DUST ON MOUNTAIN: COLLECTED STORIES

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DUST ON MOUNTAIN: COLLECTED STORIES Page 68

by Ruskin Bond


  Eyes of the Cat

  Her eyes seemed flecked with gold when the sun was on them. And as the sun set over the mountains, drawing a deep red wound across the sky, there was more than gold in Binya’s eyes. There was anger; for she had been cut to the quick by some remarks her teacher had made—the culmination of weeks of insults and taunts.

  Binya was poorer than most of the girls in her class and could not afford the tuitions that had become almost obligatory if one was to pass and be promoted. ‘You’ll have to spend another year in the ninth,’ said Madam. ‘And if you don’t like that, you can find another school—a school where it won’t matter if your blouse is torn and your tunic is old and your shoes are falling apart.’ Madam had shown her large teeth in what was supposed to be a good-natured smile, and all the girls had tittered dutifully. Sycophancy had become part of the curriculum in Madam’s private academy for girls.

  On the way home in the gathering gloom, Binya’s two companions commiserated with her.

  ‘She’s a mean old thing,’ said Usha. ‘She doesn’t care for anyone but herself.’

  ‘Her laugh reminds me of a donkey braying,’ said Sunita, who was more forthright.

  But Binya wasn’t really listening. Her eyes were fixed on some point in the far distance, where the pines stood in silhouette against a night sky that was growing brighter every moment. The moon was rising, a full moon, a moon that meant something very special to Binya, that made her blood tingle and her skin prickle and her hair glow and send out sparks. Her steps seemed to grow lighter, her limbs more sinewy as she moved gracefully, softly over the mountain path.

  Abruptly she left her companions at a fork in the road.

  ‘I’m taking the short cut through the forest,’ she said.

  Her friends were used to her sudden whims. They knew she was not afraid of being alone in the dark. But Binya’s moods made them feel a little nervous, and now, holding hands, they hurried home along the open road.

  The short cut took Binya through the dark oak forest. The crooked, tormented branches of the oaks threw twisted shadows across the path. A jackal howled at the moon; a nightjar called from the bushes. Binya walked fast, not out of fear but from urgency, and her breath came in short, sharp gasps. Bright moonlight bathed the hillside when she reached her home on the outskirts of the village.

  Refusing her dinner, she went straight to her small room and flung the window open. Moonbeams crept over the window sill and over her arms which were already covered with golden hair. Her strong nails had shredded the rotten wood of the window sill.

  Tail swishing and ears pricked, the tawny leopard came swiftly out of the window, crossed the open field behind the house, and melted into the shadows.

  A little later it padded silently through the forest.

  Although the moon shone brightly on the tin-roofed town, the leopard knew where the shadows were deepest and merged beautifully with them. An occasional intake of breath, which resulted in a short rasping cough, was the only sound it made.

  Madam was returning from dinner at a ladies’ club, called the Kitten Club as a sort of foil to the husbands’ club affiliations. There were still a few people in the street, and while no one could help noticing Madam, who had the contours of a steamroller, none saw or heard the predator who had slipped down a side alley and reached the steps of the teacher’s house. It sat there silently, waiting with all the patience of an obedient schoolgirl.

  When Madam saw the leopard on her steps, she dropped her handbag and opened her mouth to scream; but her voice would not materialize. Nor would her tongue ever be used again, either to savour chicken biryani or to pour scorn upon her pupils, for the leopard had sprung at her throat, broken her neck, and dragged her into the bushes.

  In the morning, when Usha and Sunita set out for school, they stopped as usual at Binya’s cottage and called out to her.

  Binya was sitting in the sun, combing her long black hair.

  ‘Aren’t you coming to school today, Binya?’ asked the girls.

  ‘No, I won’t bother to go today,’ said Binya. She felt lazy, but pleased with herself, like a contented cat.

  ‘Madam won’t be pleased,’ said Usha. ‘Shall we tell her you’re sick?’

  ‘It won’t be necessary,’ said Binya, and gave them one of her mysterious smiles. ‘I’m sure it’s going to be a holiday.’

