There’s a blackened patch of earth in the landscape of my
mind as far as home is concerned. When I think of it, I don’t even want to see
anyone from high school. I guess I have lived for so long in Kerala I could not
tell people anymore what I think of high school reunions. But that the smartest
should be sitting in the town council is a piece of glad news, and I would have
been gladder if they made it to the mayoralty and vice mayoralty. Conversation
always wind up to high school reunion, and our jolly batch of 1980 graduates,
my cousin who lives in town, reported to me, topped the bill in the
fund-raising. Your batch is the richest, with the guys in America contributing
thirty thousand pesos each and an engineer now in Cebu donating another thirty.
And as the class treasurer reported to me, the hundred thousands in donation
went to benches in the school gymnasium and scholarships. Lord oh Lord, the
donors’ names etched on benches and fences. See. I am really Arch Meanie and
don’t deserve a peso in donation for my causes, and still Boyet, nicest guy in
high school now in the town council, showed me around. They took me to lunch
and to my surprise and delight, they did not ask me any questions, and the one
who did ask, asked one question that matters. “Happy ka didto sa Jolo, Sheilf?”