Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Little Bird - a poem by Dr. Syeda Suhela Nashtar Khairabadi

Little Bird
Dr. Syeda Suhela Nashtar Khairabadi 
I am a little bird
I sing lovely songs
I wake up early
I go to sleep early
I am a little bird
My melodies wake up the world
And fill the hearts with joy
I have discovered the secreat of life
" Be happy and keep others happy
And fill the world with your melodies"
This is my message to the world.

Dr Saleem Wahid Saleem, a glimpse by Dr Shahzad Rizvi

Dr. Saleem Wahid Saleem- a glimpse
By Dr. Shahzad Rizvi
 

It is high time that the poetry of Dr. Saleem Wahid Saleem get its due. It is now well-known that Dr. Saleem Wahid Saleem (distinguished father of Mr. Muslim Saleem, a prominent journalist and litterateur) worked in obscurity and isolation in Pakistan toward the end of his life. His democratic and liberal views came head to head with dictatorial regimes and extremist tendencies.
His ideal was that the peoples of the world belonging to various religions and ethnic groups pursue their faith according to the dictates of their conscience and live in harmony with one other.
On a personal and micro level, he valued human values more than worldly grandeur.  Dr. Saleem has expressed in his Urdu ghazal, "DASTE TALAB NA KAR DARAAZ JAAHO HASHAM NA KAR QUBOOL," what a person should strive for in life. It is a universal truth that poetry in one language does not lend itself well to translation into another language; something unique to its linguistic and poetic tradition is always lost in the transformation.  However,  I have made an effort at its translation as follows:

Neither ask for, nor accept, the vainglory of this world
Refuse to stoop to begging for coins

Know that your dignity should not be debased
Do not accept the comforts of life for which you must degrade yourself

If you have no gold, silver, pearls or diamonds to give away
Then it is shameful to accept them

Do not complain endlessly of tyranny
Nor shake your fist at Heaven, nor accept an agony of pain

Life is short; hence do not suffer during the lovely Spring
Enjoy the pleasure of the morn and do not accept the sadness of the night

Better to sacrifice the grandeur of a king for dignified poverty,
Choose the simplicity of Arabia and reject the pomp of Persia

O Saleem, bring into your heart a mother's love, not your own ego,
As you love God, refrain from wasting yourself on earthly desires.

