Coinman: An Untold Conspiracy

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by Pawan Mishra




  Acclaim for Pawan Mishra’s

  Coinman: An Untold Conspiracy

  Winner: 2016 eLit Book Awards for Literary Fiction (Bronze)

  Finalist: 2016 National Indie Excellence Award for Humor

  “Originality is often elusive, yet that’s exactly what Pawan Mishra delivers. Humorous and highly entertaining, Coinman: An Untold Conspiracy proves an absolute gem and is recommended without reservation.”

  --BookViral

  “This articulate, wryly amusing creation focuses on simple situations that often have an unexpected, almost magical, twist. 5 stars.”

  --IndieReader

  “Mishra’s debut comic novel is an absurdist tale of office and personal politics set in a small town in northern India. A funny, unusual read…”

  --Kirkus Review

  “A quirky, heartfelt novel about finding your identity - and keeping it. In Pawan Mishra’s oddly charming novel, readers are welcomed into the strangely neurotic, passionate, and unfulfilled existence of Coinman. Coinman is a character that will be hard to forget. 4 stars.”

  --SPR

  “This story holds its own in the story world.”

  --Ana Meyer, author of Marie

  “The book is a brilliant linguistic muddle and a stunning display of stylistic somersaults. The style of the novel is an intricate mosaic fashioned with care. 5 stars.”

  --The Bibulous Bibliobiuli

  “This story was a breath of fresh air to read. The writing is superb and the characters are amazingly original. The author weaves together humor and insight into the nature of humanity to create a masterful piece. A must read!”

  --Sara Angelo, author of Drift

  Coinman

  An Untold Conspiracy

  PAWAN MISHRA

  

  Lune Spark, Morrisville, NC

  Copyright © 2015 by Pawan Mishra

  All the characters, names, places, and incidents appearing in this work are the product of author’s imagination. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator, Coinman” at the address below.

  Lune Spark L.L.C.

  PO Box 1443, Morrisville, NC, US, 27560

  www.lunespark.com

  Email: [email protected] Phone: +1 (919) 809-4235

  Ordering Information: Quantity sales. Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the publisher at the address above.

  Or visit www.coinman.info

  ISBN 13: 978-0-9974771-1-5

  ISBN 10: 0-9974771-1-3

  1. Literary Fiction 2. Humor 3. Satire

  First edition (Updated on Feb 15, 2016)

  DEDICATION

  To my dad,

  the late Mr. Chandra Prakash Mishra,

  for teaching me to live to the fullest and fight till the very end, and for inspiring me every day through cherished memories.

  

  Contents

  1. The Cacophonous Plight

  2. The Autonomous Arena

  3. Thus, Coinman

  4. The Gossipmongers

  5. The Pizzazz

  6. The Goatee Axiom

  7. The Lady in the Veil

  8. The Seeds of Debacle

  9. The Standard Pain-Killer

  10. The Serendipitous Concert

  11. The Dawn of the Heat Wave

  12. The Restroom Addiction

  13. The Sublime Collusion

  14. The Grapes of Wrath

  15. The Qualm and ABC

  16. Connubial Fluctuations

  17. The Grandpa Epics

  18. The Lethal Complaint

  19. The Meeting of the Second Kind

  20. The Involuntary Compromise

  21. The Addict’s Dilemma

  22. The Manager’s Illusion

  23. The Fundamental Cornerstone

  24. The Untimely Grief

  25. The Investigation

  26. The Unsought Date

  27. The Unsought Fate

  28. The Verdict

  29. The Unpleasant Divergence

  30. The Lonely Fracture in Time

  31. The Spiritual Quest

  Hindi Word References

  1. The Cacophonous Plight

  It all began with high expectations.

  I couldn’t believe at first that Sage Mangal, our esteemed master at the ashram, whose personality I can’t promise to make you very familiar with, had trusted me with a task of such ambition.

  “A lack of emotional engagement in the affair affirms higher credibility,” Sage Mangal had explained when asked why he chose me, Sesha, over many others, for pulling the pieces of Coinman’s story together after the latter’s departure from the ashram.

  In short, it was the lack of my prior acquaintance with Coinman that had won me this prize.

  His Politeness also bestowed me with the divine power to find almost everything that I needed to find. Such was this power that I could enter invisibly into past situations, could be at multiple places at the same time, and could even float in someone’s mind without their discovering. Before you ask, Sage Mangal did meticulously bar my access to certain activities and places—for example, the bathroom where one of the main characters in our story spent a major part of his life. The sage agreed in advance to bear with any compromises that my lack of full access might potentially introduce to the story.

  I could ramble on forever, but this is all I wish to convey to you about me and my job. I will assume that you wouldn’t want to know more than that either; not only will it make my job simpler, but it will also fulfill my wish to remain largely invisible. Honestly, with the kind of story I am about to embark on, I know you couldn’t care less about me. So let’s get to the story without further ado.

