Frame 23

The pencil broke at precisely 2:17 in the afternoon. Not with drama. Not with protest. It simply surrendered. Graphite snapped against paper, leaving behind a thin, incomplete line across a face that refused to resolve itself. The face belonged to no one yet. It hovered somewhere between hero and coward, between lover and witness, between…

Prime Minister and the Cub

In the middle of the night, the Prime Minister of India was not asleep. The lamps in the long corridors of Teen Murti Bhavan burned with a patient yellow glow, illuminating polished floors that had known both empire and independence. The portraits on the walls, stern ancestors of administration, fading generals, forgotten viceroys, watched with…

The Captain Who Could Not Command

In Ranchi, mornings do not arrive with applause. They seep in quietly, like dew threading itself through blades of grass. The farmhouse lies still under a pale sky, its long driveway scented with damp earth and faint petrol from machines that slept through the night. Beyond the gates, the city stirs in low murmurs, but…

The Bard and the Deer

In the early mornings at Santiniketan, the earth does not merely glow. It smoulders. The red laterite soil holds the memory of last evening’s heat and releases it slowly into the pale blue hour before sunrise. A faint scent of shiuli blossoms lingers in the air, mingling with the raw, metallic tang of dew settling…

The Fragile One

At dawn, the Sabarmati does not glitter. It exhales. The river lies low and patient, a silver ribbon pressed into dust-brown earth, the wind moving gently across its surface carrying the smell of damp clay, spun cotton, and last night’s ash. The ashram wakes without noise. There are no clanging bells, no shouted instructions, only…

Missile Man and the Mutt

By late evening the laboratories at the Defence Research and Development Organisation campus did not fall silent. They merely changed their breathing. The clang of metal softened into the hum of air-conditioning ducts. The sharp, acrid tang of solder and heated circuitry gave way to the faint sweetness of night jasmine from somewhere beyond the…

Bagha

At four in the morning, the Ganga does not speak. She breathes. Mist hangs low over her patient waters. The air tastes faintly of wet clay and incense long extinguished. Somewhere in the distance, a conch has already surrendered its cry to the dawn. The Math still sleeps, wrapped in saffron shadows and the smell…