What he did not have was a purpose.
At home, his wife, Banalata, served him lukewarm tea. “You’ll find something,” she said, though her voice trembled. Their son, a software engineer in Bangalore, had stopped calling. Their daughter lived in a noisy flat in Kolkata and sent money once a month, but Jiban refused to touch it. He was seventy-one. He had his hands. He had his mind. jiban mukhopadhyay
But on a humid Tuesday in August, the mill closed forever. What he did not have was a purpose
Jiban Mukhopadhyay had been the accountant of Hooghly’s Chanderi Jute Mill for forty-two years. Every morning at six, he would unfold his starched cotton dhoti, button his faded brown coat, and walk exactly 1,247 steps from his tin-roofed house to the mill’s iron gate. The guards knew him as Jiban-da , the man who could smell a mathematical error from three ledgers away. Their son, a software engineer in Bangalore, had
“Show me the notebook,” he said.
Rest? Jiban laughed a dry, papery laugh. Rest was for the dead.