Novels

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Impressionist

 

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.


Four by Four

 

The shadow of the four-letter word is a long one, cast by the flickering candles of a thousand Victorian parlors and the stern, pursed lips of a century’s worth of schoolmasters. It is a phrase that arrives with a built-in recoil, a linguistic flinch. To speak of "four-letter words" is to invoke the blunt, the base, and the broken—the vocabulary of the gutter, the sharp exhale of the frustrated, the jagged glass of the tavern brawl. We have been conditioned to see these four-character clusters as the weeds in the garden of discourse, things to be uprooted, bleached, and replaced with the ornamental topiary of Latinate synonyms.

Yet, if we hold the phrase "four-letter words" to the light and turn it gently, the prism shifts. The shadow does not disappear, but it begins to describe a different shape. What if these words are not the pollutants of language, but its bedrock? What if they are not merely the markers of impropriety, but the smallest, most pressurized vessels of the human condition?

Consider the symmetry of the architecture. The tongue does not discriminate between the sacred and the profane when the count is four. Love sits on the same shelf as the crudest anatomical slur; fear occupies the same rhythmic space as the most visceral curse. We have spent an eternity separating the acceptable from the forbidden, categorizing our outbursts into neat piles of "grace" and "filth," yet the body experiences both with an identical, shivering intensity. The pulse does not check a dictionary before it quickens.

There is a strange, muscular economy to the four-letter word. It is a linguistic bullet, stripped of the aerodynamic fluff of suffixes and the self-importance of multi-syllabic pretense. To speak in fours is to speak in a state of emergency or a state of ecstasy.

Pain is a four-letter word. It is a blunt strike, a singular thud against the consciousness.

Glee is its high-frequency twin, a spark that vanishes as quickly as it ignites.

Pure and Rave, Tang and Loss.

These are not words that describe life from a safe, academic distance. They do not meander through the scenic routes of "unfortunate circumstances" or "momentary exhilaration." They strike at the center. They are the vocabulary of the bone and the gut. When we are reduced to our most honest selves—when the ego is stripped bare by a sudden blow or an unexpected kiss—we do not reach for the ornate. We reach for the four.

The tragedy of our linguistic policing is that by stigmatizing the "four-letter word," we have inadvertently cast a shroud over the tools required for an unfiltered life. We have been taught to fear the sharp edges of the tongue, forgetting that the same edge used to wound is the one required to carve out the truth. A curse is often just a prayer that has lost its patience; a confession is often just a wound finding its voice. Both arrive in that same, compact shape.

In the quiet observation of our own internal weather, we find that the "taboo" and the "tender" are made of the same vibrating material. There is a hidden symmetry in how we navigate our days through these monosyllabic anchors. We wake in dark, we seek the dawn. We feel the urge, we endure the halt.

Society insists on a hierarchy of utility, telling us that "nice" words are for the parlor and "bad" words are for the alley. But the mind is a lawless place. In the heat of a rave or the cold hollow of a void, the distinction between a profanity and a poem dissolves. 

They are both attempts to bridge the gap between the unspeakable interior and the audible world. They are fragments of a more honest, prehistoric vocabulary that existed before we learned to use language as a mask.

To embrace the four-letter word is to stop treating language like a costume and start treating it like a skin. It is to recognize that our "crude" outbursts are often our most authentic echoes.

By widening the definition, we reclaim the four-letter word as a tool of recognition rather than classification. We stop looking for the smudge on the page and start looking at the weight of the ink. If we allow ourselves to see hope as clearly as we see its cruder cousins, we realize that the brevity of the word is not a sign of its simplicity, but of its density. It is the diamond formed under the immense pressure of being human.

Ultimately, "Four by Four" is an invitation to inhabit the small spaces of our speech. It is a call to stop apologizing for the jaggedness of our expressions and to find the grace in the blunt. We are composed of these fragments—tiny, four-sided mirrors that reflect a different version of the truth depending on how the light hits them.