  Jangle jingle! Clink clatter! Ding-a-ling! Ring-a-ding!

  The mind-numbing sound of relentlessly jingling coins was something the people of the office, the center stage of this story, hadn’t quite learned to live with yet. Not only when the possessor of the busy coins, Coinman, walked, but also when he stood talking—or engaged himself in doing anything else, for that matter—his left hand constantly fondled the coins with tenderness.

  The coins occupied an eternal place in the left pocket of his trousers and, regardless of where he dwelt or what he did, constantly slithered through the narrow spaces between his fingers.

  When an activity adamantly demanded participation from one of his hands, he strategically let the activity claim his right hand to allow the left one an uninterrupted opportunity for the recreation. If such an activity insisted on his left hand, he transferred the coins to his right pocket ahead of time to allow his right hand to continue feeding his mind. Once the exceptional engagement was over, the left hand impatiently looked forward to the return of its possession. If there was a momentary delay, the left hand hurriedly tried to enter the right hand’s den, making the coins feel nervous, just as a princess would on seeing two equally adept princes fighting to claim her hand.

  When an activity required continuous use of both hands, like welcoming a delegation from another firm with garlands, he tackled such desperate scenarios by the means of a last-minute absence. There were rare yet difficult off-the-cuff occasio
ns, too, when it was unavoidable that he stop the action in his pocket, such as a sudden request to hold a big chart with both hands for a few minutes for a colleague’s presentation. Faced with such calamity, he immodestly excused himself for biological breaks, which, despite not fooling anyone, did not provide anyone enough justification to raise an official protest.

  The office was located in a small town somewhere in northern India; in a four-story building where it occupied the second floor, where all the managers sat in private offices, and the first floor, where the rest of the staff sat at desks in a large open hall.

  Far back in time, beyond a recall of the exact date, unable to put up with Coinman’s interminable daylong feat, colleagues at neighboring desks had started shifting their positions away from him; inch by inch, each day. It caused some sort of a ripple effect throughout the entire arrangement. The staff, without a spoken word, synchronized the move, over several months, with such a constant and slow pace that it was hard to spot it at any given point.

  When Coinman first spotted the continuous movement, he stayed calm initially, for he wanted to observe for a few more days to confirm his findings. Past embarrassments from his premature findings had left him wiser.

  Satisfied with the constancy of the move, he felt comfortable loudly announcing its progress every day to his neighbors. The minute he reached the office, he threw his bag on his desk, flew to nearby desks with the wings of curiosity, and bent down to take notes on the tiny spiral-bound notebook that he carried in his shirt pocket. Spiral-bound notebooks did not misbehave during his right-hand-only writing endeavor the way the sewn or case-bound notebooks did, like closing repeatedly without support from his coin-engaged left hand.

  The futility of Coinman’s verbal attempts to convince his neighbors about the unfaltering motion of the desks made him carry a small measuring tape and a white chalk to mark the daily progress. At the end of each day, before leaving the office, he marked the location of each neighboring desk by drawing boundaries around its feet, accompanied by a date and time. He did the same on the following morning, as soon as he came to the office. He realized within a few days that one of these two marks was redundant but wasn’t quite sure which one. He decided to continue only with the morning mark.

  But that did not solve the issue entirely. Since the desks were moving extremely slowly, two consecutive marks still overlapped with each other.

  To crack this challenge, he started bringing high-quality thin marker pens. The hard-nosed desks had to accept defeat and move visibly thereafter.

  “There, you see? That mark. This one, right here. Look at the overnight distance. God!” he would exclaim, flying from one desk to other, pining for his colleagues’ approval.

  Seeing no impact on his cold colleagues, he saw no point in trying to win them over. He started removing marks from the previous day while adding the new ones in the morning to continue tracking the direction of the movement for his own record.

  At times he chuckled to himself, in a loud voice, “The poor desks are so impatient to leave. God help the atmosphere here!”

  Ratiram, the reservoir of wisdom, the most widely revered man among the first-floor inhabitants, had been discreetly keeping an ardent eye on the move. He was one of those who are not born handsome, but develop charming features with age by continuously engaging their brains with intelligent thoughts.

  Ratiram announced one day that the move had racked up to the threshold of management’s endurance for untidiness. He astutely explained that if the move continued any further, management was no more going to avoid acknowledging it publicly; and in that case, it was inevitable that the response would involve ABC, Andar, Bandar, and Chandar, the three most dreaded individuals in the office; the supreme powers who came from nowhere to establish discipline when chaos crossed their limits.

  The announcement compelled an immediate shudder among the crew because ABC’s involvement had never been without a few expulsions. The move stopped right then and there. But by this time, a belt of circular empty space had formed around Coinman’s desk.

