In the stream I could see his heart flowing, touching a multitude of other hearts that went numb either by colliding or by choosing to stay so. Sameer cared too much for the skies that went wild with rage sometimes, shackling the scudding clouds, sending spears of lightning aiming to fracture the earth. He listened to the ache of the aging Banyan too.
He said “When I die I want to be close to a water body. I want the susurration of the stream to keep me alive, which I know is a way of claiming a part of something that is moving and yet holding breath, the air in the breath, and the life in the breath.”
I didn’t quite understand him but I knew someday I would. In a world that’s divided between good and bad, I want to keep faith, hold my tongue from moving too much, and reclaim my thoughts that go astray.
The day was nearing. I counted every little blade of grass as if that were a testimony to the gush of love within, to the fear that came unbidden and the moment of despair that flew from grief to grief. I met the doctor the other day. He said “Hold on to something. That’s the least you could do.”
I remember I looked into Sameer’s eyes with agony. I knew if I kept talking to him, he would keep listening to me. And I didn’t want to lose that part of the world where we felt alive, together, stitched by the same fabric of love, our eyes holding each other’s reflections.
I never left the room until the doctor sent me away. But that day I did otherwise. I ran away, into the wilderness where the Banyan stood tall, holding its roots from swaying too much. Then something stirred, something swished. I tried making sense of my immediate surrounding. It had gotten dark, the clouds were no longer moving, and the moon sent shallow beams of yellow light towards the stream.
After a while I decided to sit under the tree, and maybe weep or sing or talk to myself. When I sat down, I heard someone wailing. A man. There was no doubt the voice felt familiar. I couldn’t discern if it was an ache resounding through my heart or it was Sameer himself. I thought I was thinking of him too much when my phone rang and the doctor said “Sameer is no more. You’ll have to come back soon.”
After that all I could hear was the chirpy stream. So naturally I walked towards it in the hope that I will hear him again. But there was nothing. The stream glittered and rippled. I sat on the reedy shore and rested my chin over my knees.
I didn’t have an urge to run anywhere. I just wanted to be where Sameer wanted to be. In those quiet moments that don’t run a show. In those instances where he set his heart on the whiff of rustic air and sometimes taught me to swing over the prop roots of the Banyan.
The phone rang again. But I was fast asleep. The rustle of the trees, the petrichor of wet grass, the distant scent of his death, marooned me into a sleepy torpid world.
When the first ray of the sun kissed my cheeks, I realised I had a life waiting to live. So I sent my eyelids aflutter. Sameer stood on the other side of the shore, waving, smiling, breathing.
It was a difficult thing to believe. I didn’t know if I was awake or sleep drew pictures in my head. But then I heard the children crossing the stream and thought I should too – to the place that would glide past me if I ever thought of settling.
A former software engineer and a banker, Soumya Doralli is an Indian author of two books of fiction. Her third coming-of-age novel “Those Ripples Call Me Home” was recently released by Readomania. Her work has been published in Active Muse, Panoply, Mad Swirl, Ran Off With The Star Bassoon, among others. She was the Second Prize Winner of the Verse of Silence Poetry in Pamphlet Contest, 2025. Soumya loves capturing the heart of fleeting moments and painting beautiful imagery through her writing. See @soumyadoralli and on Medium.
