YD6-69 (TRT) Aetheria's Swirl Beneath The Khulna Sky, Tyres Burn, Repatriation Breathes The Gulf War
YD6-69 (TRT) Aetheria's Swirl Beneath The Khulna Sky, Tyres Burn, Repatriation Breathes The Gulf War
identity blooms like dawn. This story is an unfolding suite of chapters clarifying my book: The Code:
Horizon of Infinity—a philosophical memoir exploring: How The universe Sculpted Our Minds. Through
Aetheria, the lens of consciousness, aware of her need for a body to reveal herself and exercise her
wishes, the narrative leads to her birth and the name she will claim: Sunshine.
Chapter synopsis: Step into a fractured topographic dream—where ferry decks blur with curfews,
survey lines trace fading empires, and every telegram becomes an omen. In Gulf’s Shadow, political
unrest and spectral landscapes converge, as the narrator races through collapsing timelines, haunted
by exile, a looming war, and the quiet pull of Aetheria.
Pulling up outside the Royal Hotel, cradled in the Y-crotch of the split street--the brick
memory of empire. A layered pancake, a rotunda dwarf besides a fenestrated tower, keyed
to a golden efflorescence--Aetheria awakening in Helios’ charm, even as I'm wiped by the
night’s lack of sleep.
Now, under a steaming shower. I step out, dressing before the mirror--unsteamed.
Toothbrush. Then the Philishave’s whirr--dry heads following my guide of my fingertips, until
the stubbles surrender to smoothness.
I pass the foot of the bed, cross the king-size room. French doors--held a
breath--welcome back the day, after a whole night on the road. I step onto the balcony.
Khulna’s suburbs unfold--our point of entry--cutting a path branching to my feet at the edge
of the seventh-floor deck.
I turn away. Cross the room, step into the desolate corridor. My index finger presses
the call button--the elevator stirs, mechanisms sighing through the shaft. The doors part to
the deserted cabin. I step in. Stand. Walk out into the squarish lobby. Veering into the
ecliptic rotunda--ghostly Royal Hotel’s faded elegance. A shiny khaki uniform lingers in
ricochet beside Kashem, whose eyes droop, sleep stolen in snippets. The seated officer lifts
his gaze, as if asking himself, ‘Is that who I'm waiting for?’
‘What in hell? . .’ The thought flushes through me. ‘The bandits are already a memory.
No fingerprints. No forensic?’
Both men rise--Kashem and the police officer leave behind a massive period couch,
circling the coffee table to approach. The police officer tilts his head, speaks sideways.
Kashem, a pace behind, translates. “In the report, there’s a discrepancy. You saw two
bandits. The driver saw, five.”
The police officer demands that I unknit the driver’s pitch-black window from my
memory, from the rear seat—faces eclipsed, emerged behind a flashlight sweeping off flares.
“I saw two men,” I reply, correcting the discrepancy, “… at a time.”
After questing the team, a glance at my wristwatch, ‘five--what a wasted day!’ The
officer shakes my hands, offers a smile. “You’re always smiling. Other Europeans aren’t like
you.”
I wasn't teasing robotic creatures from under my skin--nothing feels cozy with these
uniforms masking authority. Sunset creeps through a gray haze, and then the night
pigeonholes me with my NEC clamshell laptop. Always a story to write about.
In the morning, beyond the four-paneled glass, our two-tone red and gray Nissan SR5
Patrol waits. I exit the Royal Hotel and embark with the team, heading toward a map-marked
site--a mosque, a topographic departure from sea level.
The jockey driver follows the road while I record the mileage on the map--until our
topographic Nissan SUV gives its last breath. Village men seem eager to lend a hand,
pushing the Nissan--misled by a tag brimming with assurance: “Powered by Mercedes-Benz.”
I leave with the team, onto a rickshaw--its skeleton figure pedaling us into sunset, into the
night--until we’re dropped at the entrance to the Royal Hotel.
When in the morning, I catch a glimpse through the four-fold glass--my team in the
Royal Hotel’s driveway behind a blue Toyota minivan. Kashem must have caught my
surprised expression. “A replacement crankshaft has been found,” he offers, reading my
questioning mind--then adds, “Now we need time to effect the repairs.”