The world is loud, complex, and increasingly draped in the soft, suffocating fabric of euphemism. In such a landscape, the four-letter word—in all its forms—acts as a necessary puncture. It lets the air in. Whether it is the ache of a long-held secret or the fire of a new conviction, these words remind us that we are still here, still feeling, and still capable of speaking the truth in its most elemental form.

We do not need more syllables to be more human. We only need the courage to use the ones we have, unfiltered and unafraid.


Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Rewilding

 

The trek to Mantoli is like an unpeeling. As the altitude climbs toward Pithoragarh, the air loses its heavy, valley-bottom humidity and takes on the sharpened edge of Himalayan pine. For Hemlata, every step up the narrow dirt tracks—veins of red earth cut into the emerald steepness—was a labor of subtraction. She was shedding the noise of the plains, the sterile smell of the hospital, and the final, rhythmic beep of the monitor that had punctuated her mother’s departure.

Mantoli sat perched on the ridge like a bird determined not to fly. It was a village of slate roofs and carved wooden lintels, where the silence was so profound it had a texture—the sound of wind hitting stone.

But when Hemlata reached the ancestral hut, the "spectacular view" she had promised herself was framed by a blackened void. A rogue summer forest fire, fueled by the dryness of the chir-pine needles, had licked its way up the terrace. Her mother’s tiny farm patch—once a riot of finger millet and wild marigolds—was a charcoal sketch of its former self.

Hemlata did not cry. Instead, she performed the only ritual she knew: she went to work.

She called it "Rewilding," a clinical, modern term she had plucked from a nature documentary, but in the shadow of the peaks, it felt more like an exhumation. Her project was one of meticulous restoration. She began by clearing the scorched remains, her fingers stained a permanent, soot-black that no amount of mountain water could fully rinse away.

The Clearing: She pulled the charred skeletons of bean stalks from the earth. They snapped like brittle bones.

The Sifting: She raked the topsoil, removing the grey flakes of burnt history, revealing the parched, traumatized red clay beneath.

The Fortifying: She hauled bags of aged manure and leaf mold up the steep incline, her breath hitching in the thin air, a physical manifestation of the grief she refused to name.

She was obsessed with the "next season." She spoke to the empty house about nitrogen cycles and soil pH, her voice a fragile tether to a future she wasn't sure she wanted to inhabit. She was trying to fertilize a memory, convinced that if she could make the earth green again, she could somehow reverse the winter of her mother's passing.

As the weeks bled into a month, the physical toll of the land began to mirror her internal landscape. The "rewilding" was not going according to plan. The more she tried to impose order—lining the patch with stones, segregating the herbs—the more the mountain resisted.

One evening, exhausted and smelling of damp earth and sweat, Hemlata sat on the stone porch. The sun was dipping behind the jagged teeth of the Panchachuli range, painting the sky in the bruised violets and oranges of a healing wound. She looked at her hands. They were calloused, cracked, and embedded with the dirt she was trying to "manage."

She realized then that she was scrubbing at a grave.

The fire hadn't just taken the crops; it had cleared the canopy of her own life, leaving her exposed to the harsh, direct light of her loss. In the silence of Mantoli, there were no distractions. There was only the mountain, the ash, and the ghost of a woman who had once moved through these terraces with a quiet, instinctive grace.

"To rewild is not to control the growth, but to surrender to the wildness of the recovery.”

The shift happened during the first tentative rains of the pre-monsoon. Hemlata stood in the center of her patch, watching the water turn the ash into a slick, fertile slurry. She saw a single, defiant shoot of Mandua (millet) pushing through the blackened crust—not where she had planted it, but in a corner she had missed.

It was an accidental resurrection.

She understood then that her "project" was a farce. The land didn't need her fertilizer as much as it needed her witness. Her mourning was like the forest fire—it had stripped her bare, burned away the fluff of her identity, and left only the essential, scorched core.

To "rewild" her heart meant allowing the grief to grow over the ruins. It meant accepting that the landscape of her life would never be the manicured garden it was when her mother was alive. It would be something different now—rougher, stranger, and perhaps more resilient.

She stopped fighting the weeds. She let the wild clover return. She sat in the mud and finally, under the vast, unblinking eye of the Pithoragarh sky, she wept. The tears were the final nutrient the soil needed.