Friday, May 27, 2011

TUBE BABY – a short story by Dr. Shahzad Rizvi

Samantha, popularly called Sam, was very curious about her father—or more accurately, about the donor of the sperm which became responsible for her existence. She would lie in bed late into the night, wondering about him—what kind of man he was, what he did, what he looked like. She, herself, had a tall and statuesque figure, alabaster skin and gazelle-like eyes. Obviously, she had inherited all of this from him. Her mother had been bestowed many gifts by nature, but looks and figure were not among them. Often, Sam would stand in front of a full-length mirror, gazing at her reflection, trying to picture how he must look, trying to imagine being face to face with him. But it was an exercise in futility which always ended in frustration. How can I know? she thought.
She tried to quiz her mother about him, but never got very far. The most she got out of her was, “My requirement for the donor was that he should be handsome, intelligent, educated, and ideally free from any hereditary illnesses, and they said he fulfilled all the requirements. Now, I have a beautiful, smart daughter, and I’m quite satisfied.” It was well and good for her as a highly ambitious career woman—having a child without the entanglements of a marriage—but, with the passage of time, being fatherless became more and more of an emotional problem for Sam.
She found refuge in communicating with like-minded members of the Tube Baby Association. Much to her joy, she friended a member named Richard on Facebook and they planned to text message each other that night. Though only their common quest for paternal identity brought them together, she discovered that they had lots in common. They both liked nature, Indian food, and creative writing. Oh yes—and poetry, too. They exchanged numbers and they soon began to finish each other’s thoughts, as they texted.
One day, in a rather stirred emotional state, she arranged the pictures that she had of herself and of Richard side by side, realizing how much they looked like a couple. The time had come for them to see each other in person. It could wait no longer. Many a night she would lie awake, thinking of him, fantasizing about him. But, there was a problem. A whole continent lay between them; she lived in Washington D.C. and he in San Francisco. They often talked about getting together, but something always got in the way. Finally, he made arrangements to fly to the East Coast, so they could meet in person.
Sam was excited, looking forward to sharing the news with Richard that she was finally getting somewhere in her search for, as she called him, her test-tube dad. She’d been able to track down the SDA, short for Sperm Donor Agency. Everyone there was sympathetic and wanted to help, but cautioned, “Privacy laws on donation are in flux. We can’t give you the donor’s information, but we can try to contact him. Then it’ll be up to him to get in touch with you. No guarantees.” Time hung heavy on Sam’s heart as she waited. Every time the phone rang, her pulse would race and she would rush to the phone, only to be disappointed when she picked it up to find again that it wasn’t him.
At the airport, Sam’s eyes darted from person to person looking for Richard. She had no difficulty in spotting him among the swarm of travelers pouring out of the plane. She threw her arms around his neck, nearly knocking him over. They both laughed. He was exactly like she’d known he would be and they immediately clicked. It was as if they had known each other forever.
As they drove away from Reagan National, a ring came on her cell phone. “Hello?” Sam said into the Bluetooth in a nervous tone.
“Am I speaking to...S-S-a-m-m?” a male voice inquired. Sam’s voice was choked and she couldn’t speak for several seconds. “Hello. Can you hear me?”
Sam composed herself enough to be able to speak. “Yes, I can hear you. This is Sam. I’m driving.”
“So, this doesn’t seem to be good time for you to take my call?”
“No, no, it’s a very good time, sir.”
“The SDA got in touch with me and said you were eager to talk to me.”
“I’ve been looking for you for a long time. I’m your daughter.” There was silence for a while. She could hear nothing but the sounds of traffic. “Hello?”
“Apparently, I donated sperm to your mother through the SDA. That was a long time ago.”
“You’re my father!”
“I had stipulated that I would remain anonymous as a donor.”
“I want to meet you. Where are you right now?”
There was more silence. “I…I…I…am in a car…on Constitution Avenue.”
“Right here in Washington, D.C?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Can you please meet me by the Washington Monument? It will be hard to miss. I’m returning from the airport after picking up a friend. I can be there in 20 minutes.” For half a minute, she could hear nothing but his heavy breathing punctuated by noisy cars and blaring sirens. “Please…sir.”
“...All right. If you insist.”
“How will I know you?”
“I’ll be wearing dark-rimmed glasses, a beige suit, and carrying a black case. I use a cane and walk with a limp.”
Hearing about the limp, Sam felt a stab in her heart, but she didn’t let it dampen her excitement. Before she could say anything, he had hung up.
Richard spoke just then. “Now I can tell you that I too have found my donor father and have spoken to him on the phone several times. I didn’t want to tell you before you found yours, so you wouldn’t feel bad.”
But Sam didn’t answer him. She was preoccupied with conjuring up all kinds of images of the upcoming encounter. She was hearing her father’s shaky, jerky voice, with the words stammering out of his mouth.
“He told me that it would not be a good idea for us to meet.” Richard spoke again, but Sam barely heard him, as if he were speaking from the other side of a tunnel. “You’re lucky you’re meeting yours. I’m happy for you.”
As they walked toward the tall monument, she could see men in every imaginable garb—probably all tourists—but not one wearing dark-rimmed glasses and a beige suit was in sight. Richard suggested that they walk around the monument, and they did—twice. Still, they didn’t see any sign of him. With the passage of every moment, Sam was getting more anxious. What if he changed his mind and decided not to see me, she fretted?
“That must be him,” Richard shouted at the same moment that she spotted him in the distance. A figure that fitted the description was limping towards the monument. With quickened steps, Sam rushed forward, leaving Richard behind. Many emotions rose and fell within her tender heart. When he got close, she was startled by the lack of any expression on his face.
“S…s…a…m?” he asked, as if her name set off his stutter.
“Yes, I’m Sam.”
“I’m the donor that you’ve been wanting to meet.”
“I’m so happy to meet you. Shall we go somewhere where we can visit? Talk? Do you mind?”
“As a matter of fact, I do. You were eager to see me and now you have…but now I must be going.”
“Why won’t you give her a little time?” Richard shouted from behind her.
“Because that wasn’t part of the deal…it wasn’t part of the agreement. All of that happened a long, long, time ago when I was a poor student and needed money to survive. I have a different life now…a wife, children, a home, a respectable job and a position in society. I have a lot to lose, if people come to know about this...”  He suddenly became quiet.  Staring at Richard, he asked, “And who would you be?”
Sam turned around and said, “I’m sorry. This is Richard. He just arrived from San Francisco. We met through the Tube Baby Association.”
“So, he is also a tube baby?” He paused and looking intently at Richard, said, “You’re not the Richard of San Francisco who has also tracked me down…and has been calling me day and night?”
“Oh, my God! Are you the one? I had no idea. What a coincidence!” Sam was stunned and shouted, “So, you’re Richard’s father, too?”
“No…sperm-donor! Let’s call a spade a spade. Now that you have both seen me, I should be going.” He turned around with quickened steps and limped away. They both stood there looking at his receding figure until it disappeared in the crowd.

Ghazal with takrar-e-lafzi by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi

Here is a ghazal by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi, in which he has used takrar-e-lafzi (repetition of words) because of which the beauty of ghazal has enhanced (Posted by Muslim Saleem on May 27, 2011).

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Maullim Hassan Badr - tribute by Barqi Azmi

Muallim Hassan Badr died in a road accident on May 24, 2011. The death of founder of bhatkally.org has come as a shock to many. Presented below is a poetic tribute by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi (Posted by Muslim Saleem on May 26, 2011).

