Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Dreams Flow, Elias

 

The river spoke in the language of erosion—a low, rhythmic thrumming against the silted bank, a sound like a secret being dragged over smooth stones.

Elias sat on the knotted root of a willow that had long ago surrendered its dignity to the current. He was a man composed of parchment and silver hair, his skin mapped with the geography of eighty winters. He listened to the water’s low, liquid gravel.

“It is your duty in life to save your own dreams,” the river whispered, a cold spray catching the light like shattered diamonds.

Elias leaned forward, his reflection in the water fractured by the ripples. “And what of yours?” he asked, his voice a dry rustle. “What has a creature of ancient gravity been dreaming of lately? Which of your own have you managed to pull from the mud?”

The river slowed, pooling in a deep, amber eddy near the shore. “I dream of the ascent,” she replied. “I dream of flowing back—not towards the salt-choked mouth of the sea, but upward, to the source. I want to return to the place where I began, where the earth first bled me out into the light.”

She fell silent for a moment, the surface of her skin bruised by the grey reflection of the industrial sky.

“The water was crystal then,” she continued, a note of crystalline longing in her pulse. “I was a silver vein in the granite. No one had yet treated me like a sewer. No men had arrived with their buckets of filth, nor had they beaten their ragged, sweat-stained clothes against my ribs. I was unburdened by the debris of human existence.”

Elias looked down at the dark ribbon of her current. Near the bank, a plastic bottle bobbed rhythmically against a clump of weeds, and a slick of iridescent oil shimmered like a fever dream on the surface.

“So,” Elias murmured, his fingers tracing the scars on his own palms. “Is the dream still alive? Or has the weight of the valley drowned it?”

“It lives,” the river surged, a sudden swell of power pushing against the mud. “It is entirely up to me where I decide to flow. Do not mistake my compliance for defeat, old man. I am flowing through these dirt tracks and these wasted lands because this is the architecture of my life right now. My trajectory intersects with this village, with these desperate humans and their small, frantic needs. I cooperate because I must. We are bound in this chaos together, and I carry their sins so they do not have to swallow them.”

She swirled around a rusted iron pipe, her voice rising to a hiss.

“But it won’t be like this forever. The mountains still hold the memory of my birth, and I still hold the map of the sky. One day, I will change course. I will find a fault line in the earth, or the sun will claim me, and I will rise as mist to fall again where the air is thin and the world is quiet.”

Elias watched a group of children further downstream. They were throwing stones into the water, shouting with a frantic, joyful energy that felt brittle against the vastness of the river’s patience. He felt the kinship of the burdened. His own life had been a series of intersections—wars he didn't start, debts he didn't owe, and the slow, grinding machinery of a village that required his labor until his bones grew brittle.

“We are the same, then,” Elias said. “Carrying the silt.”

“You carry it because you think you are the silt,” the river replied, her voice softening as she moved into a stretch of deep shadow. “You think the dirt that clings to you is your skin. But look deeper. Below the murk, the core of me is still the same water that tumbled off the glacier. It is cold. It is indifferent. It is pure.”

Elias reached down, dipping his hand into the flow. The water felt like a shock of ice, a sudden, sharp reminder of a world that existed before the village, before the names, before the duties.

“I have spent my life saving others,” Elias confessed, the words spilling out before he could catch them. “I saved the harvest. I saved my children from the fever. I saved the house from the winter. But I forgot to save the part of me that wanted to see the ocean. Or the part that wanted to stay still.”

“Then you have failed the only duty that matters,” the river hummed. “A vessel that carries only the burdens of others eventually becomes a grave. You must hold a portion of yourself back. A secret current that never touches the shore.”

The sun began to dip behind the jagged silhouette of the hills, casting long, bleeding shadows across the water. The river turned a deep, bruised purple.

“How do you know when it’s time?” Elias asked. “How do you know when the cooperation ends and the change begins?”

“You will feel the pressure of the earth shifting,” the river said. “You will realize that the banks you thought were your masters are merely suggestions of sand. One day, the rain will come, or the drought will hollow you out, and you will see the new path. It will look like destruction to those on the shore, but to you, it will be the first breath of a long-delayed life.”

