There are some things in life you did that you regret. And others you don't regret. Then there are those that fall somewhere in between. This is a story about one such peccadillo in my life. Something that by now is just part of my past. I still miss it some times. But being who I am now and where I am in the journey of life, I can't go back to it. However, occasionally something happens that brings the memories flooding back.
Six months ago, we moved into a new 4-bedroom apartment in the northern suburbs of Bombay. Our two boisterous boys, 13 and 10, were growing really fast, both physically and emotionally, and it was getting difficult to keep peace between them with them sharing one room. Although Anuj and I were attached to the first home we ever bought and built our family in, the 2 bedroom apartment place in Bandra started seeming smaller with each passing week. Both our careers were now in a great place too and we could afford a bigger home. Anuj was a VP in a bank and I had just made partner in a consulting firm. So we finally bid our old apartment an emotional farewell, and moved into this big place in a fancy high security apartment complex.
The tenants association and the neighbors were very welcoming. So we had a house warming party to get to know them a week or so after everything was settled. It was at this party that I first met Ritwik Deb, our next door neighbor.
"I am telling you Mrs. Vyas, I know you from somewhere." he said for the umpteenth time.
"Maybe you just know someone who looks like her." his wife Mamta said. "All your attempts at unearthing a previous connection have failed."
"Maybe you've met her in the US. She keeps going there for her work." Anuj chimed in.
"No, I have never been to America." Mr. Deb said pensively. "Ah ha! Did you ever play chess competitively? I used to. Maybe we met at some tournament."
"Nope, sorry." I really had never met the man before in my life. And I have a pretty good memory for faces and names.
"Anyway, have you hired a maid yet, Mrs. Vyas? Ours is pretty good. I can bring her over tomorrow." Mamta changed the subject.
"Yes, that would be lovely. Thank you so much. And please call me Urja."
On a couple of other occasions that night, Ritwik tried to figure out the mystery of why I looked familiar to him. But we had no milestones from our past in common. We had grown up and lived in different cities. They had moved to Bombay from Cuttack only a year ago. We worked in different industries, had studied in different colleges, and didn't seem to have any other connections. We even checked Facebook and LinkedIn to see if we had any friends or acquaintances in common through whom we might have met. But nothing came up. And as I said, I am really good with faces and names. And I was absolutely positive I had never met him before.
Other than that mildly annoying obsession Ritwik had that night with finding out past connections, the Debs were a wonderful family. They had one son the same age as my elder one, and they became friends soon. Both boys were also interested in tennis, so they started attending coaching together. Mamta and I became friends too, and had a lot of interests and more importantly, disinterests in common. We both hated cricket, so when our husbands would sit with the boys to watch it, she and I bonded over books, movies, music, and cooking. Our families started doing a lot of things together, like eating out, going to picnics, even an IPL match that Mamta and I had to be dragged to.
Then we went on a trip together to Alibaug. The boys were busy with their own thing and the four of us were sitting on the hotel patio, drinking and chatting. I was on antibiotics so was drinking just juice. Anuj, Ritwik and Mamta were pretty buzzed though. When the waiter came to refill our drinks, Anuj stared at him.
"Hey....where do I know you from?"
"Sir?" the waiter asked, pouring soda in Anuj's glass.
"I have seen you somewhere before."
The waiter looked at Anuj. Then smiled.
"Yes sir. I used to work at the Bacchus Lounge in Juhu before this and I believe you came there quite often with your clients."
"Ah yes! What made you move here? Better pay?"