Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The Caravan Leaves

16
                                  The Caravan Leaves

And the ascetic would watch her spanning a spectrum between the village and the caravan site. Intriguing paradoxes between the clichés and conventions of his religiosity (on the one hand) and the beguiling eerie of mundane passions (on the other) created paranormal intrigues among different units constituting his diasporically disjointed self. His susceptibility to the deadly transmutation left the exorcist’s soul being possessed by some devil female as he irascibly groped for some respite among those supernatural webs.
At each sight of hers he felt defeated like a victim to her bewitching monstrosities. At one time they came face to face on the way. Though fear-struck she managed to breeze past that volcanically active cone inside which lava and cinders were furiously knocking to burst out and fossilise that flower to perditional lifelessness.
Unbearably poignant and psychedelic agony convulsing inside him constantly baited his looks as well as thoughts to the caravan site illustriously engaged in some restful retrospection. To the religioner it always struck as nothing less than whirring intrigues whose cataclysmic rhythms went pulsating through his enraged self. One such earthquakely shaking wave shook the memory chambers in his brain, which wryly reflected over his own apprenticeship with an old gypsy, called old frog. Next thought sent down an angry chill through his spine. His eyes became flagrantly fiery, enough red that if somebody looked into them, sanguine callousness in them would’ve given an ample hint about the macabrous conspiracy-theorist in him.
“Oh, chee!” huffing and puffing hate flowing in his blood touched a new apex, “She’s the same one who’d laughed at me, making a mockery of my hard penance!” intriguing paradoxes among soul, spirit and body sounded hard  and harsh.
We need to move back to the days of old frog, in order to understand the whole thing properly. Sum and summation of it had gone like this:
When the young friar was going through his pupilship with the old gypsy, who had been by then fully convinced that he was a true black magic disciple, the superstitiously-lit-mentor one day called him and said that the time had come when he must teach him the greatest charm in his forte of tricks––hypnotism or overpowering mesmerism. The guru in all his near death honesty and eagerness told him that with the help of this power he could concentrate his paranormal faculties on a magical entity, which’d bestow such spiritual power to him that will enable him to win over enemies, defeat envious fellow men of the trade, control anyone’s senses in such a way that they will see or fell what he dictates. And above all he’d be able to call friendly spirits in the body of hypnotised person and ask any sort of question from past or future.
Well, the guru himself was stuck at the first stage of the above mentioned hypnotical power. Despite lifelong furtive jockeying by his exorcist self, all he could accomplish in the name of hypnotism was that he could somehow manipulate a fellow human being’s senses. After that the lethargic lapse in the concentration would leave him fretting and fuming, while the mesmerised body regained its subjective cognitive power. By the instinct of it, the old gypsy knew that the continuance of same outmanoeuvring spell required a greater control over his own mind-body matrix. But unfortunately the rudely baroque life-style he was part of nullified any such straightforward concentrative culturality by his torn and tattered, homeless gypsy self.
The young man too couldn’t understand this muddily vague reflection of his guru, because more than self-control his mendicant spirit was almost dying with the hopes and prospects of overpowering influence. His ever so impressionable senses galloped with joy and appreciation after witnessing that piece of hypnotic artistry performed by his guru on their clown partner. The buffoonery exuding from each and every facial feature of the clown was eclipsed by a strange cloudy spell. He became lifelessly sober as if his whole being of earlier had been masked. The hypnotiser, walking on the tightrope of his sorcery, with the domineering look gifted to him for being the chief author and architect of this obeying puppet, fired some questions at the declowned face. In a paranormally crackling noise their third partner spoke like a corpse from the coffin. It was really awesome to the disciple, but this feeling later graduated to genuine appreciation and he clapped, crying and hailing victory for his great guru.
The hypnotiser after spending all his exorcist fuel fell from the tightrope, breaking the spell. Ridiculousness surfaced over the clown’s face once again, while the hypnotism performer sat there sulking and drained out. Oh, how earnestly he wished to perpetuate the hypnotism over that little fuzzy fellow so as to make him obey all sorts of orders through those masterfully twinkling eyes of his!
To his disciple, however, his guru seemed in complicity with strong devil powers (because we consider only devil to be powerful and overpowering). God is too generous and pious for this astraying concept of power! So, he almost fell at old frog’s feet requesting him to teach the very same to his devoted pupil also. And they started the practice.
Drawing an appallingly callous look over his face, the guru told his disciple that each person has got a mysterious power in his eyes (which our learned readers can call magnetic power). It’s brusquely assaulting and can be used to get the desired results. To awaken the pupil’s eye-power, he drew a ‘Shakti Chakra’ (a kind of cyclonic representation) on a wood board. The disciple was instructed to sit three feet away from this circle in a meditative position and concentrate fully at the centre, without any movement of eyes and without playing with any thought.
Practising the same, the young monk would leave his body as inactive as he could. Without fluttering his eyelids he deadly stared into the centre of that circular pattern. Water would come out of his souring eyes and as the days passed his capacity to sit in that position gradually increased. And after a period he began to realise a kind of mysterious sensation in those widely set big eyes of his.  Fluid disillusions contouring superstitiously along the lines on the board webbed glorious intrigues around his benumbed senses. The looping mockery of reality taking serpentine curves on the board left him with hallucinated vision of the surroundings, and he felt empowered in a mysterious way.
Then one day the tyrannizing circle made his skin crawl. He saw it moving, then whizzing maliciously: the first sign that he was getting in groove with it. His penancing self went brouhaha for a black-magical bravado. Quixotically he felt that he was manipulating that hypnotically design on the wooden board. Lost in that circumambulatory quagmire, he sensed his whole existence, the very life force, lying in and around his eyes.
Sometimes, he would stare at the circle long after it’d grown dark. And under one such spell of hard concentration, when the night had grown ogreishly dark, he saw visuals at the spot, like he was dreaming with eyes open. It was an absurdly dappled spectacle. He couldn’t make it known what types of those shapes and figures were. Some were ferocious in complete complicity with the devils. After much turmoil before his eyes and inside his mind a limpid distinctness emerged out of the chaos. As this figure emerged the sea storm in the frame subsided to let the moon glow over the less turbulent waters. It was the fairy like face of a girl which glowed with silver-lining prognoses. He just went on staring at it. Completely mesmerised! Hypnotized!
In an innocently mocking voice she laughed, “You want to control and overpower others,” her laughter degraduated to a smile, “That ‘other’ lies inside you. First control it,” even smile changed to sullenness, “You but can’t do that and I mourn over you,” she gave a heart-wrenching cry.
He was catapulted out of hypnotism. His first thought was of being a victim: that he had been unholily kicked out of the sphere of great power. Rageful reality struck him ruthlessly and he moaned in revengeful pain.
“You irreligiously, unholily bewitching beauty! The perennial doomsayer to the asceticism!” disorganised camp of immoralities inside him gnashed maliciously.
According to the practice of hypnotism with Shakti Chakra, during the advanced stages of superstitious-cum-spiritual toil, one may visualise something which might have some profound connection with past, present or future.
Now, after so many years the memory of that face struck him with such clarity as if all that happened just a day back.
Frothing angst and exploding rage seized him, “You bitch, I know it was you that night! Aah, how well I can recognise that face after such a long, long period of time! It was you who spoilt my tapasya that night, otherwise I’d have controlled the whole world!” this memory from the past came in a cataclysmic collision with his present.
Her voice under the moonlight a few days ago sounded an exact echo of the same mocking laughter which stabbed his passion thousands of nights ago.
“You’re still a girl even after such a long time! The ever youthful haunting spirit! I can well understand who you’re! And now you have come here to haunt my hard-penanced religiosity!” his bulky self choked off, as it struggled to liberate itself of overpowering strong, slenderous chains hooked to that mesmerising spikelet.
“Oh God, I pray to thee! Give me a chance to dispossess that evil spirit sinisterly hiding inside that beautiful body of hers!” revengeful sorcerer in him greedily lopped its treacherous tongue.
He knew it was only a wishful thinking. Aware as he was of the gypsies’ protective feelings for her. Even giving a few refined words to his ruthlessly boiling thoughts was simply out of question, because these wouldn’t even enter their savagely irreligious ears. Inadvertently loitering fellows, after all, never cup out their ears for such petty noises. Once again he felt hugely disempowered.
We can’t precisely understand his paranormal dementia, which made him think all those ghostly things about that angel-faced girl, after whom the whole village was bee-toeing for a scour to their eyes. But one thing is for sure. He was hauntingly disillusioned to take the poor girl as the cause for not achieving what he wanted to the core of his religious passion. And once one falls prey to such misguided missiles, his moaning reasoning---futilely pacifying those long held and time-worn myths of self-centred convictions and pretensions---vehemently blames some soft target.
In contrast to the helplessly cowering and superstitious village womenfolk (who were becoming his initial clients) this freely perfusive gypsy pergola seemed sanctimoniously unbuckling. So far the perfunctory-perfusion of his black magic tricks had been successful, to an extent, in creating a kind of tantric aura around him, which the sick old women from the village––though led by an awful suspicion––respected. As destiny has so many ways of playing with us mortals through her numerous unseen, inexplicable and even unreasonable games, there were enough loopholes and chinks in the understanding of life in the minds of these predominantly illiterate, ageing women; and here in this space uninstutionalised belief about the paranormal filled in with its superstitiously lit gloomy light.
But, this girl played with destiny in her own courtyards where there was no settled, sick air to attack those cultural relativities as a big question mark. To her he was just a fearsome and ugly-looking black magician about whom even a single reflection shouldn’t be allowed to linger in her spring-like budding mind. She, however, weighed scornfully over the Sadhu’s psyche––a prognosticating inevitability which laughed and wept out of the Shakti Chakra, forewarning doomed farce and tragedy. But the poor girl was unaware that fate had made her a player in the monk’s material success and spiritual destruction.
Her reaction at the sight of the frail saviour of that night, however, was a complete antithesis of her eyes’ glassy freeze at the appearance of the big bearded face before them. They would just brighten up daughterly, as if they had witnessed a fatherly spring on that pathetically brooding face of his. In all humility his face too would unshackle its corpse like impassivity, and a very, very feeble acquainting emotion brought life over its primordial sulk.
If love never dies, and just the like immortal soul takes different forms, then by the very look of it one could feel that his only love for the Muslim girl in his boyhood had mystically metamorphosed (had taken a new body and shape) into a parental affection for this gypsy girl, who was made to conquer hearts.
She would say some pascuous phrases to him whenever they happened to meet. On these little grassy tufts of words her gypsy emotions lurked like daughterly dew drops. He too on his part broke his tyrannizing silence, and a word or two interjected fatherly. Rejuvenated by the smell of this wild flower, the lifeless dry twig scribbled down a codicil according to which this celestial trivia got some more gifts from the old father’s torn and tattered bag. He would, thus, give her some fish and she reciprocated with Sindhi salt, black salt and other exotic dry fruits from the lands he’d never been to. His dog too got this beautiful gift. It was a low rimmed metal bowl which got a warm welcome in the animal’s unfurnished kennel. For a canine’s dignity no other thing would’ve been better than this eating vessel, because it’ll save him the humiliation of eating dust-laden crumbs. Old and understanding senses inside his broad skull must’ve made him realise the real value of this gift. Before he smelt the fragrance of any food in it, maybe the scented smell of humanity and care, immortally imprinted on the iron by those donating fingers, must’ve struck his smelling power. Without doubt we’re right up to the surety of our assessment, because the old dog wagged its cumbersomely hanging bushy tail whenever it saw her.
To the religioner, standing helplessly at the mound, these filial parleys between his foes seemed a conspiracy being hatched against him. He thought he was the sole centre of consonance between that free roaming jill and this statically chained neighbour of his. So, standing at a distance from them, he’d snuff out mocking scorn against him from their inaudible conversation.
One morning when the sun had been successful in penetrating the foggy darn, unflaggingly raging magnet in the Sadhu’s senses sniffed out the attracting and pulling prey standing by the road. Yes, it was she! He was sure. To confirm his surety he concentrated his revulsive gaze on the street’s opening between the two schools. His tormented heart took a pathetic somersault, which almost sent him toppling down.