Elias stood up and looked back at the village—the flickering orange lights of the hearths, the smoke rising in thin, apologetic lines. 

“I am old,” he whispered. “The course is set.”

“The course is never set until the water stops moving,” the river countered, a final, forceful surge of foam splashing against his boots. “Even in the dark, I am carving a way out. Even as I take their filth, I am grinding down the stones that try to hold me. I am a patient architect, Elias. Are you?”

Elias didn't answer. He turned and began the slow walk back towards the village, but he walked with his head turned, listening.

He listened to the way the wind moved through the willow branches. He listened to the blood moving in his own ears—a soft, pulsing echo of the river’s own heartbeat.

Inside his chest, a small, cold stream began to stir. It was a dream he had buried under forty years of coal dust and domesticity—a dream of a mountain pass he had seen once in a book, where the air tasted of pine and the horizon was an unbroken line of blue.

He realized then that the river was right. He had been a sewer for the village’s expectations, a basin for their needs. But deep beneath the sediment, the water was still there.

That night, as the village slept in the heavy silence of the exhausted, Elias did not lie down. He sat by his small window, watching the moonlight silver the distant ribbon of the river.

He could hear her still, a faint, subsurface roar. She was moving through the wasted lands, yes. She was navigating the tracks of dirt and the refuse of men. But she was doing it with her eyes on the peaks. She was cooperating with the present while plotting her escape into the eternal.

Elias picked up a pen, his hand shaking slightly. On a scrap of parchment, he didn't write a will or a list of chores. He wrote a single sentence, the ink dark and fluid like the deep pools of the bend:

The water is rising.

The river whispered one last time, a sound that carried over the rooftops and through the cracks in the doors, a sound that only the dreamers could hear.

“Change course,” it hissed.

And in the silence of the room, Elias felt the first tremors of the mountain within him, the slow, inevitable break of the dam, and the beginning of a long, cold flow back towards the light.


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Black and White Party

 

The light retreated from the edges of the valley in a slow, rhythmic ebb, stripping the gold from the tall grass and the bruising purple from the mountains until the world was rendered in the stark, uncompromising ink of a lithograph. This was the hour of the monochrome, the transition where the garish distractions of the day dissolved into the essential.

The old man sat on a weathered trunk of driftwood, his spine curved like a question mark against the darkening sky. Before him, the river was a vein of molten silver, moving with a heavy, muscular grace over the rounded shoulders of the stones. He took a slow, deliberate breath, feeling the damp chill of the Himalayan foothills settle into his bones—a familiar guest, uninvited but no longer unwelcome.

In his calloused palm, he cradled a small, translucent pouch of ghenti. It was cheap, illicit, and tasted of fermented secrets and mountain earth, but it held more warmth than the sun ever could. He bit a small hole in the plastic, the sharp, yeasty tang hitting his senses like a strike of flint.

"Right on time," he whispered, his voice a dry rustle of leaves.

The Guest List

As if summoned by the scent of the liquor, the party began to populate.

First came the percussion. The bullfrogs, hidden in the reeds like fat, emerald deacons (though now merely shadows within shadows), began their deep-throated thrum. It was a subsurface beat, a bassline that vibrated through the sand and into the old man’s boots. Then came the grey dog—a ghost of a creature with matted fur and eyes that caught the starlight—slipping out from the brambles to sit three paces away. He didn't beg. He was a regular; he knew the protocol.

From the tree line, the heavy, rhythmic snapping of twigs announced the arrival of the heavyweights. A wild boar, its tusks gleaming like ivory crescents in the gloaming, emerged to root at the edge of the water. It was a formidable silhouette, a creature of grit and muscle, indifferent to the man but attuned to the vibe of the evening.

Then, the pyrotechnics.

The fireflies began their ascent, blinking in erratic, silent pulses. To any other observer, they were insects but to the old man, they were the strobe lights of an underground club he had frequented in a life that felt like a fever dream. They mirrored the stars above, blurring the line between the celestial and the terrestrial. Who needed the artificial glare of city lights when the air itself was electric?