‘OK. It looks alright. Newish.’ I thought, as Ibrahim loads the last survey case. I climb
on board with the team, taking my seat next to the jockey driver. He tweaks the ignition. I
press the reset on the trip counter. We idle out from the hotel portico, gliding through
asphalt arteries--on a leisure ride through Khulna’s dense belt of population, until the road
ends at the Rapsa river, also facing the opposite wharf. We descend, overseeing where silty
rivers converge, downstream.
Ahead, our way across the waterway, where the suburb herds to the waterfront. From
amidst rooftops, an obelisk trellis rises--high-voltage limbs stretching skyward, relay
antennas bloom in petal-white dishes. At eight o’clock, a trawler shoulders into a floating
dock. Kashem approaches, leans elbows on the driver’s open window, as I jot down the
mileage. He nods toward the mooring. “That’s our boat.”
I step down from the Toyota microbus, circling to the rear. From the tailgate, I retrieve
the camera from the survey equipment case. We cross by ferry. I frame the full height of the
pylon--shoot. As the shore draws near and the ferry docks, we step aground. I lift the
clinometer--monocle to eye--tilt the dial to the pylon’s crown, watching the angle roll in
degrees along the wheel’s edge. Survey marked: Kashem grips the casing of the surveyor’s
measuring tape and sets off, while Ibrahim holds the hook. Ahead, Kashem stops and marks
the ground. He winds the tape as Ibrahim catches up. I count the one hundred meters,
moving with the mark, and again down the deserted street, around the block. Reaching the
base of the pillar’s cable tray, we retrieve--an aerial anchored line stretches across town, a
map in the making for engineers and technicians to follow in our wake. Back across the river,
we board the Toyota--the jokey driver tweaking the engine to a purr.
When they’re gone, I lift the clamshell of my NEC UltraLite. The liquid crystal
display--ideal in the shade of evening light--flickers to life with Lotus Software 1-2-3. I'm
inputting the day’s topographic data into spreadsheet cells. In my electronic diary, after
recording the team’s starting point, the completion of our topographic survey, the glitch of
loaning the Royal Hotel’s Toyota, and the mission carried through to the end of the day.
Feeling accomplished--yet. I pull down the screen. 'Details always win an argument.’ My
motto, anticipating the quiet, will one day return with questions of trust.
A day goes by--settling into leading my team by a compass, south into the delta,
downstream, toward the sea. We gather in a new daylight into the Royal Hotel lobby--where,
as the only guest, I lodge like an echo of the structural ribs. My team raised their concern.
“You don’t eat--three days?” Kashem’s words echo in my head. ‘Why aren’t I hungry?’ a
question that will filter, like nutrients, through the mineral-rich soil of food my body has
already ingested.
A while later, we enter the flurry--a village’s males, drawn by the passing minivan. We
disembark the Toyota. With the team, I walk across the flimsy planks spanning the frail
bridge. Reaching the opposite bank, we turn--watching as the Toyota’s wheels edge onto a
few butted stretches of planks, the wheel’s running tracks across a deck of cross planks
beneath.
But I'm teased--by the princess. A young woman extricates herself from a flurry of
young males, a bafflement trailing in the wake of the minivan from which I stepped. Through
the thatched grass eaves grown too close across the roadway, Aetheria’s breath was drawn
out behind them--a sillage of light and hush in the wake of the minivan.
The young woman paces gracefully upfront in slip-slops, a few strides ahead of the flat
Toyota muzzle squeezed by the guardrails. The highlight of a rustic village--her rust-orange
salwar flickering against raw, whittled wood. A white scarf, butterfly winged over her
shoulders, woven from cloudlight, defiance--yet not. About to cross, a boy clutches a
half-world of hunger. The blue Toyota coasts behind, its jockey driver shadowed behind the
windshield--fearful, bracing for a flex beneath the weight.
Along the buckling railing, the young woman, in her own world--presses on without a
flinch or glance, until the minivan shields my mind and blurs my memory. I’m bound to
follow the team, climbing on board, drawn from an artery in dissonance. ‘Don’t even think--I
don't want to be born into this world.’ The princess vanishes from the village gateway as
we're driving--following our course, plotting the next pylon.
