The deer was enjoying munching on the long, tender blades, and even from here, she could see its muzzle stained with the juice. She came up behind it, moving with painstaking slowness. Her hands outstretched before her were startling yellow, and the sunlight shining through the overhanging boughs in dappled shadows flickered on and off the stained fingers, creating a fascinating effect. It occurred to her—of all the things to occur to her when stalking a feeding deer—that she had not painted for a long, long time. She ought to take up painting again. She had loved the sensation of dipping fingers in dyepastes and then rubbing them delicately on clay walls. She had done an entire fresco once, climbing up on a wooden scaffolding, and she had been so intent on reaching the farthest corner of the wall that she had toppled over, losing her balance. Nakhudi had been there to catch her of course, and for once the anga-rakshak had been nonchalant. ‘It was worth it,’ she had said laconically, jerking her oversized head at the painted corner. And Sita, lying there in her queensguard’s arms, had looked up at her completed work and seen that yes, it
was
worth it. Well, not worth a fall and an injury, but worth the risk. ‘Now for the outside of the tower,’ she had said with a serious face as she stood upright again, then had doubled over with laughter at the expression on Nakhudi’s face! It had taken some effort to convince the queensguard that she was only joking and even then, for the next several weeks, every time she went within breathing distance of the Sage’s Brow, Nakhudi had stayed as close as a shadow.
Suddenly, the memory of Nakhudi’s face when she had cracked that quip brought back an uncontrollable urge to laugh. She suppressed it, pressing her hand to her mouth, but the laughter rolled out inexorably. A giggle burst free, all the louder for being smothered and in the lazy noonday silence, it exploded like a crackling log in a campfire. The deer leaped a yard high in fright, then bounded away. Sita made a half-hearted lunge for it but collapsed laughing uncontrollably. Half-chewed blades of darbha grass drifted down upon her face and arms. She rolled in the grass, clutching her sides and laughing.
She was still laughing a moment later when Rama came sprinting up from the direction of the river. He was dripping wet and his feet made a squelching sound as he ran across the grassy clearing. He reached the hut, calling, ‘Sitey? Sitey?’ using the affectionate ‘e’ suffix that he had only recently begun to favour. She saw him go in and for some reason it made her laugh harder than ever, knowing that she was out here and he had run past her without noticing. He emerged a moment later, a worried frown creasing his face and this time he saw her at once. He came over, still frowning as he saw her lying in the grass, hands and face yellowed (she had smeared turmeric all over while attempting to smother her laughter) with the spice.
‘What is it?’ he asked anxiously, crouching beside her. ‘What happened?’
She held out her yellowed hands to him. The similarity to the turmeric paste applied on a bride’s hands before the ritual wedding bath was so striking, that she blurted out, ‘I’m getting married again! Or at least I was, but when I tried to catch my new husband, he fled!’
That set off another burst of giggles. He grinned with that baffled look he got when she tried one of her absurd jests on him. Her sense of humour could be droll, and he was so straightlaced, it took him awhile to understand the point of the jest. Which reminded her of Nakhudi and the expression again, and set off another burst of laughing.
‘Your face is red,’ he said, offering his hand in aid. ‘And what are you doing with turmeric on your hands out here? Painting the grass yellow?’
She took his hand and he tried to pull her up. But he had forgotten how wet he was, and the combination of his wet hands and the turmeric paste made her lose her grip at once. Trying to catch her, he fell over as well and they tumbled together.
‘Now, we’re both painting the grass,’ she said. ‘Hmm, maybe I could marry you again. Since my deer lord seems to have rejected my advances.’
He laughed. It was awhile since she had heard him laugh that loudly and freely and it sounded wonderful. ‘Do that again,’ she said.
‘What?’ he asked. ‘Fall down?’
‘That too. But I meant laugh. Laugh again, and every day, all the time, waking, sleeping, eating, snoring … just keep laughing and smiling.’
