The wind in the Doon valley arrives as an inheritance, a heavy, ancestral breathing that settles into the cracks of the hillside. Lal-da lived within this breath. To the village, he was "disturbed," a word they used like a blunt tool to categorize the silence he carried. But to Lal-da, the silence was a presence, as thick and textured as the grey mist that clung to the Sal trees at dawn.
Each morning, he descended from his cabin—a small, crumbling geometry of wood and stone—to the construction sites where the earth was being torn open for new foundations. He worked with a rhythmic, devastating efficiency. He moved with the mountain's own patience, carrying bags of cement as if they were sleeping children, his lean frame absorbing the weight until his skin was coated in a fine, silver-grey shroud of dust. He did not speak to the other laborers.
When the sun began its bruised descent behind the jagged spine of the Mussoorie hills, the contractor would approach him. The man, smelling of cheap tobacco and restless registers, would ask, "What is your rate today, Lal-da? What do I owe you?"
Lal-da would stop. He would turn his face, etched with the map of a thousand suns, and stare. It was a blankness that unsettled the contractor—a gaze that seemed to look through the man, through the currency, through the very notion of debt. It was the stare of a deep, still pool reflecting a sky the contractor had forgotten how to see.
"Food," Lal-da would eventually say, the word barely a ripple.
The contractor, relieved to settle the account so cheaply, would hand over a bundle: thick, charred rotis and a tin of watery dal, perhaps an onion or a single, defiant green chili. Lal-da would take the bundle with a slow, reverent grace. He bundled the contents into a faded cotton cloth, his fingers moving with a meticulous tenderness, and began the long climb back.
The village had been without electricity for seven days. The poles stood like spare remains along the winding road, their wires humming with nothing but the wind. As Lal-da reached his cabin, the world was already dissolving into the indigo of a Himalayan night. There was no click of a switch, no artificial amber to push back the shadows.
He entered his room, the air inside smelling of dry pine and old rain. He sat on the floor, his back against the rough-hewn wall, and unwrapped his meal in the absolute dark.
He ate by touch.
The texture of the grain against his thumb, the warmth of the dal, the sharp, sudden sting of the onion—it was a sensory ritual. Outside, the mountain wind began its nightly threnody, shrieking through the gorges and whistling through the gaps in his door. To anyone else, the sound was a warning of isolation, a reminder of the vast, uncaring scale of the peaks. To Lal-da, it was a conversation. He chewed slowly, his jaw moving in time with the gusts, as if he were consuming the night itself.
He was a man who had stripped away the "shabby divine" of societal expectation until only the divine remained. He knew the coordinates of his own soul in the dark.
Once, a neighbor, carrying a kerosene lantern that cast flickering, nervous shadows, had stopped by the open door.
"Lal-da?" the neighbor had called out, squinting into the blackness of the cabin. "Are you alright in there? Living like this... it isn’t right. How are you faring?"
Lal-da had looked up, his eyes catching the tiniest fracture of the lantern’s light, glowing for a second like a forest animal’s. He didn't complain about the darkness or the cold or the ache in his lower back from the cement bags. He didn't mention the hunger that gnawed at his stomach before the contractor paid him.
"I am very good, thanks," he said.
The voice was humanized, stripped of the jagged edges of performative suffering. It was the voice of a man who had found a clearing in the thicket of human consciousness and decided to stay there.
The neighbor retreated, shaking his head, the lantern-light retreating with him until the cabin was once again claimed by the velvet grip of the night.
Lal-da finished his meal and wiped his hands on his trousers. He had the floor, which was an extension of the mountain itself. He lay down, the hard-packed earth meeting his spine with an uncompromising honesty. He pulled a thin, threadbare blanket over his chest, but his eyes remained open for a long time, watching the way the shadows danced—the dark has its own movements if you look long enough.
As sleep took him, the wind reached a crescendo, a wild, soaring note that shook the corrugated tin roof. A smile spread across his face—a slow, luminous unfolding that seemed to originate from a place far deeper than his own history. It was a smile of profound stillness, the smile of a man who knew that when the world goes dark, the stars have no choice but to show themselves.