DIGITAL DAYS
The Internet has arrived at The Dacha. I don’t access it much—I’ve got out of the habit, and the connectivity is consistently patchy in any case. It intrudes. But it also confirms the world that is waiting at our doorsteps.
I’ve begun working on a new novel, abandoning all the earlier unfinished ones. A story is emerging, but stories tend to get confused with other stories. A straight narrative with a clear arc of actions and consequences is clearly not possible. Especially not here, in Never Never Land.
Autumn has arrived and dug its heels in. The trees have changed colour. Red and yellow everywhere. The night sky is clear. The days are awash with brilliant sunshine. The evenings are cold but tender.
It has snowed in the high Himalaya. The familiar peaks greet me every morning, before the cloud line begins to veil them.
The magpie watches over me as I sit in the garden and read from the book of folk tales that Peter Paul Singh translated into English from the German. Or was it from the Russian version? Stories circle like the murmuration of birds in the sky, so many of them, and yet, often, the same stories.
There was a story Badi Amma used to tell me, of the girl who lived with her ancient grandmother in Never Never Land. I searched for the story in Peter’s book, but couldn’t find it.
There was another story that Badi Amma would tell me, about a snow-white crow that would dance across the sky in the high mountains when winter announced itself. It was the harbinger of a harsh and bitter winter, that bird, of snowstorms and avalanches, and people would tremble with fear when they saw it. That story was in the book. I read and re-read it.
Crows and ravens and magpies, they are all corvids, clever and astute. They can recognise faces and hold a grudge. They can make tools and hide their food. They mate for life. They have funerals for their dead.
I dreamt of a white raven, but then it became a magpie, my magpie, and flew away. Owls hooted all night. Dogs howled and bayed at the moon. Moths fluttered behind thin curtains.
The weather has changed again. Rain and hail and sleet for days on end. A helicopter has crashed near Badrinath. Buses have disappeared into ravines and khuds and rivers are in spate. The electricity comes and goes. The Internet keeps us alerted and updated to the havoc around. They call it climate change and global warming and sterile words like that, but it is more than that. It is the wrath of the gods.
That is what Badi Amma told me, and I believe her. ‘Uttaranchal, our Uttarakhand, is the Dev Bhoomi, the land of the Gods. That is what they call it in the Manas Khand, in the ancient epics. Now, the Mountain Gods are impatient beings—they like solitude, they don’t enjoy being jostled around. So they have decided to push away the tourists and the greedy builders who are polluting our Dev Bhoomi. They will push them over the cliffs, they will bury them under landslides, they will drown them in the overflowing rivers.’