Savi and the Memory Keeper by Bijal Vachharajani

Savi and the Memory Keeper by Bijal Vachharajani

Author:Bijal Vachharajani [Vachharajani, Bijal]
Language: eng
Format: epub, mobi
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing


Chapter 19

Tleu (Ata)

Uncle no. 54 coughed twice. All the other uncles (and two aunties) immediately quietened and sat slightly straighter on their plush, ergonomically designed chairs.

He surveyed the boardroom with beady, watery eyes. He folded his hands, “Welcome, welcome, my friends and family. Today is a special day. Today, we have finally moved one step closer to our dream.” All the uncles (and two aunties) began drumming on the long wooden table on which a bonsai stood. Uncle no. 35 rang an ancient brass ghanti, Aunty no. 2 blew a conch, while Uncle no. 67 banged a spoon against his gold-rimmed chai cup. It was truly a landmark moment for The League of Extraordinary Uncles (And Two Aunties), also known as TLEU (ATA).

Set up in the early 1900s, The League of Extraordinary Uncles consisted of some of the most powerful uncles who made some of the biggest decisions about the country and the world. They were uncles who knew the right people behind banks, industries, real estate companies, film studios, governments, media houses. Not the actual CEOs, chairpersons, or trustees. They were the silent uncles, whose names never appeared in newspaper headlines or scandals. A whisper here, a nudge there, and entire forests were felled down to make way for mines and roads, banks decided which coal company to invest in, and malls came up where beaches stood. In the mid-2000s, they had admitted two aunties—Aunty no. 1 (no relation to Bollywood) and Aunty no. 2—to their India branch, in an attempt to be more diverse and inclusive.

Across the world, not a soul outside these elite groups knew about TLEU (ATA). When a certain Jan Havesomemore stumbled upon the League, he was dubbed a hipster by an Instagram influencer, and no one took him seriously again. When Ms. Doorander began asking nosy, inconvenient questions, her identity was deleted from the Internet, her social media accounts vanished, and she was reduced to a Nobody Knows Her—a fate worse than death in today’s times.

Power oozed out of every crevice of the boardroom. It smelled of cold steel, new money, and iron left out in the rain for too long.

“At last, TLEU (ATA) has the upper hand in the Treeson Project,” Uncle no. 54 was saying. “The tree is wearing down, its hold is finally weakening. This city will soon be ours, and that tree will be felled at the altar of Progress.”

It had taken decades. But it had been worth it.

At first, TLEU (ATA) had tried wreaking havoc on Tree by:

Poisoning its roots—the tree vomited it out.

Petitioning for it to be cut—denied, it was a heritage tree.

Trying to get someone to cut it down in the dead of the night—some hooligan wasps attacked the axe-wielder.

Trying to get someone to drill copper nails into its trunk—the same hooligan wasps attacked the nail-wielders.

No one and nothing could touch that &^*$%# tree!

But then, one uncle—Uncle no. 34—had seen a TED Talk about trees by some tree scientist and had said, “This tree cannot survive alone. It is connected to other trees, which makes it strong.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.