At the same time, a gleety jibe peremptorily protruded its loathfully lopping tongue, as a shrill humorous cry reached his hairy ears from the western side. Devilishly it sounded similar. Vulgar! It had the entire propensity in the world to jettison goodness and humanity from the face of earth. On earlier occasions too their farcical proximity to the evil’s chuckle had sounded soothingly likeable to his worldly ears. First occasion was that Ramleela day when despite best efforts of Ram Singh (who was trying to play up the symbolic victory of good over the bad) they were pandering the evil’s effigy seeming so impregnable during these evil times. Second was that enjoyment and mirth-making when the lone election boycott personnel had been humiliated by the political funsters on that polling day. Apart from these, on many other occasions too he’d witnessed the fag end of their temperamental fireworks in the form of lewd humour, occasional fistwork (even among themselves) and drinking brawls. Seeing the appalling callousness of their behaviour, he was surprised whether they cared for any social norm or not. Their devilish negligence of the culturalities of a village, which itself was basking bucolically in criminally complete obliviousness to the kick at his religiosity, seemed a fitting reply to his aggrieved senses. As it’s been long said that an enemy’s enemy is a natural friend, he at once fell into a liking for them.
Warming themselves in the bonfire of callous buffoonery they were coming by the road from the western side. The Sadhu saw them crossing the Muslim cemetery mound. Revenge, the grand sire of his primordial hate, flashed a bulb of sinister design in the dark dungeons of his heart frothing in the gloom of impotent anger. Circumambulatory calibration buzzed in each pore of his skin like the destructive notes of a mountainous conch-shell.
“I need them as disciples... if not disciples, then friendship will do!” was the torrential decree shouted by his revenge seeking soul.
Yes! He needed their company on this treacherous road of life which passed through these worldly settlements suppurating with stagnated stench.
In a couple of minutes they were to cross the point where the pond’s embankment met the road. Pricked by this realisation his wood gave a kick start to his bulk. Lumbering down the slope, he didn’t have the time to run circuitously––like his asceticism’s lifelong avoiding journey––so hurriedly tucking up his loin-cloth, he decided to have an uninhibited straightforward go at it. Taking his leather papoosh (he used only one from the pair) in his hand he entered the chilly water of the moat-like intervention between the mound and the embankment. Both his legs were maulingly frozen, but without caring for that he torridly limped and lurched through the water.
Very strangely this gypsy girl had a riantly soft corner for some of the villagers’ methods and means. Who knows where this floating flower got that little syllabic knowledge––of the level of a second standard student––of elementary letters and counting? Drawn by the genially bustling educative air at this time a little before the school’s opening, when the children were swarming into it, the florid girl––in all her mannerisms she looked like a girlish flower grown taller in the orchard of child flowers––got into a little naughtily playful chit-chat with a boy. It was while talking to this little boy the exorcist’s rabidly focused look had fallen almost huntingly upon her from the mound.
Like a sweetly strict elder sister she was testing his knowledge of letters and numerals. He was a very shy little student. But sweet, elderly authority in her voice forced him to unshackle his shy-shell. With his eyes fixed on earth––as if he was trying to see the other end of the globe through earth––he was thus responding hesitatingly to her queries.
Floriformly contouring figure of hers, sisterly bent over the little boy, suddenly got a clutching shove from behind. Her bottom felt a pinch.
“Wouldn’t you teach something to us also, Rani?” came the verbal indecency, which in the preceding moment had terribly started as a physical one.
As a natural corollary to the infringement upon her modesty’s territory, she swirled like a tigress and slapped the cheek grinning maliciously over her back. It was all done with the swiftness of typical gypsy manoeuvre against any misdemeanour. Gazelle stare of her large eyes––angry, fearful, teary, prideful and whole lot of feminine matrix of emotions––focused its innocent beam on the offender. A quick movement of her eyeballs showed that there were a few others of his ilk as well. Despite the slap the young monster was grinning calmly as if he’d no civilized self to feel the hurt of a slap. Those around him, meanwhile, gave a volcanic thud of laughter, taunting him for the befitting reply by the little houri. This cloud of molesting laughter showed only one thing, that is, their diseased misdemeanour had gone immune to all and any sort of social medication. Otherwise, how could they fall into jinks, while the very air was mourning around and above them after witnessing that deflowering rage, pain, helplessness and silent sobbing prevail over that primordially spring-like face of hers?
He was broad-built and wore his hair long over the back of his neck. Ebullient features on his reddish, round face contorted ragefully.
“You stray bitch,” he started very softly; his voice mocking with some feigned-softness for this flower, “So you dare to slap me!” libidinous tinge in his tone sluggishly came out of its slumber. “What worth do you possess except this beautiful face of yours!” he cried a gargantuan muscularity against her petalous existence.
Further instigated by the feverish pitch of hooliganism, he caught hold of her beautifully entangled wild hair. Clutching them with the evil force of some dark, nocturnal force he gave skull-rattling jerks to her head. He could do it with so much ease that she seemed an airy, feathery nymph in the strong claws of a vulture. She sobbed with the painful fury of a flooded river. Trying to free herself, her physically ineffective fist work fell on his heartless chest and he let out a clarion cry of victory.
Standing behind the devil’s protégées, the revenge-seeker of the mound felt it was his cry of revenge. Watching her struggle in the ruffian’s ruthless hold, his heart gave hailing cries for these fit-to-have-an-acquaintance folks, who seemed to be mauling critics of each and everything these negligent villagers felt proud of. Finding her ensorcelling beauty victimised by those rude and crude hands, his revengeful exorcist self sipped down long draughts of pacification.
The little boy, his doe-like innocent eyes parted wide with fear, meanwhile ran into the school, perhaps to call the teachers, because it’s the habit of small school children to dash for their teachers whenever there was a quarrel. The poor boy, however, didn’t know that this matter was outside the jurisdiction of powerless primary school teachers.
The goons were about six or seven in number. Each and every voice escaping their mouths was nothing sort of an ego-massage to the devil. Disorganised chaotic commotion in the group was equivalent to an organised perpetration of immoralities. The ease with which they were participating in this criminal incidence validated the irretraceable degradation of their character, which made them blind to any conscience-pricking thought against harming or violating any type of social norm. The girl, after all, didn’t belong to their society, so she’d no claim to any protective social right against their savagery.
The teachers indeed came running, thinking the quarrel might have occurred among the school children. But the dispute-resolving urgency was instantly lost when they came to face the nasty reality. They were fully aware of the guru’s lost position during contemporary times. Gone were the golden old times when a teacher commanded such a comprehensive reputation and grandiosely lofty position in the society that his jurisdiction effectively extended to such outside school matters as well. Also, they knew the offenders as the ones who were definitely ignorant of the mace-like authoritative dignity lying implicitly inside that gleety twig in a teacher’s hand. So, precogitating with the help of educative logic they held back.
The lonesome crusader, however, wasn’t to be bound down by such nastily narrowing down circles of responsibility. He raised his head over the crowd gathered around the arena where the spectacle of evil was flashing its teeth. This man who dared to protect the dignity of the gypsy girl was none other than Ram Singh, and the young devil perpetrating the crime had been a former student of his. Thanks God, his furtively kicking and astraying young senses could remember that! His clawy fingers loosened as the teacher pleadingly implored him to do so.
Poorly priceless princess appeared a flower just about to be crushed amidst brusquely assaultive vegetable behemoths like pumpkin, gourd, cauliflower and brinjal.
As if pushed and pulled by her panegyrical cry a few gypsies too arrived at the scene. By their looks one could make it out very easily that they were ready to fight till their death for her honour. Ram Singh, his unflinching character draped in a ditto for the cause of goodness, tried to prevent any evil disharmony arising due to the atrophy’s chaotic wand of accidental or incidental coordinates. The peaceful-faced teacher tried to pacify the angry gypsies fortressly encircling their priceless jewel.
All this settlers’ social misdemeanour was too much for this soft bud blossoming amidst fluidly pascuous terrain. She was thus turned inanely dumb due to this shocking incident.
Her shocked and suppressed senses, however, yawned daughterly, sisterly as she (shrouded in frozen vacuosity) felt the warmth of familiar words spoken by her fellow gypsies. A complainingly sobbing storm mistily engulfed her and inspite of best of her efforts to the contrary, sonorous strains of a weeping sea came audible to all those gathered around her.
It was delusionally piteous, and like all good hearts which’re so wispily light–-almost weightless–-Ram Singh’s ever flying, floating emotions were swept away by the gushing riverine of tears gliding down her rosy cheeks.
The teacher’s rein over his tongue gave in, and as a tart teacher chiding an errant and spoilt brat, his voice boomeranged punishingly over the offender’s head, “You idiot, your pot of wrongs has bulged to such an extent that you’ve started doing whatever that dullard, devil mind of your prompts you to do! What this poor girl has done to you?”
The young devil stared into earth. His astoundingly astraying senses were tonking at the evil’s anvil. Their chuff and guff prompted him to humiliate this nuisant former teacher of his. But the last time he’d tasted the reforming rap of the teacher’s stick was just nine or ten years back when as a fifth class student all those bad buds were trying to sprout their uneducative hoods in the hard-working teacher’s class. The criminal in him hadn’t yet ripened to dare to completely dejuicify a teacher’s reputation. And then there were many villagers around too. So, with a big effort he controlled the antisocial animal in him.
“She slapped me first,” the handsome rascal said quixotically.
By the look of it, intelligence could never have been expected of him. But the answer wasn’t even mundanely assuring, because why would a girl slap anyone without a reason. The teacher’s blood boiled for the sheer arbitrariness of the sleaze laundering inside that vagrant brain of this dirty former student of his. He could remember it well how this monster came out with ‘out of world’ (funnily) answers during his school days. But then he could thrash him for all those deliberate misquotes of his. And now what? Isn’t it a fact that since those days lots and lots of water had vapourised from the pond.
“She slapped you!” the teacher gnashed the ineffective rage of modern guru’s helpless tutorship. “But why on earth, would this poor girl dare to slap you?” he forced down as much skepticism in his voice as he could.
The kind teacher looked at the pale lilaciousness lurking cloudily over the girl’s face. A long wave of pity swept over the longish beach of his heart.
“She isn’t a ruffian like you. Tell me, why are you misbehaving with her like this?” stinginess in his tutoring voice bit the wrong-doer.
Spoilt young man fumbled with words, which prompted the onlookers to think in terms of the oft-usual carnalic instinct of an unsocially barbaric male savagely preying upon a helpless female in broad daylight. For a few moments, the cause of righteousness seemed to win over the rowdy freakishness, as all eyes ogled accusatively at the molester.
“Because she was performing witchcraft on this little boy!” torrentially garrulous voice of the monk stepped into the arena from the wrong’s side.
The tormentor of her soft soul lurched forward as the stout defender of this most evident offence.
“I’ve seen it with my own eyes,” his precariously hanging religious equilibrium plummeted down with clip-clop to the wrong side. “She was giving something dangerously black-magical to him. Yes, yes believe me!” he made his appearance look as if he was swearing by all his hard-penanced religiosity. “You people can’t even imagine how uncivilized these people are. By playing black magic tricks on little children, they bewitch them and steal them away to sell at unknown places.”
Painfully lynched by this flagrantly false charge her flowery heart shook destructibly. In those illustriously dreamy eyes of hers a fear descended like a blinding desert storm. Intensity of that awe could pass anyone’s comprehension.
At least in hearing the word ‘black magic’ creates a sense of loathfulness in the settlers’ society. So, the momentous sympathy, which’d glinted in the onlookers’ eyes, now rolled in an arc over that paranormally suspicious circle which always looms large in the unknown sky.
“For God’s sake maharajji, don’t condemn such a fate to this innocent child!” searching into the ensorcelling innocence written epically all over her face, the teacher defended this girl of the outsiders.
More than her susceptibility to be involved in any superstitious goof-up, his conscience was convinced of the immoral impulses pulsing through the veins of this rowdy group, which in turn forced his heart to vouchsafe the innocence of this girl. Most of them had been his students in the primary classes, after which they’d randomly dropped out of various classes before matriculation, as their illogical fondness for hooliganism disposed off all educative efforts proposed by the school authorities.