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Majrooh Sultanpuri death anniversary May 24 - tribute in poem by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi

Majrooh Sultanpuri had died on May 24. Here is a poetic tribute by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi. (See Majrooh Sultanpuri's profile and pictures with Muslim Saleem in "urdu poets and writers of india" on khojkhabarnews.com  "Indian poets and writers" on muslimsaleem.wordpress.com) (Posted by Muslim Saleem on May 24, 2011)

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Ghazal "Guzar Gaya' by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi


Bina Refinery: Boon for MP, new life for Bundelkhand


By Ataullah Faizan
Bhopal, May 22, 2011
Thanks to sustained efforts on the part of Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Madhya Pradesh has got its first refinery after 63 years of India’s independence. The refinery was mooted in the regime of Congress regime The foundation stone of the refinery was laid by the then Prime Minister, P V Narasimha Rao on 16th December, 1995. But after that the MoU was not implemented until Chief Minister Shivraj Singh undertook fresh efforts and a new MoU was signed and the project started taking shape, reports SMS News and Features,
Now, the mega project has started working after Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh dedicated the Rs 12 thousand crore Bharat-Oman Refinery at Agasod near Bina May 20.
It is heartening that Madhya Pradesh has got a world class project in the form of Bina refinery that will boost development in and around Bundelkhand region. The revenue of Madhya Pradesh would go up and around five thousand people will get employment in this project, he added. It is hoped that the company would continue to discharge its social responsibilities for welfare of the local people. According to an estimate, the company likely to provide 60 percent jobs to local people in this project for which Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan made a fervent plea.
 The project will not only be boon for Madhya Pradesh  but the parched lands of the state will also get a new lease of life due to it. Recurring dry spells in Bundelkhand region have been a cause of serious concern. Earlier, this region did not receive desired attention. Therefore, Bundelkhand Package was announced in year 2009. The package lays great stress on soil and water conservation to boost agricultural and animal husbandry related activities. Now, the central and state governments would need to work in tandem for success of the Bundelkhand Package.
This is the first grass root refinery in this part of India. It is a matter of pride for India and Madhya Pradesh that this project has been established jointly by Bharat Petroleum Company Ltd, Oman Oil Company and Madhya Pradesh government.
To meet the requirements of fast growing Indian economy the country would need adequate energy at reasonable cost. Hydro carbons would continue to be a major source of meeting our energy requirements for a long time, therefore, we need to develop adequate refining capacity.
 The Prime Minister said that efforts to discover new hydro carbon deposits would be intensified. He also stressed the need for application of latest technologies in exploration and production of oil and gas.
 According to Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan that efforts were being made by the state government to develop Bina as a model industrial area. This would give an impetus to development in this region. A Bhopal-Bina corridor would also be developed, he added.  The Chief Minister referred to the facilities provided by Madhya Pradesh government for establishment of the refinery including free allotment of 2300 acre land, 15 year exemption from entry tax and stamp duty etc.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Mobile Bank boon for MGNREGS labourers in MP

By Ataullah Faizan
Bhopal, May 19, 2011
Madhya Pradesh has done what even advance states could not. The state has started mobile banking services in eight districts to disburse wages to labourers in their villages itself under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). Under the plan, wages amounting to more than Rs. 74 crore have been paid to over two lakh 75 thousand labourers by organising employment days in these eight districts, reports SMS News and Features. After the success of the experiment, the state government plans to expand mobile banking services to remaining 42 districts.
It is learnt even after making all possible efforts, difficulties were being faced for payment of wages. In view of this, mobile banking services are being introduced in eight districts on an experimental basis. With this system, the labourers will get wages in their villages itself. The workers will be saved from facing unnecessary problems like going to the post office to withdraw the wages.
The mobile banking services have been introduced in 381 gram Panchayats of 28 blocks of eight districts which are located in the far-flung areas. For this, 33 mobile bank vehicles have been pressed into service. The beneficiaries of this system are two lakh 68 thousand 871 labourers and a total amount of Rs. 74 crore 52 lakh as wages has been disbursed to them in their own villages.
The mobile banking network is operational through six vehicles in 218 Panchayats of six blocks of Anuppur district. The mobile banks distributed Rs 64.41 crore to one lakh 86 thousand 294 workers as wages which is the maximum in all the six districts.. Likewise, in Umaria district, 11 mobile bank vehicles are pressed into service in 90 villages of three blocks. These mobile bank vehicles distributed wages amounting to Rs. 6.25 crore to 38 thousand 925 labourers. In Chhindwara district, one mobile bank vehicle has distributed Rs 25 lakh to 2389 workers of 19 Gram Panchayats of seven blocks. Workers of nine Gram Panchayats of five blocks in Jabalpur districts received wages amounting to Rs. Four lakh through seven mobile bank vehicles. Workers numbering 241 of three Gram Panchayats of one block of Burhanpur district received wages amounting to Rs five lakh through one mobile bank vehicle. Three mobile bank vehicles were pressed into service in three blocks of Dindori district. There, 28 thousand 119 labourers received their wages amounting to Rs three crore 17 lakh. This scheme was introduced in Sheopur and Ujjain districts only during the last month. In Seoni district, 12 thousand 170 labourers of 22 Gram Panchayats spread over in four blocks received Rs 35 lakh as wages through five mobile banks.
It may be mentioned here that Madhya Pradesh has added yet another feather to its cap since the Anuppur model of mobile banking ensuring on-the-spot payment of wages under MNREGS has been judged as the best practice in implementing the MNREGS and was awarded by the President of India. Anuppur figured among 10 districts of the country. The officials who made sincere efforts and brought laurels to the state are indeed praiseworthy since timely payment of wages is a must and for this the mobile banking is an effective mechanism.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Nashtar Khairabadi – ghazal ‘nigah=e=kafirana’

