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KILLING THE WATER (continued) There was plenty of sweetness around the house. A line of fruit trees girded the edge of the pond. My favorite was the guava. Its trunk slanted, this was the easiest tree to climb. Some of the branches leaned out over the water. Plucking a juicy, ripe guava from one of those branches was tricky because you were in danger of falling into the pond. I left such risky jobs to my older brothers. The palmyra palm was a towering hulk and its big fan-like leaves stood guard, like a sentinel, over the pond. If the guava tree was hospitable to young boys eager to climb and pick fruit, the palmyra was said to be home to the bhoot. Nearly every ghost story told in Bengal has a spirit living in a palmyra tree.
"But why do the ghosts prefer this tree?" I asked. No answer ever satisfied me. Perhaps the clue lay in the kolshis that I saw hanging from palmyra trees in the villages. The earthen jars collected the sweet sap; later the sap became tari. We never had toddy in the house, but we all knew what drinking it did to you. All you had to do was listen to Yusuf Bepari who lived behind us. When you saw him under the influence - roaring in the streets, cursing or abusing his wife and children -you could easily believe that evil spirits from the palmyra tree had grabbed hold of him. Our first house - the cottage where I was born - was a small distance from the haunted tree. But that would change. Mymensingh Road was to be enlarged again. More of my father's land was taken, and more cash flowed into his pockets. My mother now campaigned for a brick house. It was built with its back wall skirting the trees on the edge of the pond and, as luck would have it, the bedroom my sister Meeta and I shared was built right underneath the palmyra tree's leaves. At night we could hear a swoosh-swoosh rustle coming from the roof. The roof was one of our favorite playgrounds during the day. Meeta and I played hopscotch up there. But you could never persuade us to go up there at night. We knew darkness was the time when the bhoot emerged. With the brick building came a Murphy radio. This was magic. But where did the talking voices and music come from? Imtiaz explained that there were little men and women inside the wooden cabinet. Once, armed with a screwdriver, I tried to see the little people. All I got was my knuckles rapped with a ruler. It was simpler to accept my brother's words. After all, if the palmyra tree could house spirits and I had visited places where humans had been transformed into fish or turtles, why couldn't little people live inside the radio? This creek, which came to life each day when cars were being washed, became a source of infinite joy to my brother Saadi and me. It was like having our very own river. Dhaka sat on the Buriganga (the old Ganga), so we called our river the Picchiganga (the tiny Ganga). Now we no longer had to wait until the rains to float our paper boats. We could do it year round. We even built a boat out of tin cans and equipped it with its own little steam engine. Then a whole town went up on the banks of the river, with buildings made of wooden blocks and roads laid down with cement. Our proudest accomplishment was a concrete bridge over the river. Now we could not only float our boats on the water, we could also roll our toy cars and trucks through our very own town. One afternoon Saadi and I discovered dozens of fish floating sideways on the pond. When we informed the adults, everyone was alarmed and perplexed.
"What can it be?"
If my father suspected anything, he never acknowledged it. Saadi and I were still busy playing with our little make-believe town. The streaks of oil in the water flowing underneath our bridge were worthy of no special notice. Besides, we were tired of eating fish. We didn't mind the disappearance of our pond's fish from our meals.
Then the palmyra tree appeared to die. Its carcass stayed up but the leaves became hard and brittle. The swoosh-swoosh sound vanished from our rooftop. The spirits must have deserted as well.
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