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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
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Sunday, 3. July 2005

Novel Fragment - 03



War came again to the world. Old men at the gurudwara, many of who had seen action previously at various outposts of the empire kept discussing it often, their minds seemingly inflamed in the winter of 1941 by their memories of fire. Tully’s uncles, both Uttam and Dhir, however left the room, or if they were outside sitting on the front steps, they went inside, whenever talk turned to war, which was often. They had done their fighting and were now done with what they called the white man’s foolishness and greed. Death and the glorification of it, in the name of civilization and freedom held no more appeal to them. They knew perfectly well what both the barbarian and the conquistador were capable of, given sword, given gunpowder, given gas. However this was not the case with Ricardo.

Ricardo Fernandez, was his wife’s younger brother and only sibling, and since the death of her parents, a son she did not have, had a point to prove. What was it? That he is as good as any other man or boy? That he was indisputably American, as any other, seeking retribution from the Kurat and the Jap, after Pearl Harbour? Tully had been the witness to furious arguments and shouting matches, in Spanish, between Rosa and Ricardo. Rosa kept insisting that Ricardo leave California and go across the border Mexico, to their ancestral village in Guadalajara till the war is over, that he is more than a brother to her, that he needn’t die for a country which is not really his, and which will not fully accept him as its own.

But Ricardo refused to tear up the papers drafting him, asking him to report and sign up for the US Army. So Ricardo, the bright young boy just out of high school with an easy smile, a body that seemed to dance even when standing, and a pitching arm that took his school through the baseball league, had packed his bags. And one February morning Tully drove him down to the rail station at Stockton. As he was shaking Ricardo’s schoolboy hand, and asking him to write to his sister every week, Dhir, Tully’s old uncle who lived close by in town, and who watched Ricardo closely through a boyhood now interrupted by war walked down the platform, his long beard white drift in the morning breeze. And he placed a curved dagger, one of the signs of Khasla, in Ricardo’s outstretched hand.

Tully recognized this dagger. Dhir had carried it through slaughter in Shanghai’s Boxer Rebellion and then through the trenches of World War –I. Much later it found blood of an Irishman up in Bellingham who had beaten Uttam, Dhir’s brother, for no cause other than that he was dirty hindoo. The police never found his body. And after this exchange of arms the old man turned and left. He had no time for goodbyes.

Rosa had earlier refused to come to the station with him and Ricardo. She will have years to mourn this passage even though she doesn’t know this yet. She too gave Ricardo a talisman, her staff to stand still a world that had never stopped shaking under her feet, her mother’s cross, silver and turquoise. So this is how a departure came to be, a curved dagger in the palm, a crucified Christ next to the heart, and a man in the middle passage waving to another, with still turbulent and hopeful blood, passing beyond the bend.




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