غزل

نشتر خیرابادی

اُف  تیری   نِگاہِ   کا فِرانہ

ایمان  سے  پھِر گیا  زمانہ

ہَے   ہَے  وہ   خرامِ  والہانہ

ہر گام   پہ اِک   شراب   خانہ

اِک  سجدہ    کعبہ  ساز   نشتر

لو   آ گیا   اُن  کا  آستا نہ

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Dr. Syeda Imrana Nashtar pays tribute to late brother in Urdu & English poems

Late Syed Irshad Ahmad Rizvi

نظم

دَرد  کا رِشتہ

)اپنے مرحوم بھائ سیّد  اِرشاد احمد  رضوی

کے سوگ میں سو گوار بہن(

ڈاکٹر سیّدہ عمِرانہ  نشتر خیرابادی

رات ہے میرے غم کی پر چھایئں

دِن  دِل کے   زخموں کا  اُ جالاہے

پھِر  بھی  میں  نہیں  ہوں   تنہا

کا یئنات کی ہر شے   مِرے ساتھ سو گوار ہے

 شریِک غم ہے یہ اُداس اُداس چاند

سِتاروں کی رنگت بھی زرد ہو گئ ہے

بادلوں کا دِل بھرا بھرا ہے

زمیں کی آنکھ  میں بھی نمی ہے

پہاڑوں کے چہرے  سانولا گئے ہیں

آبشارں کی چال میں بے کلی ہے

بِجلیوں کے   سینے میں تڑپ بھر گئ ہے

ہوا کی سانس میں وحشت بج رہی ہے

قلبِ سمندر میں ہے شور بپا

مو جیں سر پٹکتی ہوئ بے  حال ہو گیئں ہیں

شجر سر گو شیاں کر رہے ہیں

’’ یہی شخص کیوں نِگاہ میں آیا؟

اِسے ہی فلک نے کیوں نِشانہ بنایا؟

یہ عشق و محبّت کی باتیں  ہیں

ہم کو تُم کو معلوم نہیں

رب جِس کو زیادہ  چاہتا ہے

درد   اُسی کو دیتا ہےــــ”

-0-

TRUE  EMPATHY

(Dadicated to my dear brother late Syed Irshad Ahmad Rizvi)

Dr. Syeda Imrana Nashtar Khairabadi

 The night is the shadow of my sorrow
The day is the light of my burning wounds
Even then I am not lonely
The whole universe is sharing in my grief
The moon is sad
The stars have turned pale with agony
The eyes of the earth filled with tears
The face of mountain is darken with grief
The waterfalls are restless
There is pain and pang in the lightening
There is shuddering in the breath of wind
And turbulence in the bosom of ocean
The waves thrashing frenzy become distraught
The trees are whispering
“Why did this JOB came into sight?
Why this is made target by the cruel destiny?
This is a matter of higher and super love
What do we mortals know of this?
Whom He loveth  best, gives the suffering most

Friday, May 13, 2011

Hasrat Mohani - Poetic tribute on death anniv by Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi

Hasrat Mohani needs no introduction. The great freedom fighter and poet had died on May 13, 1951. Here is a poetic tribute on his death anniv by noted poet Ahmad Ali Barqi Azmi. (Muslim Saleem - May 13, 2011). The poem can be seen on all the websites and blogs of Muslim Saleem that include www.khojkhabarnews.com, www.muslimsaleem.wordpress.com, www.urdunewsblog.wordpress.com, www.urdupoetswriters.blogspot.com, www.muslimsaleem.blogspot.com www.poetswritersofurdu.blogspot.com, www.cimirror.blogspot.com, www.muslimspoetry.blogspot.com, www.ataullahfaizan.blogspot.com and www.abdulahadfarhan.blogspot.com

Thursday, May 12, 2011

GHAZAL BY SYED ZIA KHAIRABADI Atlanta Georgia USA

GHAZAL BY SYED ZIA KHAIRABADI
 Atlanta Georgia USA
(Syed Zia Khairabadi and is the grandson of Hazrat Muztar Khairabadi and son of Hazrat Nashtar Khairabadi. At present, he is based in Atlanta and serving the cause of Urdu by penning poetry and articles. Here is one his latest ghazals (Muslim Saleem, May 12, 2011)
راہِ   جُنوں  میں  میں شام  و سحر ڈھونڈتے  رہے
آہوں  میں اپنی   ہم  تو   اَثر    ڈ ھو نڈتے   رہے

