By 11 in the morning, the wind was blowing at a threatening velocity and the rain was lashing down so heavily that visibility was nearly nil. The nervous weatherman’s warning now made sense. The wind whistled with greater intensity, as if to mark the storm’s arrival. Thick clouds hung overhead, the rain whipped the city and a typhoon simply swept everything in sight. Within an hour the phone lines were disrupted. Bhubaneswar’s ordeal had only just begun. Bureaucrats reached their offices relatively early in the hope of receiving the news that the course of the cyclone had changed and Orissa had been spared. Wishful thinking was playing out its last act. Through the night the cyclone had moved straight towards Orissa. It made its landfall somewhere near Paradip. The state officials kept hoping the cyclone would pass in an hour or so. A majority expected to be home for lunch and the customary siesta. Their hopes were shattered as the cyclone did not simply “go away”. By noon, the streets had become unmotorable. As the storm raged, electric poles were twisted, trees uprooted, advertisement hoardings wrenched from their iron scaffoldings, window panes broke and glass shreds flew almost missile-like. Bhubaneswar resembled a war zone – a very wet one. Going home for lunch was no longer an option. Nor was survival.