We boarded the Toyota, pulling out after a topographic survey--an enclosed site
boasting a latent obelisk trellis--dusk’s self-painting, fenced silhouettes. From behind an iron
picketed palisade, the street beyond wavered in a copper-tinted haze. Shadows
broken--fenestrated facades and rooftops. One tucked into the other--margin a distancing
street. A rickshaw drifts through mist. A boy stands still beside his bicycle, stealing a stare at
our departure. In the depths, the sun, half-draped in smoke and palm fronds--paused
without urgency. Birds, mid-flight, come to rest among others perched along aerial cables,
we leave behind.
The countryside reaches out. My imagination runs wild--ghosts of hunkered men laying
bricks draw me toward a hypnotic haze along a single-lane. “Can you drive faster?” I repeat,
tighter, as the road stretches and my nerves fray. He responds with side-glancing thoughts:
‘You can't even drive?’ I read it, too, from the rear--minds blooming cotton bushes, their
thoughts ripe for my mind to pirate, each questioning my skills.
But I soon realized--I’m no longer that 13-year-old driving the farm’s Volkswagen
panel van over a washed-away overnight dirt roads with my brother Igor, flooring the
throttle. I underestimated the undulated road’s rhythmic waves--they airlift the dark through
and bounce from our seats with a pneumatic thud. The headlights skip like a stone over
water--crest to crest, never landing. Even easing off the throttle doesn’t suffice. We’re
thrown up and slammed back down. It dawn on me--It dawns on me--I’ve misread the
hand-paved surface and the traffic’s creative speed bumps--harmless stunts, but not during
a race deep into the night when all we long for is sleep.
I’m washed out. At the junction, I relent--set my ego aside and returning the control to
our jockey driver. ‘These roads. . . They’re not for me?’ I reflect. We cross the village
gateway, backtracking across the wooden bridge, headlight brushing the asphalt--until with a
sweep of the entrance, we halt before the Royal Hotel, stepping out.
I cross the ecliptic hallway, and just before veering to the elevator lobby, Kashem
catches up with me. He hands a telegram. As I stand inside the cabin, one glance. “TRT
Philips. . .” And a thought rushes through me. ‘Head office wants to know if I’m still on the
job.’
A day--to Friday evening--I enter my room, welcomed by a waft of fresh air. I lift the
NEC clamshell laptop, the gray screen, upload Lotus 123--the spreadsheet for the day’s data
input. Somehow feel they had the right not to switch on a dozen floor tower’s plant for a
single lodger. The thought lingers, nurturing in the back of my mind--I had doubted the hotel
would honor their advertised air-conditioned rooms. Then I’m distracted--by a hum in the
street.
I step out of my pigeonhole onto the balcony, following the thread of a beam of
eyesight--trawling a few floors above. With a poised look of advance knowledge, I catch the
character of a journalist--observing from his balcony. Sentient. Almost writing a story in his
mind for diffusion--morphing into a photographer, his long lens of sight already telling:
‘Something is going on here?’
I gaze after the reporter’s pointed regard--to where the city suburbs blur into palm
forest--from where the plowing boulevard slips beneath the hotel’s blind corner. Just short of
it, a clot of figures congeals: boys, men, swelling slowly. Shadows stretch long. The asphalt
fragments to ash as black puffs of smoke coils in the air. Figures, in their elongations, move
in a cluster, crossing the curb-median. Peering over shoulders, among loose hands over
tunic--bystanders. No slogans, no shouting. Just the thrum of a few restless, stoking figures.
The margins hold still--a mixt crook of storefront retailers, apartment blocks--quiet,
peeled, listening, and facing a shack leaning into its shadow, a corrugated roof rusted at the
entrance to a park. Children linger near the trenches dark mouth--half-watching,
half-unmoved. A signal post. A yellow sign, absurd. Absurd, blind to instruction. I turn away
from the sun’s stays—hard, declarative—glinting off tin, off eyes.
Night falls. I steal another glance over the balcony--storefronts and streetlights united
in their glow. As the street blocks itself with stoked tires and wood, bonfires
blossom--multiply--turns inward. Awe-inspiring freedom fighters, men breathing “Koyra.”
