Road to Mussoorie
The road to Mussoorie stirred. It was the schoolchildren who woke it — small clusters of them, satchels bouncing against their shoulders, voices tangled in homework and cricket scores and the possibility of rain. Beyond them the hills waited in clouds, patient and half-hidden, while the smell of last night’s monsoon clung to the earth, rising each time a foot presses the wet ground. Outside a shop no bigger than a doorway, someone turned up a radio. Kabhi Kabhie mere dil mein… The song arrived with the morning light — unbidden, already familiar. The children walked on. Songs were nothing new to them. Ahead lay gates, friends, the long unspooling of a school day. But one boy slowed down. He was round-faced, small, his bag too large for his shoulders, and something in this melody stopped him mid-step without permission. He did not know the singer. He did not know the film. He only knew that the music has asked him to listen, and that he must. For a few seconds the road dissol...