Dev Narayan's calloused hands trembled as he gathered his meagre belongings: a chipped enamel mug, a tattered blanket, and a photograph, edges worn frayed, of a woman with eyes that mirrored the vast sky and a boy with a grin as bright as the sun on harvested rice. They were all he had left, remnants of a life spent battling hardship with the love for his son as his shield.
His heart, once a field vibrant with hope, lay fallow. He had sacrificed everything - his wife to illness, his home to debt, his present for his son's future. Every penny squeezed from the earth, every bead of sweat shed under the unforgiving sun, was sent to fuel the boy's dreams.
And now, even that was lost. The last money order sent to his son had returned as addressee was not found. A very, cold and mocking despair reverberated the emptiness in Deo Narayan's chest. Superannuation had snatched his temporary haven, leaving him adrift in a sea of uncertainty.
He shuffled toward the gate, resignation heavy in his step. As he opened it, the sun glinted off a starched uniform and polished buttons. A young man, face hidden by the shade of a hat, stepped out of a jeep. In the spontaneous salute, Dev Narayan caught a glimpse of eyes, brown, deep, familiar. And then, in the way the man held his head, the tilt of his chin, recognition struck him like a bolt of lightning.
"Sahib..." Deo Narayan croaked, the word rasping against his parched throat. He weak eyes squinted, trying to pierce the veil of disbelief.
The man's hat tilted up, revealing a face hardened by time, yet etched with the boyish grin he carried in his heart. "Baba?" he whispered, the single word a dambreaking, unleashing a torrent of emotions.
Years of struggle, sacrifice, and unspoken love condensed into that moment. Dev Narayan stumbled, the photograph slipping from his grip. His son caught it, a mirror image of himself holding the same picture years ago. Time folded, past and present merging in the salty sting of tears and the warmth of a long-awaited embrace.
In that one act of recognition, Dev Narayan's barren field bloomed anew. The years of toil, the sacrifices, the loneliness, all found their meaning in the arms of his son, a magistrate now, but forever the boy with the sunlit grin. They walked back into the guest house, not as master and servant, but as father and son, their journey, though arduous, finally drawing them home, to each other.
The sunset that day painted the sky with hues of hope, mirroring the newfound warmth in Dev Narayan's heart. The future, still uncertain, held a promise he hadn't dared to dream for - a future lived alongside his son, proof that even the driest ground, watered with love, can bloom again.
Thursday, 18 January 2024
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