Righteous rhythms pulsing through his mind, body and soul continuum encouraged him to come out openly and outrightly in opposition to the allegation against her.
“Falsity of this allegation can be gauged by a single glance at her face shining with spotless innocence,” he said it mildly with perfect gentlemanness, but the truth in it pierced through the thick, stony walls of falsehood erected by the religioner’s tongue.
“My dear bookworm masterji!” the monk cunningly kept his cool, even though his inner self was cursing obscenities at the teacher, “Your senses seem to have gone haywire. All those mountainous tomes of books can’t explain even a single word in the invisible big book of the black magic and witchcraft. After all what’s the distance between a paper and that... that pen of yours when put to writing. It’s none!” he smiled and donned a paranormally understanding smile over his exorcist face. “But the space between actuality and the perceptiblities appearing illusioningly to your limited, ordinary mind is too large… unconquerably large in fact. And crippled by that weakness you see this bewitching face’s outer shell. Master you can’t see the dark hiding behind that shiny face of hers!”
   Pedantically, the religioner tried to make it an issue beyond the comprehension of teacher’s pedagogically normal senses.
“Sometimes the evil clothes up in the most beautiful of an appearance,” he voiced the supernaturally inexplicable loath damnatorily writhing inside him.
Two dreamful diamonds adoring her plenilunar face got blurred by sorrowful waters once again. The fluid of her girlish pain dripped down those artistically arching eyelids of hers, and flew down those teary little trajectories drawn over her cheeks.
“But, how can you be so sure about her sorcery on the boy?” the majestic mellow of her sobbing spirit tugged at the human cords in the teacher’s reformative heart.
“My God, masterji! What else a girl of these wanderers is expected to do if one finds her stooping over a little boy from the village. I saw her doing this for at least five minutes. She was casting a spell on him. You don’t know how tricky these people are. Their homeless brains are bulging with foul schemes,” revengeful distortionist drew up a dreggy scheme. Suspicion loomed invidiously large in the eyes of those gathered around. Her flowery existence shivered to its feminine core. The obstreperous menagerie despotically caging around her seemed to narrow down with the proclivity of chucking-up the charming multiversity of her existence.
The Mussalman had joined the crowd just when his neighbour started damnatory tirade against the daisy damsel to distitle her innocent beauty’s self-evident claim to righteousness.
“Bastard!”  The obscenity created irritated ripples in the nonchalantly silent waters inanely puddled in immurement inside his metaphorically reticent self. “Accuses her of witchcraft! Now if I’m to tell all those absurd nocturnalities of his. How he torments those feverishly helpless females with those fearsome rituals!” to his silently boiling thoughts the religioner seemed a dreadnaughtly murderous sniper bearer, getting ready to behead this bud.
Her daintily tear-drowned eyes got a glimpse of his fatherly figure. Instantly there swam hopeful pearls in the deep little seas on her face. Such a flash of hope hadn’t raised its protective hood even when she saw her fellow gypsies. In this frail saviour of that night she searched a rescuer again .Empowered by a strange emotion mixing mystically munificent mammary of mother and father’s protective homilies, his cumbersomely weak figure appeared to her worthy of putting some stout defence from her side.
The first incident, however, was a crystal-pure psycho-physical instinct commanded by a good human heart to save a hapless girl. Now it required a debate to invalidate the Sadhu’s sanctimonious propaganda against her, which his moronically reticent self was certainly not capable of. After all, he was just as alien and outsider as the girl and her tribe. He thus, kept standing mute and her optimistic eyes once again reverted back to their former sepulchral despair, fully realising and understanding the ineffective social position of this old man.
Emboldened by the crowd’s suspicious silence and taking full advantage of this tricky set-up of a situation, the revenge seeker lurched forward and caught her by the hair. To this her fellow gypsies-–there were four or five of them-–reacted sharply for the honour of their sister. But the young goons were even more perniciously sharp in counter attack. Their precocious, rough-shod irascibility came glyceriding over their criminal tendencies .A real battle thus started on the scene. Firstly, some onlookers tried to defuse the quarrel, but realising that they were getting thrashed up from both sides, they regained their spectatorship, which winkingly tucked at their pantaloons and pyjamas from behind and whispered, “Wait for some consequence to emerge out of this internecine scuffle, which will immediately put an end to this chaotic clamour!”
The monk held her mortifyingly buzzing head by his left hand, and balancing his right armpit over his support he hit his hammer-crude right hand on her face. Paranormal preponderance hissed a volcano-burst of hate against this nymphet and he gave blow after blow to her head and hair. She cried to the exquisite finesse of her throat, but there was too much dissonant noise for her sonorously sorrowful notes to sound distinct. Also,  the dreggy happenings around her didn’t allow any sympathetic eye-–except the watchman’s-–to stop magnanimously over the jasmine jill’s almost death-defying struggle in the clawy clutch of the exorcising predator, who was hitting and shaking her so forcefully as if he was hell bent upon dispossessing her soul of her beautifully budding body.
Merciless waters of the ghastly gushing immorality broke the dam of the watchman’s outworldish reservation. His eyes had a peremptory look at the offender. The old man, thus, once again ran for her rescue. But now it was broad day-light and he came from the front. The religioner’s powerfully hurtling right hand fist punched him down in a single swipe.
Then there was a loud cry. It sounded authoritatively final: that consequential force which was required to stop the fight. It tonked its judgmental hammer. The cry was irksomely circumambulatory. All stopped fighting. Even the tormentor’s hand involuntarily loosened its predatory clutch on her hair.
A gypsy was seen writhing in pain on the ground, blood oozing profusely from his abdomen. He had been stabbed by one of the rowdyists, who used his knife after finding that these furtively fist-fireworking tribesmen couldn’t be overpowered by using just physiologically available weapons with a human being. Till the metallic blade’s strike, the village hooligans had been severely beaten. But this single strike changed the whole situation.
Buckling under the colossal blow by ruffian time’s mace, the gypsies bent down on their knees. Resigned to fate and tears in their eyes, they took his valiantly fallen head in their lap. Fatally wounded gypsy’s face convulsed in painful suspense as baroquely assaultive pseudo reality of death wrote its introductory lines on his young, bearded, brotherly face.
Clasping his dying body in her sisterly lap, she wept hoarsely for this caravan-brother who’d fallen bravely for the caravan-sister’s dignity and pride. She cried for help, which of course came like a moral exercise in futility. Ram Singh and others took him to the village primary health centre. It was the littlest of a symbolic medication room, dungeonically evident as a tiny dot on the healthcare map of the country, and grossly incapable to handle such emergencies. As it was to inevitably happen, his soul finally did manage to escape out of its painfully cut clothing; the primary reason of death being the stabbing of his heart.
At the caravan site there were heard cries and wails entwining gypsy mourning for the young lad, whose death for the cause of caravan-daughter had set free their undemonstrative unity and some strange unidentifiable affection among them, which is missed by the roving senses of stagnant settlers. But, nobody from the village had died. So, the incident wasn’t big enough to hit the headlines as a news column. The police won’t have even cared to come, had it not been for the justice spirit in the teacher. He had failed many times in the past for a good cause but still firmly believed that the victim being stateless didn’t dilute the law’s ink in this particular case, because the perpetrators of this crime belonged to a section of society so showily defined as an administrative unit on the law and order map of the country.
The justice-monger’s parleys right from lodging a FIR, meeting the district officials, to his sensitizing efforts in the local media did ruffle some leaves. In the present times, a mere sway of some leaves (read it as the timelessly whiplashed judicial clauses which serve nothing except making lawyership more and more lucrative) is grossly insufficient to get the fruit of justice from  the big, bulky and mightily branched out tree of justice, which’s so many opportunities for all the litigants, so many in fact that if one party gets fruit on one twig, the other one promptly protrudes its victimised hand to get a nullifying one from another one hanging nearby on a higher hierarchy.  
In the colossally pallid mid section of a local newspaper there appeared a single column news item. Its dull newsworthiness was clouded by big layouts of advertisements. But there too the news sense indicated that the gist of the story was gypsy witchcraft and sorcery, not the killing.
It’s for sure that Ram Singh had ruffled some feathers. Poor gypsies would’ve left the village on the day of incident itself, were it not for the helping hand held out by the kind teacher. His assurance of justice to these homeless, stateless, assetless roamers gave them some hope of justice-–perhaps for the first time. Possibly, the caravan did feel that it too belonged to some socio-governmental administration. So, hoping against hope they extended their stay. After all, there arises an inborn natural instinct to get justice, once wronged by our fellow human beings.
In a state where the police does most of the work in judiciary’s domain (except the hugely delayed pronouncement of judgment and that too in rarest of rare cases) frequent arrivals and interrogation by the police was inevitable. But here too the sufferers suffered more, because, once their altar of criminality had bathed itself in blood, the young goons vanished from the scene. Of all the rest of those concerned the caravan princess found it most difficult to handle and bear such ‘crude interrogation’-cum-’presumption of her guilt beforehand’. Appallingly callous and foolish questioning brought the teary sea upswelling to her beach-like eyelashes and salty rivers came out, making it seem sorrowfully reversed naturality, because rivers according to the law enter into the sea, not come out of it. All in all, it gave the piteous inkling that a soft flower was unnecessarily being caned for the pinches committed by the prickles. Giving a prime example of their dullardness, the police missed the most important version. At last, Ram Singh convinced them that truth must be heard from the boy itself.
“Yes son, tell us what kind of a bad thing she was doing to you?” the sho’s---his bulging waistline squeezed tartly by the service belt---bemusedly jousting tone croaked.
More than anything else, it was laden with a conviction that she was guilty of witchcraft until proved not so. It was thus becoming a mockery in the name of policing, because the main crime was the killing of the gypsy. And the police instead of pulling the main rope, which would’ve drawn the bucket of justice out of the abysmally dark well, tugged at the sideways sinews in the name of completing its duty.
The shy boy stammered. He first stared at the fearsomely bearded man of God, then at his personal care attendant and dropped his gaze to the ground. Again he raised his eyes and looked at the girl’s beautiful face symbiosisly spanning a spectrum between hope and despair.
Again the policeman’s blubbered notes sluggishly floated in his ill-tempered waters, “Come on boy, just tell us what was she doing or saying to you?”
“Be a good boy and tell us everything without fear,” the nimble tactician broke his worryingly brooding silence. “Yes, yes kid why don’t you tell them what she was doing? Tell them that she was speaking some mysterious words to you,” the religioner shifted his stern look to his visiting-cottage-maker, as if ordering him to ask the little witness to speak the same thing.
The handyman appealingly looked at the boy, but finding some peculiar defiance over those little features withdrew his look and fixed it on the holy man’s feet as if asking forgiveness for not fulfilling his wish.
“Idiotic little thing! Seems he’s already gone under the spell cast by her!” the religioner groused.
He said this while staring at his caretaker’s flunkey face.
These words hit the boy’s lips like a repulsive fluke, and they twitched for the truth’s talisman. He stared at the Sadhu-devotee pair.
“No! She was asking me to count up to hundred,” the little boy said, fearlessly looking straight in the policeman’s eyes.
“Anything other than this?”
“And A, B, C, D.…”
“And?”
a, aa,  ee,  oo…”
“Psst... aarrr!” the ritualist let out an unhinged baulk.
Even the die-hard skeptics about superstition and witchcraft scratched their head in surprise. A gypsy girl talking about English and Hindi letters to a little village student! It sounded anomalously strange indeed.
It made her disdainer’s skin crawl, and casting an accursing look at his servile disciple, he croaked harshly, “Damn it! How can you civilized people believe such type of vagabonds to be educated? That proves it!” he slapped his thigh like a wrestler. “Sure, it’s witchcraft! This tiny one has turned a little devil after being possessed by her evil, haunting spirit!”
Some heads did turn suspiciously, as the perniciously pivotal balance between normal and the paranormal tilted towards the latter under the impact of his weirdly forced words.