  Coinman felt relieved from his self-assigned burden of tracking the move. He used the circular empty space around his desk for his post-lunch brisk walks.

  “Chew it well and walk like hell; else the lunch will make you swell,” he chanted in a low voice during these walks, followed by a loud laugh every single time, implying to his unsmiling colleagues that a good joke doesn’t necessarily need appreciation from others. One can freely laugh at one’s own deserving jokes.

  A later development was his exclusion from the meetings run by the denizens of the first floor. Initially he continued to attend the meetings without presenting any signs of awareness of any restrictions. But he understood soon that everyone was secretly jeering at his pretentious ignorance. So he finally decided to stop attending these meetings. He was afraid that if he reacted to the situation, it might blow things out of proportion. Now at least he could continue with his interests freely outside the meetings. Who could tell? If he voiced his objection, he could jeopardize his pocket sport.

  “On the other hand,” he thought, “there is hardly anything of importance that happens in these meetings.” He smiled to himself as he remembered Ratiram telling him once from his soapbox, “These meetings are conducted as a means to spend official time and money on eating and gossiping. The agendas are so ambiguous one cannot make out in the end if the objectives are met or not. Some of the associates wait for these meetings to complete a power nap, while many others only allow themselves to turn into yawning machines.”

  Coinman could not help a laugh to himself every time he remembered how Ratiram had summarized it: “A meeting is a collective tacit confession of participants’ unwillingness to work.”

  The coin-stricken souls at the office used as pain-killers some fabricated tales about Coinman’s buffoonery, yet these pain-killers were not good enough to make even a dent in the constant trauma the coins caused. The mind-paralyzing sound of the coins, mixed with the hatred against him, evolved to a stubborn assessment in their minds that Coinman was perpetrating the most unbearable experience they’d ever known.

  The tenured associates had been somewhat successful in exhibiting numbness toward the turbulence caused by the jingling coins. A newcomer like Hukum, though, found it very challenging to live under the metal chimes hanging above their heads.

  Hukum shared his experience with everyone within a few days after his joining. “It was like a sudden installation of huge copper chimes into my brain. These chimes slam together unbearably, causing an indescribable feeling in my chest area that’s several times worse than a thousand nails raking simultaneously across a chalkboard.”

  Understanding a newcomer’s challenge very well, old associates always acted early to lend a kind hand by trying to elevate his soul with their own stories, explaining how they were able to eventually cope with the phrenic tsunami.

  The common source of suffering brought them all closer as personal differences gradually melted and evaporated in the scorching heat of coins. Whining about Coinman every day, they started noticing merits in each other. It was like suddenly discovering an ocean a few steps away from one’s house. Many even took the office companionship home, where their respective families found opportunities to get together and talked excitedly about otherwise mundane affairs of life.

  Sadly enough, no one felt obligated to Coinman for being the main cause of the grand social platform. Instead Coinman’s smile penetrated them, his laughs annoyed them, and his existence offended them.

  They wanted independence from coins at any cost.

  “I swear by the self-assurance with which elderly men sitting in public tilt sideways to allow the gas to escape loudly,” Hukum announced, during a gossip session, “allow a man to sit on your shoulder and he will instinctively take a leak in your ear. Instead of tolerating him, we must figure out a way to protest. Someone needs to take the lead so that it’s not everyone’s but no one’s
.”

  2. The Autonomous Arena

  Each life is yet another chance given to humanity, but it was not even a half a chance in Coinman’s case. God surely must have been undergoing some sort of mental metamorphosis when he dispatched Coinman to the world. This was how his colleagues often described Coinman in a nutshell to anyone who had no prior acquaintance with him.

  Coinman was of average height, dark, shy, and lean but healthy. His looks often misled people in judging his age: some believed him to be as young as thirty, and some thought he was as old as fifty. The former perceived him as a young man who looked older for having been through hardships, while the latter thought he was an old man who looked younger for having lived a contented life. The rest either did not have an opportunity to express their opinion or did not deem the subject worthy of their reflection.

  His chin was in a funnel shape, tapering down to form a very thin verge at the bottom. In addition to this extraordinary appearance, his chin vibrated whenever its owner was excited, positively or negatively—two times every five seconds, in quick succession. The two successive vibrations occurred at such speed and within such a short span that there was an ongoing debate at the office, behind his back, as to whether it happened once or twice. Each vibration made his chin contract, go up, and then relax back to its usual form. People often wondered if other children his age used to annoy him on purpose, just to enjoy this rare demonstration of a chin’s low tolerance to its master’s stress.

  Time had eroded a large section of hair on his head. What had once been a dense jungle of black trees had become a barren island. The large, shiny bald area in the middle of his head was surrounded by a perfect circular band of black hair, just like a monk’s tonsure. It was as if a black ribbon had been tied in a circular fashion to guard his shining bald head against evil eyes.

 

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