Authors: Shona Patel
“Why, yes.” Charulata laughed.
“But how?” asked Biren wonderingly. He fingered the bumpy pattern.
Charulata dismissed it with a wave. “Oh, it’s just a design painted with a duck feather, some rice flour and gum arabic. You can use it as a bookmark if you like. Do you like it,
mia
?”
“It’s beautiful,” said Biren reverentially. “Very, very beautiful. I will use this bookmark for my most important book.”
“Ah, that would be the Book of Life,
mia
. The one that’s written by the universe. My book is nearing its end but yours has just begun.”
Biren studied the design closely. “I can see a
B
entwined in the pattern. And here, another letter. Oh, I see my name!” He looked at his father with shining eyes. “Look, Baba, it’s my name hidden in the design. It’s like a puzzle.”
“Yes, I see that,” agreed Shamol. “That is indeed clever.”
“I paint these palm leaf designs with the names of different gods hidden in the pattern. The devotees like that. The priest sells them in the temple and he gives me two paisa for each. But more than the money, painting the patterns feels like a kind of meditation to me. Now I am thinking of doing some colored designs using vegetable dyes. Turmeric, indigo, vermillion.” She gave a mischievous laugh. “I may not be allowed to wear colors, but God gives me permission to paint in any hue I choose.”
“You are an inspiration to me, Charudi,” said Shamol. “They can take everything away from you but you still have all the essential things that feed the spirit and keep you joyful. I have much to learn from you.” He picked up his bags. “I could spend all day talking to you, but we must rush home before our fish spoils. Come, Biren, we must go.”
“Until next time, then,” said Charulata. “God bless you both and thank you for the bananas.”
“And thank you for the artistic gift,” Biren said, wrapping up the palm bark in the newspaper. “I will put it on my study desk and look at it every day.”
* * *
“I would keep it a secret,” said Shamol when they were out of earshot. “Don’t tell your grandmother Charudi gave you the bookmark. Otherwise, she will make you throw it away.”
Biren was indignant. “I will never throw it away. It is a special gift with my name written on it. Why should I throw it away?”
“Then, don’t tell Granny because she’ll say it’s bad luck to accept something from a widow’s hand. That is, of course, not at all true.”
They walked across the riverbed toward the bamboo grove and the road leading to the
basha
.
“Do you know it was Charudi who gave you your name?” said Shamol suddenly.
Biren stopped walking and looked at his father in surprise. “I thought it was Grandfather who named me Biren.”
“That is what we led your grandmother to believe.” Shamol chuckled. “Left to your grandmother you would have been named Bikramaditya. Your mother and I did not care for that name. Your mother, especially, was vehemently opposed to it so we had to do something. The Sanskrit letter associated with your lunar birth sign is
B
, so your name had to begin with
B
. We managed to convince your grandmother to name you Biren and we made Grandfather believe it was his idea. A child’s name dictates his fate in life after all. Nobody in our family, besides your mother and me, know it was actually Charudi who suggested your name. You are the third person now to know this but you must keep it a secret for the reasons I explained to you earlier.”
Biren absorbed this in silence. “My name means a soldier, does it not, Father?”
“
Biren
means
warrior
. There is a difference,
mia
. A soldier follows the orders of others. A warrior follows his own path. Sometimes a warrior has to act alone. You, Biren, are the Lord of Warriors. Never forget that.”
“And Nitin? What does
Nitin
mean?”
“Nitin means Master of the Right Path.”
“Did Charudi give Nitin his name, as well?”
“No, this time it really was your Grandfather’s suggestion, but your mother and I both liked the name Nitin, so it worked out all right.”
Biren skipped along and repeated softly, “Lord of Warriors and Master of the Right Path.” More loudly, he said, “I am glad I am the warrior, Baba. One day I will become a lawyer and I will fight for Charudi so she can enter the temple.”
“Oh, I don’t think she’s missing much,” said Shamol drily. “I am not even sure she cares to enter the temple. She has found what she needs under the banyan tree.”
“I will still fight for her. I think she wants me to. That is why she secretly wrote my name and pretended it was only a design.”
“Just keep it to yourself,
mia
. Do you know the wise sages believe there is a great power in secrecy? If you talk loosely about your intentions this power will disappear. But if you keep your good intentions a secret, the universe will conspire to make it happen. This is one of the great spiritual truths,
mia
. Wise people never talk about their intentions. They let their actions speak for them.”
CHAPTER
9
It was Shamol’s day off. He sat on the kitchen steps in his pajamas with Nitin half dozing on his lap, a cup of tea and a sugared toast beside him. Shamol watched Biren play marbles in the courtyard. His aim was excellent; he rarely missed. But as soon as one marble clicked against the other, a tiger-striped calico cat hiding behind the holy basil shot out to pounce on the marble, spoiling Biren’s game.
Biren stamped his foot. “Shoo!” he said sternly to the cat. He grabbed the marble out of its paws and placed it back on the spot where it had rolled. “The cat is not letting me play, Baba,” he complained to Shamol.
Shamol took a sip of his tea. “Perhaps he wants to play, too.”
“I want to play, too,” said Nitin, taking his thumb out of his mouth. He clambered off Shamol’s lap.
“Now you have two cats to play with you,” said Shamol, smiling.
Biren sighed.