“It isn’t something ghostly. How you people come to believe it? It’s just a simple matter of little elementary knowledge of the kids’ level,” the teacher’s bust of righteousness once again activated its aseptic spirit.
According to his soul’s-–caught in the snares of physical and spiritual transmutation-–vogue platitudes, the monk would’ve thrown an obscenity as an antidote to the teacher’s remark. But, he somehow controlled it.
“By saying that she knows these literate things of we civilized villagers, this man is trying to prove that we all are no better than these uncultured wanderers. Given his gypsy advocacy, either this man has gone mad, or the haunting spirit is spreading its tentacles,” his religiously chauvinised voice was once again falling in the trap of sermonizing. “These people don’t stop at a place for more than a week. Then how can she know about education? It’s nothing but sheer black magic. Believe me… for I’m the one who’s spent his life in countering such evils!”
“But… but, by saying just so doesn’t prove it!” maybe the teacher had some notion about mathematical provenance while saying this.
“Oh, you poor teacher! Surely it’s just like this. And I can prove it too. But, the thing is so clear that one doesn’t need a proof. It’s, however, completely different with you, because your beauty-bewitched senses see Goddess of knowledge, Ma Saraswati in her.”
This was a clear sixer from the witty lame man. There was applauding laughter in appreciation of this farcical hit to the fence. A weird defeatedness dawned over the teacher’s face, because in this part of India silly humour is the best way to silent an unbuckling, argumentative rival. From the bystanders’ mirthy appreciation, one could easily make it out that these people hated this offbeat character among their bucolic and careless set up, incongruously navigating his way around floppy issues, which most often left him swimming through unchartered waters. Jealously, they condemned his crusading self fighting against fatal negligence of pivotal issues, and called him hopelessly over smart. They hated him, indeed! Why? Because he was constantly trying to nullify and invalidate the evil’s reinvents and reorientations during the present bad times; was cementing the good’s clout in front of the palatial fortress of badness; was trying to rejuvenate and revive the great Bengali’s  entombed legacy of religiously holy righteousness-–a millionth part of the First-Cause (the creator) with His supreme vision. So, these dark’s blandishment-savvy moguls sprang in air with joy every time this shiny little star fell while trying to follow righteous trajectory in the gloomy sky.
Once these countryside punk revelers laugh from the side of one party their loyalty naturally tilts towards the comedic charmer. After that it becomes very easy for this big horde, running amuck with nonsense fun and frolics, to gauntly slay the hapless opposition. They just whiplash the opposition to such an extent that it becomes virtually impossible to recognise its original shape and size. The buffoons would bust with crying laughters even on remarks which count zero on even the most serious humour scale.
Same thing happened in this case. The interrogation turned into a hilarious anomaly in which even the policemen followed the public’s suit and rallied behind the ritualist. Hammered down by innumerable pranks, nonsensical tongue pebbles, and mimicking, jousting cries, the teacher seemed a worthless minnow, whose fate had been fortuitously placed among their feet like a football. And a wanton game of football they played with it, kicking him around the corners.
Urgency for a cause is the first casualty when the tongues start lolling limitlessly for platitudinous laughter (in place of conversationist words) and heads take dissembling dives (instead of logical little rhythmic nods in synchronism with decently serious thoughts) in response to notorious, mischievous ticklings by uncontrolled buffoonery.
At long last the sarpanch spoke in a grave voice of sanity, “Sir, I don’t think the matter should be stretched further than this. It doesn’t matter whether she’s done this or not. And even if she’s committed the wrong, she can be spared, because they’ve lost a man.”
It was a cawingly harsh judgment, because, even in all his kindness, the crow-head foolishly forgot the main angle to the misdeed, that is, the killing of the gypsy! Witchcraft part of the case had almost hijacked the whole interrogation, so they’d forgotten the criminal gang of young ruffians.
“Then, I think we mustn’t create more noise out of it,” the policeman said with Supreme Court’s authority. “And you...” it was a semi-opaquely filthy gesture towards the girl, “keep yourself to your work of selling those petty things and begging. This time I’m sparing you…” he brandished his policing index finger as if he held her responsible for all this.
The poor teacher was left twiddling his thumbs. He found himself incapable of speaking against such a broad consensus. Still, he tried to raise a feeble opposition.
The police officer, standing in his dress like a ramshackle roadside eatery, got irritated, “I’m sorry masterji! You’ve this fatal habit of criticising and going against social and administrative norms. You don’t even believe in democracy. I remember it well what hullabaloo you made on that Election Day. And yes, one more thing! We’ve got stern orders that if someone blocks the road protesting against the unavailability of electricity, drinking water or anything else, he’ll be handled by our own free ways,” he rolled his fingers over the baton.
The policeman seemed to hold personal grudge against the teacher for giving him unnecessary trouble by making an issue of this neglectable incident.
“Now, that you’ve done it quite a few times in the past and got scot-free. But, from now onwards we won’t allow you to disturb the traffic,” he struck the policing cane on his palm, showing that he meant it.
Even the timelessly kicking clichés would vouch for the irony of this spectacle: a genuine protestor against injustice being taught the virtues of justice!
Earlier, the caravan had cremated the dead at the cremation site of the lowest caste in the village, the bhangis (scavengers). These people, one of the lowest in Hindu caste hierarchy, didn’t protest against this. So, at least the lifeless body got some after-death justice; at least got a place where its ashes lay sprinkled. It was possible because such discrimination is least prevalent at the base of caste hierarchy. The top, however, standing proudly (but still laden like a donkey under the grandstanding dregs) would’ve pretended a storm in its tea cup, in response to such a thing.
There’s a penpal relationship between the knowledge of justice (or injustice) and the desire to get it (or reparation). And till the justice is unknown, there never arises a feeling of injustice. But once the person has been shown the glimpse of this great thing, the heart crazily pines for it. So, these poor gypsies (the stateless, religionless and assetless subjects of India) who rightlessly followed the arduously long path, taking consolations in pricelessly meandering resurrections, when came to know this wretched ordeal of suffering injustice without getting remunerative justice, their hearts suffered in assonance with the echoing desolations of a crime against them; which, otherwise, would’ve slipped over their ignorant nobs just as an accident.
The girl’s sorrow was truly epitomising. Can the treacherous trap of circumstances can separate melody from the music, beauty and smell from the rose, or rob the primordial righteousness of its humanity-scenting emotions? Never! Her mourning girlish emotions, however, listening to the slowly tapering rhythm of the song of justice, sweetly protested against the above discussed mystique ordeal of divinity. She held herself responsible for whatever had happened. But they were always found sitting around her, trying to pacify and console her gently votive and potent-pure self harbouring a mysterious guilty apprehension. Their love for her was too much and high to be affected in any way by even a death in the caravan. She was after all the diamond of their crystallised gypsy passions, whose daughterly lilting twinklings anointed their parental figures walking on the wearily desolate path of life with happiness.
To overcome the shock and to muster up courage and energy for onward march, the caravan stayed at the place for two or three more days. During this period nobody from it entered the village as the epochal whistle of their protest.  For their daily survival they visited the neighbouring villages. In their stylised frailties and frivolities, the villagers too forgivingly forgot the past, because they never put these wandering gypsies, tribals and nomadic herders in the hen coop of their memories.
One fine morning when the sun was shining brightly for the sake of unwavering instinct of life and forward march, they were seen decamping from the site. But, enthusiastically cluttering chaos one witnesses while a caravan starts to move from a place was missing this time. Anarchic and subversive memory of the incident still heavily possessed the elders’ minds. Children were, but, hopping around cheerily and chattily, symbolising the bright hope that new buds always wait in future’s wings, completely unfazed by the burden of the past.
Standing on the mound, the religioner saw them preparing to go. His ebullient rage had been gastronomically soothed down and was burping after covetously eating the consequential food baked in the incident.
The caravan had arrived in the dark without his knowledge, creating many doubts in his insecure mind. But now it was leaving, one man less and almost defeated, on this clear morning without leaving back any wily affect on his profession. The evil spirit (whose dark chuckle spewed scorn at his religiosity from behind the beauty, charm and vibrancy of the girl) had been viciously beaten. His viciously witch-hunting self, at least, thought so. Looking at her deflowered, shaken and stirred facial aura, his imprisoned soul beat its chest letting out make-believe victorious calls.
“Now, she’s all right and free from the evil spirit!” a flash of her discharmed face sauntered up an adrenalin rush to the prison cells inside his heart, and they echoed with the engrossing recital of the wily song of hate for the angelic purity of her beauty.
When they’d collected all which they could turn into chattel, they set out on the journey across the southern side fields. They were going somewhere, just as they’d arrived from somewhere.
What was left of the caravan at the village? ‘Nothing!’ Oh, don’t be so forgetful of such recent past! Wasn’t the ash of their dead now an inseparable part of the village soil?
Anything else?
‘Oh ya, now I remember there are quite a few things! Dung of their cattle and sheep scattered around the caravan site. Rags picked up from all types of places lying as if windblown from far, far lands. Shoes and wares of all type and hues, torn and tattered, which they picked up during their journey and left here when these’d fulfilled the last bit of their remaining duty, which couldn’t be fulfilled under the feet of civilized settled persons.’
Such are the gypsies: pick up so many things from so many places, and draw out last utilities lying on death bed inside the discarded things found on the settlers’ fringes. Leave them then at the end of their journey. The homeless wanderers thus, at least, help these inanimate consumer durables in completing their journey, while moving on an endless path of their own.
                                            *  *  *  *
Our readers might’ve some introspective seizures about Phulva, the gypsy girl, resurrecting and refreshing aroma of whose not yet fully blossomed beauty and oodles of charm vibrantly caught the attention of the villagers.
It might be surprising to know that her family was a new entrant on the gypsy path. Intangibles of life were such that they were forced to join this motley mix of banjaras, tribals and nomadic herders-–all embaled in a distinct cultural unit of the gypsies-–for survival.
Phulva had a native village! Yes, it was Rupamgarh in Ajmer district of Rajasthan. She belonged to the community of Bhats, who in their prestigious past kept the genealogical records of established houses, clans and principalities. In that sheenful past, getting the patron’s beneficence wasn’t that difficult task, given their spellbinding and poetically vacillating tones which made even most lackluster of pasts glow in heavenly glory.
But, the crippling snarls and besieging exigencies of a fatally derivating fate had chalked out a different story for the present generation. Helplessly driven by this pauperising command of the destiny they had to adopt this nomadic-cum-gypsy profession for survival, which we settlers call idle wandering.
Be it the descendants of the nawabs who now pull rickshaws, or the Bhats from Rajasthan who proudly pick up good lines from the past and say they’re the progenies of Chand Bardai, the legendary court poet of great Rajput ruler, Prithviraj Chauhan; history seems to have hit its whiplash pretty hard.
Her grandfather was the head genealogist of a local chieftain holding a sub-infeudation in a small princely state of Rajasthan. Indian independence meant the loss of ruling status of such local dynasties which in turn meant a tight string on their princely purses. It was almost equivalent to a loss of job for the keeper of pedigree records. So, the decently wealthy man of just a few years ago could very well see the not so bright future of his own lineage.
Tomes of archaically old genealogical books, filled with endless lines of mountainous praise for the patrons’ singlest and trivialest acts of bravery and kindness, were now just cumbersomely fat records whose lines were not left with any remunerative, cajoling prowess to impress upon the princely-vaunting crowned heads of the past; who were now gathering up pieces of life in a new democratic set-up where all subjects were alike as per the Indian constitution.
Money collected by past eulogies was spent to silent down the covetously disharmonic murmurs of a poor present. The old man thus died as wretchedly poor, leaving behind just heaps of those obsolete books. And with this another chapter in their family’s history started. They were now homeless wanderers. Title of this new chapter was tireless migration: a migration where history has so few facts to gather up or even care about. Roll as they along ,almost aimlessly, this target-escaping path without taking potshots at the vacant pages of history, to fill whom the settlers fight it out fortressly fixed up at particular places .