داَمن   تھا   تار   تار  گرِ   یباں     نہ    بن    سکا
دستِ جنوں   کا  اپنے    ہُنر   ڈھونڈتے    رہے

ماضی کی کھِڑ کیوں میں  جو جھانکا    تھا   ایک بار
ہم کو حسین  یادوں   کے در  ڈھونڈتے  رہے

آنکھوں کے ساتھ دِل کا بھی  رِشتہ عجیب ہے
دِل  کو  جِلادے  ہم  وہ نظر  ڈھو نڈتے  رہے

منِزل   کی جُستجو  میں  رہا  دِل    کا   کا  رواں
شوقِ طلب میں ہم وہ  ڈگر ڈھونڈتے    رہے

ایک عُمر جِن کے سائے میں  گُزاری  کبھی ضیا
راہوں میں ایسے شمس و قمر ڈھونڈتے رہے

GHAZAL BY SYED ZIA KHAIRABADI Atlanta Georgia USA

GHAZAL BY SYED ZIA KHAIRABADI
 Atlanta Georgia USA
(Syed Zia Khairabadi and is the grandson of Hazrat Muztar Khairabadi and son of Hazrat Nashtar Khairabadi. At present, he is based in Atlanta and serving the cause of Urdu by penning poetry and articles. Here is one his latest ghazals (Muslim Saleem)
راہِ   جُنوں  میں  میں شام  و سحر ڈھونڈتے  رہے
آہوں  میں اپنی   ہم  تو   اَثر    ڈ ھو نڈتے   رہے

داَمن   تھا   تار   تار  گرِ   یباں     نہ    بن    سکا
دستِ جنوں   کا  اپنے    ہُنر   ڈھونڈتے    رہے

ماضی کی کھِڑ کیوں میں  جو جھانکا    تھا   ایک بار
ہم کو حسین  یادوں   کے در  ڈھونڈتے  رہے

آنکھوں کے ساتھ دِل کا بھی  رِشتہ عجیب ہے
دِل  کو  جِلادے  ہم  وہ نظر  ڈھو نڈتے  رہے

منِزل   کی جُستجو  میں  رہا  دِل    کا   کا  رواں
شوقِ طلب میں ہم وہ  ڈگر ڈھونڈتے    رہے

