Nostalgia had always left me with a mystifying
melancholy, and every time I was asked to recall that gusty August afternoon
that same feeling persisted.
As an eight-year old, football was something my
coach forced me to participate in. I was told that I had sharper reflexes than
most of classmates possessed, which made me ponder if it was a boon or a bane.
Reluctantly, I was thrust upon the duties of keeping goal during the match
against our neighbouring school. We had played them several times that year and
beat them convincingly in quite a few matches. But the stakes were tremendously
high for this match, all Independence Day cup matches were. Our school boasted a
repertoire of hosting and winning the tournament seven years in a row now, and
we were on the verge of eclipsing the record set by our rivals quite a few
decades ago. The match kicked off midst sunny conditions and beautiful clear
skies. The mountains draped the clouds like a warm sweater in the background. I
was left with minuscule work at the posts; the defence was shaping up to be very
effective. We dominated much of the first half but hadn’t got a chance to score
as yet. A soft drizzle surprised us, and then morphed into a sharp shower making
it impossible to grip the turf.
Deep into the second period, our coach instructed
me to ask for the ball and kick it deep into enemy territory. Our forwards were
tall and had a good chance of heading them at goal. I called for the ball and
took a stride to get set to kick it. The pitch was muddy by then and the small
drains acted as speed bumps on the otherwise smooth surface. The ball took an
evil bounce and sailed over my foot as I swung it ferociously. My heart sank
along with the realization that the next second was going to be disastrous. The
white orb trickled into the bottom corner of the net and screams of joy erupted
from the opposing stands. My legs gave way in the embarrassment of the moment
and I fell heavily in the muck. In the distance I could hear the faint whistle
amidst the roar of celebration. Time was up. We had lost and I was to blame for
it.
I sat there in the dirt, the horror shadowed me.
The rain felt cold against my skin but I didn’t care. The trauma was such that
tears refused to flow from my eyes. A soft, reassuring pat greeted me on my
shoulders. I looked up and saw a sympathetic grin etched across my coach’s face.
He pulled me up and explained that it happened to the best of us. I wasn’t
listening and eyes peered down at my feet; I feared my team-mates for what they
would say. We had lost because I couldn’t kick; we had lost because of
me.
I still have haunting nightmares from that
afternoon. Playing football in the rains always took me back to that unfaithful
day where the sky was glum and the rain was piercingly hurtful. We have laughs
over the incident now, but at the back of my head, the guilt never died.
*Disclaimer: Hypothetical
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