The girl who wandered sprinkling historical fairness on this unhistorical nomadic path, however, had a little settled history too. Till the death of her grandfather theirs was a settled household-–though it was harbouring dire apprehensions about how long it would be able to clutch at the settlement sinews. And now when they went on (swathed in the motley mix of gypsy caravan) those interprovincial migrations, one could sneak a peek at some canorous historical sadness in those epitomisingly bright eyes of hers, which made her look grandiosely aloof amidst the gypsies.
Her family comprised of parents, two young brothers and an infant sister, born somewhere in the middle of their journey. Their chattel consisted of a mule-driven little cart, a couple of donkeys and a few goats and sheep. She was, but, the virtual princess of this medium sized caravan. So what if the people thought or felt nothing of these wanderers? Her mesmeric charm wasn’t fazed down by such things. The little houri had dreamy eyes-–eyes that dreamt of their lustrous history-–which shone with unrasped dignity, wild pride and self-respect, like a female ancestor of hers would’ve felt while praising the dignified beauty of her celestially charming Rajput princess.       
If not an outright history, some roughly hewn cultural base these gypsies do possess (even though it’s nimbly subtle, which might be missed by the settlers’ upholstered eyes). But this excitingly derivated variant of culture does exist certainly. Slowly tapering rhythm of ceaseless migration is possibly the genesis of their mystically pulsating culture, which the readers can feel only if they forget cultural relativism for some time. This particular culture of these homeless wanderers revels in its own absolutism like the beauty ingrained in an unmetred verse and a wild flower. This gypsy cultural matrix has many elements chosen and picked up from the eclectic panorama of different places falling along their migratory path. Up against any type of social or cultural form they are able to smell some fragrance of survivability, and when fed up with that they just move ahead without any grudges tethering to their free roaming conscience. And that is why they survive without the backload of history. This historical voidness or constant march over the unhistorical path (because only a historical path has the tendency of disillusioning drift) puts away any chances of adversarial stagnation of their footsteps to beat the same dust at a single place in the name and game of creating history.
It was, however, not completely the case with that daughter of pedigree keepers. If we leave apart the traumatising ordeals of recent past, they’d a few lines in some little chapter in Indian history. She was, thus, not completely (gypsily) immune in her reaction to those lusty ogles, crude jokes, vulgar remarks and sometimes even filthy offers. Thus, if we come to notice her reaction or words about the things unexpected of a gypsy, then it shouldn’t come as a surprise.
“Do you know, who helped Prithviraj Chauhan in escaping from Ajmer jail, when he had been taken prisoner by Mohammed Ghori?” she would’ve zipped off the query, if somebody tried to probe inside that nymph like beauty of hers.
To the same question she might’ve replied, without even waiting for the answer, “He was a Bhat, our ancestor!”
If one searched the exceptionality defining her verdant beauty, some zephyr from the high cultural past of her community would possibly have reverted from the time’s dusty lanes to prove that she was the golden grain mixed incidentally in the gypsy sand.
In those happy times, a Bhat with his fat book bound in red cloth was most welcome. But in such a population explosion, as it’s today, who’s got the time or intention to peep into the great... grandfather series. It used to be a favourite past-time of their ruler patrons who fought with valiant volition, and during leisure-time listened to the Bhats’ poetically frilled recitations of their pedigree-cum-history. While the witty genealogist was busy in expunging the dirt from the royal lineage’s monumental past (if it was not so, they made it look so by their creative prowess) the lilting cynosure of its glitter reflected in the patron’s pleased eyes, who almost hypnotized burst volleys of wealth over the eulogiser’s bent head.
Now, but, the paradoxist time had completely turned the table on this community. In the furtively kicking present––without caring a fig for the past––they found themselves incapable of even keeping track and record of their own movements. But, she at least was a keen observer of things and had a sharp memory––a Bhat blood was she, after all––which made her shine multihuedly resplendent high above other gypsies, with whom this volant flower was being windblown.
There were a few traces of fluttering desperation in the petals of this flower, because the gypsy caravan tip-toeing around unhappeningly, shrinking parsimoniously from the time’s ‘occurrence’ trove, still failed to cut off the cords of memories between the rememberable past linked to a particular place and the detachedly roaming present. It was the only bit of nongypsy shred in her character. In all other ways and means she’d adapted herself to gypsyism with the help of that vibrantly collaborative good heart of hers.
Without any support (or burden) of history, the gypsies live in glinting intonation of the present. This voidance of historical dregs upon their carts facilitates their endless journey. But, the strifening vibrancy of the past, whose beautiful picture she’d envisioned through the words of her old grandfather in her early childhood, very often approached her in stirring surges. It was thus an extraordinary juxtaposition over her angelic purity: resonant gaiety of gypsyism of the present (with its anesthesia effect to forget all woes of fate and circumstances) on the one hand, and the circling memories of the past (dragging an inflection out of her young heart, virtually as an antithesis of gypsyism) at the other. She was, thus, a few steps short of complete gypsyism.
Her grandfather had died about eight years ago, and thence onwards they were the wayfarers of this peregrinatory path. Back in her village then she’d the opportunity to attend school for a year. Stormy enthusiasm of her ever-eager-to-learn mind seemed to foretell a bright academic future for the poor kid. Overstating excitement of her curious little self would find her cramming letters and numerals with such a childishly majestic gusto that in just one year her hold over them left children of third standard racking up their brains in dismay. But then the circumstances pulled dissentingly at her little school bag, and she’d to drop out as her family chose to constantly move for life, fearing death would hammer down its doomed judgment if it found them any more at a single place, immobile, impassive and surrendered to the diktats of a particular place’s exasperating circumstances.
Traces of that educational past were still visible. That prematurely cut swath of little, little literary plantlets still evinced its systematised, instructional existence amidst the gypsily riff-raff thickets and bushes lavishly ravishing in their wildly overgrowing instincts. And this cherubic little stalwart of those settlers’ educative furrows in the gypsies’ wildly self-referral, illiterate jungle, tried to teach those safely crammed little elementary things in the heart of her hearts to the caravan children. Watching those little classes of hers in the open, even the angels might’ve felt the fun and gaiety with aplomb.
Hearing these intangible things from her proud lips, a shyly affable grin sprouted on the tangibly placid and unknowing gypsy faces. When they hurried past schools, she sprayed the meteor shower and stardust of her confidence:
“I can read all those books in their bags, only if the caravan stops here for a month and you people allow me to sit in the school!”
As a non-forgetter of great happenings in one’s past, she still kept safely that educative symbol. It was none other than her school bag. Parlous parleys of time had snatched most of the proud things of the once kid student. All that was left in it was a dog-eared pamphlet of nursery letters, syllables and numerals, and a writing slate which’d borne uncountable writes and rewrites by those slanderous fingers of the caravan teacheress.
For the greatest proof of her historical identity, she’d her grandfather’s pedigree book, monumentally holding records of local chieftain’s lineage, important happenings of their past and the valiant tales of their forefathers. The time-wearied book was tetchily getting dog-eared. Its red cover-cloth was gradually getting dark layers of dirt: the upcoming gypsy layers over the cultural phrases of a settled history. At many a times, she would open the book and her fishily holographic eyes stared at her forefathers’ handwritten lineage of the established families in some native script which she didn’t understand. These lines drawn by the floral flow of her ancestors’ hands, obsoletely stared back at her. Twists and turns in those words still tried to vaunt their curves and  corners, but they were-–at the most-–just laurel wreaths over the entombed past.
Reading the sad meaning of those words with some language of heart, the frilling flamboyance of her exquisite features would get embroidered with sorrowful and teary silk finery. At those moments it appeared the flower was tired of constant move and migration. During such moments of sorrow in her eyes, it gave the feeling that her childhood couldn’t get a chance to blossom to perfection. And now when youth in all its vacillating dilly-dally was knocking at the door, though it was successful in penetrating those chiseled features of hers, but at the same time it failed to enlighten and brighten up her eyes to their full potential, or even in proportion to the beauty of her face.
She was not a suitable child for such fast changing scenarios; such flowers blossom fully only in primordially wild orchards resting in perfect isolation. Rough and gruff of a gypsy path suppresses the naturality in them. Still, her features were so beautiful that it would take a long, long aesthetically searching look into those deep eyes of hers to draw out the missing link between the worldly beauty of hers and the perfect face of feminine divinity.
She talked with a nongypsy wit. One could be deceived if he didn’t follow what he heard with the movement of her filling up fishy lips. What she talked about, or even more importantly the way she put it, is even rare among the breeds of settled persons. In a conversation, her part of words came out with the natural agility of a brook. Alas! There was something which got her lost in a dumb world. It was a question, at the mere mention of which our children in the cosy confines of homes spring in the air get impulsive and fly high in the clouds of fancy. Yes, it was the question of future. She kept silent on this, because only fate knew it.

If We Leave Humans Apart, Nature Finds itself Bedecked with Emotions and Anointed with Happiness

17                                      
                          If We Leave Humans Apart,
           Nature Finds itself Bedecked with Emotions
                      and Anointed with Happiness

It was March. Spring side of the season had put its pubertal promiscuity on the canvas to paint a picture with the ebriating and coloured cocktail of mild winter and mild summer. Yes, perennially flawless colours of spring were zestfully sprouting forth in new buds!
The countryside emerging out of subversively cold caverns, now found itself bedecked with lifeful emotions. Captivatingly new, yellowish sprouts could be seen in the cold-beaten, rough and old foliage of the banyan. Below, the windfallen leaves had made the ground quite fertile. But still, luscious grass won’t grow there, because the mighty mythical-shadow above willn’t allow it for the provenance of an equally old and fabled truth.
In the bright noon of a March sun, when the shadow becomes soothing, sitting under the banyan the watchman was knitting a fishing net. He’d made a little handloom using a small piece of finger-like wood tucked among his fingers. Other end of the thin cords was tied to the hind part of a charpoy.
Seeing his free manoeuvres one could make it out very easily that his neighbour had gone to pay a visit to some devotee.
There were some ducks in the pond, which hadn’t left for their Himalayan abode till now. In gently lolloping water they were swimming sabbatically, as if even the summer giving its coming call from a distance was unable to break their leisure sojourn.
The water mark around the mound had gone low. More importantly, the moat separating the mound from embankment had dried up, thus leaving the outside world open to the mound from this side as well.
A little heap of nylon threads was lying in jumblement near him. And drawing out cords from this niggling mess his artistic fingers were making a beautiful pattern on the tiny loom. Oodles of charm shone in his feeble, old eyes as they blessed this ornamentally designed piece of nettings for the daughters of water. Their Godly martyrdom for the sake of some hungry belly should come to be done in the embrace of artistically systematised designs and motifs, not in those suffocating, snaring, gallowy clutches of unhewn threads in the peevish mass of nettings which the fishing party arrived with. If he’d his will fructified he’d have changed the whole of it. Only if his fingers had that much power left in them to weave a wholesomely artistic big net for the daughters of his passion! But no, he couldn’t do that; growing old as he was. All he could do was to weave as much of laurel wreath as possible, so that it could be stitched on to the torn holes in the irritably large and crude nettings.
So, in his spare time he’d weave as much as possible. And his two little friends sola and paitya gave him ample company in this soulful endeavour of his, ever fuelled by the besieging exigencies of his passion. These were the hand-held instruments for making a fishing net. The former was held in the right hand, having two wires with needle holes at both ends, while in between the nylon thread was spooled around. It was his writer’s analogue of a pen, because with its nib like ends he manoeuvred the nylon threads in the emerging filigreed pattern. The other was a bamboo strip with a narrowly tapered end. It was held by the net-weaver’s left hand.
Sometimes on those long nights the loneliness would wake him up, fraternally whispering in his ears, “Old friend, let us spend some time with each other!” And arise he’d peremptorily. His uncomplaining fingers would then lit the lantern whose sleepy wick lightened up his part of the world-–a tiny hut, a religioner just by birth, a soul, and the frail figure of a duty bound old man.
The immortal goldfish in his heart’s aquarium would then wake up too, sending enlivening palpitations through his weakened body. Starting weaving the net was the next logical step. His artful fingers, thus, started knitting out aesthetic essence out of that orphaned time of some unknown dark hour.