ایک عُمر جِن کے سائے میں  گُزاری  کبھی ضیا
راہوں میں ایسے شمس و قمر ڈھونڈتے رہے

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

THE MISSING CHILD – short story by Dr. Shahzad Rizvi

Dr Shahzad Rizvi.
They were expecting their first child, so Bob and Bobbie decided to move out of the basement efficiency they were renting and find a place with a little more room, where they could create a nursery. They agreed that it would have to be something inexpensive. She was a cashier in a drugstore and he did the accounts for a small business. On a spreadsheet, Bob had calculated—almost down to the dollar—how much it would cost them to live after the baby arrived. He believed that they could do it on one salary, if the new rented place fit their budget. Every weekend, they looked in the papers, but couldn’t find what they were looking for. In the meantime, Bobbie was showing more and more.
Bobbie’s pregnancy generated interest among the female customers, especially the one who came to the store every week to get medicines for her ongoing illnesses. Bobbie went out of her way to be helpful to her. The two women often chatted. On Christmas Eve, Bobbie was working. When the woman came in, there happened to be no customers. Right away, Bobbie noticed that the woman was in bad shape. Without saying hello or anything, she began, “I get so depressed during the holidays. It was during this time that my sweetheart was killed in Vietnam. We were to get married when he came back. He did come back, but in a body bag. I feel so happy for you, with a touch of envy of course, that you have a husband and are expecting a child.”
Bobbie comforted her and in the conversation that followed, she told the woman about their problem of not finding a bigger place that they could afford. They didn’t know what they would do when the baby came.
“Why don’t you come and live with me? I can easily spare three, or even four rooms,” said the woman.
“But…but…the rent,” Bobbie managed to get out, as the baby inside her was kicking hard.
“Don’t worry about it,” said the woman, when they were interrupted by a customer.
That night, when they were together, Bobbie talked to Bob about their good fortune. “Don’t be stupid, Bobbie! People don’t go around offering three or four rooms to strangers to live in their house,” Bob blurted out.
Bobbie burst into tears and would not be consoled. “In all the years we’ve known each other, you’ve never talked to me like that,” she said through her wailing. It was true that their harmony had been legendary among their relatives and friends. They finished each other’s sentences and one always knew what the other was thinking. They were elementary school sweethearts and graduated from the same high school. People always mentioned them in tandem—B&B. Neither was ambitious and they both wanted the same thing from life: to make an honest living and raise a good family. Bob regretted his thoughtless comment, but then he was not expecting such a strong reaction, either. He attributed their heightened emotions to the pregnancy for which neither had been prepared.
“Honey, shall we go and look at the house this weekend?” he asked.
Bobbie wiped her tears and said, “Sure, dear.”
“Do you know where this woman lives?”
“Not exactly, but I have her phone number. I can call her tomorrow and find out.”
“What’s her name, anyway?”
“Sarah…Sarah Brown.”
“I’m sorry I talked to you that way.”
“Don’t worry about it.” They cuddled as best as they could under the circumstances before drifting off to sleep.
It was a Sunday when they finally found the house after making a wrong turn and getting lost. Adjacent to a federal park and surrounded by plenty of land, the house looked like a little mansion. Sarah was waiting for them on the porch and greeted them by saying, “You two look like twins: same blond hair, same blue eyes, same Nordic features and same height.”
“That’s what everybody says,” responded Bob, and shook Sarah’s hand warmly.
“I don’t believe any introductions are in order because Bobbie has talked so much about you that I feel like I know you well,” said Sarah.
“I feel the same way about you, Sarah,” responded Bob.
Seeing them look around the house, Sarah said, “This house was built by my grandfather who was a wealthy builder. He left it to my father who was his only child. My father left it to me. He also left a trust to pay the property tax and my support.”
“How many rooms do you have?” Bob asked.
“Ten, but I only use five. The rest of the rooms remain closed. You’re welcome to use the rest.”
“I don’t think we can afford this fancy house,” Bob said.
“Look, I’m not doing this for money. I don’t have to. I’m doing it for your company. I feel so lonely out here. I want to be done with mourning the death of my sweetheart and my parents, and living the life of a recluse.”
Bob and Bobbie followed Sarah to see the rooms. Every one of them had antique furniture and memorabilia of past lives. Their size, high ceilings and opulence were overpowering. It would be quite a switch from basement living in an efficiency, but they figured they could get used to it quickly. They looked at each other and expressed joy at this windfall.
“I’m embarrassed to ask, but could we pay you what we are paying for the efficiency?” Bob asked.
“If you want. I’m treating this as if my sister who is expecting a baby were moving in with me. This will give me a chance to talk to someone all day long and play auntie.”
“We can’t argue with that. But what are those openings in the corners of every room?” Bobbie asked.
“Those are the passages for the dogs and cats to run around all over the house. We had many of them at one time until I found out I was allergic to them. I can’t have birds, either. I’m allergic to their feathers. They make me sneeze like crazy. It’s a shame because I like animals and I particularly love exotic animals. I do very well with them, but they frighten people. So, if I ever have them, I don’t let people see them.”
Both Bob and Bobbie wondered what animals she was talking about and whether or not she had any concealed. They pictured elephants, giraffes, lions, hippos and kangaroos—animals that could frighten people—but of course that was silly. Neither pressed the issue. They left, thanking Sarah over and over again for her generosity. Throughout it all, she kept protesting that she was doing it for herself.
****
When Bobbie’s water broke and her labor contractions were three minutes apart, Bob was in the air thousands of feet above the ground, somewhere over Kansas. He was returning from a business trip in California. Apparently, the baby had decided to arrive early, throwing off their careful calculations. Bob and Bobbie had attended Lamaze classes together, and Bob had every intention of being present in the delivery room. But now, as things stood, the matter was literally up in the air. Sarah offered to drive Bobbie to the hospital, and be with her in the delivery room. When the baby was born, it was a boy. Bob and Bobbie had opted out of prenatal testing, so the baby’s gender was a pleasant surprise. Sarah was one of the first to see and hold the baby. Bob finally arrived, regretting having missed the experience of his son’s birth. He vowed that he would never be late for his son’s birthdays. They named their son Robert and, rather than calling him Bob, decided to call him Junior.
