Guides
NOTE: NO PHOTOS IN THIS BLOG; ALL PICTURES ARE ADVERTISEMENTS.
Genre - Fiction
Sub-genre - Road-trip
Length of blog - 2400 words
Chapter One: In-between
Rock Caves and Hard Fort.
Jay and Lakeisha had taken off
for the weekend. This time too, an early Friday evening getaway had made them
reach their destination by dinnertime. They checked-in to their pre-booked
hotel room and went off to bed. Their tummies full, cuddling led to a make-out
session.
Next morning, they were at
Ellora Caves, which was around 15-minute drive, north from their hotel. They
parked and had breakfast followed by exploration of the caves. And by lunch had
circled back to the parking-lot.
“That was fast”, Lakeisha said.
“Yeah the similarity of the
caves did help”, Jay said.
“I liked how the group of Southeast-Asians
were actually praying in one of the Buddhist temples”, Lakeisha continued, “By
the way, look what I found in the garden at the entrance.”
She held a throwaway water bottle
to Jay’s face.
“A cherry tomato”, Jay continued,
“I’m sure the well-kept garden did not have a vegetable patch. It probably fell
out of a foreigner’s tiffin.”
“We’ll be sure once it grows in
our garden”, Lakeisha said.
Jay had mounted some pots on one
vertical wall of their apartment's balcony, under Lakeisha’s guidance.
“Do you need a guide?”, a
stranger who had approached them said.
They both shook their heads in
unison.
“How about some guide books –
here is one of Khajuraho”, the stranger said.
He held forward a picturesque
book of sculptures which were in various stages of copulation.
“Hey, do we look like perverts”,
Jay said.
This made the guide lose
interest in them.
“I think yesterday night’s
episode, can categorize us as perverts”, Lakeisha said.
“That guy doesn’t need to know
that”, Jay continued, “Plus don’t we keep away from guides.”
It had been a passing topic
which led to a tacit decision between them to ‘explore’ more and use tour-guides
less.
They had lunch at an eatery
close to their hotel, followed by a quick refreshing nap.
“Where next?”, Lakiesha said,
“Do we have the stamina to climb a fort?”
“Let’s take baby steps and see
where we land up”, Jay said.
Daulatabad fort was again a 15
minute drive southwards from their hotel.
“Honey, you are going in the
wrong direction”, Lakeisha said”, Daulatabad fort is in the opposite direction.
“Yes, a short detour to see
Aurangzeb’s grave”, Jay said.
In half an hours’ time they were
back on track - heading towards Daulatabad fort.
A grave next to his teacher was Aurangzeb’s burial wishes; hence the
humble grave, in a common graveyard of a shanty town.
“What a tiny place and those tour-guides were shoving photos of the
grave in our hands.”, Lakiesha said.
“Yeah, it’s their livelihood. It’s a small place, yeah, so everything
looks gloomy. I too felt a little bad and tipped the parking attendant well”,
Jay said.
Their attention turned towards a structure atop a hill. Soon they were
greeted by a compound wall on their right. A parking-lot appeared.
Chapter two: The
hard to capture fort.
“So, what’s the plan? Do we enter, daylight will be gone soon?”,
Lakeisha said.
“Yes, we enter, and the strategy of this visit is, that we go right up
to the top of the fort first” Jay said.
He had paid the entrance fee and was moving into the fort. They paid
little attention to the huge doorway, elongated entrance, followed by a courtyard.
“Once we get to the top, we will get an idea of the fort’s layout and
surroundings,” Jay continued”, “A view from the top.”
Jay winked.
“Aha and we can catch the sunset
as well”, Lakeisha said.
The sun was hidden behind the
fort. The fort’s shadow covered the courtyard in a warm evening except for the
singular tower, which still caught the sunrays halfway up. The tower was not open
for public viewing and the stairs were blocked.
“For safety reasons, I guess”,
Jay said.
The tower did not match the
surroundings. The rest of the courtyard was littered with rooms of various
needs-of-past. A few amateur painters were trying to capture the fort in their
painting with their easels.
“Oh! So that is how to capture a
fort nowadays”, Jay said.
