The silence of the house was a heavy, unfamiliar garment. For forty years, the air had been textured by the percussion of his wife’s bangles, the argumentative hum of the refrigerator, and the domestic directives that formed the soundtrack of his life. Now, with her gone to her mother’s for the weekend, the old man, Mr. Baruah, found himself standing in the center of the living room, a castaway on a quiet island.
To be alone was a novelty that quickly curdled into a vacuum. He felt the sudden, frantic need to fill the void with something other than the ticking of the wall clock. He wanted to make this absence count—to prove that he was not merely a satellite orbiting her sun, but a star with his own light.
On an impulse that felt like a mild fever, he walked to the local stationery shop and purchased a wooden box of acrylics and a pad of thick, ivory-white sheets. He carried them home like stolen goods.
On the terrace, the Dehradun light was shifting, casting long, violet shadows over the water tanks. A small bird—perhaps a swallow, or a common sparrow made exotic by the twilight—perched on the parapet. Mr. Baruah snapped a photograph on his phone with a trembling hand.
He sat at the dining table, the pristine sheets mocking him. In his youth, he had been told he had a "knack" for drawing. He remembered the charcoal sketches of his college days, the fluid lines of anatomy and architecture. But as he pressed the pencil to the paper, he realized that age had not just made him rusty; it had thickened his perception.
His fingers, stiffened by the slow encrustation of decades, refused to obey the memory of grace. The bird he sketched was a clumsy thing—an anatomical failure with heavy wings and a beak that looked more like a shard of wood than a living instrument.
"Patience," he whispered to the empty room. "It’s a process."
He began to apply the paint, trying to match the delicate browns and greys of the photograph. It was a struggle against the mundane. Every stroke felt like a lie. The more he tried to capture the "real" bird, the more it looked like a diagram in a dusty textbook. He was chasing a ghost with a heavy net.
The frustration peaked as the sun dipped behind the ridge. In a sudden, jerky movement to reach for a rag, his elbow caught the open bottle of Crimson Lake.
Time seemed to slow as the thick, visceral liquid erupted across the ivory sheet. It drowned the bird’s head in a pool of wet, shocking red.
Mr. Baruah froze. His first instinct was a crushing, middle-class embarrassment. He looked around as if his wife might be standing in the doorway, ready to scold him for the mess on the table. He felt like a child caught breaking a vase.
But then, he looked at the stain.
The red was bleeding into the wet grey of the wings. It created a jagged, electric fringe where the two colors met. The "accuracy" of the sketch was gone, destroyed by a gravity he hadn't invited.
He picked up a wide brush. Instead of wiping it away, he pushed the red. He dragged it through the bird’s body, blurring the boundaries between the creature and the air. He added a smear of yellow, a streak of unblended white.
The bird began to vanish. In its place emerged a vibration—a frantic, abstract pulse of movement. It wasn't a bird anymore but the feeling of flight. It was an impression of the wind, a scream of color against the sterile quiet of the house.
That night, the painting sat propped against a vase of plastic flowers. Mr. Baruah lay in bed, his heart racing with the heat of a secret.
He imagined a new life. He saw himself in a small studio, perhaps in the hills of Landour, surrounded by canvases that bled and shrieked with color. He would be "The Impressionist of the Doon." He would no longer be the man who remembered to pay the electricity bill or the man who knew where the spare keys were kept. He would be a conduit for the sublime.
In the dark, his hands felt light. He fell asleep dreaming of a world where red was the only language that mattered.
The morning broke with the shrill, familiar chirp of the doorbell.
His wife was back, smelling of travel and her mother’s pickling spices. She moved through the house like a gale, opening curtains and banishing the artistic shadows he had cultivated.
"The house is so quiet," she remarked, dumping her bag on the sofa. She glanced at the table, where the wooden box of paints lay open like an exposed ribcage. "What is all this? Did you make a mess?"
Before he could explain the revolution that had occurred in his soul—before he could show her the red bird that wasn't a bird—she handed him a nylon mesh bag.
"Don't just stand there with that dazed look, Baruah-ji. There isn't a single tomato in the fridge. Go to the market before the sun gets too high. And get some ginger too; the quality was terrible last week."
Mr. Baruah looked at the bag. He looked at the painting on the table, which now, in the harsh, pragmatic light of morning, looked merely like a botched accident.
"The ginger," he repeated, his voice flat.
"And the tomatoes," she called out from the kitchen, already checking the level of the lentils.
The Impressionist died a quiet death between the hallway and the front door. Mr. Baruah took the bag, adjusted his spectacles, and stepped out into the heat of the Dehradun street. The red bird remained on the table, a solitary, abstract smudge in a world that demanded only the price of ginger.