The
monk was recovering quickly and by the time the dark moon appeared in
the sky pink scars were already forming in places where the bear had
dragged its sickle-like claws. What helped with healing was Atisha´s
youth, Savitri’s healing ointments and - maybe most importantly –
the unending attention he was getting from both girls. As his wounds
were healing, the color of Savitri´s saris was changing. From calm
and dark blue to yellow - shining and sunny.
Atisha
seemed to enjoy the company of both girls but it so happened that it
was he and Savitri who spent most of their time together. Even when
she was away he still felt her presence – as if she were still
sitting by his bed on a small mat — like she used to during the
first two days. And her fragrance - it filled his cell - faint during
the day and strong at night and this time it was not a product of his
imagination. Savitri was always wearing in her hair a small garland
of white jasmine flowers and every evening before leaving she put it
on his bed. All night long he was drifting on
a cloud of dazzling white fragrance.
In
the evenings the
monk started to go out of his cell. He did not go far - just made a
few steps and then sat down by the wall to watch the sunset.
Sometimes he thought that this mystical and eternal performance was
enacted just for him: he had never seen anybody else watching it.
Savitri was the first person who had ever joined him.
As
they were sitting there in silence the hot air of the day was cooling
off, small ants were running busily on the ground
trying to finish their daily chores before the departing Sun put an
end to their daily frenzy.
One
evening Atisha asked her: - my parents died... and I found a new
family in my monastery. And you... how did it happen that you live in
the temple? How did you become a temple dancer?
Savitri
glanced at him with doubt. This story was buried in her past and in
all these years she never went back to it. She slightly lifted her
head to look at the huge red-orange disc - at this very moment it was
inserting itself neatly into a narrow slot that stretched behind the
horizon and in front of the sky; there it would stay till the next
dawn.
But
there was another dawn, a long time ago.
She
took her eyes away from the setting sun, looked into the monk´s eyes
and said: - Here is how. Listen. And you will see it.
She
breathed in deeply.
The
light of the day has just started to mingle with the darkness of the
night, dissolving it bit by bit into a milky white dawn, promising a
bright and hot day. Turning round I see that the priestess walks down
temple steps so I run up to her to touch her foot for blessing.
She
looks the same as yesterday: her shining hair is black, her silk sari
is white; the skin of her bare arms and waist is cinnamon. But today
she is smiling – and I smile back, too.
She
takes me in with her calm and gentle eyes and like other people,
cannot help saying: - But look, your skin is so white…
I
look at my arm with sudden interest but it is not really so
white. Whiter, of course, then my sisters’ but then everybody in
our family is dark skinned, except me . Even my parents are. My
mother said that our grand grand parents came from the North - this
is where our Dravidian roots are. Even our Great Mother whom we
worship, Kali, came with us from these faraway places. And her skin
is so dark that it even looks dark blue.
I
came to this temple yesterday. My parents brought me here. But why?..
Because I am so different from my sisters?.. but then – if I look
different from them and even different from our Devi – why bring me
here at all? That I did not understand. Then I think about another
possible reason. Once I heard how my dad said with a deep sigh to my
mom: ”no sons... but one more daughter is born... more and
more dowries... so that our daughters could get married…”
But
later I learned that none of my guesses was correct. The real reason
was different.
The
true reason was an astrologer. One day my parents consulted a temple
astrologer in our town – and what he told them completely changed
my life. The astrologer prepared a chart of my planets and saw a
misfortune coming my way. So he took a crystal ball and looked into
it – long and hard.
Finally
he said that this white girl – that was me – would not bring good
luck to her husband. “The man who will want to marry her –
announced the astrologer - will love her so much that it will bring
ruin upon him”.
And
that was it. You know that before making any big decision we go to
the temple of our kula-devata – and we also go to the astrologer.
So...
what could my parents do? Next year they consulted the temple
astrologer again and after that brought me here. To serve our Devi.
The
road to this temple was hot and dusty. And very long. It first took
us out of our noisy and busy town, then led us through green fields
and finally brought us here where it ended abruptly at the gate of
this ashram. Never before had I been so far from home... Never before
had I seen a rock temple like this – so beautiful and so strange.
To
announce our arrival to the Devi we all in turn rang the brass bell -
my father had to raise me as it was hanging high under the entrance
arch. After that we stood there for a while listening how its deep
sounds added to the chanting coming from the bhajan hall.
We
passed under the arch and crossed the yard – it was paved with
stones – they were so hot that our feet were burning, went up the
steps and entered the temple. It was like entering a different world.
It was filled with the dense scent of burning incense and with the
sounds of chanted bhajans – as they were hitting stone walls of the
temple more and more sounds were born and they were mingling with the
spicy aroma of curling incense smoke.
Several
big and round clay vessels were filled with precious castor oil and
wickers in them were burning with even flame in front of Devi.
When
we came closer to her shrine our bodies threw shadows on the walls
and I thought: when we go out - are they doomed to stay there forever
in the darkness of the temple? Or could they fly free one day into
the high blue sky?
Then
I looked at my mom. I still remember her eyes… tears made them so
big. They glistened in the darkness of the temple and the flame of a
wicker reflected in them like an imprisoned shining snake.
The
way back home for my parents would be even longer then today´s road
to the temple. The door between us closed and there was no way back.
I
stayed in the temple with the priestess.
-
From now on you will be serving Devi - she says solemnly. - You
will become a devadasi, a temple dancer. Have you seen them? – and
she points with her hand at statues chiseled in the stone wall not
far from entrance columns.