  The Cherry Tree

  One day, when Rakesh was six, he walked home from the Mussoorie bazaar eating cherries. They were a little sweet, a little sour; small, bright red cherries which had come all the way from the Kashmir Valley.

  Here in the Himalayan foothills where Rakesh lived, there were not many fruit trees. The soil was stony, and the dry cold winds stunted the growth of most plants. But on the more sheltered slopes there were forests of oak and deodar.

  Rakesh lived with his grandfather on the outskirts of Mussoorie, just where the forest began. His father and mother lived in a small village fifty miles away, where they grew maize and rice and barley in narrow terraced fields on the lower slopes of the mountain. But there were no schools in the village, and Rakesh’s parents were keen that he should go to school. As soon as he was of school-going age, they sent him to stay with his grandfather in Mussoorie.

  Grandfather was a retired forest ranger. He had a little cottage outside the town.

  Rakesh was on his way home from school when he bought the cherries. He paid fifty paise for the bunch. It took him about half an hour to walk home, and by the time he reached the cottage there were only three cherries left.

  ‘Have a cherry, Grandfather,’ he said, as soon as he saw his grandfather in the garden.

  Grandfather took one cherry and Rakesh promptly ate the other two. He kept the last seed in this mouth for some time, rolling it round and round on his tongue until all the tang had gone. Then he placed the seed on the palm of his hand and studied it.

  ‘Are cherry seeds lucky?’ asked Rakesh.

  ‘Of course.’

  ‘Then I’ll keep it.’

  ‘Nothing is lucky if you put it away. If you want luck, you must put it to some use.’

  ‘What can I do with a seed?’

  ‘Plant it.’

  So Rakesh found a small spade and began to dig up a flower bed.

  ‘Hey, not there,’ said Grandfather. ‘I’ve sown mustard in that bed. Plant it in that shady corner where it won’t be disturbed.’

  Rakesh went to a corner of the garden where the earth was soft and yielding. He did not have to dig. He pressed the seed into the soil with his thumb and it went right in.

  Then he had his lunch and ran off to play cricket with his friends and forgot all about the cherry seed.

  When it was winter in the hills, a cold wind blew down from the snows and went whoo-whoo-whoo through the deodar trees, and the garden was dry and bare. In the evenings Grandfather told Rakesh stories—stories about people who turned into animals, and ghosts who lived in trees, and beans that jumped and stones that wept—and in turn Rakesh would read to him from the newspaper, Grandfather’s eyesight being rather weak. Rakesh found the newspaper very dull—especially after the stories—but Grandfather wanted all the news …

  They knew it was spring when the wild duck flew north again, to Siberia. Early in the morning, when he got up to chop wood and light a fire, Rakesh saw the V-shaped formation streaming northwards, the calls of the birds carrying clearly through the thin mountain air.

  One morning in the garden, he bent to pick up what he thought was a small twig and found to his surprise that it was well rooted. He stared at it for a moment, then ran to fetch Grandfather, calling, ‘Dada, come and look, the cherry tree has come up!’

  ‘What cherry tree?’ asked Grandfather, who had forgotten about it.

  ‘The seed we planted last year—look, it’s come up!’

  Rakesh went down on his haunches, while Grandfather bent almost double and peered down at the tiny tree. It was about four inches high.

  �
��Yes, it’s a cherry tree,’ said Grandfather. ‘You should water it now and then.’

  Rakesh ran indoors and came back with a bucket of water.

  ‘Don’t drown it!’ said Grandfather.

  Rakesh gave it a sprinkling and circled it with pebbles.

  ‘What are the pebbles for?’ asked Grandfather.

  ‘For privacy,’ said Rakesh.

  He looked at the tree every morning but it did not seem to be growing very fast. So he stopped looking at it—except quickly, out of the corner of his eye. And, after a week or two, when he allowed himself to look at it properly, he found that it had grown—at least an inch!

  That year the monsoon rains came early and Rakesh plodded to and from school in raincoat and gum boots. Ferns sprang from the trunks of trees, strange-looking lilies came up in the long grass, and even when it wasn’t raining the trees dripped, and mist came curling up the valley. The cherry tree grew quickly in this season.