Characteristically semi-luminous unveiling by the lantern’s steady glow showed the net-weaver’s little possessions. A little sack half full of flour, a glass bottle of kerosene oil, some little plastic jars containing salt, turmeric, sugar and chilli, a wicker-worked bowl-shaped basket hanging from the thatched roof with his meager supply of raw vegetables, a few cheap aluminum utensils and a few pairs of old saggy clothes hanging from a hook in the sinewy low roof was all one could see at the first glance inside. There was one more thing too, which wasn’t visible from outside. It was the symbol of his religion, his birth-born faith, scion of his apparent identity and to the world his evident religious faculty. Guess what? It was a calendar hung safely in a corner by the entranceway. By the look of it, it was at least decade-and-a-half old. Months and dates printed in Urdu seemed centuriously old. Their look of obliteration proudly put forward the fact that man-made time scale had become obsolete for it and its owner. Above this entombed time’s tabulation was a picture-–a greenish halo of light and a verse from the Quran written across it:

La eelaha Illallallah

Mohammed Rasoolullah
Salal lallahu Alahai
Vasallam
It was hung just fortuitously like his informal Mohammedan body blanketing a humanist soul.
The pole in the middle of the hut, which supported the central roof log, prevented the lantern rays from reaching this calendar. Its thick shadow fell on the only thatch decoration of the old man. It seemed as if Indian Islam wanted to sneak inside a dark, sheltering grove; a sort of escapism in some safe corner. Seeing which the cultural nationalists or the propagators of Hindutva raised an accusing finger, charging it was nothing but their loath to consider India as their fatherland. The pseudo-secularists offering unguents to the minority’s hurt sentiments said it was just a natural result of the inhibitions arising in a minority’s psyche in response to the majority’s aggression, and on an equal footing with the so called communalists they too encashed it to garner votes, because hating a particular community or supporting the other are just both sides of the same communal coin. They purchase with the same effect in the communal market. Then who is a communalist? Is it the one who initially tempers with the bee-hive, or the one who jumps into the fray to support the object of the former’s hate? Or are they both communalists?  Whatever maybe the truth, for sure it’s clear that the shadow over that verse from Quran could lead many to misread it, to misinterpret it, thus further perpetuating the swathes of misunderstanding around it.
Mystically oblivious of this controversially spiralling teetotum the watchman would go on weaving inventoried orderliness out of the cluttered heap of nylon threads lying near him. Drowsily amorphous caliber in his fingers was sufficient to arise a thought in any comparative mind that he was successfully bringing out the Bengali cultural orderliness out of the rustically heaped Haryanvi culture embaled in a bucolically grandstanding jumblement of simplicity weaponised with satire; of dialect corrosively modified to suit the maximum number of abuses, obscenities and foul words; of the culture of agriculture; of the arms quicker than the minds; of the buffaloes waddling  in the pond  and whole lot of work-brutes gone insensitive to most of the sensitively refined and sophisticated things in life.
The Bengali sitting in that submissive posture appeared a sage musician trying to improvise canorously redolent rhythmic notes out of this jazzy jink of Haryanvi noise comprising of farmers’ jesting tongues, buffalo brayings, oxen lowings, and noisy school children coming running out of it as if they had been set free from the whirring vortex of a treacherous jail.

                                             *  *  *  *
In the middle of March the sun shining pretty warmly along with gusts of mildly spiffy breeze drew out colourful spring from the winter’s corset. The tall eucalyptus trees in the school and along the road swayed their foliage to the soft and silky weather. To be precise, weather was still on the winter’s side in this period of spring’s infancy.
Dark green wheat crop had reached its maximum height. Bulging spikes spiffily swayed to the nimbly subtle mixture of cool and warm.
It being the time of third and last irrigation of the crop, farmers like Bania were worried that heavily diademed crop standing in irrigation water might give into the crystallised passions of a spring-lorn wind gliding around the countryside from dawn to dusk. It, however, did listen to the night’s epochal resting whistle and went to sleeping chambers during these clear-skied nights, when dew almost rained over the plants and trees. So, in order to utilise the calmatively tranquil air at night, the farmers irrigated the fields only during the nights.
The magic and mystique of greenery had been thus sprinkled around in full fairness. Alas, it was not for the migratory cow herder from Rajasthan! He too had house and fields back there in the desert state. But the littlest patches of greenness barely clutching at their existential sinews among the sand were grossly insufficient for the big cattle flocks, whose skinny bodies and huge horns made them appear to have committed a gastronomical delinquency.
Now here in their land of seasonal emigration (away from droughty incertitude of home where sand had already started to show its treacherously hot covetousness) comprehensively thawed out herd was grazing its starved muzzle in the alkaline wasteland palate offering the survival nibblings among the prickly shrubbery.
The herd-keeper, his chin supported at the end of his stick, was harbouring a mysteriously inhibited apprehension:
“These ducks in the pond are also pardesi like us. Thank God, they don’t eat grass for survival; otherwise the bullying farmers here would’ve eaten them raw”
The village’s common land had shrunk to some odd square kilometres, and most of it was covered by the landscape standing where we’re retelling the sleeping memories of some past. Gradually decreasing common pastures and panchayat’s fallow land now had started to create problems for these cow herders here in this land of better pastures than their home state.  It brought them in conflict with the local farmers, who busting in their stylised masculinities gave them severe thwackings.
This small area, however, still welcomed them generously. It had the pond, where birds seemed to sing a pacifying song listening to which the lonesome herder was lost of his memories about wretched sandy ordeal waiting back in his desert home state.
“In Bharatpur, there come so many birds in winter!” he said it aloud and saying this turned his head westwards as if trying to imagine the big lake, a bird sanctuary in fact, in his mind’s eye.
And then, naturally, the solicitously flowing wavelets in the Bharatpur Lake drifted his memories to his family in some other district of Rajasthan.
Looking westwards, a strong gust of dry wind from the Rajasthan desert hit his face. It was redolent with the smell of home and hearth. He inhaled a deep, deep morsel of nostalgic air. His eyes were closed. And when he opened them, the sulk from his face was magically exonerated.
The dry wind had soaked up the moisture of his eyes. This unhumidly sagitated wind is said to dry away the moisture from anywhere like eyes, ponds to the greenish wheat. So, within the next week or ten days the dark greenish paint around the fields was to turn into a yellow-whitish one. More and more water was to be vapourised into the air from the pond, thus bringing about a gradual decrease in its size. Then the wavelets irritated by the hottening rays would gleam somewhat sorrowfully. There would be a little unagile look in the fish shoals. The ripening wheat, baked almost reddish-yellow, would cropfully invite sickles and the gradual change of late spring into summer would be done with a teary happiness: the flowery spring giving birth to a sandy summer.
                                           *  *  *  *
“April1. This is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are on the other three hundred and sixty-four.” –- Mark Twain
Leave the universal foolishness apart. The spring was sabbatically furloughing around the countryside. There were distinct visions of fructification.
In ancient times, the spring festival was known as Kamadev Mahotsav or the festival of desires. According to a bristling legend, Kamadev, the God of sensuousness, shoots arrows around, creating rippling waves of sensual desires. Percipient insects and birds start humming erotic songs of ecstasy and procreation.
Frenetically jumpy desires had come to be fruitified. The poplars along the field embankments, which’d remained a painter’s anguish through the winter, now started to be adorned with the artistic arcade of new leaves and shoots. Same was the rejuvenating greenishness in keekars, which’d been cut for fuelwood by the village women holding little axes in their hands with feministic panache.
Wild flowers smiled with superlative charm wherever they could find some wilderness. Neetle wild plant, white and red types of clover, wild dandelion, primrose and thistle garlanded the wilderness. Under the hottening sun, their unmetred wilderness saluted like a new milestone reached by any foot passing by them. Butterflies went ebriated over them-–to pollinate, to procreate.
The wheat crop was fastly changing to golden hues as if the colourful nature around was acting as a sponge, soaking up the greenish paint from the cultivated fields. Indicating the greying of crop to meet its harvesting end, there were big yellow-grayish patches among the last little traces of faded green.
Flowery spring in the mustard crop had already gone. Seeing its charmless deflowered state of now one would’ve wondered whether all those uncountable yellow flowers of early spring had drizzled down onto the ground.
The pond was also giving a kind of sad, tranquil look despite all the cheer-up implorations by the smiling flora around it. Devoid as it was of its fauna! The winged visitors had already left for their summer abodes. Still, there were some little wagtails, waders, ducks and watercrows (who were born quite late in the season and thus too young to take a flight back with the elders) surviving by themselves in a corner: sibling bonhomie keeping them alive by themselves, without the nurturing care of the elders. All of them played like children; mixed up with each other as if unaware of the difference among them.
To knock down the human mind from its selfishly thinking perch, two ducks arrived at the pond daily after sunset. And all of them thronged around that condescending couple, playfully opening their tiny beaks to get parental doles from this seemingly old duck couple.

                                             *  *  *  *
In this natural region assaulted by the two extremities of hectoring weather-–hot and cold-–balmy spring season (the delicious ferment of cool and warm) fairs around for a little time. But during this little period of time it galores as a most colourful spectrograph bristling with prismic overabundance.
By mid-April the spring seems dejewelled. Wheat crop turns yellowish brown, indicating the harvesting labour looming in the air. It seems as if all the greenness of earlier has leached down to the pond whose water now turns mossy green (thanks to the overworking evaporation and buffalo bathing).
But as they say a life lived beautifully is no slave to the time period. Riotous merrymaking by this short spring canorously defies the felony falsity, stamped by a vainly proud time, of judging a thing’s essence by the length and breadth of seconds spent on earth. To testify this point there’re enough wild flowers and butterflies proving the beautiful essence of some interval of time spanning some rhythmic fragrant seconds amidst the treacherous trap of thawed out, bleached long hours.
Now the sun’s warmth exceeds the critical limit for the fairy’s fair face to bear. Hence, few flowers remain in the wilderness.
The setting sun in the evenings shining over ripened wheat makes it look a golden effort by the farmers. When a farmer’s daughter walks lazily across the fields to fetch water from a well, she looks like a beautiful butterfly collecting the last traces of spring’s juice at this fag end of those lilting, luscious seconds.
When the tired families of the farmers return home after an arduously-long hardwork under the hot sun, the environment echoes with a wearily-desolate sadness for the short-lived spring.
Brave siblings of the migratory birds still fight it out, while the predestined twigs and twists lay bet against their survival chances. One might wonder whether they’ll grow up before the pond gets limited to a muddy, mossy puddle by July. And to win the survival odds in their favour, they grow and learn faster; speedier than the normal.
The dying spring, however, leaves an offspring: springy hopes and aspirations of a good wheat output in the farmers’ minds. Coming across the vibrancy of thoughts in those simple minds, one is reminded of the spring’s perdurable, perennial essence.
The drops of perspiration drowsily jewelling the eyebrows and eyelids of the village maidens become amorphous prisms-–reflecting seven colours of a married life-–through which they see romantic visions and episodes, while the dried out wild flowers still standing in between the furrows surrender their mortal remains to the murmurous warmth of their palms; then and a sickle stroke entombs the dried beauty with the eatables.
The hardworking damsel while walking over the crofts when comes to slightly hurt her heel, a pleasant cry of sweet pain is carried by an ecstatic whiff of air to the distant corner of the countryside.
Under the hatching warmth of a summer-versant sun wheat-chickens come home to roost. If one casts a snippety look into the fields, they in return give scriptural long reflection buzzing with lustrous hues and vivid moods of gold. Farmers (with their combating backbone whetting its iron nerves) go all out to mine out the resonant gaiety and vibrant stardust of the ripened gold in their fields.
It being the season of weddings; so the sonorous sounds of bugles and drums exhilaratively reach the rigescent ears lost in the cesspool of little, eager voices of bulging grains inside the crop’s crowned heads.
In this period of the spring’s natural fading with the summer’s coming of age, the banyan gets its fruits. Small berry shaped, reddish-brown and chocolate-coloured fruits of India’s mighty national tree provide daughterly amicability to its dissentingly fluttering coarse leaves. And the Indian fig tree, ficus bengalensis, almost immune to decrepitude looks more and more eager to root down its hanging beard over a larger area on the mound, to give rise to more trunks and branches thus becoming immortal and integral part of the mound’s myth and legend; the focal point of religious history taking shape under its shadow.