Saturday morning. The shower streams--I become steam--my skin dissolves, my body
softens, vanishes--a spirit’s breath caught cleansing to the bones. I step out, towel dry,
wrapping my skin-suit. I dress--shirt, pants, socks, step into shoes, sweeping off, ‘what’s the
day bringing?’ I step out to grip the handrailing--the suburbs recede like an old dream. The
boulevard creeps forward, a trio of jingle trucks moving along the median. Cargo bed open,
soldiers armed--some spilled, boots jogging alongside in broken formation.
But then, I hover--over a single civilian, a tuft of hair, weeping over the cabin roof of
his truck. Around him, a truck bed filled like a livestock pen: military hard helmets, khaki
shoulders, a few rifles cocked, barrels resting across the roof, aimed inside a tightening
noose on last night’s debris, in the face of the Royal Hotel.
From the far rear--a jumble of retailer fronts, the interstice of apartment blocks--the
police chased men forward. Young men scatter across the median like leaves caught in an
autumn wind. While batons rain like monsoon thunder, driving them past the opposing street
vendor shack. Mere shadows--chased into the enclave park, vaulting backyard walls, slipping
through the cracks between houses. A few are caught--limbs twisting in resistance--hauled
back toward one of the trio trucks. Stragglers vanish, but Khaki figures haunt them down,
searching house to house, deep into the night.
A day, growing concerned about the team keeping pace--marveling as Helios unfurls
gold across our route, while Nyx, without remorse, tightens the sky’s breath and winks over
the horizon. Leaving us, worming into a wall of darkness. Until we cross the river gate, glide
through the sleeping city, and pull before the Royal Hotel. Stepping out the minibus, pressing
my way through the door, I pass by the crescent desk, footsteps unbothered. When a flimsy
envelope is pressed into my palm. After the first telegram, to no surprise, a reminder, on
sight. “Philips TRT, Paris. . .” to feel chased by their ghost.
A nag I can’t quite wrap my head around. With foresight on an arc of daylight at loss, if
I’m to chase a post office swallowed by the city--without a thought spared for the curfew
trap. The last telegram is still dangling in memory--unanswered. Swinging like a loose rung
in a fractured chain. To reply would only deepen the entanglement. My mind freezes in my
dilemma--sentient of their minds. Men in air-conditioned Parisian offices, their gaze defaming
from afar.
Bugged by my thoughts, I step into the elevator, emerge into the corridor--behind me,
the door closes, and I fall into bed. Only to find my bio-clock, before Aetheria’s hour, Nyx’s
still breathing the night--with foresight of our passage under the radar of the curfew. I
glance at my wristwatch--outside, the stars begin to loosen their grip on the darkness. I slip
out of bed, stepping on the floor. Dress. Stand inside the elevator cabin, an echoing whine
shifting through the shaft, in the midst of the sleepy concrete skeleton. I walk out through
the ground-floor lobby, veering for the oval reception--team up. We embark the Volkswagen
minibus. The jockey driver tweaks the engine whimper--headlights feeble sweep the
shadows out of hiding as we ghost through the deserted streets--reaching the ferry.
We drift, leaving behind Khulna’s political turmoils in our wake. Extending before our
silent eyes, the bright beam burrows a silent language—a ghost flare approaches—a lone
light—stretching space until its elasticity snaps into two converging headlights. The road
thickens with dribbling rickshaws, a tailback gathering before folding into the bend. In the
glow, shadow figures drift at the edge—stray vendors buttling in the margins. Under Nyx's
gaze, the night animates dismay. Beyond—the road yields to hawkers burning paraffin
lamps, ghosts at the roadside.
Out of the shadows: accidented stalls, shanty frames leaning wounded against the ink
spill of the broad river. Rising ahead—behind a wall of rickshaws, in half-sight—an iron
silhouette: the ferry, fading into the swallowing darkness, having dropped the tangle of
traffic we passed earlier.
We pull up beside drab canvas stalls. The hush of minds. Thoughtful aura—smoking
signals—silent messages exhaled. Silhouettes stir. Doors click. Figures rise from the interior,
four doors loosed into the chaos swelling around the Volkswagen minibus.
I step away, eyesight circling beneath torn tarpaulin awnings, leaning against the
faithful Nissan SR5 Patrol, tagged: “Powered by Mercedes-Benz.” At a side stall, a man with a
shawl knotted around his head edges back, finishing his meal, fingers brushing away threads
of saliva. He grabs the loose end of his shoulder-draped shawl and rises, wiping his mouth.