Bobbie quit work to stay home with the baby. After Bob left for work, which was usually early since he had a long commute, Sarah, Bobbie and Junior would spend the day together. Sarah became so fond of Junior and fussed over him so much that people took her to be his grandmother. It was amazing how skillfully she handled him, considering that she had never had a child of her own.
One day, Sarah announced that she would be going away for a yoga retreat. It would  just be overnight. “I don’t like to be gone for a long time,” she said. “And you don’t need to bother about my part of the house. I’ll just lock it.” Although Bobbie spent almost every day with Sarah, she had never seen her side of the house—except for one room. Of course, Bobbie was curious, as was Bob, but neither was in a hurry. They knew that someday they would have a chance to see it. Bobbie was in the bathroom with cramps and an upset stomach when she heard Sarah’s voice saying, “Good-bye,” followed by the car driving away.
When Bobbie came out of the bathroom, she heard thunder and it started to pour. As the weatherman had predicted, the tentacles of a hurricane were obviously reaching this far North. She was surprised that the baby was sleeping through all that noise. Realizing that she was alone in such a big house with the baby, a chill ran down her spine.
She needed to do laundry. She was completely out of clean clothes. It would be a shame to disturb the baby, she thought, to take him down to the basement where the washer and dryer were. She never had a problem of that kind when Sarah was around. She took care of the baby so well. Why did she have to go away…especially in this weather? Maybe I can leave the baby undisturbed for just a few minutes, she thought. She decided to lock the nursery where he was sleeping, just to be on the safe side.
As she descended the stairs with the laundry basket, she saw that rainwater had begun flooding the basement. She had no idea what she was supposed to do in a situation like this. There were some expensive antiques stored there.  They’ll be all ruined, she feared. She picked up a bucket and began to scoop the water, but then realized that she had no idea where she could dispose of it. The best thing would be to put the precious items out of harm’s way, she thought and began to pile them on top of each other.
Through all this running around, her cramps came back and she had to run to the bathroom. Fortunately, there was a bathroom in the basement. She was in the middle of dumping her clothes in the washing machine when she heard a loud clap of thunder. It heightened her concern for her baby and she hurried upstairs. At the door, she realized that she had left the key in the basement. She ran back downstairs and found the water steadily rising. But where did I put the key? It was nowhere to be found. She ran back upstairs and kicked at the door as hard as she could. The door flung open, but the crib was empty. The baby was gone. She let out the loudest scream, while cold terror gripped her. First, she looked for him all around the nursery, then ran from room to room looking for him. Her screams were muffled by the noise of thunder and heavy rain.
With shaking hands, she picked up the phone and punched the numbers to call her husband. She dialed the wrong number. When she tried again, she got his voice-mail. She was sure that he was on his way home; but she couldn’t reach him. In a hurry this morning, he had left his cell phone. She decided to dial 911. When a woman’s voice came on the line, she blurted out, “My child has been kidnapped!”  Within minutes, the police were on the scene.
When Bobbie told them that she had locked the room before going down to the basement to do her laundry, the police officer began to concentrate on Sarah. It had to be someone who knew that the baby was there; someone who had the key to get in. “But Sarah left earlier for her retreat,” she told the officer. The policewoman wanted to pursue the matter, anyway. She questioned, “How did you find this place? How long have you lived here? What is Sarah like?” The officer went to her cruiser and checked the crime database. Sarah’s name popped up. She had taken someone’s child home and had taken a long time to call the police. She had later explained to the police that the child she’d found wandering in the adjoining Federal Preserve was hungry and drenched from heavy rain. She had thought that she would dry him and feed him first before calling the police. In the meantime, his parents were frantic, while the police were searching for the child everywhere. The charges against her were dropped at the parents’ insistence.
The police put out an All Points Bulletin for Sarah. When Bob finally arrived home after having been slowed down by traffic congestion caused by the recent storm, his theory was that Sarah had returned home to get something she’d forgotten when Bobbie was struggling with her upset stomach in the bowels of this huge mansion and, on finding the baby unattended, took the baby with her to keep him “safe.” It would be a very strange thing to do, but it was a possibility in view of her having done something like this before. “There’s no reason to panic and expect the worst,” he told Bobbie, who was weeping and shaking uncontrollably.
The next day, the baby’s disappearance was front-page news in the Capital Post. The rookie reporter, in his freshman journalistic enthusiasm, mentioned the mysterious disappearance of the Lindbergh baby in the story. Lindbergh was a celebrity at the time, which of course Bob the accountant was not, so how the two stories were parallel was anybody’s guess. There was no sign of Sarah, whose return was expected. The FBI got involved and Special Agent Donovan was assigned to the case. Donovan arrived at the scene and—on finding the broken lock of the door from where the baby had been “kidnapped”—was told that Bobbie herself had broken the lock to reach the baby. He wanted to interview the neighbors, but there were no neighbors except for the Park Rangers in the adjoining federal land. They seemed to be familiar with the case of the lost child in the park, as well as the recent disappearance of the baby—both instances in which Sarah’s name was mentioned. Beyond that, they didn’t know anything about her, though they could hardly miss her big beautiful mansion that stared at them every day, as they went about their business.
