The mist in Kalimpong does not fall; it rises from the Teesta valley like the breath of something buried alive. It creeps over the ridges, thick and smelling of damp limestone and rotting cedar, until the pine trees are nothing but charcoal sketches against a grey canvas.
Nima
sat on the rusted railing of the shortcut path leading to Dr. Pradhan’s estate.
She liked the cold. It was the only thing that felt sharp enough to penetrate
the layer of cotton wool that had occupied the inside of her skull since the
"accident."
They
called it an accident. A "slip" on the wet shale during the monsoon.
But Nima remembered the sound most of all. Not the scream, but the crack. It
was the sound of a dry branch snapping in winter. It was the sound of her own
architecture failing. Since that day, the world had become a series of
structural errors. Her mother’s face was lopsided; the school’s blackboard was
tilted three degrees to the left; the very air felt too heavy for the mountains
to support. She felt the dent in her head, she had named it “the cup”.
Sometimes she imagined water collecting in it, penetrating her skull and
swirling through the grey matter.
She
opened her notebook. It was filled with geometric proofs and sketches of
skeletal systems. She wasn't studying for the boards anymore, the school had
"strongly suggested" she take a year off to recover, but she was
obsessed with the physics of the human frame. The sphenoid bone, she wrote, her
pencil lead scratching harshly against the paper, is the keystone. If the
keystone is bruised, the cathedral of the mind leaks. "Nima? You’re going
to catch a fever." It was Deepa. The Doctor’s daughter. She was wrapped in
a soft, cream-colored pashmina shawl that looked like a cloud. She stood on the
other side of the black iron gates of the estate, her skin glowing with the
kind of health that only comes from imported vitamins and a life without damp
walls.
Nima
looked at her. She didn't see a friend. She saw a squatter.
"The
density of your femur is higher than mine," Nima said, her voice flat,
devoid of the melodic lilt she used to have. "It’s because of the calcium.
Your father steals the calcium from the village children and injects it into
your breakfast." Deepa flinched, pulling the shawl tighter. "You’re
talking strange again. My dad says it’s just the trauma. You need your meds,
Nima." "Your father," Nima whispered, standing up. Her movements
were jerky, like a marionette with tangled strings. "He knows the truth. When
I fell, the impact was so great that the vibrations traveled through the earth.
A displacement occurred. Physics demands an equal and opposite reaction. I left
my rightful place, and you slipped into it."
She
pressed her face against the cold iron bars. The blunt force to her occipital
lobe had done more than scar her scalp; it had rearranged her soul's geography.
She was convinced that the girl in the cream shawl was a glitch in the
universe. Nima was the Doctor’s daughter, the one meant for the grand piano and
the tea sets and the future in Delhi. Deepa was the interloper, the daughter of
the woman who washed clothes until her knuckles bled.
"I
can see the cracks in you, Deepa," Nima said, her eyes widening until the
whites showed all around the irises. "I can see where the bone isn't set
right. You’re wearing my life, but it doesn't fit you. It’s sagging at the
shoulders." Deepa backed away, her eyes filling with a mixture of pity and
genuine terror. "I have to go. My tutor is waiting."
Nima
watched her retreat up the manicured driveway. She didn't feel anger; anger was
a soft, fleshy emotion. She felt a cold, calcified certainty. She turned back
to the valley. Below, the town of Kalimpong clung to the hillside like a
fungus. She saw the tin roofs of the bazaar, the smoke rising from the shanties
and the tops of the pine trees that swayed like they were whispering secrets to
each other. Nima reached up and touched the indentation behind her ear. The
bone was jagged there, a permanent topographical error on her map. If I hit it
again, she thought, the logic appearing in her mind as a perfect, golden
equation, perhaps the displacement will reverse. A second strike to correct the
first. She looked at a heavy, moss-covered stone at her feet. It was granite.
Dense. Final.
She
picked it up. It felt wonderful in her hand, the weight of a solution. She
imagined the architecture of her skull vibrating, the plates shifting back into
their original, divine alignment. She imagined the mist clearing to reveal the
life she was owed. In the distance, the bells of the monastery rang out, the
sound muffled by the fog. Nima began to hum. It was a high, thin sound that
mimicked the wind whistling through a hollow bone. She sat back down on the
railing, the stone resting in her lap like a pet, waiting for the moment when
the geometry of the world would finally make sense again. She opened her
notebook to a fresh page and drew a single, perfect dot.
Zero,
she wrote. The point where everything begins and ends. The point where the pain
becomes a shape.
The
mist swallowed her then, turning the girl, the stone, and the notebook into a
single, grey shadow.
Bio:
Samya
Jayachandran is a school student based in New Delhi. She has lived across
Arunachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Delhi. Her writing is informed by these
shifting geographies, as well as by vacations spent in her paternal and
maternal villages in Kerala and Kalimpong .
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