As the village of Mantoli vanished into the evening mist, Hemlata was no longer a visitor "managing" a project. She was a part of the mountain’s slow, deliberate healing. She was becoming wild again.



Monday, March 23, 2026

Pressure Cooker

 

The kitchen was a small, humid kingdom of steam and stainless steel. In the center of the stove sat the pressure cooker, a battered aluminium veteran of a thousand dals, its weight hissing a rhythmic, promethean breath. Savita adjusted the flame, the blue ring of fire casting a spectral glow against the darkened tiles. The lentils inside—yellow moong and red masoor—were beginning their slow dissolution into a comforting, domestic mush.

With the dal set to its task, Savita turned to the cupboard. It was the "Cleaning Season" in the Doon Valley, that time of year when the dust of the plains seems to settle into the bones of one’s furniture. She began to pull out the linens, her movements practiced and weary, until her hand brushed against a stiff, rectangular ghost tucked beneath a stack of wedding saris.

It was a photograph, the edges curled like a dried leaf.

In the faded sepia of the image, a younger version of Savita stood in a defiant Ardhachakri pose. Her arms were arched, her fingers tapering into the air with the precision of a needle, and her eyes—wide, kohled, and hungry—seemed to be looking at a horizon that didn't include a kitchen in Dehradun. She was a Kathak dancer then, a creature of rhythm and bells, her feet capable of drumming out a language that had nothing to do with the price of onions.

The sight of it was a puncture wound to her composure.

She sat on the edge of the bed, the dust rag forgotten in her lap, and dialed a number she hadn't called in months.

"Meena? You won't believe what I’m holding."

The connection clicked, and for a moment, the distance between their separate, burdened lives vanished. As Savita described the photo, a low, melodic snicker erupted from the other end of the line—a sound that hadn't aged, a remnant of the girls they used to be when they sat on the back benches of the college auditorium.

"The ghungroos," Meena sighed, her voice softening into a velvet nostalgia. "I can still hear them, Savita. You used to practice until your ankles bled, and I used to sit there and tell you that you’d be the next Sitara Devi."

"And you," Savita countered, a mischievous glint returning to her eyes. "You were going to be a poet. You swore you’d move to Bombay and write lyrics for the films. We were going to conquer the world, weren't we?"

They descended into a feverish trade of secrets—the small, luminous dreams they had tucked away like contraband. They spoke of "hopeless fails"—the auditions that went nowhere, the poems burnt in the backyard, the moments when the heart was so light it felt like it might simply drift over the Mussoorie peaks and never come back.

Then, the name surfaced.

"And Shashi?" Meena whispered, the name a spark in the dark. "The handsome rascal from the neighborhood? Remember how he used to lean against his Royal Enfield just as we walked home from the dance class?"

"Shashi," Savita repeated, her heart suddenly racing, a frantic, syncopated beat that ignored the graying hair and the stiff joints. "He had that one lock of hair that always fell over his eye. We all had a crush on him, didn't we? We used to plot our routes home just to catch a glimpse of his shadow."

For a handful of minutes, the two women were no longer mothers, wives, or housekeepers. They were untethered spirits, vibrating with the electricity of a past where everything—fame, love, travel—seemed like a legitimate possibility. Their laughter grew louder, more jagged, a beautiful, reckless sound that filled the quiet rooms of their separate houses.

The spell was thick, a golden haze of "what ifs" and "remember whens." Savita could almost feel the weight of the bells around her ankles, the floorboards trembling beneath a perfectly executed tatkar.

Then, the world asserted its gravity.

From the kitchen, the pressure cooker gave a sudden, sharp hiss. It was a warning—a prelude to the end. Seconds later, it delivered its final, faithful announcement: a long, piercing whistle that tore through the air like a steam engine’s scream.

The sound was industrial and absolute. It was the voice of the present, the sound of the lentils reaching their threshold, the sound of a "meticulous" life demanding to be attended to.

Savita flinched. The phone felt heavy in her hand again. The heat of the Dehradun afternoon seemed to rush back into the room, thick with the smell of scorched turmeric and the reality of the evening meal.