Passing a rag nailed to the wall, he pulls its frayed edge toward him—wiping again. I watch in
disgust as ghosting folks before and after repeat the same quiet ritual.
The man who cleared space near a pot of steaming broth leaves me watching a young
boy behind a table. The boy glances up and addresses me with a hand wipe across an
enameled plate—‘I’ll fill it up for you.’ I shake my head—no—but he persists, insistent in a
language that slips past me. My refusal is dismissed. He ignores it—sees through it. Their
food churns my guts.
With a tone of calm inevitability, Kashem relays, “Delayed… Five more hours to the
destination. The ferry is late.”
Out of the dark, a steel dragon lifts its head—the floating structure moors. We roll onto
the deck, crawling from the harbor into a void of pitch. Shadows flicker; feeble light anchors
the ferry. We walk off the ramp, climb into the Volkswagen minibus, and drive off in a
reverse semblance—dropping off margins: shaky stalls, peddlers, luminescent rickshaw
figures treadling through their shadows. Trucks, buses—men clinging the roofs—the swarm
fray down, thinning the medley, until the beam slips along the deserted asphalt, darting us
into the void.
When the asphalt highway forks into a brick-paved path, I fall dumb and
mute--surrounded by males in their tunics, while Kashem, in European clothes, stands fluidly
talking among them. We leave the jockey driver behind. I duck after Ibrahim into the
snout-to-rear calash of a Vespa, Kashem folding in besides the rickshaw driver--hip to hip.
The puttering ride stretches inland until we approach a swell of the road’s
shoulder--rickshaws lined up, on both sides of a culvert’s concrete parapets. A
pressure-cooker atmosphere at the squeeze--too tight for any vehicle to pass. We enter into
the midst: bike pushers and Vespa drivers blaring loose bursts of conflict, their voices
carrying--a myriad of trembling words. Kashem, at ease among his less-fortunate brothers,
catches the lined-up discourse in a breath and translates: “The union is blocking the passage
from crossing!”
Across the ditch--streaming a no men land--another row of Vespa snouts, lines the far
shoulder, facing us, commanded by a leader. A bouncer’s figure swells behind the Vespa
windshield, poised at the pathway’s edge--sinew and stillness, ready to crush the fear from
any daredevil bold enough to trespass. Behind him, a burly giant, messy and rough, plonks
into place--angled and immovable. But even his mass seems to shrink beneath the other’s
gaze. A rank of rickshaws shoulders the pathway behind them. Their slight figures are
patient, waiting.
On our side of the parapets, nervous drivers and pushers among rickshaws--none
eager to let their lucrative customers walk off. But Kashem crosses the narrow bridge. His
slight figure weaves the gaze of burlesque men framed in a gapping Vespa--eyes sharp,
unmoving, guarding their territory. He returns--unscathed. We step down. We cross through
the parapets--a silent threshold across the stream--and board another Vespa rickshaw,
puttering into a slow U-turn.
The driver behind the handlebars, hands poised. At the rhythm of - ‘prr… prr… prr’ - we
proceed along the pathway deeper inland. He throws glances around his elbow--eyes
slewing, unable to flee the fire of a dragon unfolding from the trailing brick paving. For long
stretches, he keeps ahead--until a freewheel rolls past, overtaking us like a farewell sign,
loosing momentum, to wobble.
To the driver, the coils in a serpent’s track--the wheel lying out of breath in the
sun--bear no surprise. With him, Kashem steps down, before me and Ibrahim. Stuck in the
middle of bushland, no rescue in sight--only the dare of a mechanic’s gaze on the naked axle
point, encircled by the drum brakes, a shoe resting on the chevron-pattern brick paving.
Kashem scratches his head, turns away, and gazes down the road. A ghosting tunic
approaches--the spell cast over the Vespa. Kashem waves down the pedaling figure. We duck
aboard. The skeleton rider pedals with superhuman tirelessness. After a jolting stretch, the
wayside foliage morphs--We enter a market street. Villagers bloom in a flurry along sidewalk
storefronts in midday sunlight.
On the peaceful sidewalk, the sun strikes the colonial post office--brick and ashlars
effloresce--I'm blind to Aetheria’s aura, urging me to reflect--over the telegram unanswered.
