The wise chronicler apologizes for his long absence. Due to certain circumstances which will remain undisclosed, the magnanimous and verbose scribe of this record was unable to pen down these pearls which will no doubt go down in the annals of history as words to be reckoned with.
The following excerpt from our protagonist’s unfulfilled college life contains the tale of his first acquaintances at this new place. Much to his chagrin they remained his steadfast partners in crime throughout his four years in hell college.
The first day had almost drawn to an end. Although R was not much of an introvert, the entirely new culture at this rural stable had shaken him to his very core. At a loss for words, R had somehow slinked his way through most of the introductory classes, where clearly incapable teachers had steadfastly strived to deliver what they thought were particularly inspiring discourses in the desired conduct of a student throughout his years in education. Much like the previous sentence, these discourses were utterly incoherent and had made R a little nauseas and possibly diarrhea stricken.
The last two classes of the day were in the computer lab. The tables housing the unwieldy beasts that passed for computers here were brand new and hence were giving of that extremely virulent odour of polish and paint, both of which did nothing to improve R’s mood. He made his way to the most secluded corner of the lab and eased himself down on a chair whose only claim to that title was that it allowed someone to place their posterior upon its hard and lumpy surface. Shifting uncomfortably R looked around the room. He glanced over several people and somehow his eyes came to rest upon a duo.
Much like him this duo looked dumbfounded and morose, like a child does when it finds out that Santa Claus doesn’t exist. One of them was tall and lanky, wearing a shirt which was carefully arranged to look careless. The boy had long hair which was draped over his head like the curtains over the stage of an especially untidy theatre. The boy had the look of a person desperately trying to fit in where he couldn’t. R grunted to himself. He understood the sentiment.
The other boy was considerably bulky with generous chunks of fat clinging to his face and from the looks of it, trembling beneath his clothes. The boy was wearing a dirty cap which covered a small turban. He was also exceptionally hairy. Now of course the Sikh religion forbids them to cut off their hair, but this boy looked like he had hair in places he himself didn’t know existed. His expression was that of an agitated ape, just one banana away from losing his sanity.
Something about this duo made R get up and make his way over to them. They glanced up at him, hope suddenly lighting up their weary faces. R introduced himself concisely and then waited around for them to respond in kind.
“Hey,” said the lanky one introducing himself. The worthy chronicler takes this opportunity to name the lanky one DK, Run written last name first because the other way around would make for a hilarious breakdown in any company proficient in Hindi. The chronicler also bestows upon the other boy the name of Meddling Mannu, the reasons for which will be made clear in future texts. (Of course the name doesn’t leave much to the imagination, and the humble scribe accepts that his readers aren’t probably lacking in the grey cell area.)
DK grinned at R. “Wonderful place isn’t it?”
R grimaced and sighed. “Yeah well, for better or for worse we are stuck here for the next four years.”
Meddling Mannu smiled at this and cracked some fell joke which was as cheap as it was weird. Of course being young men, the other two roared their heads off upon hearing it. Even though neither of the two on future pondering would find it funny.
The next two hours passed pretty easily as these three got to know each other. They discussed the dirty washrooms, the bumbling baboons others would call their teachers and the disheartening lack of pretty faces to hit on. They even took the same college bus to reach their homes, where even more conversation was to be had. Phone numbers were exchanged as were vows to meet the next morning to board the same bus back to the college. All things considered R walked away from this encounter vaguely satisfied at having made some worthwhile friends. Maybe life wouldn’t be as hard as he had envisioned it.
Life, of course, didn’t share the same viewpoint.