On the third day, when the rain let up and the sun came out, a state trooper spotted Sarah speeding, arrested her and handed her over to the FBI. During intensive interrogations, she not only repeatedly expressed ignorance about the whereabouts of the baby since she’d left home for the retreat, she broke down and expressed her grief over his disappearance. She had really come to love him very much, she told Donovan. In regard to her unaccounted time, she said that she was the last one to leave the cabin in the remote wilderness where they’d held the yoga retreat, and was trapped on the little dirt road which was flooded and blocked by fallen trees. There was nobody there to help her, so she’d slept in her car and lived on chips and crackers that she kept in her car for emergencies. It was a plausible story, but there was no one to confirm her alibi. The circumstantial evidence was enough to keep her under lock and key.
Special Agent Donovan was sitting in his office in the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building, looking through the window at the Capitol’s shining dome and feeling helpless about the case of the kidnapped baby. The media had given it so much hype and it had become such a high profile case, that not solving it would be tantamount to professional suicide. He could see himself being hauled before a Congressional Committee to testify and being harangued by congressmen or senators for having failed. He was startled from his unpleasant reverie by the loud ring of his telephone. He immediately picked up the receiver and shouted into it, “Hello…Donovan.”
A park ranger was on the other end of the line, asking him to come immediately.
When he arrived on the scene, there were many people gathered around a table in the ranger’s office. On the table, to his great surprise and confusion, was a python.
“Did you pull me out of my office to see this snake?” he asked, as the round of introductions began. The ranger told Donovan that he’d found this python during his rounds, which surprised him very much because there were no pythons native to the park. “Snakes, yes, but no pythons,” he said. So, he called the reptile expert of the National Zoo who identified it as an East Asian Python. “It had to be someone’s pet and somehow it got out of the home where it was kept. There are no private homes around here, except that mansion. There’s a bulge in the middle of the python’s body. It has swallowed some creature and by feeling it, I cannot identify any of the usual animals that would be fed to it. I’m sorry to say that it could very well be a human baby,” said the reptile expert.
“Oh my God!” Donovan gasped. He called the prison, identified himself and asked to speak to Sarah.
They all remained frozen in their places, as Donovan waited. It took Sarah a long time to get to the phone. Finally, he heard an almost inaudible woman’s voice: “Hello, this is Sarah.”
He barked into the little phone, “This is Special Agent Donovan. Sarah, do you have a python for a pet?”
There was a long silence, and then he heard a feeble, “Yes.”
He shouted, “Where do you keep it?”
After a long pause, through her sobs, he heard what he thought was, “In a cage.”
Donovan terminated the call and pocketed the phone. “Excuse me, you all. Please keep an eye on the python and don’t let it slither away. I’m going to that house to get to the bottom of this matter.”
When Donovan arrived at the mansion, he did find the cage in which Sarah kept the python. It was open. But how in the world could the snake go through so many rooms and end up in the nursery? That room, as Bobbie had told him, was locked. A python needs more than a crack in the door to enter. It was baffling. As he stood in the middle of the room, examining every part of it, he spotted the passage in the corner. “That’s the answer,” he shouted and ran from room to room, finding passages in every one of them. Of course, they’d been created for dogs or cats. Nobody foresaw that a hungry python would get out of its cage, slither from room to room in search of food, arrive in a baby’s nursery, swallow the baby, and then escape the house to end up in the adjoining forest. In her hurry, Sarah had failed to secure the latch of the cage.
****
Bob and Bobbie lived in a nice apartment now. Bob had been promoted and they could easily afford it. Bobbie was pregnant again and thoughts of the new baby’s arrival were helping to soften her grief over the loss of Junior. The pregnancy was going well. This time, they decided to do prenatal testing. They were both very excited at the prospect of having a little girl. Bob was thinking of all the ways that he was going to spoil her.
Sarah had sold the mansion to a developer, who had torn it down and replaced it with a high rise. She was truly sorry for what had happened. She was in therapy. Charges against her had been dropped, and Bob and Bobbie had found it in their hearts to forgive her. They were friends again. She had set up a trust for the baby from the money that she had received by selling the mansion. She had been out with Donovan, who’d been promoted. They were talking of getting married. “But no exotic animals,” he told her firmly. It was like preaching to the choir. She’d been forever cured of her love for exotic animals.
One Saturday night, savoring their current blissful existence, Bob and Bobbie were lying in bed. “Honey?” he began.
“Yes, dear?”
“The Lord works in mysterious ways.”
“I know…but what do you mean?”
“Junior had Krabbe disease.”
“What’s Krabbe disease?”
“It’s an enzyme deficiency.  Babies with Krabbe disease usually die a slow and painful death before they’re two.” Bobbie became very still and didn’t speak for a while. Bob turned toward her and put his arm around her. Tears welled up and ran down her face. She was staring off into space. Her voice barely audible, she said, “How long have you known, and how come you never told me before?”
“Oh, honey. Maybe I was wrong, but I wanted to protect you. When we did the genetic testing for the new baby last month, the pediatrician told me that we parents carry a genetic risk for Krabbe’s. Our daughter’s doesn’t have it. The tests clarified something for the doctor, though. He had begun to suspect Krabbe’s in Junior, and was planning to discuss it with us at our next visit, but then…you know what happened. There wouldn’t have been anything he or we could do, anyway. The doctor told me that the only hope for Krabbe may someday lie in stem cell research, but that’s still a long way down the road and it would have come too late for Junior.” Bob choked with emotion.
Bobbie turned toward him and put her arms around him. “So you’re saying that God took the baby back which was not made right and sent a healthy one in its place?”
“Yes, that’s exactly what I’m saying. And who are we to question the ways of God?”