  It was about two feet high when a goat entered the garden and ate all the leaves. Only the main stem and two thin branches remained.

  ‘Never mind,’ said Grandfather, seeing that Rakesh was upset. ‘It will grow again, cherry trees are tough.’

  Towards the end of the rainy season new leaves appeared on the tree. Then a woman cutting grass scrambled down the hillside, her scythe swishing through the heavy monsoon foliage. She did not try to avoid the tree: one sweep, and the cherry tree was cut in two.

  When Grandfather saw what had happened, he went after the woman and scolded her; but the damage could not be repaired.

  ‘Maybe it will die now,’ said Rakesh.

  ‘Maybe,’ said Grandfather.

  But the cherry tree had no intention of dying.

  By the time summer came round again, it had sent out several new shoots with tender green leaves. Rakesh had grown taller too. He was eight now, a sturdy boy with curly black hair and deep black eyes. Blackberry eyes, Grandfather called them.

  That monsoon Rakesh went home to his village, to help his father and mother with the planting and ploughing and sowing. He was thinner but stronger when he came back to Grandfather’s house at the end of the rains, to find that the cherry tree had grown another foot. It was now up to his chest.

  Even when there was rain, Rakesh would sometimes water the tree. He wanted it to know that he was there.

  One day he found a bright green praying mantis perched on a branch, peering at him with bulging eyes. Rakesh let it remain there. It was the cherry tree’s first visitor.

  The next visitor was a hairy caterpillar, who started making a meal of the leaves. Rakesh removed it quickly and dropped it on a heap of dry leaves.

  ‘They’re pretty leaves,’ said Rakesh. ‘And they are always ready to dance. If there’s a breeze.’

  After Grandfather had come indoors, Rakesh went into the garden and lay down on the grass beneath the tree. He gazed up through the leaves at the great blue sky; and turning on his side, he could see the mountain striding away into the clouds. He was still lying beneath the tree when the evening shadows crept across the garden. Grandfather came back and sat down beside Rakesh, and they waited in silence until the stars came out and the nightjar began to call. In the forest below, the crickets and cicadas began tuning up; and suddenly the tree was full of the sound of insects.

  ‘There are so many trees in the forest,’ said Rakesh. ‘What’s so special about this tree? Why do we like it so much?’

  ‘We planted it ourselves,’ said Grandfather. ‘That’s why it’s special.’

  ‘Just one small seed,’ said Rakesh, and he touched the smooth bark of the tree that had grown. He ran his hand along the trunk of the tree and put his finger to the tip of a leaf. ‘I wonder,’ he whispered, ‘is this what it feels to be God?’

  When You Can’t Climb Trees Any More

  He stood on the grass verge by the side of the road and looked over the garden wall at the old house. It hadn’t changed much. There’s little anyone can do to alter a house built with solid blocks of granite brought from the riverbed. But there was a new outhouse and there were fewer trees. He was pleased to see that the jackfruit tree still stood at the side of the building, casting its shade on the wall. He remembered his grandmother saying: ‘A blessing rests on the house where falls the shadow of a tree.’ And so the present owners must also be the recipients of the tree’s blessings.

  At the spot where he stood there had once been a turnstile, and as a boy he would swing on it, going round and round until he was quite dizzy. Now the turnstile had gone and the opening walled up. Tall hollyhocks grew on the other side of the wall.

  ‘What are you looking at?’

  It was a disembodied voice at first. Moments later a girl stood framed between dark red hollyhocks, staring at the man.

  It was difficult to guess her age. She might have been twelve or she might have been sixteen: slim and dark, with lovely eyes and long black hair.

  ‘I’m looking at the house,’ he said.

  ‘Why? Do you want to buy it?’

  ‘Is it your house?’

  ‘It’s my father’s.’

  ‘And what does your rather do?’

  ‘He’s only a colonel.’

  ‘Only a colonel?’

  ‘Well, he should have been a brigadier by now.’

  The man burst out laughing.

  ‘It’s not funny,’ she said. ‘Even mummy says he should have been a brigadier.’