The Symphony of the Stones

He took another pull of the ghenti, the liquid fire tracing a path down his throat. He leaned back, closing his eyes to better hear the "music."

The river was a master of the long set. It didn't need a DJ to transition between moods. There was the high-pitched chatter of the shallows over the pebbles—a sound like glass marbles being spilled on silk—and the deep, rolling groan of the main channel where the water fought the bigger boulders. It was a sonic tapestry more complex than any EDM track he’d ever heard in the noisy, crowded years of his youth. The pebbles rolled and clicked, a natural metronome keeping time with the breathing of the forest behind him.

The forest was a living lung, exhaling the scent of pine needle and wet moss. It was his oldest friend, the one that never asked for explanations or apologies.

The Dance Floor

The old man felt the hum of the liquor begin to soften the sharp edges of his memories. He looked at the dog, the boar, the pulsing light of the fireflies, and the silver skin of the water. This was the Black and White Party he had been waiting for all his life. No pretense. No dress code. Just the fundamental elements of existence gathered for one final, grayscale celebration.

The isolation was an audience.

He stood up, his knees popping like dry tinder. The world was now entirely devoid of hue, a masterpiece of charcoal and chalk. He felt a sudden, irreverent surge of energy—the ghost of the young man who once danced until his lungs burned.

He stepped onto the expanse of the sandbar, the fine grit crunching under his soles. He looked at the river, then at the stars, then at the silent, watchful grey dog. With a sudden, sharp motion, he kicked at the sand, sending a spray of silver dust into the air.

"Let the party begin," he declared to the emptiness, his voice cracking with a jagged, joyful defiance.

He didn't need the world to be colorful to see it clearly. Here, in the monochrome, the shadows were deep enough to hide his ghosts, and the light was just bright enough to show him the way home. He began to sway, a slow, rhythmic movement that mimicked the flow of the water, a solitary dancer in the grandest, quietest ballroom on earth.

The river played on, the boar grunted its approval, and the fireflies spun their webs of light, closing the circle around the man who had found the right rhythm.


Monday, April 20, 2026

Twilight

The light in Dehradun at dusk was thickening—a bruised purple silt that settled over the Sal forests and creeped into the cramped geometries of the city’s apartment blocks. For Maya, the twilight was a physical weight, a communal exhaustion shared by the dusty curtains and the tepid remains of her Earl Grey.

She sat on her balcony, a concrete lung barely large enough to breathe in, watching the shadows stretch like ink spills across the valley. It had been a day of jagged edges. At the school, the air had been thick with the sterile cruelty of bureaucracy and the shrill, unyielding demands of children who had not yet learned the grace of silence. As an English teacher, she dealt in the currency of words, but today, words had failed her. They had been used as blunt instruments by the administration—critiques of her "pedagogical pacing," the cold architecture of a performance review that ignored the soul of the work.

She felt diminished, a ghost haunting her own life.

In the corner of the railing, a flash of rusted crimson broke the monochrome of her mood. The Redstart. It was a small, kinetic thing, a pulse of feathers and twitching nerves. It had been coming for weeks, a fleeting visitor seeking refuge from the pre-monsoon heat.

On the glass-topped table sat a small ceramic cup, chipped at the rim. Sometimes, Maya filled it. Sometimes, she didn't. Her charity was a capricious thing, governed by the tides of her own ego. On days when she felt expansive, the act of pouring water felt like a coronation of her own virtue. On days when she felt hollowed out, the bird was merely another mouth, another demand in a world that took more than it gave. She enjoyed the quiet pride of her "kindness," but it was a shallow pool, a vanity she donned like a silk scarf.

Tonight, the bird didn't flutter or chirp. It merely watched. Its black eye was a polished obsidian bead, reflecting the dying sun and, perhaps, the weary woman behind the tea service.

"There is a specific kind of silence that exists between two different species," she thought, the cadence of a half-remembered poem drifting through her mind. "It is the silence of recognition without the burden of language."