"The dal is done, Meena," Savita said, her voice dropping an octave, the flight of her soul receding back behind the domestic mask.

"Mine too," Meena replied, the snicker replaced by a quiet, resigned sigh. "I have to go. The children will be home soon."

Savita hung up and looked at the photograph one last time before tucking it back under the saris. She walked into the kitchen, turned off the gas, and stood in the sudden, ringing silence. The steam from the cooker dissipated slowly, leaving only the faint, salt-tang of the mundane. 


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Design Studio

 

The glass is half-empty, 

but the world is overfull. 

He sits where the mud meets the reeds,

the cheap burn of rotgut singing a low, 

jagged aria in his throat. The river 

before him is a stubborn thing, grey and utilitarian, 

until he closes his eyes and opens the doors to the studio.


his design studio.


The turpentine of the soul is a bitter pour,

stinging the gums, blurring the horizon

and the world becomes 

a wet-on-wet mistake

waiting for the master’s hand.


He leans back 

against the weeping willow,

the architect of a kingdom

built on a hiccup.


“The bird,” he mutters, a thick-tongued command,

“should be blue. Not the sky’s pale imitation,

but a violent, lapis bruise against the grey.”


And it is so. A streak of cobalt tears through the mist.

“The flowers? A coward’s gold.”

He leans into the canvas of the air,

crushing imaginary petals between thumb and forefinger

until the marigolds bleed a deeper yellow,


a yolk-heavy sun spilled across the bank.

He narrows his eyes, adjusting the aperture of his madness.

The sky must be sharper—a blade of slate—

while the light is throttled, dimmed to a holy amber,

the kind that caught the Dutchmen in their dreams.


He is a god in a stained coat,

arranging the atoms of the afternoon

until the masterpiece is pinned to the sky.


But as the final stroke dries in the mind’s eye,

the perspective warps.

The frame dissolves, and the pigment begins to pulse.


The river he laboured to tint and tame

breaks its banks and spills inward,

a cool, subsurface current carving

a canyon through his chest.

The outer world goes silent,

a discarded sketch left in the rain.


Inside, the water is crystalline and vast,

carrying the scent of wet stone and ancient stars.

And there, on the silken bank of his own spirit,

the old man sits again—

hushed, sobered by the sudden, terrifying clarity

of a landscape he did not paint.


Saturday, March 21, 2026

Swachh Bharat

 

The morning in the village broke with a song. It was a digital, tinny herald that fractured the mist clinging to the mustard fields—the "Swachh Bharat" anthem, blasted from a megaphone bolted to a white jeep. To Dharamveer, sitting on his string cot with a brass tumbler of tea, the song had the hollow, rhythmic sanctity of a morning school prayer—a litany of virtues chanted by children who were already thinking about the marble games they would play behind the bicycle sheds.

The jeep moved with a ceremonial slowness, a white chariot of civic duty. It possessed a curious, selective momentum. As it crossed the bridge over the village canal, the driver didn't downshift. He didn't look left. He didn't look right.

Below the bridge, the canal was a colorful, plastic artery, choked and sclerotic. It was a mosaic of the modern age—crinkled blue detergent packets, silver foil wrappers of gutka, and the bloated, grey remains of a stray dog. The water oozed, a dark, viscous tea that smelled of sulfur and the slow decomposition of a thousand neglected habits.

Dharamveer watched the jeep’s exhaust pipe puff out a defiant cloud of smoke as it rolled over the bridge. He squinted, his eyes milky with cataracts but sharp with a lifetime of observation.

"Has the State lost its nose?" he muttered into his tea. "Or has the ear grown so large it no longer needs the eye?"

The jeep was an avatar of a nation in a hurry. It was a project of acoustics, not aesthetics. It moved through the dust-choked lanes of the village with the frantic energy of a man who is late for a wedding but hasn't yet put on his trousers.

From a narrow alleyway, Sunita emerged, her face veiled against the morning chill, two heavy black polyethylene bags swinging from her hands. She was the picture of a dutiful citizen, her breath coming in short, visible plumes as she sprinted towards the road.