Topography the pylon, trailing Kashem by sight, in the grasp of a telecommunication
engineer, emerging from the crows across the street. In diagonal approaching, leads the
team away from the recorded transmission tower. Kashem inquires about the site
electrification. Upon entering, a blatant cubic structure, home to a manual vintage
switchboard desk. A zoophilist purrs below the dormant telephone party lines. The engine
contented to gleam in the dusty corner--a red starter pull-cord capping a white gasoline
tank--reminiscent of my testing day back in Kelvin. The value output of a portable Honda for
our little family only survived a few globs in the event of a blackout.
In the telephone exchange room, the generator hums its phase--a cord trailing up the
wall, feeding a single overhead bulb that glimmers over the exchange operator. We turn
away--the site measured, recorded. Step back outdoors. Across the street, a Vespa
rickshaw--no driver. Kashem walks across, searching through the bustle of retail strips.
Midway, changes course, reaches toward a snail’s-pace Vespa. Waving the ride up, he
negotiates briefly. Then waves us on board. We duck into the calash, puttering up the
street--backtracking a ride emerging from cream-painted houses--before the day pauses.
The fenestrated facades efflorescence a golden aura--as if to watch us go.
A day--the sunset drapes in a hush, rhyming with the song: ‘Sunrise, sunset. . . swiftly
flow the days -- Sunrise, sunset -- One day following another. . . Laden with happiness and
disappointment. . .’ Ahead, the sky blushes with a quiet it cannot keep--still, as we shift
down south, beyond Khulna’s curfew and the jaded teeth of unrest,
The driver steers away, pulling up before the entrance. Ahead, Kashem ascends to the
upper floor. In a proud stride leading to my room. He declares, “These are a minister’s
retreat.”
From a changed base, by day--my dreams fade faster. Each day wakes the golden
beam over these riverborn seas--but won’t save what slips away. Still, Helios engages the
horizon, soft and soundless--silhouette the hull of a derelict against men in a pirogue, a
barge moored ghostly, waiting to liven and set with the tide.
By the fishers' village. Ashore, birds don’t sing--my dream thins. The river mirrors the
last, peaceful wake: the silhouette of a man--gripping a pole, his leg wrapped--an oar wound
in linen. Walking the riverbed, still and yet propelling. A crutch incarnate, he hauls his cargo
of driftwood. The dead and swollen were salvaged for the worth that remains. I break away
from the image--a workhorse walking the gunwale, tilted, and a slipper above the silty
waters.
Kashem paces in his shadow, restless along the waterfront. He returns, shaking his
head. “The skipper is an hour late.” The delay entwines us tracing the pylon, threading the
relay antenna’s voice of tomorrow. “It’s better than a pirogue…” I say sarcastic to Kashem.
Stealing into sunrise, he barters for a powerboat. I don’t see beyond my next step. After the
team boards the skeletal barge, we’re like children in mud, playing with what floats.
At the helm, the old sailor, A father-son constellation--the boy leans in—cranks the
mechanical beast from the cold, coaxing it to cough black puffs to life. I read history here:
My brother, Igor, and I--we who wrestled a stubborn single-piston diesel engine before
school, taking turns with the crank, each kickback jarring the shoulder, as the fowls on
Kyalami’s poultry farm waited for drinking water.
Precious, consuming into the start of the day, the old man turns his head, squinting
commands through coils of black smoke. It dawns on me--he’s questioning the boy at the
aft, the teenager hunched low in secrecy on deck, legs draped over the engine well, trapped,
wrenching the throttle, ridding the piston’s ragged revs.
Weird, against the rate of my compass glimpses, tracking a river whose banks have
meandered since mapped in 1928. Before the trailing vortex of black smoke, until the engine
whispers a last breath. Beneath the anxious gaze of his old man, the boy yanks the
lever--again, again, again--the piston choking at every turn. Coughing black smoke, failing a
heartbeat. The humbled barge surrenders, shoreward--where we disembark—at the doorstep
to the village.