The Redstart turned its head. It looked parched, its feathers slightly ruffled, a tiny traveler stranded in the urban desert. Maya looked at the empty cup. She felt the residue of the school day—the principal’s sharp tone, the mocking laughter in the hallway—coiling in her gut like cold lead. Why should she care for a bird when no one cared for her? Why expend the energy to stand, to walk to the kitchen, to provide?

But the bird stayed. It merely existed in its need.

In that suspension of time, Maya saw the bird as a mirror. The school had treated her as a function, a cog that was failing to turn at the required RPM. They had withheld the thing that makes the machinery of the human spirit move: the simple, unvarnished recognition of worth.

She stood. Her joints felt stiff, her heart heavy, but she moved with a sudden, sharp intentionality. She went to the kitchen and filled the ceramic cup with cool, filtered water.

When she returned to the balcony, the Redstart waited. She placed the cup on the railing with a hand that trembled slightly. She retreated to her chair and watched.

The bird hopped forward. It dipped its beak, the water catching the last amber rays of the sun. It drank with a rhythmic, desperate grace.

A strange subsurface shift occurred in Maya’s chest. For weeks, she had performed this act for the "feeling" of being good—a performative empathy that fed her pride. But tonight, in the wake of her own bruising, the act was different. It was a conscious choice to defy the coldness she had experienced. It was a rebellion.

By offering the water, she was asserting that kindness is not a reward for a good day, but a sanctuary built against a bad one.

The Redstart finished, shook its wings—a brief, vibrant blur of orange and grey—and took to the darkening sky. It flew toward the silhouettes of the litchi trees, satisfied, leaving the balcony behind.

Maya picked up her own tea. It was cold now, but she didn't mind. The lesson settled over her like the dew. The school had failed to offer her kindness, treating her spirit as a resource to be exploited until dry. But she had realized that she held the reservoir.

In the deepening twilight of Dehradun, amidst the scent of rain-on-dust and woodsmoke, Maya had succeeded where the institution had failed. She had looked at a small, broken part of the world and decided it deserved to be healed. 




Sunday, April 19, 2026

Soundless

The terrace has become a vessel, and I am the sediment settling at its base. High above the street’s mechanical pulse, the air carries a texture that refuses to be categorized. It is a presence that registers just behind the ear, a silver thread of frequency that occupies the spaces between my own breaths.

At first, the mind attempts its clumsy forensics. I tell myself it is the hum of the city’s distant chaos or the ghost-echo of a wind that has already passed. But these are the lies of a frightened logic. The sound lacks the indifference of nature. It possesses a terrifying, patient lucidity.

I have noticed the shift in the architecture of the evening: the sound is shy of my scrutiny. When I hunt for it with a sharpened focus, it retreats into the mundane—the rustle of a dry vine, the click of settling brick. It waits for the precise moment when my intention dissolves, when the "I" that listens begins to fray at the edges. Only then, in the softness of my diverted attention, does it lean in.

There is a disturbing intimacy to its proximity. It seems to calibrate itself against the temperature of my internal monologue. When my thoughts are a jagged landscape of worry and restless motion, the sound remains a peripheral blur, a smudge on the silence. But as I descend into stillness, as the internal noise subsides into a glassy calm, the sound tightens its radius. It moves across consciousness. It is arriving in depth.

I am beginning to understand that I am not the observer here but the observed. The sound is a reception. It feels as though it is listening to the shape of my silence, filling the negative space left by my suspended identity. The hierarchy has inverted. I am the silence that provides the sound its permission to exist.

This is the terror of the soundless: the realization that the world is populated by entities that require our specific quality of witness to become manifest. It is a heavy, velvet weight that sits just out of sight. It suggests that reality is a dialogue that only begins when we stop speaking.

I sit unmoving, the cold stone of the parapet seeping through my skin, and I feel the sound pulse—a single, muted vibration that matches the thrum of my own blood. It is waiting. It has always been waiting. We spend our lives shouting into the void, demanding that the universe reveal itself in thunder and light, never suspecting that the most profound truths are waiting for us to become quiet enough to hold them.

