This timeless space, located in the southern Chorbat section of Shyok Valley, has a chequered history. Bogdang, Tyakshi, Chalun-kha, Thang and Turtuk (the largest of them) are the five Balti villages in India. Baltistan is a region that is controlled by Pakistan. During the Indo-Pak War of 1947-48, the Gilgit Scouts defeated the Dogra administration and then invaded the region of Baltistan. At the end of the war, Pakistan captured Turtuk along with a large part of Baltistan. However, during the Indo-Pak war of 1971, the Indian army captured the village. Brigadier Udai Singh and Major Chewang Rinchen, his second-in-command, entered the village after the retreat of Pakistani forces. How must it feel to sleep in one country and wake up in another without leaving your bed? This is how suddenly it happened. Once part of Pakistan, today Turtuk supplies grains and other essentials on horseback to Indian soldiers at the Siachen outpost. “Makes economic sense,” is Khan’s pragmatic remark. In fact, the village, with a population of 3,371 according to the 2011 Census, has soldiers who once belonged to the Pakistan army. During the Kargil war, some were even apprehended by the police as suspected spies, only to be acquitted by the courts later. Such is the precariousness of life in border regions.