"Oye! Stop!" she cried, her voice thin against the booming crescendo of the anthem on the loudspeaker.

The driver, perhaps insulated by the very song of cleanliness he was tasked to broadcast, did not tap the brake. The jeep scurried forward, its tires kicking up a fine, granular silt that settled back onto the earth like a grey shroud. It had a quota to meet, a GPS track to complete, a digital map to satisfy. The State was in a hurry to be clean, and it had no time for the actual rubbish of its people.

Sunita stopped at the edge of the asphalt. She watched the white tail-lights fade into the haze. She stood there for a long moment, the bags pulling at her shoulders, the "Swachh" melody lingering in the air like an ironic ghost.

There was no anger in Sunita’s stance, only a profound resignation. She looked at the receding jeep, then she looked at the canal.

The canal was patient. It was the village’s collective basement, a place where things went to be forgotten. With a sigh that carried the weight of a thousand such mornings, she turned towards the bridge.

It was a gesture of faith—not in the State, but in the gravity of the landscape. With two synchronized swings, she released the bags. They plummeted, hitting the stagnant surface with a dull, wet thud that didn't even ripple the thick, oily water.

Dharamveer watched her from his porch. He saw the bags settle amongst the silver foil and the dead dog. He saw Sunita wipe her hands on her dupatta, her duty for the day discharged.


The anthem was faint now, a dying echo from the next hamlet, singing of a sparkling India while the canal sat, heavy and silent, holding the truth of the village in its dark, plastic-choked heart.


Friday, March 20, 2026

Toy Soldier

The air in our house has a weight to it, like the thick, gray water that gathers in the buckets during the monsoon. It smells of burnt lentils and the sharp, stinging scent of my father’s cigarettes. When the voices start, the weight presses against my ears until they thrum.

My mother’s voice is a jagged piece of glass; my father’s is the heavy hammer that tries to smash it.

“Manku!” my mother screams, but she isn’t looking at me but at the space where my father stands, her finger pointed like a bone. “Manku, go to your room!”

I don’t go to my room. The walls there are thin, and the sound leaks through the cracks in the wood. Instead, I reach for my yellow cloth bag. Inside, there is a tin soldier with a chipped red coat, a blue plastic car with three wheels, and a marble that has a universe of green smoke trapped in its center.

I slip out the back door. The latch makes a small clink, but they don’t hear it. They are too busy building a tower of words that always falls down.

The path to the river is lined with stinging nettles and the frames of old umbrellas. I walk until the shouting behind me becomes the hum of a distant bee, and then, finally, silence.

The river doesn't have a name, or if it does, it’s a secret. To me, it is just the Great Gray. It moves slowly, like a giant snake that has swallowed the sun and is trying to digest it. I sit on the flat rock—the one I call the throne of whispers—and unpack my bag.

"General," I say to the tin soldier, standing him up in the soft silt. "The war is very loud today. We must build the fortifications."

I gather smooth black stones and line them up. These are the houses of quiet. Inside these stones, no one ever raises their voice. The inhabitants eat clouds and sleep on beds of moss. I take a dry peepal leaf and set it on the water.

"That is the boat for the Mother," I whisper. "It will take her to the place where the glass doesn't break."

The river ripples. It laps at the mud with a sound like a tongue. Shhh-wash. Shhh-wash. I think the river is lonely. It takes everything people throw into it—broken plastic buckets, wilted garlands, the ash from the ghats—and it never complains. It just carries it all away to the place where the horizon touches the water.

At night, the house changes. The shadows under my bed stretch out like long, thin fingers. I lie very still, counting the pulses in my neck.

Then, the crash.

It’s a plate this time. I know the sound of the blue ceramic hitting the floor. It sounds like a star exploding.

"I can't do it anymore!" my mother wails. It’s a high, thin sound, like a bird with a broken wing. "You’re draining the life out of this house!"

"Then let it die!" my father roars. His voice vibrates in my mattress. "One day, I’ll just leave you both. I’ll walk out that door and disappear. You won't find a trace. Not a hair, not a shadow."