The
front half of their bodies has been freed by the sculptor from the
rock - now they are stepping forward out of the eternity
into
our world. But they will be always dancing locked in solid rock
monolith – eternity will hold on to them, not let go of their
beauty and their celestial dance.
I
silently nod and look at them with admiration. Their celestial bodies
are as flexible as branches growing on a young tree - apsaras stopped
in breath taking postures. I will never dance like them. How can I? I
am mortal and they are divine.
The
priestess walked me past them, past the shrine and then along a dark
and narrow corridor cut deep in the cave and we entered a cell – it
was tiny and I was surprised that so many shadows could fit into it;
a dot of light flickering in a clay pot had no power to dispel them.
-
This is where you will stay tonight – the
priestess said calmly, almost indifferently. – till
the dawn starts.
The
cell is not only dark – after the hot sunny day I feel cold and
frightened. I know that I am a grow up girl but still I feel like
crying. How could they leave me here... But the priestess holds me by
the shoulder with one hand and then puts another on the top of my
head. What is she going to do? say something? these useless words?
How can they help me?
But
she is silent and even does not look at me. Then heat rushes down
from the crown of my head... to my neck and chest, into the belly,
between my legs, then down to the toes – and the buzzing warmth
fills my whole body and then like tiny bubbles of
air rising through the water, it goes up - to the top of my head.
Suddenly the cell becomes lighter and all the creeping shadows are
gone.
I
raise my eyes and look into hers… what is she doing… but her eyes
only reflect back the shimmering flame of the clay pot that is
standing on the floor; they do not give away anything. Then without
another word she removes her hands, turns abruptly and disappears in
the darkness of the temple, leaving me alone. But before she stepped
out of the cell and completely dissolved in the shadows she said
something. I did not understand her quite well but I think I remember
it correctly. She said: “Straight
line is the longest. The longest path is the shortest.”
– and then she was gone.
Soon
a servant brought me a fresh chapati and a brown clay bowl filled
with warm white rice. For a while I was holding it in my both hands.
I thought about today´s trip. It started right at the gate of our
house and ended with the sound of the temple bell. On this road I
lost my parents and my home... and my place in the familiar world.
But strange as it might seem that already sounded like a story of a
distant past. Instead I was so hungry… hungry as if I had been
starving for days.
Very
soon I put a bowl on the floor – it was empty, not a single grain
of rice was left inside. Then it became dark and cold.
A
melody of distant chanting is reaching my ears again. It has not
stopped for a minute since I entered the temple and that seems to be
a long time ago: - Ooom kriiiing, Kali kayiii namaaah… I
bow down to you, Kali…
They
are praising the Devi who abides in all beings in the form of
intelligence… Salutations to Her, Salutations to
Her, Salutations again and again…
The
chanting is monotonous; some parts of it are repeated over and over,
again and again. Listening to them I close my eyes. Eyes open or eyes
closed – it really does not make any difference because it is dark
in the cell either way.
And
then I see Her.
She
suddenly appears in front of me out of the impenetrable darkness.
Kali... She looks the same as on the picture that we kept on our home
altar. Though not big, this picture always scared me a lot.
Its
two main colors are red and black. Black - for Kali and red…. red,
for the blood pouring out of her mouth… and for the blood dripping
from her shining sword... but what scares me even more then this
crimson blood is a white garland hanging around her neck. The garland
is long and it goes almost to her knees... but no... it is not usual
praying beads. She is wearing a mala made of white polished human
skulls.
I
always wondered about her mala: whose heads
are these? Whose heads does she usually cut off?
I
must say that this question tortured me a lot but I never dared to
ask my mom: what if… if she could cut my head, too?..
In
the darkness of the cell these sculls of Her mala are staring at me
with their non-existing eyes and then one of them suddenly grins with
its empty socket. When it did so I gasped with fear and forgot to
breathe out... and my eyes darted up, from her mala to her hands. I
wish I had not done that... what I saw there was even worse then
looking at white skulls of her mala: one of her four hands was
holding a head by its long hair. Just head... She had severed it with
her sword just seconds ago – I knew that because warm blood was
still dripping from the cut neck.
I
get really frightened, I do not want to see anything – nothing at
all! But how can I separate myself from what I see if my eyes are
already closed?
And
then... then I hear her roaring laughter - it resounds in the endless
sky above me and after that it enters my head. I close my ears with
the palms and, of course, it does not help.
So
I quickly look down – where Shiva is. Divinely beautiful Shiva is
lying calmly under Kali´s feet. I look at him without any fear - but
instead with endless surprise. How can he be lying there as if in
yoga nidra... so peaceful and so detached while ferocious Kali is
stepping on him…
Their
world is the world I know nothing about.
But
I do know that I will spend my whole life here, in the temple,
serving Her... And I know another thing: what the biggest virtue is.
It is obedience to my parents.
Soon
Kali´s laughter turned into silence and chanting from the bhajan
hall returned to me one more time. These bhajans are familiar and
soothing and I join in their distant melody from my cell – at first
quietly, then louder. Chanting makes me feel calmer and what I like
best of all – warmer. And I keep chanting. The sounds vibrate
inside my chest, then they rise to the throat, then higher into some
place inside my head and there sounds - like Kali´s laughter –
exhaust themselves into silence.
And
then suddenly I fell asleep…
…and
now I am standing in the yard and the priestess is telling me that my
whole life will change. Of course, it will. I know that – I was the
eldest of my sisters! I only do not know yet how…
Yesterday
I did not expect anything good to happen to me but now I am watching
the break of day. And
waiting for Surya, the Sun, to rise above the horizon.
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