In this season of disappearing wheat furrows, hares and rabbits do have a really tough time. Running to survive this parlous shove by the combustible nature, they take shelter under any isolated thicket falling in their skiddling way. Farmers’ dogs with their forthwithly docked tails and straight pockering ears chase them for a soft juicy meat treat. The sight of these helplessly galloping cotton-soft lives draws out a weary compassion out of the deepest emotional well lying almost unused inside the farmers’ hardened hearts.
Water-mouthed hunters belonging to the scavengers’ community set out to hunt down these soft rodents hiding beneath thickets and bushes. Mere thought of the soft juicy meat sends champagne corks rippling in their mind, as they go on plodding the bushes more zestfully.
Shining wheat-husk dunes give the harvested fields a deserted look. Their thrasherward gentle slope and a steeper one on the other end makes them resemble the typical sandwork hot-stormily performed by the wind in deserts. In not so bright noons (because the atmosphere is laden with pollens) these elongated domes shine silvery on the teemless horizon.
Day and nights the harvesting farmers draw out their sweat’s sanguinity. But there’s always a danger of dust storms and occasional showers playing havoc with their plans. Sometimes clouds too get excited on some such labour ridden nights. Drops fall almost pathologically on the unhusked crop.
On one such occasion, in the eastern sky there could be seen an incriminatingly dark cloud-–so dark that it appeared thinking of the night’s obliteration itself–-spreading out its unwavering gloomy instinct. Then as a ray of hope moon’s crescent cambered up with its fighting spirit along the cloud’s fringe. It gave the thought of a supremely confident fin of a shark swimming in the thrusting gluttonicity of dangerous waters. And later when the pointed lunar nob (elongated big in its last phase) raised its sheen more upwards, it appeared the emerging sail of a boat seen by someone from the shore. It smiled there for the brutal trysts of human labour in the face of adversarial dark night; the boat of human efforts swimming over the turbulent waters of destiny.

The Local Goons’ Prurience and Profligacy finds a Sympathetic Space in the much Obliged Sadhu’s Religiosity

18
             The Local Goons’ Prurience and Profligacy
                    Finds a Sympathetic Space in the
                    much Obliged Sadhu’s Religiosity


High on a chilly, criminal whim those tramp characters (all of them so young and helpless under their vagabondage’s eternal damnation) had killed the gypsy in cold blood and cold winter. They then went into an escaping hibernation, only to blossom up once again in a forgiving and forgetting spring.
These young village goondas were self-spoilt brats. Inside their split open fickleness worms of felony were growing and coarsening fastly. There was no family responsibility, restriction or fear to deworm their licentiously fledgling selves. Finding themselves almost weaseled out of social norms at such a risky stage of life, their lewdness went boomerang. As far as any type of socially obedient trait is concerned, they had none of theirs; and others’ they didn’t believe to exist. So, it was all fair play for the young devil in them.
A veil is a veil, either face-to-toe or head-to-ankle. Similarly, a crime was just a tiny, bearable unit to them; beyond differentials and typifications. They didn’t even care to hide its iron fist in a velvet glove. After all, they were no politicians to make it appear as a socially and politically acceptable kid-glove treatment.
Further, a man’s behind can be used either for an encouraging back-slap or ghastly back-stab. Unfailingly, the God will do the former. A human being might end up doing any of them, depending on the circumstances. But, the evil and his progenies will invariably do the latter. As per their take on this, they fell in the last mentioned category.
Rightly interpreting the crime’s secret exegesis, they kept local-made pistols, knives and swords. Voguely versant with the fact that some blacksmiths can make pistols, they had in the past faked friendliness with the Muslim blacksmith. They sat around him, caressing his crude iron products, feigning artistic appreciation for the rough and gruff of those workers’ tools in the hope of winning his confidence by mellowing down his rigescent iron nerves, so that he might get ready to take a risk and make illegal weapons for them.       But the sturdy little fellow had been adamant in his outright denial to the same. Their confidence was thus blighted a bit. So, when after many sessions of cajoling the blacksmith still stood his ground (this ordinary human had an extraordinary forthright instinct) their combustible character got a mix bag of irritating emotions-–anger, despair and mocking humour.
“Hey miyanji, you weigh just 250 grams,” one of them was heard saying, angry sarcasm dripping from the tone.
The Muslim kept himself busy in putting coal in his furnace. That being the month of Ramzan, during which the Qu’ran was revealed to the Prophet, he kept his lips sewn up for the sake of keeping his tongue clean during this holy month.
The belittling satire’s semblance spread its tentacles through the group. So, another one’s soul’s declivity showed its wrong angle, “I think, we can cook whole of you in a cooker. All at a time!”     
Strange peels of laughter emerged out of this out an out farce. The target tried hard not to pay any heed to this. To the taunt’s response he blew air very hard into the little furnace, as if the rising smoke would act as a smudge and drive away these malevolent insects from his shop.
“Then I’ll eat the heart of roasted chicken!” The thick-headed fellow said it with such a cherishing tone as if he wanted to eat the ironsmith’s meat in reality.
Another jeered out his vandalic tongue, “I’d like to have his leg.”
“As for me, I prefer his hands.”
“Me? I take liver.”
And they went on with the Hannibal humour, leaving almost no part or limb of their presumed dish.
The ironsmith’s eremite silence broke the barrier of holy constraint. Rampaging frustration broke the religious barrier to his tongue.
“You’ve forgotten a thing!” his tongue whetted its counter-taunt. “Whose mother is going to eat this?” he held up his penis beneath his pyjama and protruded it like a little missile.
The Muslim let out a piercingly loud laughing shriek whose intrepid adventure settled score in a single stroke.
Conflicting dilemmas of their mind, body and spirit would’ve easily turned them into rattling and ranting pugilists. But here, in complete contrast to their expectable response they were seen dumbfounded. Only one thing can explain this. That in humour even the most beastly persons have to accept defeat with a sheepish grin.
There was another pinpricking fact in the episode---about the mother. But, these firecracking joyhogs weren’t conversant with the respectable aura around the word “mother”. So, on hearing the ironsmith’s counter-taunt they might’ve found their shirts quite clean. It was poor mother who’d silently bore the prank’s burn.
After that initial period of shock, the foolish foppishness lying drollingly inside their choppy souls burst crackly. They were now seen rolling in laughter as if one of them had hit the winning note in the taunty game.
Reaping the tiny saplings of crime, once they’d looted the Aeon House (a tiny manufacturing unit-cum-residence of a businessman from some city, situated by the road outside the village) and were jailed for a brief time for the same. Also, all of them had tasted the jail’s pious life for possessing illegal local made firearms. In fact their young chief (a de-facto or de-jure sort of mentor is naturally bound to crop up in such a group) had raped a girl, who later committed suicide. Further, two of them had once eloped with a minor girl from the village.
Alcohol driven vice and virtues of their astrayed youth had made them stubborn, stern, manipulative, filthy prank-mongers and mischievous. All the above counted qualities had spread a cloud of vagabondage over the village. And in fact the villagers were afraid of them, because there was nobody to whom they were liable to feel fear or answer for their wrong deeds. To earn a livelihood they sold illicit liquor, opium and many sharp edged weapons; looted a few trucks and snatched a few motorcycles at nights. The villagers bound by soft socialites found themselves lily-livered before this group’s brassy and hardened antisocialism.
Their friendship with the Sadhu (who now, after that bout of helplessness, wanted to add some muscles to his holy body) blossomed in the sulphureous air of early March. The ruffian jamboree’s sniggering cynicism was always in discordance with the mitigatory air prevailing in the village. They thus had so few places in the village to spent time in accordance with a gambling den’s immoral immurement. So, every new place on the platter was accepted with full heart. The religioner offered them mound (did he want to settle score with the villagers for their eight-month-long criminal negligence of his religiosity?), and they quickly hitched on to the place.
They proved to be a perfect nuisance to the poor watchman; ate small fish like barbarous sharks; laid snares for the ducks in the vegetation around the pond’s edges. The watchman’s heart, ever muddled in morally piteous considerations, cried dewy duets of mourning whenever some unlucky migratory pintail duck got caught and the butchers took it by its flabbing feathers which were awaiting in this spring to take her back to the Himalayan kingdom. Sometimes they forced him to cook the prey for them, and at other times utilised his utensils and the mud and brick fireplace to do it themselves (because the religious hut of their new-found friend couldn’t be used for the same). In this way their friendship went on blooming like the primroses of spring, while the watchman sulked like a brownish frail fallen leaf of the autumn.
Contorting contours of their vulgar control (or miscontrol) spread their vulture-like dirty tentacles over the mound. Just a cursory look at their rowdyism was enough to affect a pinch at any decent buttock to turn the eyes squint with a purplish spasm on the face.
They came out with heinous-most humour about the watchman. The marauders though met some initial resistance from the dog, but after a few rattling kicks the poor animal understood very well how to behave. These harum-scarums had turned so reckless and rash that whenever they reached the mound, there was a sort of mini riot. The block-heads fought mini-battles among themselves by bursting the firetong near each other’s feet. And when they’d spent all his gun powder, he could only smile guiltily, fearing any other facial expression might find him thrown into the pond.
They were so prattling about their tattles that in a very short period of time the Sadhu came to know about the scandalous side of all the girls and women in the village. It’s however another matter that these were the fabled facts made mountains out of mole hills during those sottishly long idle hours.
From their new elevated hideout they now cast lusty glances at the women who’d brought buffaloes to the pond.
Most of the people in the village, especially the illiterate old women (ever dwelling on disappointments due to the mischievously invasive problems in their families) had come to believe by now that the Sadhu’d occult powers to perform minor miracles. And others who were having a good time, facing no impedance from ill fate or misfortune were convinced that the fearsome exorcist was capable of putting some obstacle in their smoothly running wheel of life, if ever they happened to have a row with him. So, they always played it safe. Conjuration survives on rumour mill, which was gradually catching up speed since his arrival. To top it, his appearance made him seem capable of ugliest of an incantation.
But this group had no such black magic driven fear. Their idea of life was altogether different. Immorally humouring mirth inside them wouldn’t take even a single superstitious sigh even at the mention of most gory of witch-crafty practices performed in the ghostly darkness of a graveyard, the mother of all black magic techniques.    
Yes, the cremation site occupies the most awful place in the dark world of occult powers. Here the gory practices and supernatural arts related to the dug out corpses-–like having sex with them, enslaving their souls for foretelling the future–-have been heard to be prevalent for a very long time. Floating jargon of grisly rituals using human bones and skull still turns most chivalrous of hearts dimly undecided about what to believe and what not.
Some people say they’ve seen one of the most evil practices of black magic, muth kriya (murder by remote control). Cremation sites thus acquire a kind of bewitching and hypnotic aura during the nights and most of the people, even the most courageous ones who normally get ready to empawn their life just like a mere wooden piece on a chess board, don’t dare to imperil their souls for the fear of some coldly callous after-death consequence.
Others swear by the fact that graveyards are the fearful consanguine sites where chakrapujas are performed. In this the dead persons are said to be gathered in a circle and questions are asked to them about the future events. Even in the broad day light the elements of black magic like wine, meat, bones, fish, corn and many other repulsive things, mysteriously scattered along the ashes of the dead, send down fearful chill down the spine of many of us.
This violescent path of witchcraft, which passes over the dark terrain while chanting mantras over the corpses, certainly embales truths, half-truths and pure figs-of-imaginations into a cravenly-babbling puzzlement.
Well, so far so much about the graveyards and much-much more hidden in the long hours of dark nights. The people who assume that they’ve a lot to lose to such evil forces are always fearful of the black magic. So, many of them take shelter under the vigilantism and healing power of the white magic. But these congenitally foolish young ruffians did never think they’d anything to loose. The hoodlums in fact made a mockery of the cremation site many a times.                                                      
One evening, during their long-stretched idle prattling, rote repetition of their buffoonery got hooked to the topic of graveyards.
