For me, and most of us young reporters who joined him when he started the features section at FE, Tarun was the perfect boss. Not only could he write beautifully (he could; his India Today essays were legendary); he could pick the best stories, edit wonderfully, take a stand with the fearsome Prabhu Chawla, then editor, fight for salary raises (not just his but yours too), take on the management. And then stride in with your contract and fling it casually on the table with: “It’s done. Go work now”. He was the kind of journalist every young aspiring kid in journalism school dreams of becoming and hardly anybody ever does.
In his casual denim shirts rolled up at the arm, he walked tall. He strode through the corridors of Indian Express with an easy familiarity, he laughed without inhibition, his smile touched his eyes, his concern for people was genuine, he wore his intelligence lightly. From that first day when I knocked on his cabin door, biodata in hand, a nervous “Mr. Tejpal?” on my tongue; and he waved me in from where he was lazily leaning back in his swivel chair, arms clasped behind his head, with a: “Come on in. And call me Tarun;” he was the kind of person I wanted to be. He would sit in his cabin with his long legs on the table, discussing story ideas and special supplements; addressing guys with the crassest of expletives and they would be delighted with the familiarity. If you walked late for a meeting, stuttering over an apology, he would just grin wider and say: relax, pull a chair and tell us what you got. He would regale us with stories about the time he ran away from NDA (or was it IMA), he would share with us scandalous celebrity gossip; yes even about editors who had prepositioned young girls, about how Shobha De’s charm was far greater than her writing. He would send us for assignments with the warning: Don’t come back with wide eyed stories. Use your brains.
Once when I called a turbaned Sikh colleague I didn’t get along with Jodie Foster and the complaint reached Tarun; he called me to cabin. Rather severely he asked me what I had been calling the man since he was really upset. “Jodie Foster” I replied. “Why?’ he asked. “Because he has a judie,” I replied, wishing the earth would split and swallow me. A cut surd himself, Tarun burst into laughter and told me to get lost. “You guys make me feel like a school principal.”
Now when I hear of salt mining scandals in Goa and murky political deals and unbelievable fallen behavior in lifts; it shakes the belief of nearly 20 years. Tarun was an awesome guy or so I always believed. What he has done (and he apparently has since he has written that sick apology of a letter) is heart breaking for all of us who equated journalism of courage and conviction with him.