“Aye, Khoka!” Granny called to Shamol from the kitchen window. Granny always called Father by his boyhood name every time she wanted something done. “Plant the marigold seedlings in the pots for me, will you? I want to grow the flowers for my
puja
.”
“Yes, Mother,” Shamol called back. “I am just finishing my tea.”
Biren glared indignantly at the retreating form of his grandmother.
Khoka, do this, Khoka, do that.
Never a moment of peace for poor Father. No time to even enjoy his cup of tea!
Shamol whistled a boatman’s song and went into the kitchen to return his cup. He must have said something funny because Mother replied with a laugh—the girlish laugh she reserved especially for him. His parents had their own little secrets, Biren suspected. Where did they run off to in the middle of the night? And why was there sand on their bed in the morning?
Shamol emerged from the kitchen. “Is anybody going to help me plant the marigolds?” he asked.
“I want to play with marbles,” said Nitin. “Dada, play marbles with me.”
“You play with the cat,” said Biren in an imperious voice.
“I don’t want to play with the cat,” Nitin pouted.
“Come along, then, wear your slippers,” said Shamol, heading toward the woodshed. The two boys ran to catch up with him.
Shamol dug up the rich black soil, Biren broke up the clumps and placed them in the terra-cotta pot and Nitin sat on his haunches and handed Biren the seedlings one by one.
“Careful,
mia
, you are pulling them up too roughly,” Shamol said. He took the seedling from Nitin’s hand and pointed to the roots. “See these small white hairs? If you break them, the plant will die. Use a stick and pull out the seedling very gently, like this, see?”
“Father, if you could be a tree—any tree in the world—what tree would you be?” Biren asked suddenly.
Shamol leaned on the worn-out handle of the shovel. “What tree would I like to be, now? What an interesting question. I will have to think about it.”
He went back to digging, then stopped. “I know what tree I want to be. I want to be a bamboo, although technically it is not a tree. It belongs to the grass family. Does that count?”
Biren frowned. “I suppose so.” He was disappointed in his father’s choice. He had expected him to pick something more significant like, say, a mango tree or a banyan, even a papaya tree. But
bamboo
? Father must be joking.
“But why bamboo, Father? It’s so...so ordinary.”
“Your father is an ordinary man, son. But why a bamboo, I will tell you. A bamboo is strong and resilient. It has many uses. You can build a house with it, you can make a raft and float down a river with it. You can eat it as a shoot, and drink out of it as a cup. Most important, the bamboo is hollow and empty inside. If a person can be hollow and empty like the bamboo, all the goodness and wisdom of the universe will flow through him.”
Biren was still not impressed. He did not want to be a bamboo. He saw himself as a magnificent and glorious flame tree, admired by all from near and far. He told his father that.
“The flame tree is an inspiring tree,” Shamol conceded. “It gives cooling shade and when it blooms it brings joy to all. But also know this. When the flame tree sheds, it loses everything. You see this in life,
mia
. Sometimes a person has to lose everything to renew and bloom again.”
Biren twirled a marigold seedling between his fingers. “Why is there only one flame tree, Baba? I have not seen any other flame trees around here.”
“Because it is an unusual tree for these parts. The natural habitat of the flame tree is in tiger country, hundreds of miles away.”
Shamol smiled at Nitin, who was frowning at the ground. “So what do you think, Nitin? What tree would you like to be? Dada wants to be a flame tree and I want to be a bamboo.”
“I...I...” Nitin faltered. He looked distressed, like he had been given a difficult piece of homework.
“Don’t worry,” Shamol said kindly. “You don’t have to be a tree. You can be anything you want.”
“I want to be an ant tree!” Nitin blurted out.
Shamol twitched his lips. “An ant tree!” he repeated. He leaned on his shovel and studied the round, earnest face of his younger son. “How marvelous! But tell me,
mia
, is it a tree where ants live or a tree that grows ants? I am curious to know.”
Nitin brightened. “An ant tree is a tree that grows ants and when...when...the ants get ripe they all fall down...and...when they all fall down they all play together and go to school!”
“Is that so?” Shamol’s eyes widened. “Be sure to warn me,
mia
, if you ever see an ant tree. I would be very much afraid to walk under one, with all the ripe ants falling on my head.”
Biren rolled his eyes at their silly talk. He tried to give Shamol a knowing look to say,
Nitin is such a baby
,
but Shamol’s face was deadpan as he struck his shovel into the ground and continued to dig.
CHAPTER
10
The schoolmaster told Biren to see him in his office. When Biren stood in front of his desk, he handed the boy a folded note.
“Give this to your father,” he said, without looking up. “And don’t forget to bring back the answer tomorrow.”
Biren looked at the schoolmaster nervously. This was the first time he had written a note to his father—for that matter, to
anybody’s
father. Disciplinary measures were taken care of in school with no interference from parents, except, of course, in Samir’s case. Even that was most unusual. Most parents could not read or write anyway. Biren’s father, who had attended college in Dhaka, was the most educated man in the village, even more educated than the schoolmaster himself. To send Biren home with a handwritten note for his father and expect an answer the following day was all very odd. Biren wondered what the note was about.
“Did I do something wrong, Mastermoshai?” he said anxiously. “Please do not report me to my father.”
The weasel-faced schoolmaster looked mildly amused. “Why,
mia
? Do you have something to confess?”