‘Let's go?’ blurt in mind. “We’re going with the speedboat,” I say. The river opens to a
clearing, silt circling at the prow. We slide ashore between two pirogues grinding moored at
the lip of a riverbank. Where a fired clay riprap embankment rises--behind a village’s boy
balancing on an ill-brick—a question too many eyes ask. Young men, shirts wilting from their
shoulders, tucked into lungis drawn tight at the waist, in slip slops. While two bicycles wheel
aboard a narrow hull, others shaded by the stilted huts. Thatch roofs offset by a warehouse
whitewashed facade, roofed by rusted pitched corrugated iron sheets. The skeletal sentinels
studying our approach—clutching equipment cases like foreign relics.
Kashem signals ahead and exchanges a gesture with the helmsman. I disembark last,
stepping onto the raw cobble rise. The village males follow us--emerging from a hedgerow
of trees. I pause, lift the camera. Frame. Shoot. The antennas atop the obelisk
trellis--engineers to reinforce—are too feeble to carry the thread of signal farther toward the
sea. Survey complete. We retreat toward base.
A day--en route to a remote village near the edge of the Bay of Bengal--we board with
our bags onto the silhouette of a ghost trawler. A room with louvered windows breathes
behind a middle-aged man in the wheelhouse, steering us downstream.
Kashem and Ibrahim in our field office--planks swollen, the gunwale blackened with
use. They lean over; Ibrahim steadies the paper with one hand while Kashem inches the red
planimeter along the map, tracing the topography in slow arcs. Beside them, the makeshift
desk exhales--clutches of tools, loops of worn tape, the scholar’s handbag half-open, spilling
pencils and pens. While nearby, with a cutter, I shave the eraser and jam the rubber into my
ears. Tethered to the river. Catching the compass needle’s drift through the current’s
middle--south. Mark the river that refused to stay still.
Until the engine fails--and the pace returns strange. Kashem and Ibrahim's voices
carry across the water. From the dark riverbanks, clay figures rise, responding. I ask, “What
are they saying?”
Patience thins. Squabbles ripple between us and men onshore. The Kashem turns to
me. “They say they have no seaworthy boat.” We drift in. Disembark into a loose pool of
waiting men besides cargo rickshaws--their gaze fixed on the next body, the next box to
arrive.
With Ibrahim, I hop onto the cargo flatbed--Kashem leading ahead. Spoked wheels
spider-crawl. We patter the narrow brick-paved path, threading through a trickle of rickshaw
traffic. Behind us, a skeletal dwarf pusher, feet treading on booster blocks--an odd
distraction--as wooden planks abrade flesh to pelvic bone. The ride stretches on. I don’t
know how long I’ll endure--shifting hips, folding forward, thighs absorbing the pulses. We
prolong the dark-clayish estuary embankment, sentient of an upcoming whirlpool--where
rivers might forget which way to flow beneath the ocean’s tide.
At the crossroads of the deserted outskirts, I alight, relearning my legs. With Kashem
and Ibrahim, we walk the brick-paved path into the village. From every
crevice--thatch-shadowed doorways, cracks of homes--young males gather in our wake.
They follow in silence. Bare feet. The weight of their gazes hovers my shoulders. In silent
orbit, a darkness thickens--suffocating, enclosing us in an arc of masculinity.
I pause before a designated implant of a pylon, lift the camera. The creeping swell:
young boys, middle-aged men, elderly drawn in, skirting into a swarm of flickering eyes.
They frame the lens, obliterating open space. I need not think--only adjust the focus, set the
light, then turn my back on the black crowd of faces, a full 180. They follow, drawn like flies,
to the edge of their straw-roof village. When the swarm had shifted before me, my body
uncoil. In the light of the lens, I whisk a frame across the bare plot of land--and leave it. Let
the construction team come in the aftermath to raise the transmitter tower, foreseen to rise
in due course.
Michel’s lifestyle surges ahead--a rhythm I couldn’t perceive beyond the four months
I’d granted myself. Aetheria’s aura in a sliver of cloud, unwilling to participate. Her divine
hush pressed against the scenes--watching, never yielding. My spirit captures flower girls
fleeing my lens, scattering, whisking their beauty behind walls--in fear I might steal their
soul.
We leave--village males straddling before a distant palm grove. Their naked footsteps
fall off the paved street like husks, slipping into cracks as we pass scattered huts. Kashem
and Ibrahim guide us back to a thatched hut--old, frayed--crutch against a hand-smoothed
earth wall, juxtaposed with the hollow of a storefront at the crossroads to an aural labyrinth.
