EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY
A Spicy Extra-Marital Affair
Short Fiction – A Love Story
By
VIKRAM KARVE
From My Creative Writing Archives:
One of my earliest stories – a hilarious romance.
I wrote this story than 10 years ago – in the year 2004.
This story also features in my short fiction anthology COCKTAIL
Do let me know whether you liked the story.
Do let me know whether you liked the story.
EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY – A Hilarious Romance By VIKRAM KARVE
I never reminisce.
It makes me nostalgic, poignant, and melancholic.
But there is one thing that I love to hark back to, revisit in my mind’s eye from time to time, and have a hearty laugh.
A vivid memory of quite long ago - whenever I recall it – I always burst out laughing.
And so will you when I tell you about it.
It happened long ago – fifty seven years ago – in the year 1956 to be precise.
It happened in far-off tea-estate country, in a remote corner of India , almost in the back of the beyond – the place was then still a relic of the Raj.
I shall not tell you the place, and I will also change the names; for we just want to have a laugh, don’t we?
There was a handsome planter. 30. Let’s call him Roy.
And he had a most beautiful wife. Let’s call her Helen.
A dashing couple. An ideal match – made for each other – at least from the outside.
“Please. I’d like to have a word with you,” Roy sidled up to me at the bar in the Planters’ Club one cold wintry evening.
“Sure,” I said, pointing at the bar-stool. “Come, join me for a drink.”
“Not here,” he said looking at the crowd, “It’s very personal.”
“Okay. Let’s go outside.”
I ordered two whiskies; we picked up our drinks, and went out on the lawns.
It was dark, desolate and chilly.
“I don’t know how to say it,” Roy hesitated.
“Just say it,” I said.
“I want you to keep an eye on my wife,” he said.
“Something serious?” I asked.
“I think she is having an affair,” he said, “Someone visits her whenever I go out on my weekly tours.”
“You’re sure?”
“Not really. But I suspect. There are those telltale signs.”
“Like?”
“She seems a bit too satisfied, fulfilled, happy – how can I describe it – especially when I return home from tour. And there is a strange gleam in her eyes. And now-a-days she is overly polite and considerate towards me. I suspect she is up to some hanky-panky. ”
“Hanky-Panky? Well this is really your private matter. You know I really shouldn’t ….”
“Please,” he interrupted, “you’re the only one I can trust.”
He seemed so desperate that I had no choice. “Okay,” I said, “I’ll need to see your place, and meet your wife too.”
He told me the way to his tea-estate and next morning I was on my way, driving up the hair-pin bends on the steep windy road in my open jeep with my ferocious Doberman, Bruno, sitting beside me.
It was a lonely bungalow atop a hill surrounded by tea gardens.
“I’m Helen,” she said looking into my eyes for that moment longer than could be considered polite greeting.
She looked so ravishing that it was with great effort that I could take my eyes off her.
No wonder he was so insecure – anyone with such a beautiful and stunningly sexy wife always feels vulnerable. Especially, clots like him – I wondered why dopes like Roy always got the most gorgeous wives.
We indulged in some small-talk, and it was only after lunch that I brought up the subject. “Mrs. Roy, you must be feeling very lonely out here, isn’t it? Especially when Mr. Roy goes out on his tours.”
“Oh yes, she does,” Roy interjected.
“No, No. I don’t feel lonely at all,” Mrs. Roy said. “In fact, I love being alone. And don’t call me Mrs. Roy – call me Helen!”
“Why don’t you drop Helen off at the club on your way out and pick her up on your way back from your tour?” I suggested to Roy . “She can make some friends, play tennis, cards, tombola, a movie, and party – do whatever she likes and then stay for the night at the guestroom. She’ll always have plenty of lively company at the club”
“I prefer my solitude,” she said.
“She even sends the servants away,” Roy complained.
“I told you I like my privacy,” she said, a tinge of irritation in her voice.
She seemed quite obstinate, the tone of her voice slightly hostile, so I changed the subject.
“You like dogs?” I asked her.
“I love dogs, adore them,” she said excitedly. “We always had pet dogs back home. I have been telling Roy to get me a nice dog to keep me company, but he hates dogs.”
“Your prayers are answered,” I said, and I led Helen to my jeep where Bruno was sitting obediently.
“A gift for the charming lady,” I announced holding Bruno by the collar and making him smell her.
Bruno instantly took a liking for her, wagged his tail and nudged affectionately against her.
She was overjoyed.
On my way out, when I was alone with Roy , I confided in him, “We will catch the lover-boy now. Bruno is the best guard dog in our kennel. I trained him myself. Just leave him in the verandah when you go out at night. He is deadly ferocious – whoever is up to hanky-panky with your wife –well, the lover boy is going to be ripped apart from limb to limb.”
A wicked smile appeared on Roy ’s face as in his mind’s eye he visualized his wife’s mysterious lover being devastated and mutilated by the ferocious dog.
That evening many things happened.
Roy left on his tour, viciously excited, probably relishing in his imagination what was going to happen to the unknown “lover” that night.
Later that night, after a furious bout of lovemaking, Helen lying fully satiated in the arms of her lover, asked her passionate lover, “How did you manage? That ferocious dog did not even bark!”
Her lover gently took her to the window, drew the curtains, and said, “Look!”
In the verandah they saw a totally exhausted Bruno, coupled with a beautiful she-dog, both interlocked, pointing in opposite directions, dog-tired after a vigorous bout of lovemaking and mating.
The mysterious lover mischievously looked at Helen and naughtily teased her, “Tell me, which dog can resist the charms of a hot-blooded bitch in full heat?”
Helen looked at Bruno, and then at her lover, which was me.
Helen laughed and said teasingly to me: “You hot-dogs! You have both been upto hanky-panky, haven’t you?”
“Yes,” I said, tongue-in-cheek, “Every Dog has his day!”
VIKRAM KARVE
Copyright © Vikram Karve
1. If you share this post, please give due credit to the author Vikram Karve
2. Please DO NOT PLAGIARIZE. Please DO NOT Cut/Copy/Paste this post
© vikram karve., all rights reserved.
1. If you share this post, please give due credit to the author Vikram Karve
2. Please DO NOT PLAGIARIZE. Please DO NOT Cut/Copy/Paste this post
© vikram karve., all rights reserved.
Disclaimer:
This Story is a work of fiction. Events, Places, Settings and Incidents narrated in the story are a figment of my imagination. The characters do not exist and are purely imaginary. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Copyright Notice:
No part of this Blog may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Blog Author Vikram Karve who holds the copyright.
Copyright © Vikram Karve (all rights reserved)
No comments:
Post a Comment
I Write and I Blog because I want to say something.
I also want to hear what you have to say, especially about what I have written.
Please Comment.
I would love to hear your views.
I will greatly appreciate and welcome to your Feedback.