The courtyard landed onto the foothill of the fort, which they climbed. A
small bridge rose into the innards of the fort.
“Wow, a moat”, Lakeisha said.
They entered the dark viscera of
the hill.
Paths wound upwards, they held
each other’s hands and stepped forward into the bleak light of their
cellphone’s inbuilt flash. A few wrong turns, and weird curves later they
reached a clearing. At the other end of the clearing, another door, another
flight of stairs and finally they reached a bright open livable space four
floors up. It had a verandah with short border walls due to which it felt like
a bungalow.
“This would look plush when
decorated”, Lakeisha said.
A few tourists loitered around.
The view was unobstructed all around, except for the sunset in the west.
Lakeisha saw Jay on a higher plinth. She saw the stairs leading there and
followed him. On reaching up, Jay was nowhere to be seen.
“Jay”, she said.
A couple of calls and still Jay
did not reply. She realized she was almost at the summit; the plinth overlooked
the spacious quarters below and encircled it. The huge verandah had no cover.
The only way on top was to circle around the roof of this floor from the
outside of the hill.
Lakeisha stepped out and saw the tiny rooftops of a village in the
south. She looked closer to the bottom of the hill and saw a few more ruins.
She looked towards the west and saw her husband waving out to her. A short
climb and she was now seeing the sunset.
The summit had a couple of caves.
“Smoking zone”, Jay said.
They spent a few moments there before Lakeisha said.
“Once the sun goes down the way down would be even more difficult.”
They retraced their steps towards the living quarters. They seemed to be
the only people there. Jay walked towards the east verandah parapet.
“Look at the size of that cannon”, Jay said, as he pointed downwards.
Lakeisha saw the huge cannon on a cylindrical building.
“Remember how when we sketch a fort, we draw these cylindrical
structures at all the four corners?” Lakeisha said.
“It’s 16 foot in length, the cannon”, a stranger next to them said,
“Come this way.”
He led them towards the north, and they circled downwards along the path
which led towards the cannon. At the base of the cannon he stopped. Lakeisha
overtook both of them and climbed the few stairs to the flat circular top which
held the cannon.
“This cannon can fire all around
almost 360 degrees except exactly behind”, the stranger said.
“It would take many men to turn
the cannon to aim it”, Jay said.
“Look at the panoramic view”,
Lakeisha said.
She did a short twirl, her
ghagra-top obediently followed.
“This hill was thus chosen by…”
the stranger’s voice trailed off as he walked down the steps with Jay.
Lakeisha knuckled the wrought
iron cannon, which did not flinch. She followed the duo back down the steps.
She saw them standing over a hollow pit, in discussion.
“Look at this”, Jay continued,
“Once the cannon was aimed, all the men cleared the area, except for one who
would light the fuse. He would light the fuse and run down the stairs and dunk
his face into this pit- which would be filled with water.”
Jay actioned it all.
He did a running action down the
stairs, half bent to show the pool dunk, covered both his ears with both palms
and his mouth was puffed to act out the breath-holding part.
“To save his eardrums from the
huge sound this cannon made”, Jay said releasing his breath.
Lakeisha looked at the now dry pit. It was waste height and was cut out
of the rock, the size of a large, deep wash basin.
They walked back up the path
towards the living area. While curving the north edge and Lakeisha walked off
the path to check out the mountain wall - it was steep.
“We can see the moat below”, she
said.
Jay followed her.
“Yes, there is only one entrance
over the moat, the other three sides are steep cliffs. And the moat used to be
filled with crocodiles and poisonous snakes”, the stranger said aloud.
“Who is this crocodile guy?”, Lakesha
asked Jay under her breath.
“Heh, a guide I suppose”, Jay
continued, “Lets go with the flow.”
As they passed the quarters the
stranger said, “It’s my duty to usher all the guests out at closing time. I had
finished up here when you two came down from the caves at the top.”
“We were catching the sunset”,
Lakeisha said.
“Let’s continue to exit, I’ll
give you a tour on the way out”, the man continued, “The caves at the very top
are second century BC. And these are the living quarters. As we go down the stairs,
we can be sure that this is where the last stand would be taken before reaching
the living quarters above.”
