Ticket for Success in a Ticketless Train Travel
  It was the beginning of  summer. I was boarding Udyan Express at Gulbarga railway station. My  destination was Bangalore. As I boarded the train, I saw that the  second-class reserved compartment was jam-packed with people. I sat down  and was pushed to the corner of the berth. Though it was meant for three  people, there were already six of us sitting on it...
  
  The ticket collector came in and started checking people's tickets and  reservations.. Suddenly, he looked in my direction and asked, 'What about  your ticket?' 'I have already shown my ticket to you,' I said.
'Not you, madam, the girl  hiding below your berth. Hey, come out, where is your ticket?' I realized  that someone was sitting below my berth. When the collector yelled at her,  the girl came out of hiding.
  
  She was thin, dark, scared and looked like she had been crying profusely.  She must have been about thirteen or fourteen years old.She had uncombed hair  and was dressed in a torn skirt and blouse. She was trembling and folded  both her hands.. The collector started forcibly pulling her out from the  compartment. Suddenly, I had a strange feeling. I stood up and called out  to the collector. 'Sir, I will pay for her ticket,' I said.
  
  Then he looked at me and said, 'Madam, if you give her ten rupees, she  will be much happier with that than with the ticket.'
  I did not listen to him. I told the collector to give me a ticket to the  last destination, Bangalore, so that the girl could get down wherever she  wanted.
  
  Slowly, she started talking. She told me that her name was Chitra.  She lived in a village near Bidar. Her father was a coolie and she  had lost her mother at birth. Her father had remarried and had two  sons with her stepmother. But a few months ago, her father had died.  Her stepmother started beating her often and did not give her food.  She was tired of that life. She did not have anybody to support her so  she left home in search of something better.
  
  By this time, the train had reached Bangalore. I said goodbye to Chitra  and got down from the train. My driver came and picked up my bags. I felt  someone watching me. When I turned back, Chitra was standing there and  looking at me with sad eyes. But there was nothing more that I could do. I  had paid her ticket out of compassion but I had never thought that she was  going to be my responsibility!...
  
  I told her to get into my car. My driver looked at the girl curiously. I  told him to take us to my friend Ram's place. Ram ran separate shelter  homes for boys and girls. We at the Infosys Foundation supported him  financially. I thought Chitra could stay there for some time and we could  talk about her future after I came back from my tours.
  I was not sure if Chitra would even be there. But to my surprise, I saw  Chitra looking much happier than before. Ram suggested that Chitra could  go to a high school nearby. I immediately agreed and said that I would  sponsor her expenses as long as she continued to study. I left the shelter  knowing that Chitra had found a home and a new direction
  in her life.
  I got busier and my visits to the shelter reduced to once a year. But I  always enquired about Chitra's well-being over the phone. I knew that she  was studying well and that her progress was good.. I offered to sponsor  her college studies if she wanted to continue studying. But she said, 'No,  Akka. I have talked to my friends and made up my mind. I would like to do  my diploma in computer science so that I can immediately get a job after  three years.' She wanted to become economically independent as soon as  possible.. Chitra obtained her diploma with flying colours. She also got a  job in a software company as an assistant testing engineer. When she got  her first salary, she came to my office with a sari and a box of sweets.
  One day, when I was in Delhi, I got a call from Chitra. She was  very happy. 'Akka, my company is sending me to USA! I wanted to meet you and  take your blessings but you are not here in Bangalore.'.
  
  Years passed. Occasionally, I received an e-mail from Chitra. She was  doing very well in her career. She was posted across several cities in USA  and was enjoying life. I silently prayed that she should always be happy  wherever she was.
  
  Years later, I was invited to deliver a lecture in San Francisco for  Kannada Koota, an organization where families who speak Kannada meet and  organize events. The lecture was in a convention hall of a hotel and I  decided to stay at the same hotel. After the lecture, I was planning to  leave for the airport. When I checked out of the hotel room and went to  the reception counter to pay the bill, the receptionist said, 'Ma'am, you  don't need to pay us anything. The lady over there has already settled  your bill. She must know you pretty well.' I turned around and found  Chitra there.
  
  She was standing with a young white man and wore a beautiful sari. She was  looking very pretty with short hair. Her dark eyes were beaming with  happiness and pride. As soon as she saw me, she gave me a brilliant smile,  hugged me and touched my feet. I was overwhelmed with joy and did not know  what to say. I was very happy to see the way things had turned out for  Chitra. But I came back to my original question. 'Chitra, why did you pay  my hotel bill? That is not right.' suddenly sobbing, she hugged me and  said, 'Because you paid for my ticket from Bombay to Bangalore!'
  
  (Excerpted  from Penguin Books India from Sudha Murty's 'The Day I  Stopped Drinking Milk: Life Stories From Here and There')
 

 