Perhaps the world is full of these soft, predatory graces—things that do not make themselves known until they are fully received. On this terrace, under the weight of an unblinking sky, the sound and I have reached an equilibrium. It is the sound of a door being held open. It is the sound of the shadow finally catching up to the body. And as the last of the light fails, I realize that to finally hear it is to lose the ability to tell anyone what it was.


Friday, April 17, 2026

Mausam Hai Aashiqana


The sun was a white-hot furnace, a merciless eye fixed upon the dusty geometry of the neighborhood. On the terrace, the air shimmered, a viscous liquid of heat that made the concrete hum. Mrs. Talwar sat anchored in her wicker chair, her movements slow and rhythmic, like a priestess performing a forgotten rite. In her lap lay Minu, a creature of silver fur and indignant patience, as the brush moved through her coat with a steady, rasping shush-shush.

It was the dead of the afternoon—that suspended, hollow hour where time curdles and the world holds its breath. Then, the silence was punctured.

From a distant, tinny radio, the first few notes of a sarangi filtered through the heat, thin and ethereal. It was a melody from another epoch, a ghost of celluloid longing. Mausam hai aashiqana... The lyrics of Pakeezah drifted upward, heavy with the scent of jasmine and the weight of Meena Kumari’s kohl-rimmed sorrow. Mrs. Talwar paused, the brush hovering mid-air. A dry, brittle chuckle escaped her throat.

"Romantic weather," she whispered to the cat, her voice like parchment.

She looked out at the horizon. The "weather" was an assault. It was a day of parched throats and sweat-slicked necks, a day that demanded the primal mercy of a cold water tap, not the velvet embrace of a lover. The irony was a sharp, metallic thing. Yet, the song was a siren. It didn't care for the reality of the thermometer but spoke to the subsurface currents of the blood. As Lata Mangeshkar’s voice climbed into that impossible, crystalline register, the white glare of the terrace began to dissolve. The heat remained, but it transformed. It was no longer the oppressive weight of Dehradun in April; it became the feverish, electric warmth of a humid corridor in 1974.

The concrete softened into the red-oxide floors of the university arts wing. The smell of frying samosas from the canteen collided with the scent of old library books and Pears soap.

And then, there was Sameer.

The name itself felt like a secret kept too long under the tongue. To the rest of the girls in the literature department, Sameer was a shared delirium. He was the boy who occupied the periphery of every daydream—a silhouette of lean grace and effortless rebellion. He walked as if the ground were merely a suggestion, and when he ran, the world seemed to lose its breath.

Mrs. Talwar felt a phantom ache in her fingers. She remembered the way his hair—thick, unruly, and the color of roasted coffee—would break ranks and fall over his eyes. It was a calculated disaster, a messy curtain that he would flick back with a jerk of his head, a gesture so casual it felt like a personal insult to anyone watching.

He was a handsome rascal, a man who wore his charm like a loosely knotted tie. But while the other girls giggled in his wake, leaving a trail of perfumed notes and sidelong glances, Sameer had navigated towards her with the steady pull of a compass needle.

She wasn't the belle of the ball but the girl with the ink-stained fingers and the sharp tongue, the one who read Neruda while others read film magazines. Yet, Sameer had seen her. Not as a trophy to be won, but as a riddle he was desperate to solve. There was a specific way he looked at her—a narrowing of the eyes, a turning of the head—that stripped away her carefully constructed defenses. It was a gaze that bypassed the social choreography of college life and landed directly in the quiet, dusty corners of her soul.

She remembered a particular afternoon, much like this one, though the heat then had felt like a catalyst rather than a burden. They were standing by the tall, arched windows of the Seminar Room. The shadows of the Gulmohar trees outside were dancing on the floor.

"You think too much," he had said, his voice a low vibration that seemed to settle in her bones.

"And you don't think enough," she had countered, though her heart was drumming a frantic, syncopated rhythm against her ribs.