A still breath in the whirlwind of our arrival. Kashem steps across and down the riverbank,
haggling our fate with a boatman.
As Kashem waves us on board, the diesel roars. I leave, wrapped in a sari of warm
vermilion, ochre, and quiet earth--folded over her head with grace. In a glimpse, the young
woman grips me with her half-smile--neither shy nor performative. A little girl, sleeveless red
top, skirt fluttering, barefoot in her mother’s long shadow, wide eyes--the aura of Aetheria’s
reminder: 'I exist.' Out of the corner of my eye, I catch a traveler's leather satchel slung
beside an elder man--white topi and beard, red kurta, and white scarf--quiet, exalting
dignity. Paired with a cloth bag in the mother’s hand: the boat’s drop. . . in their
homecoming?
As we drift upstream, retrieving ourselves into the silty swell of the flood tide, a naked
riverbank trades for the opposite bank, disappearing beneath a claiming green tight-knit,
flocculent, rich hedgerow sanctuary. I feel privileged as Kashem’s voice rises: “The Bengali
tiger.” I search for cracks--but find none--for the creature who has earned a zodiacal domain:
clumsy hunter, playful prowler, to revere. In the hush beyond the diesel’s roar, Aetheria
brushes destiny into the air--skies mirror a Michelangelo, clouds animated by Helios shaping
beasts in a zodiac forest.
Finding the Volkswagen minibus, our jockey driver returns us to the ministry’s
apartment complex--and a day, in the late afternoon, crossing by ferry the river, oblivious to
the fallen curfew, arrives at the Royal Hotel. We step out of the minibus. The first telegram
had hovered a shadow over me--layered with quiet reminders. Kashem hands me the next
one, which reads: “Due to the Golf War. Immediate repatriation.” No breath to gather my
thoughts, no time to wrap up my accomplishment or review the data collected--left in limbo.
I head off to the elevator; behind the door to the room, I fall to sleep.
In closing loop, dropped off at the Sonargaon hotel, I anticipate the obvious: ‘What
have you been doing all this time?’ Inside my room, I lift the clamshell of my NEC UltraLite.
The liquid crystal display flickers, pages shifting late into the night--until I fall into the arms
of Morpheus. In the morning, I walk from the hotel around the block, along the bustling
thoroughfare. Besides the splashed wall of the ANZ Grindlays Bank, I step into the lobby,
bearing no heed to the joiner’s makeshift workshop planning doors.
The elevator splits its doors, and I take a stance. I step through to the fifth-floor
landing--an invitation onward by the paired doors, clearing TRT-Philips’ hum, unfiltered by
diplomacy. No greeting. Each man for himself, in a dense, heavy atmosphere--figures mere
scattering shadows of the past. Michel, even with his assured footing in geotech, doesn’t
escape the mood. His freedom trails loose braids--a lifestyle of prostitutes—and behind his
lost regard, churns Anita, his local girlfriend. His repatriation--a conflict with a wife in Paris.
I only fear becoming that character--further estranged from acquaintances and friends,
like distancing mountains--their echoes changing as the shades of green fade into deeper
grays and blurs. Even family feel lost in one’s reach.
The mistrust looms--an inherent weight from Paris. Amidst zombies walking about my
existence, I save my diary file to a floppy diskette and slide it into the IBM-compatible tower
at my disposal. Lotus 1-2-3 flickers on. I set the pages and mark the data range. One
breadth--click. Holding my breath, I press “F7” for print. My heart throbs in my chest as the
adjacent dot matrix printer zips lines across the paper, rippling down in spools. I tear the
sheet off, feed it into the facsimile machine--wait until the receipt is sliced clean. Exhausted.
Like running a marathon through the wires, reaching Paris. Destiny, eager, let me slip away.
For once, it didn’t set a trap. Kind to me--without a glitch--the rarest harmony between
competing electronic ghosts. Aetheria wants me home.
You are welcome to read all the chapters and explore more at my website: How the Universe
Sculptured Our Mind. I spend an absurd amount of time chasing expression—perhaps to shame. But
the challenge is mine, updates may occur without notice, shaping the timeline, perceptions. The gift
is yours: thoughts, echoes, reflections. I take them with gratitude. And you—who are you, reading
these lines, stepping into my genre, my style, the quiet current of my subject?