The light in Dehradun retreated like a weary army, leaving behind the spoils of a day well-spent. For the old man, the ritual was sacred, a ceremonial rhythm of deprivation and excess. Sixteen hours of an empty stomach—a hollow, echoing cavern of discipline—finally silenced by a lunch that sat heavy and defiant in his belly. It was the weight of indulgence, a deliberate gravity that tethered him to his wicker chair on the terrace.
From this vantage, the world was a map of his own quiet conquests. He cataloged the landmarks with the precision of a jeweler appraising stones: the undulating spine of the Mussoorie hills, the silver vein of the river, the dark, brooding lungs of the Rajaji forest, and the raw, grey scar of the upcoming highway—a concrete promise of a future he wasn’t looking forward to inhabiting. He counted these sights as blessings, a mental archive of survival and presence.
Then came the slumber, thick and amber-hued, pulling him under the surface of the conscious world.
In the theater of his mind, the years stripped away. He was the horizon’s master of ceremonies. He stood tall, his voice projecting with a vigor that tasted of woodsmoke and mountain air. He was a guide, draped in the invisible mantle of authority, leading a flock of wide-eyed pilgrims through the geography of his heart.
“Look to your left, my dear friends,” he heard himself say, his hand sweeping toward a shimmering mirage. “This is the famous Sahastradhara. A thousand-fold spring, where the water carries the salt of the earth to heal what ails you.”
The tourists—faceless, shimmering entities of pure attention—murmured in collective awe. He moved them like a conductor. He felt the vibration of the earth beneath his feet, the phantom trumpeting of giants.
“Quiet now,” he whispered in the dream, pointing toward the emerald depths of the Rajaji National Park. “The matriarch leads. See the elephants? They carry the memory of the forest in their stride. They do not hurry, for they know the land belongs to those who wait.”
The dream was a tapestry of vivid clarity. Every leaf was etched in sharp relief; every cool spray of water from the falls felt like a baptism. He was useful, he was vibrant, and he was the bridge between the wild earth and the human soul.
The transition was a slow, drowning realization. The sounds of the dream—the rushing water, the heavy footfalls of pachyderms—began to dissolve into the mundane hum of a settling city. The warmth on his face, once the imagined sun of a midday tour, grew heavy and visceral.
He opened his eyes.
The world he had just cataloged was gone. The hills had been swallowed by a bruise-colored haze. The river was a ghost. The forest had retreated into a wall of impenetrable shadow. Dehradun was vanishing, slipping through the fingers of the clock into the cool, indifferent twilight.
But it was the color that held him captive.
The sky had hemorrhaged. A violent, spectacular crimson had spilled across the horizon, saturating the air until it felt thick enough to touch. It was not the gentle pink of a postcard but a deep, thrumming arterial red that stained the white lime of the terrace walls and turned his gnarled hands into the hands of a stranger.
He sat motionless, a stone figure in a rising tide. The "Sea of Red" was pressed against his chest, filling the silence left by his departed dream. He realized then that the "blessings" he had counted earlier—the hills, the trees, the roads—were merely the stage dressing for this final, solitary act.
He was bathed in it. The red light filled the furrows of his brow and the hollows of his eyes. In this light, the distinction between the man and the mountain blurred. He was a part of the fading geography, a landmark of a different sort, waiting for the red to deepen into the final, velvet black of the Himalayan night. He delayed turning on the lamps. To do so now would be to break the spell, to deny the magnificent, terrifying beauty of being consumed by the sun’s last, desperate breath.
He became a passenger in the crimson tide, watching his world go dark.