Like on thousands of other such occasions, one of them started a miniscule tug-of- war among themselves. “I bet he can’t go to the cremation ground after dark,” he pointed to the weakest link in their self-proclaimed chivalrous chain.
The young monster, considered to be a coward in the groups’ rudely mocking bravery, had so much at stake to prove his fearless worthiness.
 “Why not?” he masked a fake jingoistic posturing over his face. “I’ve done it in the past as well.”
“Then let us have a bet,” they chorused an ensnaring gospel.
Hesitant scapegoat thought for a moment. All those clichéd and stereotyped tales about the graveyards flashed in his mind. But, he’d stretched his false hardihood too far. It was just impossible to backtrack now.
Robbing him of even any last chance, one of them put up a proposal, “Well, you can take my pants with you and bury it in the ashes of the old woman who was cremated this noon. We’ll fetch it back tomorrow.”
Springing in his foppishness, he promptly unbuttoned his pants. Grinning like a foe in his boxer shorts, he handed it over to the poor fellow.
Now, he knew that he had to oblige, otherwise they would become more monstrous than even the graveyard ghosts. He thus went, his soul buzzing with funeral oration. With tentative steps he reached the destination. His heart ready to burst out against the lungs’ ghettoisation, knocking and crying, “Please, please let me go out of your ill-fated body, wherein the ghosts’ll dance in a few moments!”
To make it a grisly tryst with the paranormal, they too sneaked in from the other side and sat hidden there.
Under bombastic pot-shots by writhing fear, the fellow was waging a relentlessly grim struggle with his senses. Slowly and slowly he reached the small ashy elevation where the old woman had been cremated during the day. He was damn sure the old witch, who looked so repulsive and spooky while she was alive, was ready to settle scores with him for his misbehaviour to her (there was hardly anyone in the village who hadn’t bore the butt of their jokes and misdemeanour).
As he began to bury the cloth with the help of a small stick of wood spared from burning with the rest of the pyre, one of the hiding vagabonds let out a cry, which sounded an exclusive preserve of the ghosts. The challenger fell down and then ran bellowing in the dark. Perhaps, the ghosts won’t take the trouble of wetting their clothes. Thinking thus, he jumped into a nearby puddle of filthy water.
Next morning all of them went to the spot, picked up the half buried ware, washed it in the greenish, mossy puddle of dirty water in the near vicinity and left the scene without a single hitch.
On another occasion, helplessly led by the crucifying hollering of the mischief, they’d buried an egg in the ashes at night; took it out in the morning and ate its omelette with such ease as if they were the saviours of the world from the sordid tales of black magic and witchcraft.
All of it proves that they considered the Sadhu as someone of their own ilk: no more, no less. It was however another matter that the religioner wasn’t aware of their crematorial escapades, and prided himself for having such influential, fearless fellows in his coterie; though many, many steps below than (not even on the first step of the disciplehood’s staircase) what one can call as pupilage.
The helpless watchman had no power to control such haywire, wanton energy toppling over in high winds. His worthiness as a watchman could thus be questioned on this account. He was also aware of the lessee’s helplessness in this matter. Hence, both of them consoled each other by saying everything was just right.
He didn’t know much about the group’s personal history. One day when he was inside his hut, his neighbour and his friends were enjoying a conversation. They were sitting on a big, broad divan (which they’d brought there for their own convenience) under the banyan’s pleasing shade. He heard somewhat deep and resigned tone of the head hoodlum. It was unusual. In fact, he’d never expected him to be serious. With sober pauses and pronunciation, he was speaking sacerdotally:
“What do you people know about prisons? Nothing!” he was high on opium. “I, who’s spent three years in a jail, know how much effort it takes to spend a day there, when one isn’t in mood. And how time flies when’u get a company according to your mood. When I was sent there, for the first twenty days I was almost dead dumb; couldn’t sense anything except a constant stare at the walls and ceiling. Fearing that I’ll break down or go mad, the havaldar said, ‘He’ll go mad if he isn’t given some opium and other intoxicants.’
“For the next few days I was in very… very heavy drinking… eating tobacco… smoking opium and those pills. And when I came out of the stupor, I found myself amidst strange companions or in fact friends. The friends who made me forget all my cowardly pain. One of them was especially generous to me. The reason? I don’t know why!  But I’m really thankful to him, for he saved my honour. Do’u know, a man like me who’s fucked all those girls, would’ve surely got the very same done to me, had it not been for that friend. Every new entrant is given intoxication pills on the very first day by those friendly inmates. And when he loses his consciousness, he’s sodomised throughout night. Only the rarest of rare are able to save their honour. He saved me. Didn’t allow me to eat that sugar which they put on my chapatti, saying it was the welcome feast. Later he told me the whole story… said, ‘I saved you because you look like my younger brother.’
“People in that hell of a place still think about their families! Then we formed a kind of gang there. Do’u know why? For survival! If you want to save yourself, don’t want to wash others’ clothes and do that entire menial work, don’t want a kick at your shin at each and every step, then you have to become part of a gang. We’d our weapons of convenience. Each and every prisoner! From small nails to knives. In fact one or two were able to sneak in revolvers. Being an influential member of a big gang, I never washed my shorts myself after bath!
“We’d our private cookings at nights. Who cares about these damned households and shops? We ate porridge, pakoras, even mutton and chicken sometimes. One can get anything there. It is a big underhand market. And to purchase something from it one needs money, for which we sold opium at a very, very high price. Ours was quite a rich gang. After that we’d sit down for smoking and drinking and fall asleep only when all these dirty people outside in a free world wake up. My friend Vijay Path knew the reality of these so called good people roaming in a free world. He’d say, ‘They’re bastardly bad. Only we are the good ones. And it being the age of kaliyuga we have been imprisoned here to protect us from those free wolves.’ He was such a nice fellow. ‘Hey you, all of you, cheer up! Only we’re the good citizens of this country. Otherwise why should the government pay for our upkeep?’ he used to say.
“He was in the army. Once he came home, found his mother murdered by his younger brother. The poor woman had come to know about the illicit relationship between her younger son and Vijaypath’s wife. And as it happens, these bad people charged the soldier with murder. Don’t think that he was a fool like us. He knew many bookish things. ‘Do you know why government is keeping us here?’ he’d thunder, ‘Because it considers that we nice fellows are capable of a revolt. We might change the whole set up. If it spends hundred rupees daily for our upkeep here, it doesn’t do any favour to us. It’s all in return of those so many taxes paid by us: house tax, Income tax, Water tax, Sale tax and… and all other taxes. Now it’s obliged to pay them back because we’re really nice people. It just can’t gobble up our dues like all those filthy fools outside; on whose money government is fattening up. It’s just a corrupting deal between the two. The government lets them roam free in return of all that money… black money… which they fill in its pockets. And we who don’t pay the corruption money have been imprisoned here.’”
“What strange places these prisons are?” the watchman thought. “I don’t know what they take from a man and what give him in return? Perhaps, they take away even that small amount of goodness left inside and add to something which is already bursting to its seams.”
The numero uno ruffian had a kind of hermetically sealed prison-vision before his eyes while he was narrating all this.
Each and every word spoken by them was acquainting the religioner with newer and newer depths of the dark, deep and erroneous well inside their souls.
A few days back, seeing them poisonously coiled around his guru’s holy body, a quiescent Bhagte had complained coyly. To this his chronically habitual master answered sermonically:
“Oh Bhagte, for God’s sake, hate the sin not the sinner! They’re not that bad; just a bit astrayed. They can be reformed in a holy company like mine. Do’u think, I’ve any other motive than bringing them on the right path? See, people can say anything about this. They’re after all just common householders who can’t discriminate between a sin and a sinner. We, the people of God, can’t fall in such traps. For us all of you common people are human beings first. One day you’ll realise that I was right. As for myself, for whose reputation you’re worried, I’ m a sandalwood tree gone all pure and holy due to life-long penance. Mild venom in these little snakes can’t affect me.  One day they themselves will be purified.”
                                            *  *  *  * 
There was a thick trunk of sheesham tree lying in the pond’s water just a few metres from the water edge to the village side below the mound. About a dozen water-snakes were usually seen sticking around it in a casually cavalier reptileness; their yellowish feckless hoods popping out of water and all that antiquely ornate length lost below in the greenish water. One or two could be seen in whole length, lying austerely empty on the wood. Some roguishly hissed out their tongues from the big hole at the wood’s end.
The watchman knew a majority of them were almost harmless; just their snaky appearance made them seem proclaiming dangerous averments. But, a snake is a snake. Its mere sight rings the lifeful instinct of danger; afraid of any millisecond’s mistune when it might end up showing its nanosecond’s biting chivalry. The village lads, ever effulgent with castrating rhetoric against these poor reptiles, were always ready to kill them for the sake of antiquated animosity between man and the snake, wherein the former ever afraid of dear life places the latter (all of them and in all types of circumstances) under one rubric––danger.
Till now, the watchman had been successful in saving the reptiles from the children’s impassioned antipathy; though they ran away abusing him, while one or two stood for a few brave moments, cocking snook at him. To this the old man just smiled. But this new gang of clamorous choir boys was beyond the control of even wildest of his dreams. Killing the poor reptiles became their fun-game. Each raid resulted in one or two victims. With revulsioning bellicosity they hung the victims on the keekar twigs and branches around the mound as the trophies of their huntings.
The sight of someone killing a snake was a sacrilegious thing to the religioner. The mythical reptile being a virtual connotation of lord Shiva, who kept a few of them coiled around His body. While the profane fellows committed the crime, his fearful soul silently baulked prayers lest one of them bite him as a punishment for his friends’ crime. Whenever he tried to stop them, the outlandish linchpins doubled their effort, saying they wanted to taste the dizziness of a snake bite. So, if lord Shiva exists, He would definitely effectuate that as a punishment to them, they’d declare.
As for the watchman, all he could do was just leave the place and go across that shrubbery along the pond, where he found snake sloughs shed among the bushes.
“These idiots can’t dare to touch the one here,” he thought, looking at a big tuft of bunchgrass by which was lying a fearsome cast-skin, half out and the other half hidden in the bush.
Sparse and minimalist reflection of his mind promptly estimated that it must be a big black snake. “It can single-handedly teach all of them a lesson,” he thought.
Driven by its canine vigilantism, the dog drollingly harped on its smelling prowess along the slough. There was a loudly violescent hiss from the bush. The dog fell back and then started barking to the capacity of its old lungs. The reptile let out a barrage of rattling and ranting hisses.
“Devil of a snake it is!” the old man jumped away to safety. “Seems angry after casting away its old garment! Aah, only if it comes to the rescue of its weak brethren there! Poor fellows, can’t hiss, don’t bite; only surrender meekly to be killed.”
His zig-zag gaze puzzlingly criss-crossed the bushy maze, then, caught sight of the freshly smooth, shiny black body of the reptile. His heart, leading a solitary life, for a moment sent a fearsome shudder. The dog further backtracked.
“This’s the law of nature. Might is right!” he sighed and moved further backwards.
(To the thick-heads, their rudely mocking manoeuvres were nothing but decent symbols of power and might.)
“Bad humans are even more dangerous than this snake.”
The tramps were the genesis of this thought. Their hisses seemed more venomous: hurling embitteringly farcical jokes at him; sometimes holding him in funniest of ways (which was equally humiliating, given his age); eating fish at will; killing water snakes at the mere fig of an idiotic fancy; kicking the dog whenever he happened to bark at them (even by mischance).
Their host at the mound found most of these harebrained acts quite pleasing. He, perhaps, felt obliged for being spared of this free-willed treatment of theirs, which spared none from snakes to human beings.
Sometimes, once again doing the rote repetition of their rampaging bumpkinness, they climbed up the banyan and vanished in its big, broad leaves. Their presence there could only be gauged by loudly disharmonic songs, whose littlest of musicity harped on the same string of some delusional insanity. While coming down from the singing recesses, someone would volunteer to play Tarzan among the tree’s flying roots. Hanging hilariousity of this dolt would have pinpricked at the inflated ego of a monkey.