‘While snoring too? How do you do that?’ he wondered aloud. Then, after a brief, thoughtful pause, he tried to produce an imitation of himself snoring and laughing at the same time. It sounded like a hippopotamus with a heavy cold.
When they had finished laughing over that one, she told him about the deer. ‘That was the third time!’ she complained.
‘What would you do even if you caught it?’
She had never thought of that. ‘First, hug it madly.’
‘Madly is right, the poor thing would go mad being hugged by a desperate woman with turmeric hands.’
She put one yellow-powdered hand on his face and pushed. ‘Then I suppose I would like to keep it tethered by the hut, feed it and talk to it and sing to it every day. It would be a nice companion.’
He raised himself to his elbow, looking down at her. The right side of his face had her handprint on it. ‘What’s wrong with this companion?’
‘I can’t keep you tethered. You keep running off whenever you please. I need a companion who stays by my side at all times.’
He tried to glare at her, pretending to be angry, but a grin twisted one side of his face.
‘What?’ she asked, sitting up and brushing grass off her garment.
‘I was trying to picture you returning to Ayodhya, greeted by great crowds waiting to welcome us home, parades and military displays and trumpeteers and flowers showering down … and you with your pet deer tethered to your little finger!’
She shrugged. ‘Oh, that’s all right. I’ll just tell everybody that it’s actually you, turned into a deer by an angry sage’s spell.’
He chuckled. They got up, this time accomplishing it without falling down.
‘Why did you come running back?’ she asked. ‘You looked like you had seen something.’
‘I did.’ He paused. ‘Only it was something that happened years ago.’
He told her the whole story, how he had picked up the mahseer and it had reminded him of that day he had walked beneath the Sarayu to save a fish. They walked to the hut and sat on the mud stoop. She glanced at him as he narrated the story and the wonder and excitement of his long ago experience came through to her as vividly as if she was there with him, under the river with the heavy rock in his hands. Rama was not generally a good storyteller. At times, she had to coax and cajole details and anecdotes out of him, but today he seemed to want to tell her everything, leave out none of the details, however tiny or insignificant.
When he finished, she nodded. ‘That was quite a story. You’ve never told me about that before.’
‘I’ve never told you so many things before.’
She nodded again. ‘I’m glad you shared this one with me though. It’s a wonderful experience, it must have changed you in some really meaningful way. My father always said that sometimes the incidents that change our lives are the very incidents we try hardest to forget. It’s because those incidents are so fraught with emotions that it’s difficult to relive them. They remind us too much of what we were like just before that moment of change.’
He was silent, thinking about that for several moments. ‘Your father is a wise man. That is a great insight.’
She looked down, suddenly aware of what she had just done.
He sensed the change in her. ‘What?’ Then he understood. ‘You must long to see him again.’
She shrugged, not trusting herself to speak.
He put his arm on her shoulder, brushing back a lock of her hair that had come free of the bun on her head. ‘Why don’t we go to see him?’
She stared at him. ‘When? You mean next spring?’
‘We could travel to Mithila from here, visit your father for a while, then proceed to Ayodhya. We could send word ahead to my mother and brothers of the day of our arrival.’
She drew in a sharp breath. ‘You would be willing to do that? Go to Mithila before Ayodhya? Just for me?’
‘The last time I went to Ayodhya, I went via Mithila, and just for you.’
She pushed his arm away, affectionately. ‘You did not go for me. You went because the brahmarishi Vishwamitra commanded it. Because there was an asura invasion to repel.’
‘But you were the best thing I found in Mithila,’ he said softly, tracing the line of her cheekbone. ‘And I would like to see you happy again, so we will go to your father’s domicile first, then return to our home.’
‘I am happy,’ she said. ‘Even here. I am happy now that the fighting is done. These past weeks have been like a dream. As if our exile had already ended. Haven’t you felt it too, Rama?’
