Windhorse by Kaushik Barua
Author:Kaushik Barua
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: FICTION
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 2013-02-15T00:00:00+00:00
16
BOD RANGZEN
1963: New Delhi, India
âIâll go for the meeting. I want to see. But I donât want to be too involved.â Norbu shrugged.
âDonât want to be too involved? Because these are the kind of people you shouldnât be involved with?â Dolma asked.
âThe two Khampas who came seemed okay. Lhasang and Ratu.â
âI was joking,â Dolma said.
âI know. But theyâre following this guy named Thupten, Thupten-la.â
âAnd what about him?â
âHeâs raising a rebel army. Iâve heard things about these rebels.â
âWhat kind of things?â
âThat some were bandits. They stole from Chinese camps.â
âSo, letâs think about this,â said Dolma. âThey stole from the people who are occupying them. That makes them bandits. And when your father steals from the Indian government, itâs obviously okay. Because he does it over a bottle of Scotch.â
âStop bugging me about my dad. Heâs worked bloody hard his whole life for it,â said Norbu. âAnd thatâs true. It doesnât matter what else heâs done.â He stepped out with the dog.
Outside, as the day rustled to life, Norbu walked Rani through the lanes, tugging her away from the piles of garbage or translucent corners of piss which interested her immensely. Norbu had skipped work for the day. He didnât like the idea of shirking his responsibilities, but this wasnât neglect of duty, it was simply prioritizing: Tibet over work. But if he lost his job, he would lose face. In front of whom? Karma? However, he had already walked out on his parents. In fact, it was a wonder Karma hadnât got him fired from the job. He couldnât talk to Karma anymore; not after the fertilizer-girl suggestion â no, order.
Should he just surrender and join his fatherâs business? Or join Dolma in whatever plans she had? Plans, what plans? Become an officer in Dharamsala? Sometimes he sensed, more with his gut than with his mind, that there was another destination for him, some destination, nameless and barely visible â like a lighthouse in the fog. But who would understand this? Not his parents. He hoped, and sometimes he feared, Dolma did.
He was nervous about the meeting. And excited. Could these people actually fight and free Tibet? They would have to be great warriors, heroes. Or a bunch of madmen â was there a difference? If he was Tibetan â and he was â didnât he owe a bit of himself to their insane quest? He was worrying too much. All he had to do was translate for some American guy.
He spent more than an hour outside. That was enough for the dog and for Norbu. When he returned, Dolma had already left for work. After a breakfast of daal and rice leftover from the previous night, he still had too many hours to kill before the meeting. He knew what he could do. Start working on a guide for his student Ugen, the two-syllable kid.
Norbu drew a line through each page, one side for the Tibetan text and the other for its English translation. First he tackled the three persons: first, second and third, making sure the Tibetan words included both the normal and the honorific.
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