Fall n’ Love


Thursday

“I love you, Rakeshi,” Shantha started speaking after a long embarrassing pause “but I don’t think we can live together…”

“but…” Rakeshi was groundless. He had been preparing for proposing for weeks. “I thought that we could…”

“No!” Shantha interrupted him. “I know you, Rakeshi! I know your flaws… It’s my fault that I let this situation reach this far…”

“I thought that we could overcome this together…” He took a deep breath. “…that you would help me…”

“You know that I tried! You know that I spent the last 3 years trying to understand your mind, but I concluded that you cannot control yourself!” She walked away and checked her watch. 10 past 3. She had only twenty minutes left for her break. “Rakeshi, look… We can talk better Saturday…”

“I see…” He checked his own watch. “Where?”

“Can you show up in my place?” Shantha took her seat beside him. “Tom and Delu won’t be at home… We can talk in a quiet place…”

“Ok. I’ll be there…” And Rakeshi watched Shantha go back into the Rana Plaza, a huge building, where at least 5 garment factories were set. There were also hundreds of stores. It was said that five thousand people would be there every day, working or shopping. 

Rakeshi went back home walking; He had no money to pay for the subway tickets. All the money he had he was saving to rent a house to live with Shantha IF she accepts his proposal. He was not angry by what she had said. It was a difficult decision Shantha had to make and he had to give her some time. Rakeshi was different and he knew that. Shantha knew that. 

It was not possible, though, to take any subway in that crowded city; people would literally go on the trains. It was the end of an important period for the Muslim people: the Ramadan, a month in which they have to practice self-control, self-discipline and try to be better Muslim. Most people go back to their hometowns in the countryside when the month is over, making a holiday. Neither Rakeshi nor Shantha were Muslim; They were part of a small group of Christian people living in Dhaka. So they used the holiday to make money. 

Shantha became a seamstress after her mother died in a big fire in India and by necessity she got a job into a factory. She had many options there: Bangladesh was making clothing for the world, “We are the wardrobe of the world” some would say, and by the end of July that year, she was in her third company. She was never happy. She could barely find a good place to work because she was not Muslim. To get better jobs, she used to pretend to be Muslim, and by the time of the prayers, she would leave and take a rest. It was in one of these breaks that she met Rakeshi. 


It was nearly 7 pm when Shantha left the Rana Plaza and headed home. She was starving – the last meal she had was 7 hours before and she had worked a lot. Fortunately, the building where she lived was located “only” seven blocks away from the Rana and she got there fifteen minutes later. Tom was watching TV on the sofa and Delu wasn’t at home. 

“Where is Delu, honey?” Shantha asked the little boy after kissing him in the head.

“She answered a phone call and left.” The boy spoke in a very Indian accent.

“How long?”

“Five minutes… I don’t know….” The voice of the man speaking in the television took back the boy’s attention and he looked back into it. Tom was Shantha’s 5 year old brother, and he came from India still a baby. Delu was her sister. She was 16 now. Shantha had asked Delu to never let Tom alone, but every day she had to ask it to remind her. 

Shantha washed her face and started preparing the dinner – normally food enough to last until the other day. She could not do certain kinds of movements with her hand because of the repetitive job she used to do in the factory and cutting vegetables was a painful task. She always asked Delu for help, but Shantha had to do all by herself. 

“TOM!”, Shantha called the boy from the small kitchen when she felt tired of countless unsuccessful attempts to cut some carrots. “TOM!”

“Yes?” Tom answered, entering the room.

“I need your help with the veggies…” She placed him on a chair and gave him a small knife. After some minutes he was cutting vegetables well. Then a noise from the front door announced Delu. She headed the kitchen.

“Where have you been?” Shantha asked, preparing to shout at the girl.

“It’s Fahad. He’s dead.” Delu said that and a tear shed.

“What? How? When?” Shantha felt guilty. 

“People were protesting against the poor working conditions in Dhaka downtown…” Delu’s chest was moving quickly “but the police came shooting everyone…”

“Oh, my God!” Shantha held Delu in her arms. The girl couldn’t hold herself and cried. “I’m so sorry!”

They spoke nothing during the rest of the night; Delu didn’t have dinner and went sleeping early. Shantha was preoccupied. There were big cracks in the walls of the room she worked in the Rana Plaza and she started wondering their causes. The reasons for being preoccupied were legitimate: a week before a building collapsed killing 334 people – they were also making clothes in there. She decided that she would talk to the company’s manager the following morning. 


Friday

Shantha woke up before sunrise, and left home 15 minutes later. She was late – it took her a lot of time to sleep – and she had to run down the streets. When she arrived in the building, there were thousands of people outside the building; a firemen truck parked in the parking lot. Shantha saw no fire. 

“What happened?” She asked one of the passing by.

“Some workers from the night turn felt a vibration in the building and more cracks appeared.” The man responded.

“Is the Rana opening today?” Shantha asked.

But before the man could give her an answer, one of the firemen announced in a big speaker that no one would be allowed to enter the building – only after a careful inspection. She went back home, slowly. Shantha knew that she would have to work the next day; she would have to set another day with Rakeshi.. She entered the small apartment, had her seat in the sofa and watched the sun rise. Tom woke up, followed by Delu.

“Why aren’t you at work?” Delu asked, confused.

“There are some cracks in the building. The fireman said it was not safe to be there.” Shantha said, trying to figure out something to do that day.

“Will you be able to go to the park tomorrow?” Delu asked. “Tom misses you.”

“I don’t think so…” Shantha felt guilty again. “If they say we have to go back and work, we have to…”

“You’ve never been this kind of employee, Shantha!” Delu was imploring. “Come to the park!”

“Let’s see the reports from the firemen…” Shantha rose up and started preparing the breakfast.

Delu turned the TV on. 

“No,” Shantha said, staring Delu with a serious expression. “please.” 

She turned it off. 


Saturday

“Shantha?” The voice from the man from the other side sounded worried. “Are you alright?”

“Yeap…” She was not fine. She woke up from a nightmare that night and wasn't well. “I’m at work…” 

“Ah!” His voice turned to a sad intonation. “Can I meet you in the park, just like the other day?”

“I don’t think I’m having breaks today…” She wanted him by her side that moment. “There is a lot of accumulated work from yesterday…”

“Well…” Rakeshi didn’t know what to say. He spent the last two days waiting to speak to her. He had made a decision. “Ok.”

Shantha turned the cell phone off and went back to her sewing station. Ten minutes later Rakeshi showed up. 

“What are you doing here? How did you get in?” Shantha was whispering. She did not want to lose this job.

“There’s no one watching the entrance of the factory, today!” He was really happy, but his happiness was having problems to overcome Shantha’s bad feeling.

“Ok…” She said, leaving the sewing station and heading to an old room used as warehouse. “Quickly! Come in! Someone can see you!”

“Shantha, listen,” Rakeshi started speaking as soon as she closed the door. “I’ve come to a decision.”

“So, what is it?” Finally his happiness had affected her and she felt good. 

“I decided not to be…” Before he could finish, a strong vibration hit the ground. “I decided that…”

“Please, hug me!” She was crying. Another vibration shook the building and they fell. A big crack appeared in the ground and the sound of metal being torn invaded the room. They hug.

“I love you” he said.

“I love you” she said.

There was no time for any other word; the entire building collapsed. 

  




Photo by Taslima Akhter. It was taken a day after the Rana Plaza Collapse
in Bangladesh on April 25, 2013, in which 1129 people died.


The couple was not identified.