He had. That was why that memory had percolated up to his consciousness today, because it reminded him of the last time he had felt so at peace. ‘I feel freed of some great burden,’ he said. ‘Free to be myself, to be happy, to love and be loved. You are right. Only with the end of violence can we find the beginning of happiness.’
‘Now,’ she went on, speaking with the same tone, as if she were continuing his thoughts, ‘I feel as if I could stay here forever. One with the forest, the animals, the sounds and smells of life and nature everywhere. Not only do I not miss the city and the palace, I almost don’t want to go back. I like the simplicity of this life, the quiet peace, the silence is so complete I can hear the grass grow or a fawn chewing that same newly-grown grass, smell a muddy bison one day and a rutting elephant the next, hear the songs of a thousand different birds, watch even a deadly cobra slither past knowing that he merely seeks food for his younguns and means me no harm. For the first time in my life, I truly understand what my father meant when he used to tell me that we were all of the forest and it is only in the forest that we can truly find ourselves.’
‘Cities stifle the truth in our souls,’ Rama said. ‘They are unnatural compromises made by people who desire the power and safety of numbers and wealth. They are the future, but in living in them we lose a part of ourselves, just as a caged beast gradually loses its will to survive and dies at a third of its natural span.’
She sighed. ‘I wouldn’t really have tethered that deer. I don’t know what I would have done. I suppose, hugged it madly and then set it free. It would be cruel to tie it down.’
‘But we have to return,’ he said quietly. ‘We can’t break free of our tethers. Because we’re tied by the unbreakable rope of dharma.’
‘Yes, yes,’ she said. ‘I understand that. Maybe that’s why, because I know we must return, that I want to enjoy these seasons of rest we have been given.’
‘And we shall enjoy them,’ he said. ‘We shall live each moment to the fullest. You desire laughter? We shall laugh! And play, and love and live like happy beasts of the wilderness. Let us put aside all cares and worries and relish this precious time of peace, my love.’
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Rama, that’s exactly what I desire. Not chariots and silks and jewels and battalions of serving maids. Peace and love. Even—’ She stopped abruptly.
‘What were you about to say?’
She shook her head.
‘Speak your mind, love. You know you can say anything to me. There are no secrets between us.’
She glanced up shyly at him. ‘I was almost about to say that at times like this I’m almost tempted to …’
‘Yes?’
She turned her face away, overcome by embarrassment. He reached out and held her chin, turning her blushing face back to face him. ‘To bring a child into the world? Our child?’ She nodded.
‘Our hearts beat as one. I feel the desire too, growing stronger every day. As if I long to enter the state of parenthood during this time of peace, lest …’ Now he stopped, unwilling to go on.
‘Lest the peace not last,’ she finished for him.
He looked at her, saying more through his eyes than he could express in words. She sometimes felt as if she could read the future of the universe in those eyes, those dark, bright pools of perfection, if only she gazed into them long enough. But it was never long enough.
‘We will speak of this by and by,’ he said at last. ‘But for now, let’s be happy in each other’s happiness. We have a right to peace and contentment. It’s our due.’
‘Richly deserved,’ she added.
They sat quietly for a while.
Finally Sita frowned and turned her head this way, then that, as if searching for something.
‘What are you looking for?’ he asked.
‘You went to the river to get fish,’ she said. ‘For our supper. Where is it?’
He grinned. ‘I threw it back in the river.’
They laughed a long while over that one.
NINE
Lakshman came back to Panchvati through the thicket, not by the water as usual, because he had been tracking a spoor and wanted to see which way it went. It looked like a deer spoor, a big male, but it was much bigger than any stag he’d seen in these parts before, and something was odd about it. He was close enough to hear the crackle of the fire and smell the flavours of roasting fish, potatoes and cauliflower when he bent over to examine a mark on a tree more closely. He could see where the stag had stood, facing this way—which would mean it was facing towards the hut. There was something he couldn’t understand about the marks and tracks, something he couldn’t put his finger on but knew was wrong. Unnatural.