Thursday 30 November 2017

Mahua memories




It was still dark. The full moon was on its way to the horizon, leaving a trail of gleaming white village road. It was still dark when Lakha and his wife Diri, quietly opened the door and stepped out for Mahua.

It was that time of the year when the evenings bathed in the afterglow of bright orange, after the sun embraced the horizon. It was that time of the year when the smell of Mahua around dawn would almost intoxicate the animals in the jungle. So much so that some of them would venture outside the forest to savour a lump. Why, if you were in the forest in the still of the night and focused hard, you could hear even the mesmerising sound of the flowers dropping on the ground, “dwoop”.

Diri had often asked her mother,” Henda go, why is that even the smell of Matkom flower’s so luring in the morning?”

“Because, the spirits in the forest hide their nectar in the Mahua tree”, her mother would say. To which, young Diri would reason, “No, no, I am asking why mornings?”

“Because”, her mother would answer,” the spirits don’t want to be seen, so they hide the nectar only late in the night, after they finish their sabha, meeting each other!” 

And Diri’s random thoughts would take to motion, as random as the kok’s selection of fishes at the village pond. The Dighi itself was home to myriad spooky stories. Many a times she had gathered tales from the men bathing after sunset, of their encounters with the maidens with beautiful burnt skin, slender neck and honey smooth voice. Most often than not, it would be just one seemingly helpless lass, asking them for directions. Once they are cosy in conversation, the girl would vanish in the thin air without a notice, leaving the frightened man gasping for air. Worse yet, she would take the man her own way. And when he has completely lost his sense of direction, suddenly, he would notice her legs and gradually her inverted feet!! Most would return in a state of madness or in the least, stupor, from such encounters.

Well, not only paranormal beings, Bhagandanga and the villages nearby were also frequented by dacoits. “But that was long ago”, Diri thought to herself. The village manjhi doesn’t allow even petty thieves to get away. On one such occasion, Diri summoned the recesses of her memory, when dacoits had attacked the village, the sentries and village keepers had trapped them and had beaten them up black and blue. One of the dacoits had died while escaping and they had found his body in a paddy field near Bhagandanga, next day afternoon. The soil was red, soaked in his blood. Next harvest, when they gathered thrice the paddy from the same field, everyone said the same thing. It was the blood that had made the almost barren land so fertile.

“I wish I could turn back time”,  Diri sighed, reminiscing of the olden days. One looked forward to each day eagerly anticipating a new adventure to unfold itself. Every day. Now, amidst the routine household chores and the countless hours at field, even sohrai didn’t seem like celebration.

During a journey, it’s always the woman who leads. Dust on the mud road pressed beneath their cautious feet as Lakha trod lightly behind Diri, following the smell of the Mahua tree at the distance. A light might awaken the villagers, so they walked guided by the silhouettes of the trees and their own frames.


As they stepped outside the village, Diri remembered how her mother had warned her not to venture out to gather Mahua, especially during the full moon nights.  There was a soft breeze lilting around the trees by the village road and the arresting smell of Mahua flowers was not something that helped heed that precious advice, at least at this juncture. The intensity of the smell in the air grew, after almost every step they took. Warm yet soothing, strong yet mellow, the fragrance of the Mahua knew how to steal the hearts of the ones who had had a sniff. Finally, Diri’s eyes spotted the white flowers at a distance, after two large Sal trees. They had reached. 

To be continued....