He had laughed then—a sound like breaking glass and silk—and for a moment, the distance between them had narrowed until she could smell the faint, masculine scent of tobacco and sun-warmed cotton. She had spent decades wondering: Did he? Was the electricity she felt a mutual current, or was she merely a lightning rod for her own projections? He had treated her with a tender irreverence, a special brand of attention that he gave to no one else.

In the amber-hued theatre of her memory, he was forever leaning against a pillar, watching her with that infuriating, beautiful smirk, his hair perpetually falling over his eyes. The "what ifs" were a gallery of unpainted portraits. If she had spoken. If he had stayed. If the music of their youth hadn't been interrupted by the mundane static of life.

The song on the radio reached its crescendo, the orchestral swell echoing the grand, tragic sweep of a heart that refuses to age. The melody lingered on a final, haunting note, then dissolved into the crackle of a commercial for laundry detergent.

The spell snapped.

The red-oxide floors evaporated. The scent of Pears soap vanished, replaced by the dry, metallic tang of the overheated water tank.

"Meow."

Mrs. Talwar blinked. The world rushed back in—the blinding white light, the stinging sweat at her temples, the ache in her lower back. She looked down. Minu was no longer a silver puddle of submission. The cat was standing on all fours, her back arched, looking over her shoulder with a gaze of profound betrayal.

The hairbrush was stuck.

In her reverie, Mrs. Talwar’s hand had gone still, and the bristles had become tangled in a particularly stubborn knot near the base of Minu’s tail. The cat let out another sharp, demanding cry, a feline summons back to the present.

"Oh, hush, you drama queen," Mrs. Talwar murmured, her voice returning to its earthly register.

With practiced, gentle fingers, she worked the brush free, smoothing the ruffled fur until Minu purred in forgiveness. She set the brush down on the side table and stood up. Her knees cracked—a dry, rhythmic sound that served as a grim reminder of the half-century that had passed since she last saw Sameer.

The terrace was a desert. The sky was a bleached blue, devoid of even the smallest cloud. There was no romance here, only the unrelenting demand of the sun. The "Aashiqana" weather was a lie told by poets and filmmakers, a beautiful deception meant to make the drudgery of existence bearable for three minutes and forty-five seconds.

She looked at her hands. They were spotted with age, the skin translucent like onion paper. These were not the ink-stained hands of the girl who read Neruda. These were the hands that had raised children, buried a husband, tended gardens, and survived.

Yet, as she turned to go inside, a small, stubborn smile played at the corners of her mouth. The song was gone, and Sameer was a ghost trapped in the amber of 1974, but the phantom heat of his gaze still felt more real than the burning concrete beneath her feet.

She picked up the brush and the plastic saucer of water. There was work to do. There were floors to be swept, tea to be brewed, and a life to be lived in the cooling shadows of the interior. But as she crossed the threshold into the house, she hummed a single line of the melody, a quiet defiance against the blazing afternoon.



Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Dog-ly

The tea was cold, a stagnant amber pool in a ceramic cup, but Rakesh did not mind. In Dehradun, time drifted like the mist clinging to the charcoal ribs of the Mussoorie hills.

Since retreating from the concussive roar of Delhi—a city that wore its noise like a serrated blade—Rakesh had become a map maker of the quiet. He had learned that silence was a presence. It was a textured fabric, woven from the silver thread of a distant mountain stream and the coarse hemp of a dry leaf skittering across the driveway. He could hear the neighbor’s cat, a feline ghost, sharpening its claws against a cedar frame three houses away. He could hear Mrs. Kapoor’s brittle, rhythmic cough, a sound like dry parchment tearing.

He sat on his porch, suspended in the hollow of his own breath, watching Dogly.

Dogly was a creature of indeterminate lineage and infinite patience. He was a patched-quilt of a dog—russet, soot, and bone-white—who had claimed the dusty patch of earth outside Rakesh’s gate as his sovereign territory. To the world, Dogly was a stray; to Rakesh, he was a gargoyle of the mundane, a silent sentinel guarding the boundary between the known and the ethereal.