They reached the small verandah
on the lower floor. Jay and Lakeisha started to head towards the other end
which had a similar opening to exit.
“On this floor was the last
battleground, “the guide said.
“As you can see this side falls into
the steep moat. So the fort-holders knew they had to push their opponents down
that-a-way.”
Jay and Lakeisha looked around the single-room sized space. They turned
towards exit.
“Look here”, The guide said. He was set on showing them the fort in
detail.
Jay was almost halfway through the doorway, when he saw the guide’s hand
through a small opening near the door. He bent and put his head in the decent
sized hole.
“A person could fit through the hole”, Lakeisha said.
“But they wouldn’t survive”, the guide said.
His hands made a swinging motion from above his head.
“The attackers head would be chopped off as he would try to enter or
look from the hole beside the doorway.”
“There would’ve been a door then”, Jay said.
He had hopped back to where the guide was and was inspecting the hole
from the verandah.
“It’s the perfect height for the
executioner”, Jay said. He too did the head chopping movement.
“And then the head would be
kicked into the chute there”, the guide said.
Another opening in the wall –
this one the size of a door- it was next to the hole in the wall. A similar
setup was on the opposite wall which they had just come down from.
“Hey, these openings in the wall
are open dummy doors. An unknown person would be bound to walk or run into
them, only to find themselves falling down a chute”, Jay said.
He and Lakeisha walked back to
the other wall and saw the similar three holes, first the doorway to stairs,
followed by a hole in the wall, and third the dummy door to death.
“I was wondering why there would
be a chute, when another step left would anyways send the enemy down the
cliff”, Lakeisha continued, “its all there to deceive the enemy into thinking
he is entering a doorway.
Lakeisha answered her own
question. They were all moving in the wrong direction, upwards.
“Let’s go downwards”, the guide
said.
They exited the last stance
floor. Onto the dark alleyway.
“Stay on the right”, they were
guided down a short slow slope. A small opening in the wall gave a dim glow.
The spy hole gave a view of the dim courtyard below.
As the ground flattened, the
guide said, “Stay left.”
They again felt the rock wall on
their left. It was pitch-black now. A few paces, and they could see the sunset
glow in a westward opening. The guide stood in their way.
“Don’t go towards the light,
it’s a sure fall”, he said.
Jay and Lakeisha froze. Both
holding each other to not to let the other move.
“On our right towards the
courtyard is the correct way to exit.
Someone’s mobile flashlight
shown towards the right. Both waited for the guide to move first.
“We came hugging the left wall,
and if we hug the right wall, we will keep going in circles”, the guide
continued, “It’s a loop – make the enemy charge at their own men in the
blackness. This area is always pitch dark.”
Jay and Lakeisha made a loop in
the dark. They noticed the right-wall had a small slit of an opening to reach
the slope upwards.
“This could easily be missed”, Jay said. He shone his mobile flashlight
up the slit in the wall.
“Let’s move down”, the guide said.
They exited over the bridge.
“The original entrance is via
there”, the guide pointed downwards towards an opening on a lower level.
“And a bridge connected from
there”, he continued to point towards the opposite wall of the moat.
The lower level lay in ruins,
probably because of the multiple tries at forced entry. The bridge that they
all stood on was a metal one, put up there by the ASI.
Past the bridge down a gentle
slope, they found themselves in the courtyard. The guide described the various
dilapidated buildings as granary, temple, mosque, barracks, stables, etc. They
all looked the same in their dull state. No daylight remained as they crossed
the singular tower.
“The tower was built by the one
of the wannabe-conquerors, who laid siege and wanted to see the ongoings in the
fort’s living space four-floors up”, the guide said.
They were at the main gate now.
The corridor and the insides of
the room which housed the main gate – all had hiding spaces for an imminent
ambush, the guide explained. The way to parking-lot curved left – so that the
enemy would be slowed down. The huge main gate which was spiked and curved
inwards too - so that elephants couldn’t charge straight into them to break
them down.
“That was wonderful!”, Lakeisha
said.
She turned around to see Jay palm the guide a big note.
“That was Sachin, he works for the Archeological Survey of India”.
--- THE END ---
Beautifully written
ReplyDelete