They took us across the river to the other side for the ceremonies they had to conduct for Achchan’s ashes – we went by boat of course. It makes me feel odd remembering all that now. Aniyathi and I don’t remember ever going across the river before that though we lived so close to it all these years. We never needed to. It was bright and calm that day. Everything looked green and pretty as went slowly across the water, slower than usual because of what we were carrying with us, I think. Our neighbours – the twins and their parents too came with us maybe because they really wanted to be kind to us. One of the twins, Bindu, sat with us in our boat and kept looking at the clay pot placed in the middle, covered in shiny red silk, as if she was a little afraid of it. She was very quiet that day though they both usually have a sharp way of talking and laughing all the time -- and I felt like laughing that day – I did not, of course – what was there to be afraid of now? Definitely not our father’s ashes and bones in front of us – and not even whole bones were in there but only bits and pieces that were left behind from the burning --
You see, I had managed to look when they were scooping the ashes into the pot – I left Aniyathi inside our room with a handful of peanut sweets in her hand, next to Amma who had dozed off peacefully and I went and hid behind the front window – I think I saw one or two long-ish, hard looking bones charred black like Achchan’s angry eyes that I can never forget – and a whole lot of crumbling lumps – the man filled up the pot and then poured in handfuls of grey ash too – then wrapped it all up tightly in a square piece of red cloth, the way Georgettan packs idlis and sambar in pieces of old newspaper at the teashop . As I stood there staring, I heard Amoomma enter the room and I froze. She came to the window too, silently, like a tree spirit, in her greyish green saree and stood there watching, like I was watching. She slipped out after a few minutes, maybe to receive the red-wrapped bundle – which later came on the boat with us on our first boat trip ever – it took us about an hour to get to the place because we were going against the current and nothing would make the boatman hurry, once he knew where we were going and why. Bindu had smuggled packets of masala peanuts inside her churidar shawl and she gave them to us on the return trip. Everybody was more cheerful when we were returning, I thought, not just Bindu, maybe because the ashes and bones were safely gone – well on their way to the big sea which is at least a few miles from here – scattered and lost in all that water – never to come our way again – never to find us again --
When we got home though there was a scare – we could not find our Amma anywhere and the doors of our house were lying open. Amma was not taken on the boat trip because Amoomma said it was not necessary. She is the one deciding everything now, naturally. She has taken over from our father though sometimes she does look in my direction before she says something. Maybe she sees something new in my face now. Maybe she expects me to help her, or maybe she is wondering about what I think – like about what really happened to Achchan at Georgettan’s place that morning. Or at our home, the previous night. Or why she did not ask anyone to come and call us out of school that whole day even though our father had just dropped down dead in front of half the village and instead, let us go through a normal day of school which then became one of the best days ever – along with the twins who still know nothing about us except what we told them that day – on that day we escaped for a little bit of time--