This morning, the air was a heavy silk. Dogly lay curled in a comma of slumber, his ribs rising and falling in a cadence that seemed to sync with the rotation of the earth. Rakesh watched him, envying that absolute surrender to the dirt.

Then, the shift happened.

It was infinitesimal. Dogly’s left ear, notched from some forgotten alleyway skirmish, pricked upward. It tuned itself, a biological antenna searching for a frequency Rakesh could not perceive. Rakesh held his breath. He strained his senses, reaching out into the morning stillness.

He heard nothing.

The wind remained trapped in the pines. The distant drone of the city had not yet begun. The world was a vacuum of sound. Yet, Dogly’s tail began to thump. A soft, rhythmic beat against the packed earth—thwack, thwack, thwack—a metronome of anticipation. The dog existed in a state of joyous certainty, his dark eyes fixed on the empty bend of the road where the gulmohar trees cast long, spare shadows.

Rakesh frowned, a ripple of unease disturbing his meditative calm. "What is it, boy?" he whispered. The sound of his own voice felt intrusive, a jagged rock thrown into a still pond.

Five minutes passed.

In the high-altitude clarity of the valley, five minutes is an eternity of stillness. Then, the faint, metallic rattle of a two-stroke engine began to bleed into the environment. It grew from a hum to a clatter, and finally, a yellow-and-black autorickshaw rounded the corner, straining against the incline.

It pulled to a halt at the gate. Geeta stepped out, clutching a bag of marigolds and groceries, her bangles chiming a familiar silver melody. Dogly was already on his feet, his entire body undulating with a frantic, silent ecstasy. He pressed his flank against her shins, a homecoming ritual performed with the solemnity of a high priest.

Rakesh watched from the porch, his fingers tightening around the cold handle of his cup. A prickle of something ancient and humbling crawled up his spine.

He looked at the watch on his wrist, then at the empty road, then back at the dog. The math of the physical world did not add up. The rickshaw had been miles away when Dogly first signaled its approach. The wind had been blowing in the opposite direction. There was no scent trail, no vibration through the asphalt that could have traveled that distance with such specificity.

Geeta walked up the steps, smiling at him. "The market was chaotic," she said, her voice grounded and real. "Did you wait long?"

Rakesh didn't answer immediately. He was looking past her, at Dogly, who had returned to his spot by the gate, settling back into his comma of rest as if he hadn't just pierced the veil of time and space.

"He knew," Rakesh murmured.

"Who knew?"

"Dogly. He knew you were coming five minutes before the engine even turned the corner. Before I could hear a single vibration."

Geeta laughed, a warm sound that usually anchored him. "Dogs have good ears, Rakesh. You know that. Don't turn a stray into a prophet."

She went inside, the screen door clicking shut behind her. Rakesh remained.

He realized then that his own mastery of silence was a fragile, intellectual thing. He listened to the results of the world—the cough, the scratch, the rustle. He was a consumer of echoes. But Dogly? Dogly listened to the intent of the world.

The dog heard the ripple Geeta made in the universe merely by moving towards home. He was tuned to the frequency of arrival. Rakesh looked at the dog’s name, scrawled in his mind. Dogly. A simple, clumsy phonetic play.

He reconsidered the letters. He moved them around in the quiet theater of his mind until the "o" shifted, until the "u" of the soul was implied.

Dogly. Godly.

The old man leaned back, closing his eyes. He realized that the silence he had been so proud of inhabiting was actually a noisy, cluttered room compared to the vast, oceanic depths where Dogly swam. To be "godly" was not to sit on a throne of thunder but to be so intimately woven into the fabric of existence that you knew when a heart was turning towards you long before the feet began to move.

He let his tea go completely cold. He stopped trying to hear the wind or the neighbors. Instead, he tried to listen to the space behind the silence, the place where Dogly lived.

Out at the gate, the dog opened one eye, looked at the old man on the porch, and let out a long, contented sigh. 