I pull the quilt over my head. Disappear. I try to imagine my father turning into smoke. I imagine him becoming transparent, like the wings of a dragonfly, until the wind blows him over the rooftops. If he disappears, will the shouting go with him? Or will the shouting stay in the walls, waiting for someone else to pick it up?

I feel a cold lump in my chest, right where the marble sits in my pocket. I am afraid that if he disappears, he will take the light with him, and we will be left in a house made of tea-stained shadows.

The next day, the air in the house is scorched. My mother has a purple smudge under her eye that she tries to hide with her sari. My father sits at the table, staring at his hands as if they belong to a stranger.

I run to the river. I am panting when I reach the throne of whispers.

"He said he would go," I tell the water. I feel a tear catch in the corner of my mouth. It tastes like salt and dust. "He said he would leave us in the dark."

I reach into my bag. I look at the tin soldier. He is my favorite. He has seen the great gray many times. He is brave.

"You have to tell him to stay quiet," I whisper to the soldier. "Or you have to take the anger away."

I lean forward and press the soldier into the mud, right at the water’s edge. The river reaches out a small, cold finger of foam and tugs at him. Slowly, the red coat sinks. The water closes over his head.

"A gift," I say. "For the silence."

I give the river my green marble next. It sinks fast, a flash of emerald before it vanishes into the silt. I feel lighter, as if I’ve given the river a piece of the weight from my chest.

It happens on a Tuesday. The sky is the color of a bruise.

The fighting starts before the lamps are even lit. It isn't just words tonight. It’s the sound of furniture dragging. It’s the sound of my mother screaming a name that isn't mine.

CRACK.

Something heavy hits the wall right behind my head. I don’t wait for the "go to your room." I grab my bag—it's almost empty now—and I run. I don't even put on my slippers. The thorns bite my feet, but I don't feel them.

I sit by the river in the dark. The water is blacker than the sky. I wait for the moon to come out, but it stays hidden behind the clouds. I stay there for hours, listening to the river breathe. It sounds heavy tonight. Fed.

When I finally creep back home, the gate is hanging open.

The house is silent.

It is a silence so thick I can taste it on my tongue. The front door is ajar. Inside, the lamp is flickering, casting long, dancing shadows on the walls.

My mother is sitting on the floor in the kitchen. She is surrounded by the blue ceramic shards of a dozen plates. She isn't crying but staring at the open door, her hands resting limp in her lap like two dead fish.

"Ma?" I whisper.

She doesn't look at me. "He’s gone, Manku," she says. Her voice is hollow, like a cave. "He finally did it. He just... walked out."

The next morning, the neighbors are gathered by the well. Their voices are low, but I am good at listening.

"...saw him heading toward the embankment," Mrs. Gupta whispers, clutching her shawl. "Walking like a man in a trance."

"...found a shoe downstream," old Mr. Das adds, shaking his head. "Near the bend where the current pulls. They’re calling for the divers."

I look at my mother. She is washing the floor, scrubbing at a spot that isn't there. She looks like a ghost that forgot to leave.

I go back to the river one last time. My bag is light. Only the blue plastic car remains.

The river looks the same. It doesn't look guilty. It doesn't look sad. It just flows, carrying the world’s secrets towards the sea.

I sit on the throne of whispers. My feet are covered in dried mud. I look at the spot where I buried the tin soldier. The mud has smoothed over. There is no sign he was ever there.

"You heard me," I whisper. My voice is small, smaller than the rustle of the leaves.

I think of the house. It is quiet now. There is no hammering, no glass breaking. But there is no laughter either. There is just the sound of the clock ticking and the wind trapped in the chimney.

I take the blue car out of the bag. Its three wheels spin uselessly in the air.

"Did you take him?" I ask the great gray. "Or did you just take the noise?"

The river ripples against the bank, a soft, wet sound. Shhh-wash. "You promised," I say, my throat tightening. "You promised you would make the shouting stop."

I stand up and toss the blue car as far as I can. It bobs for a moment, a tiny bright spot against the vast, shifting gray, and then it catches the current. I watch it drift, getting smaller and smaller, until it is just a speck, and then nothing at all.