  It was on the tip of his tongue to make a witty remark (‘Perhaps that’s why he’s still a colonel.’), but he did not want to give offence. They stood on either side of the wall, appraising each other.

  ‘Well,’ she said finally. ‘If you don’t want to buy the house, what are you looking at?’

  ‘I used to live here once.’

  ‘Oh.’

  ‘Twenty-five years ago. When I was a boy. And then again, when I was a young man … until my grandmother died and then we sold the house and went away.’

  She was silent for a while, taking in this information. Then she said, ‘And you’d like to buy it back now, but you don’t have the money?’ He did not look very prosperous.

  ‘No, I wasn’t thinking of buying it back. I wanted to see it again, that’s all. How long have you lived here?’

  ‘Only three years.’ She smiled. She’d been eating a melon and there was still juice at the corners of her mouth. ‘Would you like to come in—and look—once more?’

  ‘Wouldn’t your parents mind?’

  ‘They’ve gone to the club. They won’t mind. I’m allowed to bring my friends home.’

  ‘Even adult friends?’

  ‘How old are you?’

  ‘Oh, just middle-aged, but feeling young today.’ And to prove it he decided he’d climb over the wall instead of going round by the gate. He got up on the wall all right, but had to rest there, breathing heavily. ‘Middle-aged man on the flying trapeze,’ he muttered to himself.

  ‘Let me help you,’ she said and gave him her hand.

  He slithered down into a flower bed, shattering the stem of a hollyhock.

  As they walked across the grass he noticed a stone bench under a mango tree. It was the bench on which his grandmother used to sit when she tired of pruning rose bushes and bougainvillaea.

  ‘Let’s sit here,’ he said. ‘I don’t want to go inside.’

  She sat beside him on the bench. It was March and the mango tree was in bloom. A sweet, heavy fragrance drenched the garden.

  They were silent for some time. The man closed his eyes and remembered other times—the music of a piano, the chiming of a grandfather clock, the constant twitter of budgerigars on the veranda, his grandfather cranking up the old car …

  ‘I used to climb the jackfruit tree,’ he said, opening his eyes. ‘I didn’t like the jackfruit, though. Do you?’

  ‘It’s all right in pickles.’

  ‘I suppose so … The tree was easy to climb. I spent a lot of time in it.’


  ‘Do you want to climb it again? My parents won’t mind.’

  ‘No, I don’t think so. Not after climbing the wall! Let’s just sit here for a few minutes and talk. I mention the jackfruit tree because it was my favourite place. Do you see that thick branch stretching out over the roof? Halfway along it there’s a small hollow in which I used to keep some of my treasures.’

  ‘What kind of treasures?’

  ‘Oh, nothing very valuable. Marbles I’d won. A book I wasn’t supposed to read. A few old coins I’d collected. Things came and went. There was my grandfather’s medal, well not his exactly, because he was British and the Iron Cross was a German decoration, awarded for bravery during the War—that’s the First World War—when Grandfather fought in France. He got it from a German soldier.’

  ‘Dead or alive?’

  ‘Pardon? Oh, you mean the German. I never asked. Dead, I suppose. Or perhaps he was a prisoner. I never asked Grandfather. Isn’t that strange?’

  ‘And the Iron Cross? Do you still have it?’

  ‘No,’ he said, looking her in the eye. ‘I left it in the jackfruit tree.’

  ‘You left it in the tree!’

  ‘Yes, I was so busy at the time—packing, and saying goodbye to friends, and thinking about the ship I was going to sail on—that I just forgot all about it.’

  She was silent, considering, her finger on her lips, her gaze fixed on the jackfruit tree.

  Then, quietly, she said, ‘It may still be there. In the hollow of the branch.’

  ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘After twenty-five years, it may still be there. Unless someone else found it.’

  ‘Would you like to take a look?’

  ‘I can’t climb trees any more.’

  ‘I can! I’ll go and see. You just sit here and wait for me.’

  She sprang up and ran across the grass, swift and sweet of limb. Soon she was in the jackfruit tree, crawling along the projecting branch. A warm wind brought little eddies of dust along the road. Summer was in the air. Ah, if only he could learn to climb trees again!

 

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