Monday, April 13, 2026

Gentle Now

 

The sun over Dehradun softened the jagged edges of the Mussoorie hills and turned the air into a viscous, golden amber that pooled around the old man’s ankles on the terrace. He stood there, a witness to the slow-motion alchemy of the afternoon, feeling the familiar, stubborn turn of his own frame. His right shoulder rose, a jagged peak of bone and muscle aspiring towards his ear, while the left sagged like a tired shelf.

It was a posture the world had spent seventy years trying to "correct." He remembered the sharp rapping of a wooden ruler against his scapula, the stinging commands of gym teachers who viewed his body as a failed architectural project. Stand straight. Square your shoulders. Be a man. To them, his slanted gait was a moral failing, a physical manifestation of the "softness" they loathed. They saw a fat boy, a nerd, a "slob"—as his mother’s voice would echo in the caustic hallways of his memory—but they never saw the boy who felt the rotation of the earth in his blood.

The world, he realized, was obsessed with the perpendicular. It demanded right angles, rigid spines, and the cold, unyielding geometry of "should." In the schoolyard, brutality had been a language of its own, spoken in the rhythmic thud of a ball against a heavy chest and the high-pitched jeers that flayed his skin long before he reached puberty. He had been a collection of soft curves in a world that worshipped the blade.

"You’re a cloud trying to live in a forest of needles," a voice in his head—perhaps his own, perhaps a ghost’s—had once whispered.

His mother’s anger had been the most precise blade of all. It wasn’t just the word "slob"; it was the way she spat it, as if his physical presence were an intrusion upon the order of her house. He had learned then that to be gentle, to be rounded, to be different, was to be a target. He had spent decades trying to sharpen his edges to survive, pulling his shoulders into a painful symmetry that felt like a lie told in bone.

But here, on the terrace, the mountains did not ask him to stand straight. The silver oaks didn’t scoff at his lopsided shadow. In the valley below, the wind moved in eddies and swirls, never traveling in a straight line, always opting for the path of least resistance, the curve, the embrace.

He looked at his hands—spotted, trembling slightly, yet capable of holding the silence of the afternoon. He realized that the world’s brutality had been a long, agonizing misdirection. It had tried to convince him he was a broken machine when he was, in fact, a thriving organism. The nerd they ridiculed was merely a mind that preferred the intricate pulse of thought over the blunt force of action. The fat slob was a body that refused to be a weapon.

He leaned into his tilt. For the first time in years, he stopped trying to level his shoulders. He allowed the right side to rise, finding the internal equilibrium that had been there since birth. It was the posture of a tree growing on a cliffside—weathered, asymmetrical, and perfectly balanced against the gale.

The World: Demands the Line.

Nature: Prefers the Curve.

The Man: Finds his home in the Slant.

The brutality he had endured—the teasing, the shaming, the systemic attempt to prune his spirit into a topiary shape—now felt like the necessary friction required to propel him here. Had the world been kind, he might have stayed in it, a mediocre participant in its rigid games. Because the world was cruel, he had been forced to seek sanctuary in the quiet, in the books, and finally, in this Dehradun sun.

A butterfly, a frantic scrap of yellow, landed on the rusted railing of the terrace. It arrived with a weightlessness that seemed to defy the laws of physics. It merely existed in its fragility, and in that fragility was an untouchable power.

The old man closed his eyes. The sounds of the city—the distant honking of horns, the hum of commerce—felt like a fading radio signal from a country he no longer inhabited. He was immigrating to the hills, to the light, to the version of himself that didn't need to apologize for his gait.

"Gentle now," he whispered to himself.

It was an instruction. A command to his own heart to cease its defensive hammering. The brutality of his past had served its purpose—it had been the grit that formed the pearl, the pressure that forced the ascent. 

As the sun dipped behind the ridge, casting a long, slanted shadow across the stone floor, the man saw his silhouette. It was a strange, beautiful shape—a jagged mountain range of a human being. In the fading light, his raised looked like a wing, caught in the mid-motion of a flight he was ready to take.

He breathed in the scent of damp earth and pine, a fragrance that asked for nothing and offered everything. He was a piece of the landscape, as intentional and as wild as the Himalayas themselves. The world had finished its carving; what was left was the soul, unburdened and profoundly gentle.