the stairs is, ”…Shouldn’t slip and fall.”
***
Beep. Beep. Beep.
There
are sounds that aren’t quite reaching my ears. Body feels like lead. I’m lying
down.
My
head feels heavy and there’s something else…pain? I try to open my eyes; it
seems like a herculean task. It’s a
dimly lit room. The beep sounds are coming from nearby. My right hand is in a
cast. I let my consciousness focus on different parts of my body. Several tears
leak sideways and fall onto the pillow. The pain in my head is building.
A
nurse walks in, and before I gather the energy to open my mouth she adjusts the
drip and I slowly dissolve into nothingness…
***
There’s
something definitely not right.
Where
is Amma?
As
I lay in the hospital bed, I had asked my brother about how she was holding up.
It was so stupid of me to put her in this situation. At the time he had said
that she was at home. And every time since then he said Amma was coming to look
after me, there was this other woman who would come with him. She took care of
me the whole time. Like Amma. But why wouldn’t Amma herself come? I thought
maybe she was too tired and sad to come see me. And that woman was helping me
anyway.
Urghh.
The headache again. The wounds have healed, but the doctor says it would be
sometime before this headache would go away. Why oh why did I have to go up the
stairs on that day. Should have stayed with Amma.
This
other woman like Amma. Why does my brother keep calling her Amma? I thought
about it many times, and I once even tried to ask him at the hospital. Then
there was this blasted headache again and… maybe they sedated me.
I
waited till we got back home. She came home with us too. And as soon as I came,
I went looking for Amma everywhere. Only she wasn’t there. And the other woman
was looking at me like… I have lost it. She started crying. So I came up to my
room.
But
where is Amma?
The
other woman does look a lot like Amma. But of course she isn’t. Because I don’t
feel the warmth and the peace I used to feel when I look at her. I don’t feel
the need to hug and hold onto her. No. She definitely isn’t Amma. She is not
the person I’m the mirror image of. Or am I?
I
step in front of the mirror. My hair is starting to grow back. I’m thinner.
There are dark shadows under my eyes. If only Amma was here, I could have asked
her to give my head an oil massage.
There’s
a movement at the door. The other woman is looking at me sadly. “You will be
back to normal soon” she says. I nod jerkily and look away. I pretend to search
for something in my bag. I hear a sniff but when I turn around and look she has
walked away from the room.
***
After
dinner I retreat to the room as usual. There’s a knock and I find my brother
standing at the door with a searching expression on his face. I laugh. “Since
when do you knock to come to my room?” I playfully try to hit him, but he looks
at me in astonishment.
“What
happened?” I ask him. He looks at me again, as if gauging my expression. After
a long pause he asks, “Are you feeling okay?”
I
mull over the question. I do feel okay in the sense that I can walk around and
do things pretty much by myself. But yes, the nagging feeling about Amma… should
I ask him? Isn’t he too worried about me already?
“Why?
Why do you ask that?” I ask gently.
“Because
you are behaving weirdly with Amma. You don’t talk to her. You don’t even call
her Amma anymore. Is… is everything alright? I… I wanted to ask you. But… I just
wanted you to feel better first.”
A
thousand things explode in my head. A dull pain is again starting to surface
somewhere. I feel confused.
“Amma?
I am weird with Amma?” What is he
going on about? I rub my forehead to suppress the headache.
“Listen,
I wanted to ask you something too…where
is Amma?”
He
looks at me like he couldn’t believe his ears. His eyes searched both of mine.
“What
do you mean where is Amma?”
His
voice is shaking. Is he going to cry?
“Umm…
I thought she was too shocked to come see me in the hospital…and that’s why the
other woman kept coming to stay with me… and today I came and searched for Amma
everywhere…” A sudden thought struck me. “Did something happen to her?”
His
eyes are bloodshot. His voice is pleading when he says, “Amma was with you the whole
time. That is no ‘other woman’. That is
Amma. And she is heartbroken. Why are you doing this?”
It
is taking me sometime to process his words and they pierce through me like
shards of glass. Why would I call another woman Amma? Anger flared inside me
after a long time.
“What
do you mean why I am doing this? You tell me why you are calling her Amma!” I realize
there are tears in my eyes too. I step closer to him. “Please tell me Amma is
fine!” My voice drops to a whisper. I am begging.
He
walks to the bed and sits down, shaking with sobs, head in his hands. Tears run
through my face too.
“What
are you guys arguing about?” There she is. I turn angrily to her. Before I can
speak a word, my brother runs up to her and says, “Amma please go now. Let me
talk to her first.”
But
the despair and anger has gotten the better of me. “TELL ME WHERE AMMA IS! AND
WHY IS SHE HERE? WHY DO YOU KEEP CALLING HER AMMA?” I hurl words at my brother
who seems to get angry too.
The
woman has a shock on her face which slowly turns into something like sorrow and
she starts weeping. My headache is at a breaking point now.
“You
ask her to go back from wherever she came from. And you bring Amma back. Now!
I’m going to sleep, but I don’t want to see her in this house again!” I shout,
pointing at the woman. Her sobs turn louder.
My
brother shakes his head. Holding the weeping woman by her shoulders, he leads
her outside.
I
stagger to the bed and lie down, clutching my head. Tears are gushing down my
face and my breath is catching amidst sobs. I lie in the bed crying for a long
time into the night. It starts raining.
***
Capgras
delusion.
That’s
what they call it. My brother tells me that that’s why I can’t see that the
other woman is Amma. He tells me that my brain injury is the reason. He says I
should call her Amma. She does look a lot like her. Like the mirror image of my
mirror image.
Something
is definitely not right. Maybe it’s all inside my head.
The End.
___
Inspired
by the description of the delusion in Phantoms
in the Brain: Probing the Mysteries of the Human Mind by Padma Bhushan Dr. V.S.
Ramachandaran and Sandra Blakeslee.
Amazing, Samatha! You literally took me down an emotional rollercoaster. So touching. You are such a blessed writer! God bless! and Love you!
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot Ambily! Love you for the kind words always :)
DeleteSamatha, your writing is so engrossing. I felt like I was a part of it... Bravo 👏🏻
ReplyDeleteThank you :)
DeleteVery well-written! Such captivating prose! Congratulations and keep it up! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Sharika!
DeleteBeautifully written samatha
ReplyDeleteThis was so engaging.
Never guessed the next line and at times, had to go to the previous line after the mystery resolved, to take the film essence of the story.
Amazing story from a scientist 😊
Thank you very much :)
DeleteBeautiful Samatha
ReplyDeleteThanks!
DeleteBeautifully written keep writing if interested try storymirror platform as well. You kept the suspense. I thought it would be organ donation probably with another twist in the ending:)
ReplyDeleteHi Samantha,
ReplyDeleteI belong to a different field, i just probe on science out of passion when you get time check these questions.
https://randomthoughtsofvramanu.blogspot.com/2020/09/questions-on-brain.html
This link is an probe on virus, just pass to your network if it is worth.
https://randomthoughtsofvramanu.blogspot.com/2020/03/probe-on-virus.html
Thanks
Venkat.R
Well summarised 👍
ReplyDelete